Stimulus Control of Operant Behavior - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Stimulus Control of Operant Behavior

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Demonstrated discrimination of natural objects by pigeons ... Organisms as simple as pigeons can reliably demonstrate this discrimination ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stimulus Control of Operant Behavior


1
Stimulus Control of Operant Behavior
  • Overview of stimulus control of operant behavior
  • Discrimination
  • Generalization
  • Generalization Gradients
  • Peak Shift
  • Concepts

2
I. Operant Discrimination
  • Known as the study of discrimination learning or
    stimulus control
  • Discriminative stimulus - Signals that
    reinforcement will be forthcoming if the response
    occurs (S or Sd)
  • Signals that reinforcement will not be available,
    even if the response occurs (Sv)

3
Discrimination
  • Animals learn to demonstrate differential
    patterns to responding to different stimulus
    conditions

4
Response Pattern
  • Add info of your choice here
  • Add text, graphic or photo at left

Resp/Min
S
S-
5
II. Generalization
  • Similar patterns of responding to similar
    stimulus conditions
  • The opposing qualities of discrimination

6
III. Generalization Gradients
Early in discrimination training
CS
7
Generalization Gradients
Later in discrimination training
CS
8
Generalization Gradients
  • Excitatory Pattern of Responding

CS
9
Generalization Gradients
  • Inhibitory Pattern of Responding

CR
CS-
10
Generalization Gradients
  • Excitatory of Responding

CS
CR to tone
1 KHz
11
Generalization Gradients
  • Inhibitory Pattern of Responding

CR to tone
CS-
570 nm
12
Predictiveness and Redundancy
  • Conditioning will occur to the stimulus which
    most predictive
  • An especially salient CS may overshadow the other
    stimuli

13
Overshadowing
  • Depends upon nature of the environment, the past
    history of the animal and similar issues
  • Highly salient stimulus qualities often
    overshadow other stimuli
  • Specific features of the stimulus may be attended
    to

14
Attention Training
  • Relevance must be learned
  • Behavior must be demonstrated
  • Transfer of training studies
  • Paying attention is a separate part of the
    discrimination learning

15
Attention Training
  • Dimensional shift learning paradigm
  • Intradimensional shift - Train to CS quality,
    shift to different type of same dimension (e.g.
    shift from red to blue for CS)
  • Extradimensional shift - Train to CS quality,
    shift to different dimension (e.g. from color to
    shape for CS)

16
Attention Training
  • Extradimensional shift is more difficult

17
IV. Process of Generalization
  • Extinction builds to CS and inhibition builds to
    CS-
  • Early work of Spence 1936, 1937 and Hull 1943,
    1952
  • According to Spences theory, excitation and
    inhibition add together in an algebraic fashion

18
Peak Shift Phenomenon
CS
Response Strength
CS-
19
Peak Shift Phenomenon
CS
Response Strength
CS-
20
V. Natural Concepts
  • Concepts are related by unifying or common
    properties
  • Abstract concepts
  • Same or different
  • Often not limited to specific concrete qualities

21
V. Natural Concepts
  • Some processes
  • Matching to sample

R
G
R
Peck
Reinforce
22
V. Natural Concepts
  • Some processes
  • Oddity responding

R
G
R
Reinforce
Peck
23
V. Natural Concepts
  • Wittgenstein in 1953
  • It is not clear what specific features or
    qualities are being responded to
  • What is a dog?
  • What are the qualities of dogginess?

24
V. Natural Concepts
  • Herrnstein work in the 1980s
  • Demonstrated discrimination of natural objects by
    pigeons
  • Sort stimuli by water, trees or a particular
    person
  • Organisms as simple as pigeons can reliably
    demonstrate this discrimination

25
Learning Theory and Memory
  • Are there behavioral ways to describe remembering
    and knowing?
  • Some procedures include delayed matching to
    sample
  • Matching accuracy decreases as a function of time

26
Matching Accuracy Over Time
100
Percentage Correct
50
Seconds
27
Matching Accuracy Over Time and Sample Duration
100
Percentage Correct
14 sec sample
8 sec sample
4 sec sample
50
Seconds
28
Working Memory
  • Memory is an active process
  • Susceptible to interference
  • Retroactive interference - interfering stimulus
    comes after the stimulus to be remembered
  • Proactive interference - interfering stimulus
    comes before the stimulus to be remembered

29
Working Memory
  • Symbolic matching works as effectively as direct
    stimulus matching
  • For example, red to vertical lines is remembered
    as well as red to red
  • Directed forgetting - stimulus learning is
    followed by a signal that the stimulus is to be
    remembered or not
  • It appears memory is an active process

30
Spatial Memory and Cognitive Maps
  • Memory for places
  • Maze learning studies
  • Little indication of decay over time
  • Tends to be accounted for by a cognitive
    representation of space
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