Psychology HW pg

Similar documents
Chapter 7 Conditioning and Learning

GCSE PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 LEARNING REVISION

Programmed Learning Review

Learning. Relatively permanent behavior change that is acquired through experience

Okami Study Guide: Chapter 7

Outline. General Psychology PSYC 200. Definition. Habituation. Habituation. Classical Conditioning 3/17/2015. Learning

Learning. Any relatively permanent change in behavior brought about by experience or practice. Permanent Experience Practice

Learning: Classical Conditioning

Chapter 5: Learning I. Introduction: What Is Learning? learning Conditioning II. Classical Conditioning: Associating Stimuli Ivan Pavlov

Learning Theories Taught in EDFL 2240: Educational Psychology. Behavioral Learning Theories (Learning is defined as a change in behavior)

Learning Theories 4- Behaviorism

Classical Conditioning

Classical Conditioning. Classical and Operant Conditioning. Basic effect. Classical Conditioning

GCSE Psychology Learning

Okami Study Guide: Chapter 7

UNIT 6: LEARNING. 6. When the US is presented prior to a neutral stimulus, conditioning DOES NOT (does/does not) occur.

A BEHAVIORAL VIEW OF LEARNING

Learning from Experience. Definition of Learning. Psychological definition. Pavlov: Classical Conditioning

Today. Learning. Learning. What is Learning? The Biological Basis. Hebbian Learning in Neurons

HONORS PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW QUESTIONS

Image Source: Markstivers.com

Chapter 5. Learning. Outline

LEARNING. Chapter 6 (Bernstein), pages

Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning

Learning UNIT 6 UNIT PREVIEW UNIT GUIDE

How do we Learn? How do you know you ve learned something? CLASS OBJECTIVES: What is learning? What is Classical Conditioning? Chapter 6 Learning

Operant Conditioning. Skinner and Thorndike

Psychology with Mr. Duez UNIT 3 "Learning" LEARNING TARGETS

Chapter 15. Historical Perspective. How the world creates who you are: behaviorism and social learning theory

Behaviorism & Education

Applied Behavior Analysis Reinforcement. Elisabeth (Lisa) Kinney, M.S. September 19, 2007

Introduction to Learning. Chapter 1

Psychology Ciccarelli and White

IMPORTANT BEHAVIOURISTIC THEORIES

Operant Conditioning. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Module 22

Encyclopedia of School Psychology Conditioning: Classical And Operant

A. Learning Process through which experience causes permanent change in knowledge or behavior.

Operant Conditioning

Introduction. 1 st Reason. Extension of 1 st reason. Elaboration of 1 st reason. 2nd Reason. Extension of 2nd reason. Elaboration of 2nd reason

Behavioral Principles. S-R Learning. Pavlov & Classical Conditioning 12/2/2009

Behavioural Therapy A GUIDE TO COUNSELLING THERAPIES (DVD) Published by: J & S Garrett Pty Ltd ACN

Interview with David Bouthiette [at AMHI 3 times] September 4, Interviewer: Karen Evans

California Treasures High-Frequency Words Scope and Sequence K-3

101 IELTS Speaking Part Two Topic cards about sports, hobbies and free time A- Z

Final Exam Review for EDP304 Prague

Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience.

Theories for Child Development: What are they and why should you care? Lifespan Developmental Theory

Learning. Chapter 5. How have you used reinforcement to modify your own behavior or the behavior of others? Video 00:00 / 02:28

9/14/2015. Innate behavior. Innate behavior. Stimuli that trigger innate behaviors are called releasers.

A Note to Parents. 1. As you study the list, vary the order of the words.

PEER PRESSURE TEACHER S GUIDE:

Is the stimulus/response something that was learned or something that occurs naturally, by instinct?

Parents Corner. Habit 1 Be ProActive * You re In Charge

STEP 5: Giving Feedback

Arkansas State PIRC/ Center for Effective Parenting

PUSD High Frequency Word List

Parenting. Coping with DEATH. For children aged 6 to 12

Making requests and asking for permission.

Classical vs. Operant Conditioning

I Miss My Pet: A workbook for children about pet loss

A PARENT S GUIDE TO CPS and the COURTS. How it works and how you can put things back on track

5 Learning. Links to Learning Objectives. Enduring Issues. How is learning influenced by an organism s inborn characteristics?

