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PSY402 Theories of Learning

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Title: PSY402 Theories of Learning


1
PSY402Theories of Learning
  • Chapter 3 (Cont.)Indirect ConditioningApplicatio
    ns of Conditioning

2
Midterm on Tuesday
  • Use my overheads to identify main points for
    studying.
  • Important terms are shown boldface in the
    textbook.
  • Learn names only of people talked about in a
    whole section (e.g., Watson), not every studys
    author.
  • Dont skip the figures and graphs.

3
Studying for the Exam
  • Try to get basic principles straight.
  • What effect does a stronger UCS have, what effect
    do more pairings have?
  • Identify UCS, CS, UCR CR in an example, these
    are defined on pg 61.
  • Know the different conditioning paradigms on pg
    70 which works best.
  • Practice questions are on the Klein text website
    (link on class webpage).
  • Study the Section Reviews in the book.

4
Predictiveness of the CS
  • Predictiveness refers to how reliably the CS is
    associated with the UCS.
  • When two or more CSs are present, only the most
    reliable elicits a CR.
  • When the CS occurs with the UCS more often than
    the UCS occurs alone, conditioning occurs.
  • A CS alone weakens conditioning.

5
Blocking
  • Presence of a previously conditioned CS (existing
    predictive cue) prevents conditioning of a new
    CS.
  • Parent threats presence of fear of the parent
    prevents acquisition of fear to another stimulus.

6
More learning
7
Higher-Order Conditioning
  • A new stimulus (CS2) acquires the ability to
    produce a CR because it is paired with another CS
    (CS1).
  • The CR to CS2 is weaker than to CS1 50 as
    strong.
  • Higher-order conditioning is difficult to
    accomplish because conditioned inhibition also
    arises.
  • More pairings result in inhibition.

8
Sensory Preconditioning
  • When two stimuli are associated with each other,
    if one becomes a CS, the other will become a CS
    too.
  • Dog and neighbor example.
  • To get the strongest CR
  • Timing is important first CS must precede
    second CS.
  • Only a few CS-CS pairings to prevent learned
    irrelevance.

9
Vicarious Conditioning
  • Berger people hearing a tone and watching
    another person be shocked acquired a fear
    response.
  • Watching another person fail at a task can induce
    a stress response.
  • Monkeys can acquire vicarious fear responses to
    objects or snakes.
  • Arousal is needed for conditioning.

10
Contemporary Theories
  • Classical Conditioning
  • Nature of the CR stimulus substitution theory,
    SOP and AESOP theory
  • Predictiveness of the CS Rescorla-Wagner
    associative model, comparator theory, attentional
    theory, retrospective processing approach.

11
Stimulus-Substitution Theory
  • What is the nature of the CR is it just the UCR
    or is it different?
  • Pavlov stimulus-substitution theory
  • The CS stimulates the same areas of the brain as
    the UCS, producing the same response.
  • Activation of CS with UCS establishes neural
    connection between brain areas.

12
Conditioned Opponent Response
  • The CR and UCR are often different
  • CR of fear is different than UCR of pain.
  • Siegel best evidence of difference
  • Morphine (UCS) produced analgesia, reduced pain
    (UCR)
  • Light or tone (CS) produced hyperalgesia,
    increased pain (CR).
  • Rats remove paws from heat quickly with CS,
    slowly with UCS.
  • Insulin (glycemia) works the same way

13
Drug Tolerance Overdoses
  • Elimination of a CS results in a stronger
    response to the UCS, drug.
  • Extinction of responding to environ-mental cues
    strengthens drug response
  • Changing the context in which a drug is
    administered increases response to the drug.
  • Novel environment does not elicit an opponent CR.

14
SOP Theory
  • Sometimes Opponent-Process theory (SOP)
    explains why CR varies.
  • UCS elicits primary A1 (fast) and secondary A2
    (longer) responses.
  • A1 A2 can be same or different.
  • Conditioning only occurs to A2 the CR is always
    an A2 response.
  • When A1 A2 differ, UCR CR differ.

15
SOP Explains Timing Effects
  • None of the previous models explain why the
    timing of CS-US matters.
  • SOP model requires that both CS and UCS be in the
    A1 stage for learning to occur.
  • With delay more elements of CS decay from A1,
    becoming A2.

16
Activation of a memory node in SOP theory
17
(No Transcript)
18
Conditions during delay conditioning
Learning occurs only for the elements whose A1
stages overlap
19
Conditions during trace conditioning
Without overlap, no conditioning occurs
20
Conditions during backward conditioning
Inhibition is conditioned because the CS A1
overlaps US A2 stage
CS comes after the US
21
Two-Phase Reactions
  • Shock results in
  • A1 -- Initial agitated hyperactivity
  • A2 -- Long-lasting hypoactivity (freezing)
  • CER (fear) elicited by CS is A2
  • Morphine results in
  • A1 sedation, analgesia hypoactivity
  • A2 hyperactivity two hours later hyperalgesia
    (greater pain sensitivity)
  • CR elicited by CS is A2 (hyper)

22
Affective Extension of SOP Theory
  • Why do different A2 responses have different
    optimal CS-UCS intervals?
  • Two distinct UCR sequences activate distinct A1
    A2 sequences
  • Sensory
  • Emotive
  • These distinct sequences can have different
    strengths, time scales (latencies), or eliciting
    CSs.

