PSYCH Ch. 7
______is the initial learning stage in classical conditioning in which an association between a neutral stimulus and an unconditioned stimulus takes place.
Acquisition
associative events; CS accounces US.
Acquisition
Gentile et al., (2004) shows that children in elementary school who are exposed to violent television, videos, and video games express ____ _____.
increased aggression
2000 years ago _____ suggested this law of association. Then 200 years ago ____ and ____ reiterated this law.
Aristotle Locke and Hume
_______: Any event that strengthens the behavior it follows. A heat lamp positively reinforces a meerkat's behavior in the cold.
Reinforcement
____ _____A learned reinforcer that gets its reinforcing power through association with the primary reinforcer.
Conditioned Reinforcer
However, later behaviorists suggested that animals learn the predictability of a stimulus, meaning they learn ______ ____ _____of a stimulus (Rescorla & Wagner, 1972).
expectancy or awareness
Acquisition: The time in between the two stimuli should be about____ __ ____.
half a second
Research shows that viewing ___ ____ leads to an increased expression of aggression.
media violence
Early behaviorists believed that learned behaviors of various animals could be reduced to mindless mechanisms. ____ ____.
mindless mechanisms
Learning by ___ begins early in life. This 14-month-old child ____ the adult on TV in pulling a toy apart
observation imitates
Higher animals, especially humans, learn through ____ and ____others.
observing and imitating
During conditioning, the neutral stimulus (____) and the US (____) are paired, resulting in salivation (____). After conditioning, the neutral stimulus (___________) elicits salivation (_______)
tone food Unconditioned response now Conditioned Stimulus now Conditioned Response
unlearned
unconditioned
relatively means
could change
input
stimulus
____ ____ is learing to assoiciate a response with a consequance.
Associate learning
_____ Bobo doll study (1961) indicated that individuals (children) learn through imitating others who receive ____ and _____.
Bandura's rewards and punishments
____ ___ predispose organisms to learn associations that are naturally adaptive.
Biological constraints
Breland and Breland (1961) showed that animals drift towards their ____ ____ instinctive behaviors.
Biologically predisposed
The ____ needs to come half a second before the ___ for acquisition to occur.
CS US
Organisms develop expectation that CS signals the arrival of US
Classical Conditioning: Cognitive processes
CR decreases when CS is repeatdly presented alone.
Classical Conditioning: Extinction
Natural predispositions constrain what stimuli and repsonses can easily be associated
Classical Conditioning: biological presipositions
involuntary, automatic
Classical Conditioning: response
Reinforces the desired response each time it occurs.
Continuous Reinforcement
A reinforcer that is delayed in time for a certain behavior. A paycheck that comes at the end of a week
Delayed reinforcer
Operant conditioning term: Negative reinforcement
Desciption: Remove an aversive stimulus
Operant conditioning term: Positive reinforcement
Description: Add a desirable stimulus
Reinforces a response only after a specified time has elapsed. (e.g., preparing for an exam only when the exam draws close.)
Fixed interval schedule
Reinforces a response only after a specified number of responses. e.g., piecework pay.
Fixed ratio schedule
____ showed that the duration between the CS and the US may be long (hours), but yet result in _____. A biologically adaptive CS (taste) led to conditioning but other stimuli (sight or sound) did not.
Garcia conditioning
A reinforcer that occurs instantly after a behavior. A rat gets a food pellet for a bar press.
Immediate Reinforcer
______ is relatively permanent change in an organism's behavior due to experience.
Learning
_____ if more flexible in comparison to the ____-____ behaviors of Chinooks for example.
Learning genetically programmed
associating response with a consequence (reinforcer or punisher)
Operant conditioning: acquisition
organisms best learn behaviors similar to the natural behaviors; unnatural behaviors institively drift back toward natural ones.
Operant conditioning: biological predispositions
organisms develop expectation that a repsonse will be reinforced or punished; they also exhibit laten learning without reinforcement.
Operant conditioning: cognitive process
responding decreases when reinforcement stops
Operant conditioning: extinction
voluntary, operates on enviroment
Operant conditioning: response
Reinforces a response only part of the time. Though this results in slower acquisition in the beginning, it shows greater resistance to extinction later on.
