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Animal Learning Classical Conditioning

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Describe the basic features of classical conditioning ... Pavlov, Thorndike and Skinner at www.pigeon.psy.tufts.edu/psych26/history.htm. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animal Learning Classical Conditioning


1
Animal Learning- Classical Conditioning
  • Keith Clements
  • Animal Cognition

2
Aims
  • Students should be able to
  • Describe the basic features of classical
    conditioning
  • Describe variations to the basic procedure, such
    as inhibitory conditioning, sensory
    preconditioning and blocking and their
    implications.
  • Appreciate how, and why, biological constraints
    may affect conditioning.

3
Classical Conditioning
  • You need to be familiar with the basic
    terminology
  • US, CS, UR, CR
  • Extinction
  • Discrimination and generalization
  • Excitation and Inhibition
  • Pavlov viewed extinction as involving active
    inhibition of the response, because extinguished
    responses show spontaneous recovery
  • Conditioning can also produce inhibitory links.

4
Producing a conditioned inhibitor
  • Acquisition
  • Tone Food
  • Tone Light No Food
  • Testing
  • Tone Salivation
  • CS CR
  • Light No response
  • CS-

5
Inhibitory conditioning
  • How would we know it had worked?
  • A Summation test. A conditioned inhibitor will
    inhibit responding to a second CS paired with
    it.
  • A retardation test can also be used, If a
    stimulus is a conditioned inhibitor it will take
    longer for it to acquire excitatory properties,
    when it is paired with a US, than would be the
    case if it was initially a neutral stimulus.
  • Inhibitory conditioning is one line of evidence
    against stimulus-response accounts of classical
    conditioning

6
Second-order conditioning
  • The response transferred to a CS may subsequently
    be transferred to another neutral stimulus.
  • This occurs in second-order conditioning.
  • The reverse procedure is known as sensory
    pre-conditioning. This shows that classical
    conditioning can occur without an apparent change
    in behaviour.

7
Sensory preconditioning
  • Rizley Rescorla (1972)
  • Rats were presented with several trials in which
    a light was followed by a tone.
  • Subsequently the tone was used as a signal for
    shock.
  • The second Sniffy practical examines one way of
    measuring the conditioned response in this sort
    of study
  • As expected the tone produced a conditioned
    response because of its association with shock.
  • When the light was presented alone it also
    produced a CR

8
Contiguity or contingency?
  • Pavlov assumed contiguity between CS US was
    sufficient for conditioning to occur
  • Evidence shows that only if the CS reliably
    predicts the occurrence of the US will
    conditioning occur. Varying the correlation
    between the CS and US alters the strength of
    conditioning.

9
CS-US correlation and strength of responding
  • Rescorla (1968) varied the correlation between CS
    and US by delivering the US on its own between
    trials.
  • The strength of the CR was assessed using a
    conditioned emotional response paradigm. CS's
    associated with aversive stimuli inhibit operant
    responding.
  • The strength of the CR was sensitive to the
    relative probabilities of the US when the CS was
    present and when it was not.

10
Blocking
  • Shows that conditioning occurs to a given
    stimulus to the extent that the stimulus adds to
    an individuals' ability to predict the occurrence
    of important events.
  • If a conditioned stimulus already predicts a
    given US, further learning is blocked.

11
Blocking ( Kamin, 1968)
12
Biological influences
  • The nature of the stimuli can influence the
    development of conditioning.
  • Learned taste-Aversion (Garcia Koelling, 1966)
    demonstrates that tastes are readily associated
    with nausea, allowing conditioning to occur after
    a single exposure and with very long
    inter-stimulus intervals.

13
Taste Aversion
  • Acquisition
  • Saccharin-flavoured water
  • Tone Lithium Chloride Nausea
  • Light
  • Testing
  • Saccharin flavour Disgust (is avoided)
  • Tone Light No conditioned response
  • (Do not suppress drinking)

14
Applications
  • Classical conditioning and emotional responses.
  • Phobias may be viewed as learned fear responses.
    Such learning appears to be particularly common
    in relation to biologically significant stimuli.
    Seligman (1972) suggests that such stimuli may be
    evolutionarily prepared to take part in fear
    conditioning.
  • Exposure-based therapies (such as systematic
    desensitization) aim to extinguish such
    maladaptive conditioned responses.

15
Recommended Reading
  • References from the first learning session cover
    classical conditioning
  • Essential Reading
  • Wynne (2001) Animal Cognition, Chapter 3
  • Further Reading
  • Klein, S.B. (2002). Learning Principles and
    Applications (4th Ed.). New York McGraw Hill.
  • Morgan, D.L. (2002) Essentials of Learning
    Cognition. Boston McGraw-Hill
  • Schwartz, B. Robbins, S.J. (1995). Psychology
    of learning and behaviour ( 4th ed). New York
    Norton.
  • Web Sites
  • Bjorn Brembs' web site includes a description of
    classical and Operant conditioning
    www.brembs.net/, select I from the menu.
  • Dr. Robert Cook's pages include information
    about Pavlov, Thorndike and Skinner at
    www.pigeon.psy.tufts.edu/psych26/history.htm.

16
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