Learning

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Learning

Transcript of Learning

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Learning

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Learning refers to any relatively permanent change in behavior which occurs as a result of practice or experience.

Learning is a change in behavior, for better or for worse.

It is a change that takes place through practice or experience. (growth, maturation, injury)

The change must be relatively permanent. (fatigue, diseases, drugs, hunger, thirst)

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Classical Conditioning

Ivan PavlovA type of learning in which a neutral stimulus comes to bring about a response after it is paired with a stimulus that naturally brings about that response.

John Watson - Little Albert

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VariablesNeutral stimulus - a stimulus that, before

conditioning, does not naturally bring about the response of interest

Unconditioned stimulus - a stimulus that naturally brings about a particular response without having been learned

Unconditioned response - a response that is natural and needs no training

Conditioned stimulus - a once-neutral stimulus that has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus to bring about a response formerly caused only by the unconditioned stimulus

Conditioned response - a response that, after conditioning, follows a previously neutral stimulus

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A. Before conditioningbell (NS) pricking of ears

food (US) salivation (UR)

B. During Conditioningbell (NS) + food (US) salivation (UR)

C. After Conditioning bell(CS) salivation (CR)

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Applying Conditioning Principles to Human Behavior

DentistMcDonaldsPhobia - irrational fearsPosttraumatic Disorders of veterans

Perfumes

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Extinction

A basic phenomenon of learning that occurs when a previously conditioned response decreases in frequency and eventually disappears.

Examples: you stop putting coins in a damaged pop machine, stop writing with a pen once runs out of ink, stop texting a friend who never answers, attention to a crying child

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Spontaneous Recovery

The reemergence of an extinguished conditioned response after a period of rest and with no further conditioning.

Extinction Burstinitial increase in the response rate and

magnitude or intensity, especially if that response has an emotional or aggressive component

Example: drug addiction, crying to get attention

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Generalization and Discrimination

Stimulus generalization occurs when a conditioned response follows a

stimulus that is similar to the original conditioned stimulus; the more similar the two stimuli are, the more likely generalization is to occur

Examples: bell and buzzer, red lights (size, shape, shade)

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Stimulus discriminationthe process that occurs if two stimuli are

sufficiently distinct from one another that one evokes a conditioned response but the other does not; the ability to differentiate between stimuli

Examples: two teachers, growling dog and wagging of tail, smile and frown

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Operant Conditioning

Law of EffectEdward Lee Thorndikepuzzle box for a catresponses that lead to satisfying consequences are more likely to be repeated

example, class recitation

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Operant Conditioning

BF SkinnerSkinner Box - learn to obtain food by

operating on their environment within the box

Laboratory rats Learning in which a voluntary

response is strengthened or weakened, depending on its favorable or unfavorable consequences.

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Reinforcement: The Central Concept of Operant Conditioning

Reinforcement - the process by which a stimulus increases the probability that a preceding behavior will be repeated

Reinforcer - any stimulus that increases the probability that a preceding behavior will occur again

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Primary reinforcer - satisfies some biological needs and works naturally

Secondary reinforcer - a stimulus that becomes reinforcing because of its association with a primary reinforcer

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Positive Reinforcementreinforcement by the

presentation of a reinforcerpositive reinforcer - a stimulus

added that brings about an increase in a preceding response

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Negative Reinforcement reinforcement by the removal of an

aversive conditionnegative reinforcer - unpleasant

stimulus whose removal leads to an increase in the probability that a preceding response will be repeated in the future

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Punishmenta stimulus that decreases the

probability that a prior behavior will occur again

Positive punishmentweakens a response through the

application of an unpleasant stimulus

Negative punishment (Penalty)removal of something pleasant

(penalty)

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Shaping

The process of teaching a complex behavior by rewarding closer and closer approximations of the desired behavior.

Examples: helping a mental hospital resident to speak again, teaching a child with autism to play basketball

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Behavior Modification

A formalized technique for promoting the frequency of desirable behaviors and decreasing the incidence of unwanted ones.

ReinforcementPunishmentExtinctionShapingPenalty

Behavior ContractingToken economyTime-outOvercorrection/

Flooding Reprimands

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Cognitive Learning Theory

An approach to the study of learning that focuses on the thought processes that underlie learning.Latent LearningObservational LearningInsight Learning

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Latent Learning

Learning in which a new behavior is acquired but is not demonstrated until some incentive is provided for displaying it.

It is said to occur but is not shown in behavior immediately, until later, when conditions for its emergence are favorable.

Behavior of rats in a maze (control and experimental group)

Lessons in schoolFailures in love

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Observational LearningLearning by observing the behavior of another

person, or model.Albert Banduraoften referred to as social cognitive approach

to learningBobo doll (children and an adult)

Four processes in Observational Learning:1.Attention 2.Retention3.Motor Reproduction4.Motivation

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Insight LearningSultan the chimpanzee and the bananaWolfgang KohlerSudden appearance of a solution to a problem; AHA

experience; restructuring a perceptual world into a new pattern

A Catholic man who lived in a small town married twenty different women in that same town. All of them are still living, and he never divorced any of them. Yet he broke no laws. How could she do this?