Evolutionary Perspective: Wrap Up

LESSON TITLE: Jesus Visits Mary and Martha THEME: Jesus wants us to spend time with \ Him. SCRIPTURE: Luke 10:38-42

DOMAIN Ill: Cognitive Development

Devotion NT273 CHILDREN S DEVOTIONS FOR THE WEEK OF: LESSON TITLE: The Garden of Gethsemane. THEME: We always need to pray! SCRIPTURE: Luke 22:39-53

LESSON TITLE: Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard

Ohio s Assessment System

Behavior & Sensory Strategies for Individuals with ASD

Operant Conditioning: An Overview

Parable of the Faithful Servant Lesson 3 February 14 & 15

TALES OF A FOURTH GRADE NOTHING. By Judy Blume

2009 More Time Moms Publishing All Rights Reserved.

Get the Facts About Tuberculosis Disease

How to Play Walking the Dog a Pablo Puppy Game

The Fruit of the Spirit is Love

Classroom Behavior Management Plan

The Chocolate Touch: Chapters 1-2

Making Friends at College

Grade 2 Lesson 3: Refusing Bullying. Getting Started

7/17/2014. Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) Therapy Overview. Applied Behavior Analysis Therapy. Ivan Petrovich Pavlov

The Insider's Guide To The West Highland Terrier - The Dog Barking Helper HOW TO MANAGE DOGGY PROBLEMS. Dog Barking Help

THE WASHING MACHINE. Written by. Lorena Padilla

GOD S BIG STORY Week 1: Creation God Saw That It Was Good 1. LEADER PREPARATION

Behavior Analysis and Strategy Application after Brain Injury: Addressing the long-term behavioral outcomes of brain injury

CHAPTER 5 LESSON PLAN NOV 28-DEC 9, 2011 LEARNING Learning Objectives

Something Better Than Punishment

Content / Topic Teaching / Learning Activity Duration Assessment Resources

LESSON TITLE: A Story about Investing. THEME: We should share the love of Jesus! SCRIPTURE: Luke 19:11-27 CHILDREN S DEVOTIONS FOR THE WEEK OF:

Chapter 7. Behavioral Learning Theory: Operant Conditioning

LESSON TITLE: Jesus Heals Blind Bartimaeus

Psychological Models of Abnormality

Participle. 國 中 英 語 自 助 餐

Parable of The Prodigal Son

Step 1: Come Together

Teaching & Behavioral Challenges

THE WORLD OF PSYCHOLOGY, 5/E 2005

Lesson 6: Solomon Writes Many Proverbs

However, if your child is learning how to use the toilet without problems, there is no need to stop because of these situations.

Fry Phrases Set 1. TeacherHelpForParents.com help for all areas of your child s education

Transcription:

Psychology HW pg. 313-325 Stimulus: something that produces a reaction, or response Pavlov's Dog Pavlov knew that dogs normally salivate (mouth watering) if meat powder is placed on their tongue. In other words, meat is a stimulus for salivation. Pavlov then decided to see if he could dogs salivate in response to a different stimuli that they normally care nothing about. Pavlov hooks the dogs up into elaborate harnesses that hold them still and measure their salivation. Every time Pavlov gives the dog meat, he rings a bell. He does this pairing several times. After several pairings, Pavlov rings the bell but does not give the dog any meat. However, the dog begins to salivate anyway, and continues to salivate anytime the bell is rung. US. UR. CR. and CS Letters of Learning Unconditioned = not learned. Unconditioned Stimulus (US/UCS): a stimulus that causes a response that is automatic, NOT learned (sight of food, meat powder on tongue) Unconditioned Response (UR/UCR): the automatic response caused by the stimulus. In this case, salivating to the meat. Dogs don't LEARN to salivate over meat, they do it automatically because of their biology (salivation due to meat). Conditioned Stimulus (CS): A stimulus that was previously neutral or meaningless. In Pavlov's research, this was the bell. After pairing the ringing of the bell caused the dog to salivate (conditioned response). Conditioned Response (CR): A learned response to a previously neutral stimulus. In this case, the salivation of the dog. Another example- your dog or cat Sometimes the sound of the can opener (CS) means that food (US) will soon appear in the dish, causing your pet to run to bowl (CR) Let's look at the case of Little Albert. Remember they took Albert and placed him in a room with a stuffed animal. Then they made a loud noise every time he went to touch the stuffed animal. Eventually he became scared of everything white and fluffy. Acquisition: The initial learning in classical conditioning. The pairing of the neutral stimulus with the unlearned stimlulus. What would happen if Pavlov kept ringing the bell, but no longer presented any meat? Extinction: when a conditioned stimulus (bell) is no longer followed by an unconditioned stimulus (meat/salivation), the response (salivation) will die out. In class experiment. 1

