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Learning Theory

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Title: Learning Theory


1
Chapter 8
  • Learning Theory
  • Part 2

2
Pop Quizzes So Far This Exam
3
What is Learning?
4
Learning Defined
  • A relatively permanent change in the behavior of
    an organism due to experience

5
Classical Conditioning
  • Pavolov (p. 316)
  • (Review)

6
What was Pavlovs Original Field of Study?
  • Physiology

7
Figure 8.3 P. 317
8
Pavlovs Research
9
Prior to Conditioning
10
After Conditioning
11
Basic Concepts
  • Unconditioned
  • US Unconditioned Stimulus the US reliably
    produces the UR
  • UR Unconditioned response usually based in
    physiology such as salivation, sweating,
    blinking, or other reflexive responses
  • Conditioned
  • CS Conditioned Stimulus a CS is a neutral
    stimulus prior to conditioning but produces CR
    after conditioning
  • CR Conditioned Response same type of response
    as UR but occurs in response to CS

12
Acquisition
  • Know that re-acquisition of a learned behavior is
    typically faster than initial acquisition of that
    same learned behavior

13
Acquisition and Re-Acquisition
  • I havent done it in years, but I picked it up
    almost immediately.
  • Bad habits can resume with the same intensity as
    they had when initial efforts to extinguish them
    began
  • If addiction is drug seeking behavior, then
    what implications for addiction?

14
Extinction
  • What is it?

15
Extinction
  • Diminished Responding When the CS No Longer
    Signals an Impending US

16
Extinction
  • Said Differently When the CS is no longer
    paired with the US (p. 319)

17
Extinction
  • Makayla developed an intense fear of flying five
    years ago when she was in a plane crash. The
    fact that she can again fly without distress
    indicates that her fear has undergone ______?

18
Generalization
19
Generalization
  • The tendency to respond to a stimulus similar to
    the CS. (p. 320)

20
Generalization
  • Pavlov and his students noticed that a dog
    conditioned to the sound of one tone also
    responded somewhat to the sound of a different
    tone never paired with food.

21
Generalization
  • Generalization can be adaptive, as when toddlers
    taught to fear moving cars in the street resond
    similarly to trucks and motorcycles.

22
Generalization Examples (p. 320)
  • Toddlers, cars, motorcycles, trucks
  • Argentine Writer who was tortured black shoes.
  • Abused Children and Angry Face of Unknown
    Strangers
  • All of these are in the text on p. 320

23
Generalization Examples (p. 320)
  • What diagnosis is associated with Stimulus
    Generalization?

24
Generalization Examples (p. 320)
  • PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder)

25
CC and PTSD PopQuiz
  • 14. Months after she was attacked and robbed,
    Courtneys heart pounds with fear merely at the
    sight of the place in which she was attacked.
    The location of here attack is most likely a(n)
    ____________
  • Conditioned Stimulus (CS-US-UR/CR)

26
Discrimination
  • The learned ability to distinguish between a two
    similar conditions (p. 320)(One is the CS One
    is not)

27
Discrimination
  • Pit Bulls v. Golden Retrievers (p. 320)
  • What other examples of discrimination?

28
Discrimination (Tones)
29
Applications of Classical Conditioning (p. 324)
  • Former Crack Cocaine Users Triggers
  • Alcohol Use and Consequences
  • Taste that accompanies drug immune response
  • What else?

30
Operant Conditioning (p. 326)
  • Target behavior operates on the environment to
    produce rewarding or punishing behavior

31
Operant v. Classical
32
Operant Conditioning v. Classical Conditioning
(p. 326)
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Operates on Environment
  • In theory, the organism can choose to respond
    or not
  • r-R
  • Reinforcement FOLLOWS response (AFTER)
  • Skinner
  • Classical Conditioning
  • Response to Environment
  • Organism doesnt have any control
  • CS-US-UR Produces CR
  • Conditioned Stimulus PRECEDES response (Before)
  • Pavlov

33
Classical v. Operant p. 339
34
Respondent v. Operant (Popquiz)
  • Bandura Pavlov
  • Skinner Bandura
  • Bandura Skinner
  • Pavlov Skinner
  • The study of respondent behavior is to __________
    as the study of operant behavior is to ___________

35
Operant Conditioning Reinforcement v. Punishment
  • A reinforcer is any stimulus that increases the
    frequency of the target behavior
  • A punishment is any stimulus that decreases the
    frequency of the target behavior

36
Operant Conditioning Reinforcement v. Punishment
  • Skinners Work was Built on Thorndikes
  • From last time, remember the Law of Effect?
    (p. 327)

37
Skinner Built on Thorndike
B. F. Skinners work elaborated what E. L.
Thorndike called
  • Shaping
  • Observational learning
  • Latent learning
  • The law of effect

38
Thorndike, Again (Video)
39
Thorndike, Again (Graphic, p. 327)
Trial and Error Successive Trials Resulted in
Faster Responses
40
Operant Conditioning
  • Skinner Boxes (p. 327)

41
Operant Conditioning Skinner Boxes
  • Skinner developed a special tool to study operant
    conditioning called an operant chamber
  • Virtually everyone calls an operant chamber a
    Skinner Box
  • Can you think of any real life Skinner Boxes?
  • What about Video Poker?
  • What about certain webpages?

