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1 AP Psychology Chapter 8
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1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

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AP Psychology

Chapter 8

Page 2: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

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A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born

with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be

our adaptability – our capacity to learn new behaviors that enable us to cope with changing circumstances.

Learning- a relatively permanent change in an organism's behavior due to experience

Page 3: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

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How do we learn

What are some ways that you learn? Seeing Doing

Associating Which one?

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Association

Animals can learn simple associations Complex animals learn more response –

outcome associations. Associate learning- learning that certain

events occur together. The events may be stimuli (as in classical conditioning) or a response and its consequences (as in operant conditioning.

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Conditioning

Conditioning is the process of learning associations.

Classical Conditioning A type of learning in which an organism comes

to associate stimuli. A neutral stimulus that signal an unconditional stimulus (US) begins to produce a response that anticipates and prepares for the unconditional stimulus. Also know as Pavlovian or respondent conditioning.

Good example is Pavlov

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Operant Conditioning

We learn to associate a response (our behavior) and its consequences and thus to repeat acts followed by good results.

Conditioning is not the only form of learning. Through observational learning we learn from others experiences and examples.

By conditioning and by observation we humans learn and adapt to our environments.

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Classical Condtioning

Ivan Pavlov A type of learning in which an organism

comes to associate stimuli. A neutral stimulus that signal an unconditional stimulus (US) begins to produce a response that anticipates and prepares for the unconditional stimulus. Also know as Pavlovian or respondent conditioning.

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Classical Conditioning

Classical conditioning would lead us into the area of behaviorism and John Watson.

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Ivan Pavlov

US – unconditioned stimulus. Naturally and automatically -triggers a response

UR- unconditioned response -the unlearned ,naturally occurring response to the unconditioned stimulus.

CR- conditioned response- the learned response to a previously neutral stimulus.

CS- conditioned stimulus- the irrelevant stimulus

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A thought to ponder

Conditioned = learnedunconditioned = unlearned

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Cause and effects of classical conditioning

1)Acquisition2)Extinction

3)Spontaneous4)Recovery

5)Generalization6)Discrimination

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Acquisition

The initial stage in classical conditioning: the phase associating a neutral stimulus with an unconditional stimulus so that the neutral stimulus comes to elicit a conditioned response. In operant conditioning, the strengthening of a reinforced response.

Extinction and Spontaneous Recovery Extinction When the US (food) does

not follow the CS (tone), CR (salivation) begins to decrease and eventually causes extinction.

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Spontaneous Recovery

The reappearance after a pause, of an extinguished conditioned response.

After a rest period, an extinguished CR (salivation) spontaneously recovers, but if the CS (tone) persists alone, the CR becomes

extinct again.

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Generalization

The tendency, once a response has been conditioned, for a stimuli to elicit similar response.

Tendency to respond to stimuli similar to the CS is called generalization. Pavlov conditioned the dog’s salivation (CR) by using miniature vibrators (CS) on the

thigh. When he subsequently stimulated other parts of the dog’s body, salivation

dropped.

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Discrimination

Discrimination is the learned ability to

distinguish between a conditioned stimulus and other stimuli that do not signal an unconditioned

stimulus.

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Extending Pavlov’s Understanding

Pavlov and Watson considered consciousness, or mind, unfit

for the scientific study of psychology. However, they

underestimated the importance of cognitive processes and

biological constraints

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Cognitive Process

Early behaviorists believed that learned behaviors of various animals could be

reduced to mindless mechanisms

However, later behaviorists suggested that animals learn the predictability of a stimulus, meaning they learn expectancy

or awareness of a stimulus (Rescorla, 1988).

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Biological Predispositions

Pavlov and Watson believed that laws of learning were similar for all animals. Therefore, a pigeon

and a person do not differ in their learning.

However, behaviorists later suggested that learning is constrained by an animal’s

biology.

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Biological Predispositions

John Garcia showed that the duration between the CS and the US may be long (hours), but yet result in

conditioning. A biologically adaptive CS (taste) led to conditioning and not to others (light or sound).

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Thank you Pavlov

Pavlov’s greatest contribution to psychology

is isolating elementary behaviors from more

complex ones through objective scientific

procedures.

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Applications of Classical Conditioning

John B. Watson used classical conditioning procedures to

develop advertising campaigns for a number of organizations,

including Maxwell House, making the “coffee break” an

American custom.

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Why classical conditioning

Alcoholics may be conditioned (aversively) by reversing their positive-associations with alcohol.

Through classical conditioning, a drug (plus its taste) that affects the immune response may cause the taste of the drug to invoke the immune response.

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Operant & Classical Conditioning

1. Classical conditioning forms associations between stimuli (CS and US). Operant conditioning, on the other hand, forms an association between behaviors and the resulting events.

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Operant and classical conditioning

Classical conditioning involves respondent behavior that occurs as an automatic response to a certain stimulus. Operant conditioning involves operant behavior, a behavior that operates on the environment, producing rewarding or punishing stimuli.

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Skinner's Experiments

Edward Thorndike – behaviors followed by favorable consequences become more likely, and that behavior followed by unfavorable consequences become less likely.

