PSY402 Theories of Learning. Chapter 11 Learned Helplessness

Similar documents
Programmed Learning Review

LEARNING. Chapter 6 (Bernstein), pages

Chapter 5. Chapter 5 Lectures Outline

Learning. Relatively permanent behavior change that is acquired through experience

A BEHAVIORAL VIEW OF LEARNING

Theories of Intelligence and Learned Helplessness: The Role of Social Psychology in Schools

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

Okami Study Guide: Chapter 7

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

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

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

Chapter 7 Conditioning and Learning

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

Introduction to Learning. Chapter 1

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

Classical vs. Operant Conditioning

GCSE PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 LEARNING REVISION

Cognitive triad: negative view of future, world, and self. Cognitive distortions-faulty information processing Core irrational beliefs which create a

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

The Highly Sensitive Person in Love. Highly Sensitive Person (HSP) motto is Look before you leap. Or A stitch in time saves nine.

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

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

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

Three Theories of Individual Behavioral Decision-Making

Learning Theories 4- Behaviorism

Harm Reduction Strategies to Address Anxiety and Trauma. Presented by Jodi K. Brightheart, MSW

Psychology Ciccarelli and White

IMPORTANT BEHAVIOURISTIC THEORIES

Case Formulation in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy. What is Case Formulation? Rationale 12/2/2009

Anxiety, Panic and Other Disorders

Memory, Behaviour, Emotional and Personality Changes after a Brain Injury

Borderline Personality Disorder and Treatment Options

SUBSTANCE ABUSE & DEPRESSION: WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Chapter 5. Learning. Outline

Okami Study Guide: Chapter 7

Personality Disorders

Research Report Optimism and Performance in Call Centers

How To Treat An Addiction With Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

AP Psychology Academic Year

Motivation. Motivation as defined by Sage is the direction and intensity of one s effort.

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

Diagnosis and Assessment of Personality Disorders

Final Exam Review for EDP304 Prague

Grade 12 Psychology (40S) Outcomes Unedited Draft 1

WHY DO WE HAVE EMOTIONS?

Behaviorism: Laws of the Observable

Self-Efficacy in the Workplace: Implications for Motivation and Performance

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

Cognitive Remediation of Brain Injury

The Social Cognitive perspective and Albert Bandura

USVH Disease of the Week #1: Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

ADHD AND ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION AN OVERVIEW

PSYC2011 Exam Notes. Instrumental conditioning

CHAPTER 6 Diagnosing and Identifying the Need for Trauma Treatment

See also for an online treatment course.

Stress! And How to Deal With It Effectively

Delusions are false beliefs that are not part of their real-life. The person keeps on believing his delusions even when other people prove that the be

Decision Making Capacity Determination and Declaration. Objectives of this section. Capacity Determination

Content / Topic Teaching / Learning Activity Duration Assessment Resources

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and TBI. Kyle Haggerty, Ph.D.

Course Completion Roadmap. Others Total

APA National Standards for High School Psychology Curricula

Assertiveness and Self-Confidence Student Manual Corporate Training Materials

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

Central Texas College. Psychology General Psychology

AMPHETAMINE AND COCAINE MECHANISMS AND HAZARDS

HONORS PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW QUESTIONS

What is Sport Psychology?

Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning

HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE

Client Teaching. Dr.Sabah Abas Ahmed. College of nursing/baghdad University.

TWO - FACTOR THEORY OF LEARNING: APPLICATION TO MALADAPTIVE BEHAVIOR

Restorative Parenting: A Group Facilitation Curriculum Activities Dave Mathews, Psy.D., LICSW

EMDR and Panic Disorder

Chapter 10 Personality Name Period Date. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Learning UNIT 6 UNIT PREVIEW UNIT GUIDE

`çããçå=jéåí~ä= aáëçêçéêëw=^åñáéíó=~åç= aééêéëëáçå. aêk=`=f=lâçåü~ jéçáå~ä=aáêéåíçê lñäé~ë=kep=cçìåç~íáçå=qêìëí=

HOW TO CHANGE NEGATIVE THINKING

Co-Occurring Substance Use and Mental Health Disorders. Joy Chudzynski, PsyD UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs

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

GCSE Psychology Learning

Psychiatrists should be aware of the signs of Asperger s Syndrome as they appear in adolescents and adults if diagnostic errors are to be avoided.

Insecure Attachment and Reactive Attachment Disorder

THIRD MODULE DETERMINERS AND CONDITIONERS OF NON PRESCRIPTIVE DRUGS AND CONSUME.

Unit 4: Personality, Psychological Disorders, and Treatment

1of 5. Parental Resilience. Protective & Promotive Factors

University College London Hospitals. Psychological support services for people affected by cancer

THE ABSENT MOTHER. The Psychological and Emotional Consequences of Childhood Abandonment and Neglect. Dr. Judith Arndell Clinical Psychologist

Behaviorism & Education

Loving Someone with BPD: A Model of Emotion Regulation Part I

WHAT EVERY PSYCHOLOGIST SHOULD KNOW ABOUT GUIDED IMAGERY

Establishing Healthy Boundaries in Relationships (Adapted by C. Leech from Tools for Coping with Life s Stressors from the Coping.

