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Personality Theory

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Title: Personality Theory


1
Personality Theory
  • Chapter 13 Learning Theories of Personality
    The Radical Behaviourism of B.F. Skinner

2
An Introduction to Skinners Radical Behaviourism
  • At the turn of the 20th century, psychology was
    based on conscious experience and introspection
    to gain access to mind.
  • Wundt and the use of trained observers to
    describe sensory experience.
  • Wundts experimental approach
  • Example mental chronometry to time mental
    activities.

3
  • Edward Titchener and the classification of
    sensory experiences
  • A psychology called Structuralism
  • Mental chemistry
  • 46,708 possible sensory experiences
  • How do we confirm what the observer says he
    observes?
  • The privateness of private experience

4
  • The rebellion of John B. Watson
  • A scientific psychology of observable behaviour.
  • Study of learning and behaviour in children.
  • Popularizer of a strictly behaviouristic approach
    to child-rearing.

5
John B. Watson on The dangers of too much mother
love
  • There is a sensible way of treating children.
    Treat them as though they were young adults.
    Dress them, bathe them with care and
    circumspection. Let your behaviour always be
    objective and kindly firm. Never hug and kiss
    them, never let them sit in your lap. If you
    must, kiss them once on the forehead when they
    say goodnight. Shake hands with them in the
    morning.

6
Watsons Principles of Behaviourism
  • The goal of psychology is to study behaviour, not
    mind.
  • To understand behaviour, we have to understand
    the environmental conditions that produce it.

7
  • We must never try to explain the
    environment-behaviour relationship by appeal to
    covert mechanisms.
  • There is no fundamental difference between the
    learning of humans and animals.

8
Skinners Behaviouristic Credo
  • People are complex machines.
  • People are products of learning.
  • The environment is neutral.
  • Behaviour can change at any point in life.

9
Behaviourisms Ties to Major -isms
  • Associationism the connection of experiences.
  • Functionalism an emphasis on adaptation to
    environment.
  • Pragmatism practicality.
  • Environmentalism behaviour is controlled by the
    environment.

10
  • Materialism mind is mechanistic matter.
  • Experimentalism anything can be solved by
    experimental trial.

11
Behaviourisms Promises
  • Improve classroom learning and make it
    interesting.
  • Make mental institutions flexible places of
    relearning.
  • Increase the efficiency of psychotherapy.
  • Put human social life on a rational basis.

12
Burrhus Frederic Skinner
  • Skinner was born in 1904, in Susquehanna, PA .
  • He had bright, talented parents.
  • An inventive and somewhat devilish boy, he was
    taught a strict moral code.
  • He attended Hamilton College and majored in
    English.
  • He was determined to become a writer but failed.

13
  • Reading about Watson and Pavlov turned him toward
    behaviouristic psychology.
  • Admitted to psychology at Harvard
  • There was not a behaviouristic department at the
    time.
  • Earned his PhD (1931) on reflexes under a
    biologist
  • Harvard postdoctoral fellow for 5 years

14
  • He then moved to the University of Minnesota,
    then Indiana University.
  • Eventually returned to Harvard as professor.
  • Recognized as a major behaviourist
  • Important early books
  • The Behavior of Organisms.
  • A utopian novel, Walden Two, created a storm.

15
  • Many books followed
  • Science and Human Behavior
  • Verbal Behavior
  • The Technology of Teaching
  • Contingencies of Reinforcement
  • Beyond Freedom and Dignity
  • Enjoy Old Age Living Fully in Your Later Years
  • Greatly honoured as a psychologist
  • Died at 86 in 1990

16
Emphases
  • Human and animal behaviour are controlled by
    environment.
  • An opposition to theory.
  • Goal control and prediction of individual
    behaviour.
  • General laws found in study of the individual
    subject.
  • Functional analysis, linking behaviour to its
    causal antecedents.

17
  • Personality is the study of the behavioural
    attributes of persons.
  • Understanding personality is shown by bringing
    behaviour under control.
  • Use our knowledge of behaviour to change
    behaviour and improve learning.

18
The Major Concepts of Skinners Behaviourism
  • Operant conditioning, not classical conditioning.
  • This is Type R conditioning, linking response to
    reinforcement.
  • We begin with an already behaving organism.
  • Responses cause reinforcing consequences that
    increase their probability.

19
  • Complex behaviour is shaped by successive
    approximation
  • Shaping verbal behaviour by operant techniques
  • Operants are frequently discriminative.
  • Controlled by stimuli that tell when to make
    them.
  • Operants become differentiated.

20
  • Secondary reinforcement a stimulus becomes a
    reinforcer through association with one that is
    the generalized reinforcer.
  • Extinction occurs when reinforcement terminates.
  • Except
  • When responses are associated with primary
    reinforcement
  • When responses are reinforced intermittently
  • Responses are commonly chained.

21
  • Intermittent or partial reinforcement
  • Reinforcement schedules
  • Interval schedules
  • Ratio schedules

22
  • Interval schedules
  • Fixed interval
  • Variable interval
  • Ratio schedules
  • Fixed ratio (e.g., piecework)
  • Variable ratio (e.g., gambling)
  • What makes gambling so addictive?

23
Personality Development
  • Skinners behaviourism is particularly applicable
    to developmental learning.
  • The importance of shaping the responses of young
    learners.
  • Punishment may suppress responses but not
    eliminate them.
  • It frequently brings unwanted side effects.
  • A Skinnerian mistake language as operant
    learning.

24
Implications
  • A behaviour technology with significant
    implications for
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Behaviour disorder and behaviour modification of
    psychiatric patients and developmentally disabled
    children
  • The token economy
  • Psychotherapy
  • Education the teaching machine

25
Skinners Behaviourism in Perspective
  • A theory based almost wholly on experimental
    research
  • A workable behaviour technology in many areas
  • Is it too utopian? Too simple?
  • It doesnt take account of observational learning.

26
  • It doesnt recognize cognitive processes.
  • How do we judge it?

27
Take-Home Messages
  • The sterility of early 20th century psychology
    introspection and structuralism
  • The Watsonian behaviouristic revolution
  • Watson and classical conditioning
  • Watsons credo for psychology
  • B.F. Skinner, an admirer of Watson
  • Skinners credo for psychology

28
  • Behaviourism and major ideas
  • Associationism
  • Functionalism
  • Pragmatism
  • Environmentalism
  • Materialism
  • Experimentalism
  • Behaviourisms promise

29
  • Skinners history
  • Born in 1904 in Pennsylvania
  • Educated at Hamilton College and Harvard (PhD,
    1931)
  • Strongly influenced by Watsons behaviourism
  • Thought operant conditioning more important than
    classical
  • Early career at Minnesota, then Indiana, then
    Harvard

30
  • Many influential books and a utopian novel
  • Emphases in Skinners behaviourism
  • Behaviour controlled by environment
  • Not a theory
  • Study of the individual subject
  • Functional analysis of cause and effect
  • Personality and behaviour, not internal states

31
  • Major concepts of Skinners behaviourism
  • The operant
  • in animals
  • in human affairs
  • Discriminative, differentiated operants
  • Reinforcement secondary reinforcers, generalized
    reinforcers
  • Chaining of operants

32
  • Schedules of reinforcement
  • Interval fixed and variable
  • Ratio fixed and variable
  • Reinforcement schedules in life
  • Personality development
  • Operant learning
  • Problems with punishment
  • Language and verbal behaviour

33
  • Implications
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Behaviour disorder and treatment
  • Psychotherapy
  • Education
  • Skinners behaviourism in perspective
  • An optimistic and practical view of human affairs
    or too simple and unworkable?
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