23
Faster
Slower
24
Rescorla-Wagner Theory
  • There is a maximum associative strength between
    CS and UCS.
  • UCS determines the limit
  • Strength gained on each training trial depends on
    prior training.
  • More learning early, less later on
  • Rate of conditioning varies.
  • Conditioning of a CS depends on prior
    conditioning to other stimuli.

25
UCS Preexposure Effect
  • If the UCS is encountered without the CS prior to
    pairing of the two, less learning occurs.
  • UCS becomes associated with other environmental
    stimuli (without CS).
  • Since there is a limit to association strength,
    some is drained off by such prior associations.
  • CS-UCS association is weakened.

26
Problems with Rescorla-Wagner
  • Overshadowing salient cues have more
    associative strength.
  • Sometimes a salient cue potentiates another cue
    instead of overshadowing.
  • Garcia says cues are indexed.
  • R-W says cues are seen as unitary stimulus.
  • Unclear which explanation is correct.

27
More Problems
  • CS preexposure effect appearance of CS without
    UCS prior to learning weakens learning.
  • Shouldnt have any effect according to
    Rescorla-Wagner theory, but it does.
  • Cue-deflation effect extinction of a more
    salient cue enhances learning for the less
    salient cue.
  • Should be no change according to R-W.

28
Comparator Theory
  • If two CSs are associated, extinction of one
    should reduce responding to the other.
  • Sometimes true, other times not.
  • CS-UCS associations exist for many stimuli but
    are exhibited only for the strongest.
  • Comparator theory says the CSs are judged in
    relation to each other.

29
Organisms might learn about elemental or
configural CS nodes
Wagner Brandon
Pearce
30
Attentional View
  • Mackintosh learned irrelevance occurs during
    preexposure of CS.
  • Animals exposed to a novel stimulus exhibit an
    orienting response.
  • No orienting with preexposure.
  • Habituation results in failure of conditioning
    no attention is paid to a habituated stimulus.
  • Pairing of CS/UCS in novel context results in
    learning.

31
Retrospective Processing
  • Most theories assume the level of responding will
    be constant after learning.
  • Baker Mercier suggest association can change
    after learning.
  • Retrospective processing CS-UCS contingency
    reevaluated after learning.
  • Backward blocking support for theory
  • Suggests animals have mental representations,
    memory for events.

32
Applications of Conditioning
  • Treatment of phobias
  • Systematic desensitization
  • Treatment of addictions
  • Elimination of conditioned withdrawal reactions
  • Enhancement of drugs used to treat immune system
    disorders
  • Lupus, AIDS

33
How a Phobia Works
  • A phobia is an unrealistic fear.
  • A learning experience causes fear to become
    associated with a neutral stimulus.
  • Avoidance prevents extinction.
  • The stimulus is generalized.
  • Eventually, too many experiences must be avoided
    and a persons functioning is impaired.

34
Systematic Desensitization
  • Wolpe applied ideas from classical conditioning
    to treatment of phobia.
  • Reciprocal inhibition an organism can only feel
    one emotion at a time.
  • Mary Cover Jones used counterconditioning to
    extinguish fear.
  • Cats could be counterconditioned using food.

35
Clinical Procedure
  • Construct an anxiety hierarchy.
  • Teach a relaxation response.
  • Cue-controlled relaxation.
  • Counterconditioning pairing of relaxation with
    imagined feared stimuli, starting with least
    scary.
  • Assessment of whether the treatment worked
    interacting with the feared stimulus.

36
Effectiveness of Desensitization
  • Wolpe reported 90 success rate, compared to 60
    for psychoanalysis.
  • 12-29 sessions
  • Relapse after 1-3 yrs easily treated.
  • Works with a wide range of fears.
  • Can also be used with anxiety disorders.

37
Limitations on Desensitization
  • The client must be able to vividly imagine the
    feared stimulus.
  • 10 cannot do this.
  • Confrontation of a real rather than an imagined
    object is more effective.
  • Difficult for the client to endure the anxiety
    associated with this.

38
Virtual Reality Desensitization
  • Graded height-related stimuli presented via
    virtual reality were effective in treating
    acrophobia.
  • Subjects were able to endure real stimuli after
    virtual treatment.
  • Successful in treating spider phobia.

39
Treatment of Withdrawal
  • Conditioned withdrawal reaction environmental
    cues become associated with withdrawal stage.
  • Exposure to cues triggers symptoms.
  • Withdrawal motivates substance use.
  • Extinction by exposure to environmental cues is
    needed.
  • Virtual reality also used to treat addictions.

40
Treatment of Immune Disorders
  • Lupus, AIDS are immune system disorders.
  • Treated using drugs that either boost or suppress
    immune system response.
  • Classical conditioning can be used to produce the
    results of such drugs without the side effects or
    cost.

41
Immune System Conditioning
  • Cyclophosphamide used to induce nausea during
    flavor-aversion learning also immunosuppressant.
  • The saccharin-flavored water used as a CS caused
    several rats to die.
  • The drug reaction occurred without the drug the
    CS evoked immune system suppression.
  • Also works with other drugs.

42
Treatment of Lupus AIDS
  • Rats given saccharin paired with cyclophosphamide
    had slower lupus progression and lower mortality.
  • A girl treated for lupus was able to use half as
    much drug when paired with a distinctive taste
    and smell.
  • Sherbet paired with adrenaline enhances immune
    functioning for AIDS treatment.
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