When Mrs. Mackson runs the experiment fill in the following. What happened when she stopped the conditioned stimulus? Taste Aversion: a learned avoidance to a particular food. Sometimes people become ill after eating a certain food and learn to avoid it. This may happen when you are young, and you may not even remember why you do not like the food. Food aversions can occur after only 1 pairing. Because there is usually such a gap between food and sickness and other stimuli biological constraints on conditioning? Garcia Studied the idea that taste aversion may be different than other forms of classical conditioning Conclusion: After pairing food with different stimuli (nausea, shock, loud tone, etc only nausea produced results must be evolutionary Examples of taste aversion - Getting sick on alcohol? Others Spontaneous Recovery: An extinguished behavior is not gone forever. After extinction and a short period of no stimulation a CR can suddenly come back. However, it will come back weaker. Examples? Old girlfriend/boyfriend? Song on the radio? Generalization: is the act of responding in the same ways to stimuli that seem to be similar even if the stimuli are not identical. For example, Pavlov's dog would salivate to other bells that were not exactly the same tone as the one it was conditioned to. However, the dog salivated more when the bell was closer to the tone it was used to. (Little Albert everything white and fluffy not just the white rat) Other Examples? Discrimination: responding differently to stimuli that are not the same. (ex. Mrs. Mackson and spaghetti) Both generalization and discrimination help people adapt to their environment. 2

Practice 1. Every time you take a shower, someone in the houses flushes the toilet causing the water to turn cold and you become cold. Now every time you hear a toilet flush, you get cold. 2. People receiving chemotherapy often vomit during or shortly after the procedure. After several chemo sessions, people begin to feel sick at the sight of the treatment room. 3. Susan is a good swimmer but has a lot of pain associated with practice. Whenever she leaves practice she has to take some aspirin because the pain is so bad. Soon when ever she smells chlorine she has aches and pains. 4. When Mrs. Mackson was a little girl her mom didn t want her to wake up in the middle of the night to go to the bathroom because she would wake everyone else up. So every time Mrs. Mackson would brush her teeth they would make her go to the bathroom. To this day if Mrs. Mackson brushes her teeth she has to go to the bathroom. 5. When Mrs. Mackson was looking for a job she had one interview suit. Interviewing for a job is a stressful thing. After a while every time she would put on the blouse that went with her suit she would start to sweat. She eventually had to give the blouse away. Operant Conditioning HW 327-339 Classical conditioning, we learn to associate one stimulus with another (bell with meat). Operant Conditioning: humans or animals learn to do something because of the consequences (positive or negative). Classic ex. of operant conditioning - teaching a new to do tricks. B. F. Skinner Was conducting experiments to study Edward Thorndike s theory called the law of effect. (Rewarded behavior is likely to reoccur.) To do this he was training pigeons to do unpigeon like behaviors. (walking figure 8s, playing ping-pong, and keeping a missile on course by pecking at a target on a computer screen.) He is well known for creating what will be known as a skinner box. (A box with levers/bars that animals use to either get rewarded with things like food or water, or punished through things like shocks) Reinforcement: the process in which a stimulus increases the chances that the behavior will happen again. 3

Primary reinforcers: things that the organism needs (and knows it needs) in order to survive. Food, water, warmth, etc. Secondary/conditioned reinforcers: things that are important to the organism because they lead to getting the things it needs. Money, attention, social approval, etc. (good grades--->get in a good college-->get a good job-->money->things you need) Positive Reinforcers: increase the frequency of a desired behavior. (Food, money, extra credit, etc.) These reinforcers may be more effective at certain times. For example- food may be an effective reinforcer IF the organism is hungry. If it just ate, food would not be a very effective positive reinforcer. Negative Reinforcers: a painful or unpleasant stimulus is removed or not applied IF the desired behavior is performed. (you brush your teeth in order to not get a cavity OR you gag and whine about having to eat liver, therefore your mom takes it away. You will most likely continue that behavior if given the same circumstances) Punishment: causes an unwanted behavior to decrease Positive Punishment: Decreases behavior by administering something (You spank a child for coloring on the wall) Negative Punishment: Decreases behavior by removing something (You take away your driver s license for getting too many tickets) Problems with Punishment -Punishment does not teach an alternate behavior (reinforcement tells you what to do/punishment only tells you want NOT to do) -Punishment only works when it is consistent -Severe punishment tends to make the organism flee the situation instead of trying to change their behavior -Punishment may be confusing (organism may not know why they are getting it) -Punishment may be copied by children when dealing with other children -Children may act up in order to get punished, since that is the only attention they get Practice (PR pos. reinforcement, NR neg. reinforcement, PP pos. punishment, NP neg. punishment) 1. The police stop drivers and give awards for safe driving. 2. The coach removes a player from the game who commits a flagrant foul. 3. A baseball player glares at a teammate who makes an error. 4. A mother gives candy to the crying child in the grocery store. 5. A hospital patient is given extra visitation time after eating a full meal. 6. Grounding a teenager until his or her homework is done. 7. A defendant is harassed until he confesses. 8. A child is given $5.00 for getting good grades. 9. A mother smiles when her child says, Mama. 10. A child is put in time out for misbehaving. 4

