CH 6 psych
Stimulus that elects response after repeatedly being paired with an unconditioned response
Conditioned stimulus
Natural (unlearned) reaction to stimulus
Unconditional Response
reflexive response in organism
Unconditioned Stimulus
2 types of responses
Unconditioned and Conditioned Stimulus
Reinforcement is delivered after an unpredictable number of responses
Variable Ratio
Founder of Behaviorism
WAtson
Classical Conditioning
associating events or stimuli that happen repeatedly together
Operant Conditioning
behavior and consequence
negative punishment
behavior will decrease
associating similar stimuli
stimulus generaliziation
Unconditioned Stimulus
stimulus that elicits automated response
Conditioned Stimulus
the previous neutral stimulus that causes the conditioned response
reinforcers that have innate reinforcing qualities. These kinds of reinforcers are not learned. Water, food, sleep, shelter, sex, and touch, among others, are primary reinforcers. Pleasure is also a primary reinforcer. Organisms do not lose their drive for these things.
primary reinforcers
no inherent value and only has reinforcing qualities when linked with a primary reinforcer
secondary reinforcers
Reinforcement is delivered at predictable time intervals
Fixed Interval
Reinforcement is delivered after a predictable number of responses
Fixed Ratio
Not responding to stimulus anymore
Habituation
Does not naturally elicit response
Neutral Stimulus
learning that occurs but is not observable in behavior until there is a reason to demonstrate it.
Latent learning
When an organism receives a reinforcer each time it displays a behavior, it is called
continuous reinforcer
Positive Reinforcement
Behavior increases
An unconditioned stimulus (such as food) is paired with a neutral stimulus (such as a bell). The neutral stimulus eventually becomes the conditioned stimulus, which brings about the conditioned response (salivation).The stimulus occurs immediately before the response.
Classical conditioning
means you are increasing a behavior
Reinforcement
Two forms of associative learning
Operant and classical conditioning
The target behavior is followed by reinforcement or punishment to either strengthen or weaken it, so that the learner is more likely to exhibit the desired behavior in the future. The stimulus (either reinforcement or punishment) occurs soon after the response.
Operant conditioning
means you are decreasing a behavior
Punishment
Reinforcement is delivered at unpredictable time intervals
Variable Interval
positive punishment
behavior will decrease
Negative Reinformcement
behavior will increase
Unconditioned Response
the automated response