Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Classical vs. Operant Conditioning :: essays research papers
Learning Thoughts on Learning â€Å"Learning is not compulsory. Neither is survival.†–     W. Edwards Demming â€Å"Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten.†–     B.F. Skinner â€Å"I am always doing that which I cannot do, in order that I may learn how to do it.†–     Pablo Picasso What is Learning? A relatively permanent change in behavior that results from experience Types of Learning †¢Ã‚     Classical conditioning †¢Ã‚     Operant conditioning †¢Ã‚     Cognitive and social learning Classical Conditioning: Examples †¢Ã‚     Sound of a dentist’s drill: sweaty palms †¢Ã‚     Smell of mom’s perfume: smiling †¢Ã‚     Sight of certain restaurant: nausea †¢Ã‚     Noise of a can opener: cat comes running †¢Ã‚     Smell of a hospital: weakened immunity Classical Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Discovered (accidentally) by Ivan Pavlov Pavlov’s Observation †¢Ã‚     Studied digestion in dogs Pavlov’s Experiment: Phase 1 †¢Ã‚     Food (US): salivation (UR) –     Reflexive response †¢Ã‚     Tone (CS): nothing (CR) Pavlov’s Experiment: Phase 2 †¢Ã‚     CS is repeatedly paired with the US –     A tone is sounded before the food is presented Pavlov’s Experiment: Phase 3 †¢Ã‚     Eventually, the CS elicits a new CR –     Hearing the tone by itself causes salivation Classical Conditioning: Conditioned Emotional Response †¢Ã‚     Avoidance learning †¢Ã‚     Conditioned phobias –     Little Albert Classical Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Extinction †¢Ã‚     Spontaneous recovery Classical Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Stimulus generalization †¢Ã‚     Stimulus discrimination Higher Order Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Pair CS1 with a new CS2 †¢Ã‚     CS2: CR †¢Ã‚     But, CR will be weaker Classical Conditioning Applied †¢Ã‚     Drug overdoses †¢Ã‚     Smoking: environmental cues †¢Ã‚     Systematic desensitization †¢Ã‚     Advertising: sex appeal †¢Ã‚     Taste aversion †¢Ã‚     Conditioning and the immune system Types of Learning †¢Ã‚     Classical Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Operant Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Cognitive and Social Learning Operant Conditioning: Examples †¢Ã‚     Tantrums are punished: fewer tantrums †¢Ã‚     Tantrums bring attention: more tantrums †¢Ã‚     Slot machine pays out: gamble more †¢Ã‚     Reward dog for sitting: dog is likely to sit Operant Conditioning †¢Ã‚     Thorndike’s puzzle box –     Law of Effect: actions that have positive outcomes are likely repeated †¢Ã‚     Skinner box Operant Conditioning: Principles †¢Ã‚     Stimulus-Response †¢Ã‚     Reinforcement –     Positive reinforcement –     Negative reinforcement Effective Punishment †¢Ã‚     Should be –     Swift –     Consistent –     Appropriately aversive †¢Ã‚     Challenges –     Physical punishment may be imitated –     May fear the person who punishes †¢Ã‚     Most effective when paired with reinforcers Reinforcement †¢Ã‚     Primary reinforcers †¢Ã‚     Secondary reinforcers †¢Ã‚     Behavior modification †¢Ã‚     Immediate versus delayed reinforcement Beyond Basic Reinforcement †¢Ã‚     Generalization †¢Ã‚     Discrimination –     Discriminative stimulus †¢Ã‚     Extinction †¢Ã‚     Spontaneous recovery
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