42
Operant Conditioning Skinner Boxes (p. 327)
43
Skinner Boxes (Again)
44
Operant Conditioning Skinner Boxes
  • Can you think of any real life Skinner Boxes?
  • What about Video Poker?
  • What about certain webpages
  • What other examples?

45
Operant Conditioning Skinner Boxes
  • What is Second Life? Do people get lost in it?
  • What about World of Warcraft?
  • What about other websites? MySpace? Facebook?
  • What other examples?

46
Operant Conditioning Reinforcement v. Punishment
  • A reinforcer is any stimulus that increases the
    frequency of the target behavior
  • A punishment is any stimulus that decreases the
    frequency of the target behavior

47
Reinforcement Two Types (p. 329)
48
What about Addiction?
  • Dragging on a cigarette will reduce a nicotine
    addicts pangs. (p. 329)
  • Negative Reinforcement

49
Punishment Two Types
  • Positive Punishment ADDs a stimulus (similar to
    Positive Reinforcement) Example Electric Shock
  • Negative Punishment SUBTRACTs a stimulus

50
Punishment Two Types
51
Operant Conditioning
  • Shaping (and Auto-Shaping)

52
Operant Conditioning Shaping
  • An operant conditioning procedure in which
    reinforcers guide behavior toward closer and
    closer approximations of the target behavior (p.
    329)

53
Operant Conditioning Successive Approximations
  • Responses that are progressively closer to the
    final target behavior are reinforced other
    behaviors are ignored (p. 329)

54
Operant Conditioning Successive Approximations
  • Criminality lie, cheat, steal, property crimes,
    crimes to person (assault, robbery, rape, murder)
  • Caffeine, Nicotine, Alcohol, THC, Cocaine /
    Heroin, etc.

55
Doobie Brothers
  • What Were Once Vices are Now Habits

56
Operant Conditioning Successive Approximations
  • Animal Training (please read the book)
  • Shaping and Whinning Children
  • Shaping and Development of Athletic Skill

57
Operant Conditioning Continuous v. Partial
Reinforcement
  • Behavior is most quickly established by
    Continuous Reinforcement
  • Continuous Reinforcement most vulnerable to
    Extinction
  • Partial Reinforcement is most resistant to
    Extinction (p. 331)

58
So What?
59
Operant Conditioning Continuous v. Partial
Reinforcement
  • Use Continuous Reinforcement During Autoshaping /
    Establishment of Behavior
  • Switch to Partial Reinforcement once the behavior
    is established
  • Lean Schedules are most resistant to extinction

60
Ratio Schedules
  • Fixed-ratio schedule Reinforces a response only
    after a specified number of responses. e.g.,
    piecework pay.
  • Variable-ratio schedule Reinforces a response
    after an unpredictable number of responses. This
    is hard to extinguish because of the
    unpredictability. (e.g., behaviors like gambling,
    fishing.)

61
Interval Schedules
  • Fixed-interval schedule Reinforces a response
    only after a specified time has elapsed. (e.g.,
    preparing for an exam only when the exam draws
    close.)
  • Variable-interval schedule Reinforces a response
    at unpredictable time intervals, which produces
    slow, steady responses. (e.g., pop quiz.)

62
Fixed Variable / Ratio Interval
  • A fixed ratio of continuous reinforcement most
    quickly establishes the target behavior
  • But a variable interval schedule of partial
    reinforcement will produce the most steady
    responding
  • What is video poker and other gambling? (p.
    332)

63
Figure 8.10 Reinforcement Schedules (p. 331)
64
On the first day of class Professor Wallace tells
her geography students that pop quizzes will be
given at unpredictable times throughout the
semester. Clearly, studying for Professor
Wallaces surprise quizzes will be reinforce on a
__________ schedule.
  • Variable-Interval

65
Problems with Skinners Model
  • Evidence for Cognitive Maps and Latent
    Learning is accumulating (p. 334)
  • Intrinsic Motivation v. Extrinsic
    Motivation(p. 335)
  • But, is it really a reinforcer if it decreases
    the frequency of the target behavior?
  • Biological Predispostions (pp. 335-336)

66
But
  • Skinners Work has revolutionized many lives

67
Skinners Legacy (pp. 336-337)
  • Skinners Ideas Provide a Theoretical Foundation
    for modern Computer Based Training
  • Workplaces have been revolutionized by having
    productivity defined in specific and measurable
    terms
  • Behavior Modification in Treatment Settings
  • B-Mod and MRDD

68
Observational Learning
  • Albert Bandura and Social Learning Theory
    (SLT)(p. 343 et seq)

69
Banduras SLT
  • Gave us the idea of modeling behavior
  • No S-R, r-R, or other paradigm
  • Explains Copycat Events (Like Columbine
    Copycats)
  • Basis of criticism of TV Violence, Violent
    Videogames

70
In a well-known experiment, preschool children
pounded and kicked a large inflated Bobo doll
that an adult had just beaten on. This
experiment served to illustrate the importance of
  • Observational Learning (p. 343)

71
Finis
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