1 / 26

AP Psychology

AP Psychology. Learning 12/2/13. Learning. Any relatively permanent change in behavior resulting from experience or training. Associative learning: learning that certain events occur together. Observational learning: learning from the behavior of others.

medea
Download Presentation

AP Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AP Psychology Learning 12/2/13

  2. Learning • Any relatively permanent change in behavior resulting from experience or training. • Associative learning: learning that certain events occur together. • Observational learning: learning from the behavior of others. • Associative learning & observational learning fit best with what subfield(s) of psychology? (not behavioral…) Why?

  3. Learning • Habituation: a decrease in response to a stimulus after repeated exposure. • Classical conditioning: associating two stimuli in order to anticipate events. • Operant conditioning: associating a behavior with a consequence, thereby reinforcing certain behaviors.

  4. Classical conditioning • Ivan Pavlov (pictured) & John B. Watson subscribed to behaviorism. • What is behaviorism? • How did behaviorism lead to humanistic psychology?

  5. Ivan Pavlov • Studying digestion in dogs when he noticed their salivation before the presentation of food. • “Psychic secretion” • Measured the amount of saliva produced by dogs and determined they had learned when food would come based on another stimulus—classically conditioned.

  6. Pavlov’s terms… • Unconditioned stimulus • Unconditioned response • Neutral stimulus • Conditioned stimulus • Conditioned response • Create a short experiment that labels each of these parts.

  7. Pavlov’s other terms… • Acquisition • Extinction • Spontaneous recovery • Generalization • Discrimination • Come up with an example of each for your mini-experiment

  8. Classical conditioning & cognition • Though Pavlov largely rejected the influence of cognitive psychology on behavior, the phenomenon of predictability suggests otherwise • Varying levels of utility between two conditioned stimuli

  9. Classical conditioning & biology • Negative unconditioned responses, even if not immediate, lead to avoidance. • Aversions to stimuli develop particularly with senses that are ecologically relevant (taste for a rat, sight for an eagle).

  10. Videos! • Little Albert (done by John B. Watson): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hBfnXACsOI • CC 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eo7jcI8fAuI • CC 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfZfMIHwSkU

  11. Operant conditioning • Classical vs. Operant? • Respondent behavior vs. Operant behavior • Behavior operates based on the environment.

  12. Law of Effect • Edward Thorndike put a cat in a box. • Pushing the lever once to get out leads to a much quicker recurrence next time. • Law of Effect: Behavior that is rewarded is likely to recur.

  13. B.F. Skinner • Did not believe in human free will • Any behavior is the result of consequences • Designed experiment with rats in boxes that made them repeat a meaningless behavior in order to receive rewards. • Called “radical behaviorism”: all action is determined, not free. Emphasizes observable behavior over any cognitive processes.

  14. Operant chamber (Skinner box) • A box with a device that produces a reward of some sort when manipulated.

  15. Operant terminology • Shaping • Successive approximations • Come up with a system to get a freshman to do your psychology homework using shaping and successive approximations.

  16. Reinforcement • An event that strengthens a behavior. • Positive reinforcement: positive = gain • Negative reinforcement: negative = remove • Primary reinforcers • Secondary reinforcers

  17. Reinforcement • Immediate vs. delayed reinforcers • Come up with an example of you favoring immediate reinforcers, despite a cognitive realization of delayed gratification’s advantage. • Continuous reinforcement • Partial reinforcement (intermittent reinforcement) • Greater resistance to extinction?

  18. Reinforcement Schedules • Fixed-ratio schedule: set # of responses • Variable-ratio schedule: unpredictable # of responses • Fixed-interval schedule: set period of time • Variable-interval schedule: unpredictable period of time

  19. Punishment • A reinforcer that decreases a behavior. • Positive punishment: positive = add • Negative punishment: negative = subtract • Come up with an example of positive punishment and negative punishment for a cat that threw a hairball up on you.

  20. Quick activity • Anagrams! • Take the word and write down another word using the same letters. • Raise your hand when you are finished.

  21. Learned helplessness • Helpless behavior that does nothing to eliminate punishment or gain reward. • In learning, this usually occurs when punishments (or rewards) are unpredictable and inescapable, thus causing the organism to feel helpless and encourage defeatist behavior.

  22. Learning & incentives • Cognitive map: a mental representation of one’s environment. • Remembering a cognitive map is an example of latent learning: learning that occurs but only manifests itself with an incentive.

  23. Learning & incentives • Intrinsic motivation: “interior” desire • Extrinsic motivation: “exterior” desire • Overjustification effect: Extrinsic reinforcers -> decreased intrinsic motivation Extrinsic removed -> behavior disappears Intrinsic motivation does not return Extrinsic motivation required for behavior • Example: pizza for reading books

  24. Videos! • Rats: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drnnulHw5CM • Operative conditioning: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qy_mIEnnlF4&feature=PlayList&p=4C9C76AA3D761AA8&playnext_from=PL&playnext=1&index=30

  25. Learning proposals… • Due on Friday, 12/6/13. • Create two examples of learning: one by classical conditioning and one by operant conditioning. Rubric on separate paper. • Need some inspiration? Come up with some tricks to teach your pet (or little sister).

More Related