11. Employee of the month gets reserved parking. 12. You continue to talk, and the teacher moves your seat. Schedules of Reinforcement (how and when the reinforcement occurs) Continuous Reinforcement: reinforcement (positive, negative, or punishment) occurs every time the behavior occurs. -Effective in learning new behaviors -Problem: behavior ONLY occurs when reinforcement is there (Examples ) Partial Reinforcement: reinforcement occurs some of the time. -Behavior continues the longest when this is used (Examples ) Interval Schedules (how long do I have to wait) A certain amount of time must elapse between reinforcements. Fixed Interval Schedule: Set amount of time in between reinforcements -Behavior only increases near the time reinforcement is set to occur Variable Interval Schedule: Amount of time in between is random -Behavior is more constant Ratio Schedules (How many times do I have to do it before I get something?") Fixed Ratio schedule: Certain number of responses must occur before reinforcement comes. (A rat pushes a level 5 times before a food pellet comes out= 5:1 ratio) Variable Ratio schedule: A random number of responses must occur before reinforcement (rat pushes the level, but does not know how long until food comes out) -Leads to increased and more constant behavior 5

Practice 1. Each day after completing 1 hour of the treadmill, Susan allows herself a break to relax and sit down 2. A dog begs for food as the family sits down to dinner table, sometimes he gets a scrap 3. Peter e-mails his girlfriend multiple times per night; occasionally she will e-mail him back. 4. Aki buys a ticket for the state lotto thinking the next time she might win 5. If he has worked hard all year, each December Darren gets his annual bonus at work. 6. Every Friday Martha goes to the movies with her friends 7. After Fiona cleans the bathroom three times her mother gives her an allowance of $20. Shaping: Teaching a complex behavior by reinforcing steps along the way (Example ) Observational Learning HW pg 341-347 Cognitive Role in learning Tolman a study on food deprived rats Group A food at end of maze every time performance improved over 17 days Group B no food at end modest performance increase over 17 days Group C no food first 10 days, food day 11 sharp improvement in following days (in fact a little better than group A) Conclusions Rats in group C were learning all along but didn t show it. Two big things from this study 1. Latent Learning: Learning is hidden until it is used. 2. Cognitive Map: A mental representation of the spatial layout Rescorla Predictive power of US/CS. Group A 20 parings of shock with tone (100%) Group B 20 pairings of shock with tone PLUS 20 tones no shock (50%) Conclusions Group A has a much higher conditioned fear due to predictive power Seligman Study on phobias People are more likely to develop phobias of things such as spiders, snakes, heights, and darkness compared to things such as hammers, knives, hot stoves, and electrical outlets EVEN after pairing with painful stimuli. Conclusions all the things we are more likely to develop phobias too were genuine threats to our ancestors. Observational learning: We acquire skills and knowledge from watching and imitating others. Example Albert Bandura and his bobo dolls. Bandura took two sets of kids and had them watch a video containing footage of a bobo doll. In one film an adult was hitting the bobo doll, in the other the bobo doll was just sitting there. Then they brought the kids separately in a room filled with lots of toys and a bobo doll. The kids who saw the bobo doll getting hit were more likely to hit the doll. Bandura identified four key processes that are crucial in observational learning 1. Attention selective attention would play a role here 2. Retention depending on time between attention and use, do you remember it? 3. Reproduction actually do what you see, it is one thing to watch a break dancer but can you do it? 4. Motivation It the response likely to pay off? 6

Although your parents may tell you that you should not hit your little brother, if you observe them hitting, you are more likely to hit as well. Studies have found that people who watch a lot of violence on TV are more likely to commit violent acts than those who do not. Repeated exposure to violence on T. V. may inhibit viewers' emotional response to real violence. However, those people who CHOOSE to watch violent programs are already more likely to engage in violence, even if they do not watch the desired program. 7