PSY1010 Chap. 6 REVIEW QUESTIONS
What are the modeling process steps?
Attention - focus on the behavior. Retention - remember what you observed. Reproduction - be able to perform the behavior. Motivation - must want to copy the behavior.
Which is the correct order of steps in the modeling process? a. attention, retention, reproduction, motivation b. motivation, attention, reproduction, retention c. attention, motivation, retention, reproduction d. motivation, attention, retention, reproduction
a. attention, retention, reproduction, motivation
What caused Little Albert's fear response?
a loud sound every time he touched the stimulus
In Pavlov's work with dogs, the psychic secretions were ________. a. unconditioned responses b. conditioned responses c. unconditioned stimuli d. conditioned stimuli
b. conditioned responses
The person who performs a behavior that serves as an example is called a ________. a. teacher b. model c. instructor d. coach
b. model
Which of the following is not an example of a primary reinforcer? a. food b. money c. water d. sex
b. money
A stimulus that does not initially elicit a response in an organism is a(n) ________. a. unconditioned stimulus b. neutral stimulus c. conditioned stimulus d. unconditioned response
b. neutral stimulus
Learning is best defined as a relatively permanent change in behavior that ________. a. is innate b. occurs as a result of experience c. is found only in humans d. occurs by observing others
b. occurs as a result of experience
Slot machines reward gamblers with money according to which reinforcement schedule? a. fixed ratio b. variable ratio c. fixed interval d. variable interval
b. variable ratio
Who proposed observational learning? a. Ivan Pavlov b. John Watson c. Albert Bandura d. B. F. Skinner
c. Albert Bandura
Which of the following is an example of a reflex that occurs at some point in the development of a human being? a. child riding a bike b. teen socializing c. infant sucking on a nipple d. toddler walking
c. infant sucking on a nipple
In ________ the stimulus or experience occurs before the behavior and then gets paired with the behavior. a. associative learning b. observational learning c. operant conditioning d. classical conditioning
d. classical conditioning
In Bandura's Bobo doll study, when the children who watched the aggressive model were placed in a room with the doll and other toys, they ________. a. ignored the doll b. played nicely with the doll c. played with tinker toys d. kicked and threw the doll
d. kicked and threw the doll
Why do organisms need to be able to distinguish between different stimuli?
in order to respond appropriately
Why is shaping needed?
it is extremely unlikely that an organism will display anything but the simplest of behaviors spontaneously
When does stimulus occur during operant conditioning?
soon after the response
Which primitive centers of the CNS do reflexes involve?
spinal cord and medulla
what did Albert Bandura believe about observational learning?
that it involved more than just imitation and that internal mental states must be involved
What are the 2 types of responses that organisms have to their environment?
unconditioned (unlearned) responses conditioned (learned) responses
When does associative learning occur?
when an organism makes connections between stimuli or events that occur together in the environment
If the sound of your toaster popping up toast causes your mouth to water, what are the UCS, CS, and CR?
The food being toasted is the UCS; the sound of the toaster popping up is the CS; salivating to the sound of the toaster is the CR.
What is the effect of prosocial modeling and antisocial modeling?
Prosocial modeling can prompt others to engage in helpful and healthy behaviors, while antisocial modeling can prompt others to engage in violent, aggressive, and unhealthy behaviors.
What is the difference between a reflex and a learned behavior?
Reflex: a behavior that humans are born knowing how to do, these behaviors happen automatically in response to stimuli in the environment Learned behavior: things that humans are not born knowing how to do, not automatic, occur as a result of practice or repeated experience in a situation
What are the steps in the shaping process?
1. Reinforce any response that resembles the desired behavior. 2. Then reinforce the response that more closely resembles the desired behavior. You will no longer reinforce the previously reinforced response. 3. Next, begin to reinforce the response that even more closely resembles the desired behavior. 4. Continue to reinforce closer and closer approximations of the desired behavior. 5. Finally, only reinforce the desired behavior.
What is a Skinner box and what is its purpose?
A Skinner box is an operant conditioning chamber used to train animals such as rats and pigeons to perform certain behaviors, like pressing a lever. When the animals perform the desired behavior, they receive a reward: food or water.
