7.1 What is Learning?
Key Ideas about Learning
Learning is based on experience Learning produces changes in the organism These changes are relatively permanent
classical conditioning examples
Pavlov showed that dogs learned to salivate to neutral stimuli such as a buzzer or a metronome after the dogs had associated that stimulus with another stimulus that naturally evokes salivation, such as food
habituation
a general process in which repeated or prolonged exposure to a stimulus results in a gradual reduction in responding
conditioned stimulus
a previously neutral stimulus that produces a reliable response in an organism after being pairs with a US
Conditioned response
a reaction that resembles an unconditioned response but is produced by a conditioned stimulus.
successive approximations
a step-by-step process moving gradually closer to the desired behavior
Maggie is a participant in a cognitive psychology experiment. On each trial, she views strings such as "XXNNYZZZKLLKZN." Maggie is MOST likely in an experiment using a(n) _____ to investigate _____ learning.
artificial grammar; implicit
Observational learning challenges the _____ explanation of learning because it involves no direct reinforcement.
behavioral
Superstitions can be explained by operant conditioning as mistakenly inferring a _____ between a specific behavior and a reinforcer.
causal relationship
Road construction prevents you from getting to campus using the route that you usually travel. You think about the situation for a moment and then come up with a different route to take. To figure out this alternative route, you are using _____ to devise a different route.
cognitive map
shaping
conditioning a behavior by reinforcing successive approximations to the desired behavior
stimulus control
develops a particular response occurs only when an appropriate discriminative stimulus
Like classical conditioning, operant conditioning:
does not need to refer to the mind to explain things
Discrimination
in classical conditioning, the learned ability to distinguish between similar but distinct stimuli
reinforcement
in operant conditioning, any event that strengthens the behavior it follows
observational loearning
learning by watching other rather than from direct experience
Implicit learning
learning that takes place largely independent of awareness of both the process and the products of information acquisition
Johnny is "hammering" a nail in with his toy hammer as his father is hammering nails into deck boards. Johnny's behavior is a clear example of:
modeling
classical conditioning
neutral stimulus produces a response after being paired with a stimulus that naturally produces a response
sensitization
occurs when presentation of a stimulus leads to an increased response to a later stimulus
biological preparedness
propensity for learning particular kinds of associations over others
unconditioned stimulus
something that is reliably produced by an unconditioned stimulus
Which behavior is LEAST likely to be studied by researchers using operant techniques?
startle response
Most people know when to be boisterous and when to be somber because learning:
takes place in contexts
Learning
the acquisition of new knowledge, skills, or responses from experience that results in a relatively permanent change in the state of the learner
extinction
the gradual elimination of a learned response that occurs when the cs is repeatedly presented without the US
Declan does things that make him feel good and avoids things that make him feel bad. His behaviors are consistent with:
the law of effect
acquisition
the phase of classical conditioning when the CS and the US are presented together
spontaneous recovery
the tendency of a learned behavior to recover from extinction after a rest period
Generalization
the tendency, once a response has been conditioned, for stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus to elicit similar responses CR is observed even though the CS is slightly different from the CS used during acquisition
operant conditioning
type of learning in which a behavior is influenced by the favorable or unfavorable consequences that follow it
second-order conditioning
type of learning whereby a CS is paired with a stimulus that became associated with the US in an earlier