Skinner’s experiments extend Thorndike’s thinking, especially his law of effect. This law states that rewarded

behavior is likely to occur again.

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Operant Chamber

AKA the Skinner Box It contains a bar that can be manipulated to

obtain a water or food reinforcer.

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Shaping

Shaping is the operant conditioning procedure in which reinforcers guide

behavior towards the desired target behavior through

successive approximations Rewards

Treats Kind words

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Reinforcer

Primary Reinforcer: An innately reinforcing stimulus like food or drink.

Conditioned Reinforcer: A learned reinforcer that gets its reinforcing power through association with the primary reinforcer.

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1. Immediate Reinforcer: A reinforcer that occurs instantly after a behavior. A rat gets a food pellet for a bar press.

2. Delayed Reinforcer: A reinforcer that is delayed in time for a certain behavior. A paycheck that comes at the end of a week.

Immediate & Delayed Reinforcers

We may be inclined to engage in small immediate reinforcers (watching TV) rather than large

delayed reinforcers (getting an A in a course) which require consistent study.

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Reinforcement Schedules

1. Continuous Reinforcement: Reinforces the desired response each time it occurs.

2. Partial Reinforcement: Reinforces a response only part of the time. Though this results in slower acquisition in the beginning, it shows greater resistance to extinction later on.

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Ratio Schedule

Fixed –ratio schedule In operant conditioning, a reinforcement schedule that reinforces only after a specified number of responses.

Variable-interval schedule: Reinforces a response at unpredictable time intervals, which produces slow, steady responses. (e.g., pop quiz.)

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Punishment

1. Results in unwanted fears.2. Conveys no information to the organism.3. Justifies pain to others.4. Causes unwanted behaviors to reappear in its

absence.5. Causes aggression towards the agent.6. Causes one unwanted behavior to appear in

place of another.

Punishment is the opposite of reinforcement. A punisher is a consequence that decreases the frequency of a preceding behavior.

Although there may be some justification for occasional punishment (Larzelaere & Baumrind, 2002), it usually leads to negative effects.

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Punishment

Punished behavior is not forgotten it is suppressed.

Physical punishment may increase aggressiveness by demonstrating that aggression is a way to cope with problems

Can create fear Punishment tells you what not to do Reinforcement tells you to do.

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Extending Skinner’s Understanding

Skinner believed in inner thought processes and biological underpinnings, but many

psychologists criticize him for discounting them.

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Cognition & Operant Conditioning

Evidence of cognitive processes during operant learning comes from rats during a

maze exploration in which they navigate the maze without an obvious reward. Rats seem to

develop cognitive maps, or mental representations, of the layout of the maze

(environment).

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Latent Learning-learning that occurs but is not apparent

until there is an incentive to demonstrate it.

Such cognitive maps are based on latent learning, which becomes apparent when an incentive is given (Tolman & Honzik, 1930).

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Motivation

What motivates you?

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Motivation

Intrinsic Motivation: The desire to perform a behavior for its own sake.

Extrinsic Motivation: The desire to perform a behavior due to promised rewards or threats of punishments.

Do you have any examples for either one?

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Biological Predisposition

Biological constraints predispose organisms to learn associations

that are naturally adaptive.

Breland and Breland (1961) showed that

animals drift towards their biologically

predisposed instinctive behaviors. Marian Breland Bailey

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40

Skinners Legacy

He stated with some controversy, by repeating over and over that external influences shape behavior and by urging the use of operant

principles to influence people’s behavior at school, work, and home.

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Applications of Operant Conditioning

Reinforcers affect productivity. Many companies now allow employees to share

profits and participate in company ownership.

At work

Page 42: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

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Operant vs. Classical Conditioning

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43

Learning by Observation

Higher animals, especially humans,

learn through observing and

imitating others.

The monkey on the right imitates the

monkey on the left in touching the pictures in a certain order to

obtain a reward.

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Page 44: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

44

Mirror Neurons

Neuroscientists discovered mirror neurons in the brains of animals and humans that are

active during observational learning.

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Page 45: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

45

Imitation Onset

Learning by observation begins early in life. This

14-month-old child imitates the adult on TV

in pulling a toy apart.

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Page 46: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

46

Bandura's Experiments

Bandura's Bobo doll study (1961)

indicated that individuals

(children) learn through imitating

others who receive rewards and punishments.

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Applications of Observational Learning

Unfortunately, Bandura’s studies

show that antisocial models (family,

neighborhood or TV) may have

antisocial effects.

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48

Positive Observational Learning

Fortunately, prosocial (positive, helpful) models may have prosocial effects.

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Page 49: 1 AP Psychology Chapter 8. 2 A Thought Unlike some animals we are not born with a genetic blueprint for life. Nature's most important gift to us may be.

49

Television and Observational Learning

Gentile et al., (2004) shows that

children in elementary school who are exposed to violent television, videos, and video

games express increased

aggression. Ron

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50

Modeling Violence

Research shows that viewing media violence leads to an increased expression of aggression.

Children modeling after pro wrestlers

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