Conditioning I Learning A Any relatively permanent change
- Slides: 23
Conditioning /I. Learning /A. Any relatively permanent change in behavior as a result of practice or experience. Changes due to growth or maturation are not learning.
B. How do we learn?
C. How do we stimulate learning? /1. Rewards (operant conditioning) /2. Punishments /3. Classical conditioning
II. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING /People (and animals) acquire certain behaviors through classical conditioning /Learning process in which associations are made between an unconditioned stimulus and a neutral stimulus.
STIMULI /Something that elicits a response. /NEUTRAL STIMULUS: / Initially does not elicit a response. /UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS (UCS): /UNCONDITIONED RESPONSE (UCR): /elicits a predictable response w/o training. automatic or natural reaction to a stimulus w/o training /
STIMULI cont. CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS): / elicits a response due to being paired with an UCS. CONDITIONED RESPONSE (CR): / the learned reaction to a CS
Classical Conditioning / A. Pavlov’s Dogs Experiment (US) Unconditioned Stimulus food (UR) Unconditioned Response saliva (NS) Neutral Stimulus bell (CS) Conditioned Stimulus bell (CR) Conditioned Response saliva to bell - Ivan Pavlov
EXAMPLES OF CLASSICAL CONDITIONING Using electric wires to keep cows in a field UCS - Electric shock UCR - Jump back CS - wire CR - Stay away
ELECTRIC CAN OPENER / CATS UCS - food UCR - Run into the kitchen CS - Can opener CR - Run into the kitchen
Classical Conditioning in the real (comics) world
Think, Write, Pair, & Share Three big ideas (at least one visual) Two connections (to me or prior learning) One question (or thing I am confused about)
John B. Watson & Baby Albert /1. Little Albert /a. (US) - /b. (UR) - /c. (NS/CS) - /d. (CR) - /loud noise /fear, /white /fear, crying rat crying
Taking classical conditioning a step further GENERALIZATION: Responding to a second stimulus similar to the original CS / DISCRIMINATION: the ability to respond differently to different stimuli ✏ EXTINCTION: When the CR gradually dies out after the CS is repeatedly presented w/o the UCS /SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY: When the CR reappears after a rest period following extinction. ✏
What did Watson do after leaving academia? /He got involved with advertising, using the principles of classical conditioning and applying them to getting consumers to buy certain products.
Classical Conditioning and Phobias / B. Applications /1. Generalizations /A. Phobias /2. Discrimination / C. Behavior Modification /1. Immersion Therapy /2. Systematic Desensitization /a. anxiety hierarchy /b. biofeedback/relaxation
Acquisition Curve
Cognitive Processes Early behaviorists believed that learned behaviors of various organisms could be reduced to mindless mechanisms. (cognition in rats and dogs does not play a role) Rescorla and Wagner (1972) disagreed /Experimented with rats using tone, light (sometimes), and electric shock /Rats feared the tone, but not the light, even though the light was always followed by a shock.
Cognitive Processes, cont. /Treating alcoholics with classical conditioning /Lace alcohol with nausea inducing drugs /Patient knows to blame the nausea on the drug, not the alcohol /Similar treatment has had limited success
Biological Predispositions Early researchers believed that the laws of learning were basically the same in all species. (any natural response could be conditioned to any neutral stimulus) Each species has predispositions that prepare it to learn the associations that enhance its survival. /Rats develop taste aversions to poisoned bait /Birds (that hunt by sight) develop aversions to the sight of tainted food /Humans develop taste aversions to novel foods after getting sick. (not the restaurant, plates, people, or music)
Think, Write, Pair, & Share Three big ideas (at least one visual) Two connections (to me or prior learning) One question (or thing I am confused about)
- Any relatively permanent change in behavior
- Which learning is permanent
- What is any relatively permanent change in behavior
- Is any relatively permanent change in behavior
- Relatively permanent definition
- Is the systematic relatively permanent
- A relatively permanent change of behavior is called
- A relatively permanent change of behavior is called
- The relatively permanent and limitless storehouse
- Relatively permanent
- Operant vs. classical conditioning
- When was the little albert experiment
- Fixed interval schedule example
- A very bright mildly painful light
- Classical conditioning vs operant conditioning
- What is classical conditioning and operant conditioning
- Intermittent schedule of reinforcement
- Classical and operant conditioning
- Classical conditioning vs operant conditioning
- Operant conditioning classical conditioning
- There any any
- Any to any connectivity
- Seknder
- Cuadro comparativo e-learning m-learning b-learning