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Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning
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Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Jan 18, 2018

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Blake Stokes

Principles of Respondent (Classical) Conditioning Unconditioned reflexes: “automatic” stimulus-response relationships. Unconditioned Stimulus and Unconditioned Response: no training required. Respondent Conditioning: pair unconditioned and neutral stimulus to create a conditioned response. The neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus. The relationship between the conditioned stimulus and conditioned response is a conditioned reflex.
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Page 1: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Chapter 14Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning

Page 2: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Operant vs. Respondent Behavior

Operant behaviors operate on the environment.

Respondent behaviors are reflexive behaviors.

Page 3: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Principles of Respondent (Classical) Conditioning Unconditioned reflexes: “automatic” stimulus-response

relationships.

Unconditioned Stimulus and Unconditioned Response: no training required.

Respondent Conditioning: pair unconditioned and neutral stimulus to create a conditioned response. The neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus. The relationship between the conditioned stimulus and conditioned response is a conditioned reflex.

Page 4: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Factors Influencing Respondent Conditioning

Number of pairings CS strength

CS precedes US by ½ second CS strength

Consistent CS/CR pairings CS strength

Intensity of CS or US or both CS strength

Page 5: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Higher order conditioning

Establish a CS, then pair CS with a different CS, it can become a second order pairing. These pairings are not as strong and third order pairings are rare.

Page 6: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Respondent Extinction Presenting a CS without the US results in

gradual loss of strength of the CS.

This is why second order conditioning is weaker, because the original US is absent in second order conditioning.

Page 7: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Counterconditioning

Extinguish a CS while conditioning a different CS at the same time.

Aversive conditioning is one example of

this, but counterconditioning positive emotions in the place of negative emotions (fears, anxieties) is more common.

Page 8: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Biological Preparedness

Ability of members of a species to be more readily conditioned to some neutral stimuli as CSs than to others (taste aversions, life threatening situations such as heights, snakes, dark)

Page 9: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Respondent and Operant Conditioning Compared Voluntary vs. Involuntary behaviors Presentation of NS before the response vs. Presentation

of reinforcer after a response. Extinction by severing ties between CS and US vs.

Severing ties between behavior and reinforcer. CSs and SDs both produce responses that have been

conditioned to them CSs ELICIT responses (more automatically), SDs

EVOKE responses (more voluntarily) and operant behavior is EMITTED.

Page 10: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Applications of Respondent Conditioning Aversion Therapy: pair aversive event with an

undesirable behavior (alcohol and Antabuse, cigarettes and nausea from satiation or urge to smoke and rubber band on wrist, sexual stimuli and aversive shock. May use pictures, slides, etc. of undesirable reinforcers).

Problems: ethical concerns, high dropout rate. Bedwetting: Nytone apparatus

Page 11: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Chapter 15Chapter 15Respondent and Respondent and

Operant Operant Conditioning Conditioning

TogetherTogether

Page 12: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Operant-Respondent Interactions Any given experience is likely to include

both respondent and operant conditioing occurring concurrently.

Examples include anything that involves emotions and behavior, since emotions are generally respondent and behaviors to deal with emotions are operant.

Page 13: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Respondent and Operant Components of Emotions Respondent: Physiological ANS arousal

components (HR, sweating, stomach upset, breathing, dry mouth)

Operant: Actions, Descriptions, and Awareness of emotions are specific to our past operant learning.

Page 14: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Causes of Emotions:

Present Reinforcer: Happiness

Withdraw Reinforcer: Anger

Present Punisher: Anxiety

Withdraw Punisher: Relief

Page 15: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Respondent and Operant Components of Thinking Imagery is respondent: Conditioned sensing can

involve all senses; we can imagine sights, sounds, tastes, touches and smells through pairing words/thoughts with sensing our environment.

Covert Sensitization is an example of aversive conditioning using imagery only (imagining the undesirable reinforcer paired with an aversive event).

Self-talk is operant: We can voluntarily think thoughts, which serve as CSs for feelings

Page 16: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Chapter 16Chapter 16Transferring Behavior to New Transferring Behavior to New

Settings Settings and Making It and Making It Last: Last: Generality of Behavioral Generality of Behavioral ChangeChange

Page 17: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Stimulus Generalization (One response in many settings)

When a behavior becomes more probable in one situation because it’s been reinforced in another (similar) situation. Generalization is stronger if…

Physical similarity…and Conceptual similarity…and Equivalence Class similarity….are stronger.

Page 18: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Response Generalization (one stimulus, many responses)

Behavior becomes more probable in a situation because another behavior was reinforced in that situation. Generalization is stronger if…

Physical similarity…and Conceptual similarity…and Equivalence Class similarity….are stronger.

Page 19: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Behavioral Momentum

Reinforcing a behavior results in more likelihood other behaviors in same equivalence class will be emitted.

Examples: Following Instructions, starting a fire.

Page 20: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Factors Influencing Generality

Operant Stimulus Generalization: Try to make the training conditions approximate the eventual target situation. Vary the training conditions (stimuli) so the response is elicited from a variety of similar stimuli.

Operant Response Generalization: Vary acceptable responses from one stimulus.

Page 21: Chapter 14 Procedures Based on Principles of Respondent Conditioning.

Operant Behavior Maintenance

Use behavioral traps by allowing natural contingencies of reinforcement to take effect.

Train those in natural environment who will continue the reinforcers (CFTs).

Use Intermittent Schedules of reinforcement. Teach the client to use self-management to

reinforce him/herself.