Chapter 9 Behaviorism: Antecedent Influences. Toward a Science of Behavior. apter 9 Behaviorism: Antecedent

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Chapter 9 Behaviorism: Antecedent Influences Dr. Rick Grieve PSY 495 Western Kentucky University 1 Toward a Science of Behavior Background Functionalism was more evolutionary than revolutionary Behaviorism revolutionary John B. Watson These ideas did not originate with Watson; they had been developing for some time in psychology in biology Major forces that were brought together to form behaviorism included: Philosophical tradition of objectivism and mechanism Animal psychology Functional psychology Insistence on objectivity can be traced back to Descartes and, probably more importantly, Compte, who created positivism 2 Most important antecedent to Behaviorism was animal psychology Grew out of evolutionary theory and led to attempts to demonstrate: Existence of a mind in lower organisms The continuity between animal and human minds Jaques Loeb (1859-1924) Did animal research Postulated that animal behavior was influenced by tropism Involuntary movement in response to a stimulus Did not totally reject animal consciousness, especially in humans and other animals at the top of the evolutionary scale If the actions of lower organisms can be explained without reference to mental events, why cannot human behavior be explained in the same way 3

Cont. Rats, Ants, and the Animal Mind Willard Small Introduced the rat maze in 1900 at Clark University Studied dbehavior, but also interpreted t dthe behavior in terms of consciousness, writing about the rats images and ideas 4 Charles Henry Turner Zoologist Interested in and published articles on comparative and animal studies A Preliminary Note on Ant Behavior (1906) Margaret Floy Washburn Taught animal psychology at Cornell The Animal Mind (1908) 1 st comparative psychology textbook published in US Last book to discuss animal consciousness and introspection by analogy 5 Difficult to be an animal psychologist Clever Hans the Clever Horse Supposedly could add and subtract, use fractions and decimals, read, spell, tell time, distinguish among colors, identify objects, and perform phenomenal feats of memory 6

Turns out that Hans did not know anything that is owner didn t know Illustrates that need and value of an experimental approach to the study of animal behavior 7 Edward Lee Thorndike (1874-1949) Called his experimental approach to the study of associations connectionism Approach to learning that is based on connections between situations and responses Law of effect If the response to a stimulus is followed by a reward, the connection is strengthened stamped in If the response is followed by a punishment, it is weakened stamped out Law of exercise Any response to a situation, other things being equal, will be more strongly connected with the situation in proportion to the number of times it has been connected with the situation 8 Developed these laws from using the Puzzle Box Trial-and-error-learning Learning based on the repetition of response tendencies that lead to success Disagreed with behaviorism he wanted to keep the mentalistic qualities in psychology 9

Cont. Ivan Petrovitch Pavlov (1849-1936) Shifted work on association from subjective ideas to objective and quantifiable physiological events Conditioned reflexes Psychic reflexes Changed to conditional reflexes» were conditional upon the forming of an association or connection between the stimulus and the response 10 Classical Conditioning Apparatus 11 Ivan Pavlov 12

Ivan Pavlov Ivan Pavlov Ivan Pavlov

Higher mental processes in animals could be described in physiological terms without mention of consciousness Edwin B. Twitmyer the the lost one Gave a talk in 1904 that described conditioned reflexes, but no one noticed Alois Kreidl s goldfish Fish anticipated feeding 16 17 Cont. Vladimir M. Bekhterev (1857-1927) Contemporary and rival of Pavlov Founded Psychoneurological Institute 18

Cont. Helped lead the field away from subjective ideas and toward objectively observed overt behavior Associated reflexes Reflexes that ca be elicited not only by unconditional stimuli but also by stimuli that have become associated with the unconditioned stimuli This is actually Pavlov s conditioned response but with a motor learning bent Behkterev postulated that higher-level processes could be built using associated reflexes 19 The Influence of Functional Psychology and Behaviorism Functionalism was a direct antecedent of Behaviorism It was more objective than other schools of psychology at the time Functionalists t were calling for a more objective psychology even as Watson created the first tenets of behaviorism In 1911, Pillsbury defined psychology as the science of behavior he argued that it was possible to treat human beings as objectively as other aspects of the physical universe Others moved away from mentalistic ideas: William Montague J. R. Angell 20 Which Brings Us to: John Broadus Watson 21

References Kendler, H. H. (1987). Historical foundations of modern psychology. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole. Schultz, D. P., & Schultz, S. E. (1996). A history of modern psychology (6 th edition). Ft. Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace Publishers. Schultz, D. P., & Schultz, S. E. (2004). A history of modern psychology (8 th edition). Ft. Worth, TX: Harcourt Brace Publishers. 22