Partial Reinforcement
____ greatest contribution to psychology is isolating elementary behaviors from more complex ones through ____ ____ ____.
Pavlov's objective scientific procedures
administeran aversive stimulus EX: spanking, a parking ticket
Positive punishment
____ ____An innately reinforcing stimulus like food or drink.
Primary Reinforcer
An aversive event that decreases the behavior it follows.
Punishment
____ believed in inner thought processes and _____ _____, but many psychologists criticize him for discounting them.
Skinner Biological underpinnings
___ argued that behaviors were shaped by ____ ____ instead of inner thoughts and feelings. Critics argued that Skinner ____people by neglecting their free will.
Skinner external influences dehumanized
Using _____ law of effect as a starting point, Skinner developed the _____ ____, or the Skinner box, to study operant _____.
Thorndike's Operant chamber conditioning
Pavlov's Experiments Before conditioning, food (____) produces salivation (____). However, the tone (____) does not.
Unconditioned Stimulus Unconditioned Response neutral stimulus
Reinforces a response at unpredictable time intervals, which produces slow, steady responses. (e.g., pop quiz.)
Variable interval schedule
Reinforces a response after an unpredictable number of responses. This is hard to extinguish because of the unpredictability. (e.g., behaviors like gambling, fishing.)
Variable ratio schedule
Unfortunately, Bandura's studies show that ____ ____ (family, neighborhood or TV) may have antisocial effects.
antisocial models
We learn by ____. Our minds naturally connect events that occur in ____.
association sequence
Ideas of ____ ____ originate from old philosophical theories. However, it was the Russian physiologist ____ ____ who elucidated classical conditioning. His work provided a basis for later behaviorists like ____ ____.
classical conditioning Ivan Pavlov John Watson
____ ____ forms associations between stimuli (CS and US). ____ _____, on the other hand, forms an association between behaviors and the resulting events.
classical conditioning operant conditioning
Acquisition: Acquisition is the initial learning stage in ____ ____in which an association between a neutral stimulus and an ____ ____ takes place.
classical conditioning unconditioned stimulus
Even humans can develop _____to conditioned nausea.
classically
Evidence of cognitive processes during operant learning comes from rats during a maze exploration in which they navigate the maze without an obvious reward. Rats seem to develop ____ ___, or mental representations, of the layout of the maze (environment).
cognitive maps
Pavlov and Watson considered consciousness, or mind, unfit for the scientific study of psychology. However, they underestimated the importance of ______and _____ ____
cognitive processes biological constraints.
Such cognitive maps are based on ____ ____, which becomes apparent only when an incentive is given (Tolman & Honzik, 1930).
latent learning
Skinner's experiments extend Thorndike's thinking, especially his ___ ___ ___. This law states that ____ behavior is likely to occur again.
law of effect rewarded
Pavlov and Watson believed that ___ __ ___were similar for all animals. Therefore, a pigeon and a person do not differ in their learning. However, behaviorists later suggested that learning is constrained by an animal's _____.
laws of learning Biology
Although there may be some justification for occasional punishment (Larzelaere & Baumrind, 2002), it usually leads to ____ ____. -Results in unwanted fears. -Conveys no information to the organism. -Justifies pain to others. -Causes unwanted behaviors to reappear in its absence. -Causes aggression towards the agent. -Causes one unwanted behavior to appear in place of another.
negative effects
withdraw a desirable stimulus EX: time out from privileges, revoked driver license
negative punishment
serves no function
neutral stimulus
The ___ ___, or Skinner box, comes with a bar or key that an animal manipulates to obtain a _____ like food or water. The bar or key is connected to devices that record the animal's response
operant chamber reinforcer
Fortunately, _____ (positive, helpful) models may have prosocial effects.
prosocial
Classical conditioning involves ____ ____that occurs as an automatic response to a certain stimulus. Operant conditioning involves ______ ____, a behavior that operates on the environment, producing rewarding or punishing stimuli.
respondent behavior operant behavior
output
response
_____ is the operant conditioning procedure in which reinforcers guide behavior towards the desired target behavior through ____ _____.
shaping successive approximations