What is emotional intelligence?

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

Mental Health Ombudsman Training Manual. Advocacy and the Adult Home Resident. Module V: Substance Abuse and Common Mental Health Disorders

Empirical Background for Skinner s Basic Arguments Regarding Selection by Consequences

430 CURRICULUM AND SYLLABUS for Classes XI & XII

WHY ARE OUR CHILDREN FAILING IN SCHOOL? By Robert Gordon MS and Myrna Gordon MA

3 Classical conditioning: involuntary associations

Transcription:

PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 11 Learned Helplessness

Learned Helplessness Theory Seligman depression is learned. Depression occurs when people believe: Failures are due to uncontrollable events. Failure will continue as long as events are beyond their control. Depression arises from helplessness.

Animal Research Step 1 -- three groups of dogs: Inescapable shock no control. Escapable shock -- terminated if the dog pressed a panel. No shock Step 2 10 trials of signaled avoidance training in shuttle box. 2/3 of inescapable shock dogs did not learn to jump during step 2.

Helplessness in Humans Hiroto three groups of college students: Uncontrollable group wrongly told that pushing button would end noise. Escapable group pushing button ended noise. Control no noise. Tested using finger shuttle box. Uncontrollable group did not escape

Characteristics of Helplessness Motivational impairment unable to initiate voluntary behavior. Mice in water maze. Nonspecific carries over to a variety tasks and test situations. Intellectual impairment incapable of benefiting from future experience even if they jump, don t learn. Emotional trauma neg. affect.

Studies of Depressives Show similar results to learned helplessness studies. Depressed individuals do not escape noise, responding like inescapable non-depressed individuals. Depressed individuals do not adjust likelihood of succeeding upward when they experience success. They credit chance not skill.

Criticisms of Seligman s Theory There is more to depression than learned helplessness. Helplessness subjects described the task as a skill task, even though acting as if it were a chance task. Failure to replicate performance deficits in humans facilitation of performance instead. May be due to attributions.

Attribution Theory Causal attributions of failure have three dimensions: Internal-external internal traits or characteristics vs environmental forces Stable-unstable past causes will persist vs new forces will determine future outcomes Global-specific outcome relates only to one task vs outcome effects everything.

Attributional Model of Depression Internal External Dimension Stable Unstable Stable Unstable Global Specific I m unattractive to men I m unattractive to him My conversation sometimes bores men My conversation bores him Men are overly competitive with intelligent women He s overly competitive with women Men get into rejecting moods He was in a rejecting mood

Two Kinds of Helplessness Personal helplessness an individual s inability causes failure. Universal helplessness the environment is structured so that no one can control future events. Abramson -- both kinds lead to depression. Vary on external-internal dimension. Low self-esteem only with personal.

Severity of Depression Depression can be transient if attributed to global but changing conditions. Severe depression occurs when attributions are: Internal Global Stable Better if external, specific, unstable.

Hopelessness Depression Hopelessness the expectation that desired outcomes will not occur. Learned helplessness -- no control over undesired outcomes. Accounts for anxiety without depression. Anxiety possibility that a person may have no control over negative events. Depression occurs when certain.

Pessimism Pessimistic explanatory style attributional style predicts susceptibility to depression. Langer a perceived control is basic to human functioning. Optimists feel they can control events, more successful. Pessimists believe they have no control over events.

Cognitive View of Phobia Bandura two kinds of expectancy maintain a phobia: Stimulus-outcome expectancy about the nature of the stimulus. Response-outcome expectancy about the likely result of behavior. Why does phobia produce behavior with negative outcomes? Efficacy expectancy belief that one cannot execute a particular action.

Self-Efficacy Types of information used to establish self-efficacy: Personal accomplishments, success. Task difficulty, amount of effort. Observations of success/failure of others vicarious modeling. Emotional arousal we feel less able to cope when agitated or tense. Efficacy predicts approach behavior.

Criticisms of Efficacy View Efficacy expectations may be epiphenomenal arise with anxiety but do not affect responding. Three types of anxiety: Cognitive affects self-efficacy Physiological affects physiology Behavioral affects responding. Lang contribution of each depends on prior experience and situation.

Contemporary Theories Shift from global theories to theories about specific aspects of learning. Global theories were about operant responding not classical conditioning. An animal s biology influences whether, what, and how fast it can learn. Cognitive view requires emphasis on specific cognitive processes.

Stimulus-Substitution Theory What is the nature of the CR is it just the UCR of is it different? Pavlov stimulus-substititon 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.

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

Conditioning and Drug Tolerance Elimination of a CS results in a stronger response to the UCS, drug. Extinction of responding to environmental 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.