PSYC 4032 COX Phylogenetic and Ontogenetic Behavior
Habituation
-repeated presentation of the Unconditioned Stimulus (US) results in a gradual decline in the magnitude of the Unconditioned Response (UR) - initial decrease is large but gets smaller as it continues
faster
When habituation is repeatedly produced, each series of stimulus presentations generates progressively _____________ habituation
Respondent Extinction
- involves repeatedly presenting the conditioned stimulus (CS) without the Unconditioned Stimulus (US)
Ontogenetic Behavior
- learned - behavior relations based on environmental experience - acquired on the basis of individual history - the experience of the individual alters the behavior an organism is born with
Respondent Discrimination
- occurs when an organism shows a Conditioned Response (CR) to one stimulus but not similar events
Fixed/Modal Action Plans
- sequences of behavior phylogenetic in origin - all members of species engage in behavior - behavior evoked by releasing or "sign" stimuli - initiated sequence is completed even if evoking sequence is removed - ex: goose rolling egg- even if egg is removed
Phylogenetic Behavior
-inherited - behavior based on genetic endowment -acquired on the basis of species history - includes the repertoire of responses elicited by environmental conditions ex. yawning in womb -every member of species will exhibit
The laws of the Reflex
1. Law of Threshold 2. Law of Intensity-Magnitude 3. Law of Latency
discriminative - training
A ______________ - _____________ procedure involves positive and negative conditioning trials
Law of Threshold
A point below which no response occurs and above which a response always occurs
Respondent Acquisition
Acquisition of Conditioned Stimulus (CS) ---> Conditioned Response (CR) relation occurs as NS (CS) is paired with US
Law of Latency
As the intensity of the Unconditioned Stimulus (US) increases the latency to appearance of the Unconditioned Response (UR) decreases
Law of Intensity - Magnitude
As the intensity of the unconditioned stimulus (US) increases so does the magnitude of the unconditioned response (UR)
occurrence
By pairing the tone with the presentation of food, the tone has come to control the _____________ of saliva
extinction
Each ___________ trial (CS, no US) results in a decrease in associative strength toward the respondent level
similar
Event (NS) temporally contiguous with Unconditioned Stimulus can come to elicit __________ responses (CRs)
recovers
If Unconditioned Stimulus (US) is withheld for some time, habituated response ____________
conditional probability
If conditioned stimulus happens often without unconditioned stimulus, or unconditioned stimulus happens often without the conditioned stimulus, the _________________ _______________ will be LOW
produced response
Researchers test for generalization by varying some dimension of the conditioned stimulus and measuring the __________________ ________________________
transfer of the control
Respondent conditioning involves the ____________ ___ _____ _______________ of behavior from one stimulus to another
Learned Behavior
Tone (Stimulus) ---> Saliva (Response)
Respondent Conditioning
Tone + Food ---> Saliva
Stimulus substitution theory
US ---> UR = CS -----> CR
slower conditioning
What would have happened if my favorite CD before traveling to the mountains had been strictly strings blue grass?
Reaction Chains
a series of species typical behaviors that requires a unique stimulus to trigger each response in the sequence ex: sickleback fish mating routine
spontaneous recovery
an increase in the conditioned response after respondent extinction has occurred
reflexes
are unlearned relations between stimuli and responses
FAPs
have one eliciting stimulus for entire sequence
conditioned place preference
more likely to get reward in one place than other
Generalization
occurs when an organism shows a conditioned response to values of the conditioned stimulus that were not trained during acquisition
Conditioned Stimulus - pre - exposure effect / latent inhibition
pre-exposure to the conditioned stimulus (CS) weakens subsequent conditioning with the Unconditioned Stimulus (US)
reaction chains
require stimuli at each step
contingency
respondent conditioning is based on _________________ between conditioned stimulus and unconditioned stimulus
respondent level
strength of the target response before conditioning
Unconditioned Stimulus - pre - exposure effect
the more familiar the unconditioned stimulus the weaker and slower acquisition to the conditioned stimulus
Magnitude
the strength/intensity of the conditioned response (CR) elicited by the presentation of the conditioned stimulus (CS)
Latency
the time that elapses between the presentation of the conditioned stimulus (CS) and the onset of the conditioned response (CR)
Reflex
unconditioned stimulus (US) elicits an unconditioned response (UR) -unlearned, automatic S-R relations - US causing UR
conditioned taste aversion
you can take a stimulus you originally like and turn it into something you don't - context dependent