Compare and contrast classical and operant conditioning. How are they alike? How do they differ?
Alike: both classical and operant conditioning involve learning by association Classical Conditioning: responses are involuntary and automatic, the event that drives the behavior (the stimulus) comes before the behavior, involves an organism forming an association between an involuntary (reflexive) response and a stimulus Operant Conditioning: responses are voluntary and learned, the event that drives the behavior (the consequence) comes after the behavior, involves an organism forming an association between a voluntary behavior and a consequence
Cara is 17 years old. Cara's mother and father both drink alcohol every night. They tell Cara that drinking is bad and she shouldn't do it. Cara goes to a party where beer is being served. What do you think Cara will do? Why?
Cara is more likely to drink at the party because she has observed her parents drinking regularly. Children tend to follow what a parent does rather than what they say.
What is the difference between negative reinforcement and punishment?
In negative reinforcement, you are taking away an undesirable stimulus in order to increase the frequency of a certain behavior (e.g., buckling your seat belt stops the annoying beeping sound in your car and increases the likelihood that you will wear your seatbelt). Punishment is designed to reduce a behavior (e.g., you scold your child for running into the street in order to decrease the unsafe behavior.)
What is shaping and how would you use shaping to teach a dog to roll over?
Shaping is an operant conditioning method in which you reward closer and closer approximations of the desired behavior. If you want to teach your dog to roll over, you might reward him first when he sits, then when he lies down, and then when he lies down and rolls onto his back. Finally, you would reward him only when he completes the entire sequence: lying down, rolling onto his back, and then continuing to roll over to his other side.
Explain how the processes of stimulus generalization and stimulus discrimination are considered opposites.
Stimulus Generalization, an organism responds to new stimuli that are similar to the original conditioned stimulus. For example, a dog barks when the doorbell rings. He then barks when the oven timer dings because it sounds very similar to the doorbell. Stimulus Discrimination occurs when an organism learns a response to a specific stimulus, but does not respond the same way to new stimuli that are similar. In this case, the dog would bark when he hears the doorbell, but he would not bark when he hears the oven timer ding because they sound different; the dog is able to distinguish between the two sounds.
How does a neutral stimulus become a conditioned stimulus?
Through the process of acquisition. A human or an animal learns to connect a neutral stimulus and an unconditioned stimulus. During the acquisition phase, the neutral stimulus begins to elicit the conditioned response. The neutral stimulus is becoming the conditioned stimulus. At the end of the acquisition phase, learning has occurred and the neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus capable of eliciting the conditioned response by itself.
Two forms of associative learning are ________ and ________. a. classical conditioning; operant conditioning b. classical conditioning; Pavlovian conditioning c. operant conditioning; observational learning d. operant conditioning; learning conditioning
a. classical conditioning; operant conditioning
Rewarding successive approximations toward a target behavior is ________. a. shaping b. extinction c. positive reinforcement d. negative reinforcement
a. shaping
Extinction occurs when ________. a. the conditioned stimulus is presented repeatedly without being paired with an unconditioned stimulus b. the unconditioned stimulus is presented repeatedly without being paired with a conditioned stimulus c. the neutral stimulus is presented repeatedly without being paired with an unconditioned stimulus d. the neutral stimulus is presented repeatedly without being paired with a conditioned stimulus
a. the conditioned stimulus is presented repeatedly without being paired with an unconditioned stimulus
________ is when you take away a pleasant stimulus to stop a behavior. a. positive reinforcement b. negative reinforcement c. positive punishment d. negative punishment
d. negative punishment
In Watson and Rayner's experiments, Little Albert was conditioned to fear a white rat, and then he began to be afraid of other furry white objects. This demonstrates ________. a. higher-order conditioning b. acquisition c. stimulus discrimination d. stimulus generalization
d. stimulus generalization
What is the most famous example of classical conditioning?
dogs were conditioned to associate the sound of a bell with food
When does the stimulus occur in classical conditioning?
immediately before the response
What is the best way to teach an animal or person?
positive reinforcement