AP psych behaviorism test
list some other key players of behaviorism
Albert Bandura, BF Skinner, Ivan Pavlov
one of the most famous of the behaviorists, he is known as the founder of operant conditioning
BF Skinner
conditioned response
CS
conditioned stimulus
CS
the subject doesn't respond in the way that we want yet because we haven't conditioned it
UCR
the stimulus before conditioning
UCS
initial learning of the stimulus-response relationship
acquisition
unproductive or destructive behavior-
antisocial behavior
learning that certain events occur together is....
associative learning
behaviorists don't care about the "why"--they care about......
behavior
works for operant and classical conditioning, focuses on changing harmful behaviors (aversive conditioning, exposure therapy)
behavioral therapy
psychological perspective that emphasizes the role of learning and experience in determining behavior (nurture-based)
behaviorism
it was once believed that conditioning incurred the same in all animals
biological predispositions
was believed that you could associate any neutral stimulus with a response
biological predispositions
an INVOLUNTARY behavior is determined by what PRECEDES it is....
classical conditioning
when someone can be "conditioned" or trained to elicit an involuntary response toward a stimulus
classical conditioning
work for or against conditioning (alcoholic-medication example)
cognitive processes
list some of the criticisms of behavioralism
deemphasizes the role of internal thoughts and feelings in behavior; presents humans as lacking free will, ignores biological predispositions
when reinforcement takes time...
delayed
the ability to distinguish between the CS and similar stimuli
discrimination
list some examples of the behaviorist therapies we know of
exposure therapy, aversive conditioning
diminished response to the conditioned stimulus when it is no longer coupled with UCS
extinction
when you get sick after eating something, and can no longer eat that thing again because you get sick when you see it
garcia effect
the tendency to respond o any stimuli similar to the CS
generalization
positive= what?
giving something
(sometimes known as secondary conditioning)- we can begin to associate secondary stimuli with a certain CS
higher-order conditioning
reinforcement happens right away means that it is....
immediate
why is punishment not always the best
it breeds anger in the recipient, doesn't provide an alternative behavior so the behavior only goes away when the punisher is around, reinforcement is usually better, IMMEDIATE reinforcement is usually better than delayed
behaviorism was founded by
jon watson
taking something good away to punish
negative punishment
taking away something bad to reward
negative reinforcement
albert bandora said that behavior does not have to be reinforced or conditioned; it can be observed and mimicked
observable behavior
learning through reinforcements and punishments
operant conditioning
rewards and punishment; a VOLUNTARY behavior is determined by the anticipation of something that FOLLOWS it
operant conditioning
this is voluntary, and the behavior comes in anticipation of what comes AFTER it (unlike classical conditioning)
operant conditioning
explain Pavlov's dog experiment
pavlov paired a a neutral stimulus (a bell) with a meat powder (which made the dog salivate). eventually the dog salivates to the bell alone
reinforced pigeons with food so that they learned the game
pigeon ping-pong
giving something bad to punish
positive punishment
giving something good to reward
positive reinforcement
a reinforcer that is biological in nature, such as food or drink (always work best FIRST)
primary reinforcer
constructive behavior=
prosocial behavior
a bad thing that happens because of behavior (meant to stop it)
punishment
a good thing that happens (think reward)
reinforcement
reinforcement schedules: continuous
rewarded every time
reinforcement schedules: partial
rewarded sometimes, but not every time
a non-biological reinforcer (work best AFTER primary reinforcer)
secondary reinforcer
reinforcement schedules: fixed ratio
set number to be reinforced
creating a desired effect in "steps". in other words, reinforcing behavior slowly
shaping
explain jon watsons little albert experiment
showed the orphan a white rat. no fear. made a noise. fear. showed the rat with the noise. fear. repeated this
a chamber when pigeons would peck if they wanted food. he recorded the number of pecks on a machine tied to the box. he varied the why he reinforced them with food (continually, sporadically, etc) to see which was more effective
skinner box
reappearance of an extinguished CR after a rest
spontaneous recovery
negative= what?
taking something
you avoid a taste of something because it makes you sick
taste aversion
developed by edward thorndike; suggested that rewards reinforce behavior; punishments stop behavior, essentially the backbone for operant conditioning
thorndike "law of effect"
motivating an entire GROUP through reinforcement
token economy
reinforcement schedules: variable interval
unpredictable amount of time
reinforcement schedules: variable ratio
unpredictable number of responses is reinforced