Chap 8 Day 1 RV
Chap 8 Day 1 RV
Chap 8 Day 1 RV
Learning:
a relatively permanent change in an
organisms behavior due to
experience.
Q: How do we learn?
A: By association &
experience!
Associative Learning:
Learning that certain events occur
together.
The events may be two stimuli (as in classical
conditioning) or a response and its
consequences (as in operant conditioning).
to expect and prepare for significant events like food and pain
Learn
Classical Conditioning
Definition
: A type of learning in which an organism
comes to associate stimuli.
To
Outcome:
The dog now associated the tone with
food learned association between the
Pavlovs Terminology
To describe his observations, Pavlov used the following terms:
Pavlovs Terminology
Conditioned Stimulus (CS): an originally irrelevant
stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned
stimulus (UCS) comes to trigger a conditioned response.
i.e. dog salivating to the tone (stimulus).
Neutral stimuli
Unconditioned
UCS hot
stimulus:
water
Unconditioned
UCR jump
response:
back
Conditioned stimulus: CS toilet
Conditioned
flush
response:
Higher-Order
Conditioning
Famous Quote
Give me a dozen healthy infants, wellformed, and my own specified world to bring
them up in and I'll guarantee to take any
one at random and train him to become any
type of specialist I might select doctor,
lawyer, artist, merchant-chief and, yes, even
beggar-man and thief, regardless of his
talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities,
vocations, and race of his ancestors.
-John B. Watson (1878-1958)
Crash course
B. F. Skinner 1904-1990
Never took a university
psychology course before
enrolling in Harvards
graduate psychology school.
Behavioral Psychologist.
Famous for Operant
Conditioning
Operant Conditioning
Skinners work
Skinner Box
Skinners Work
Operant Conditioning
Hunger
Rat
Stimulus
Receives Food
Reinforcer of behavior
Presses
Bar
Response
to Stimulus
Reinforcement
Negative reinforcement: a stimulus that gains its reinforcing
power through its removal of something unpleasant.
Reinforcement cont.
Continuous reinforcement: desired response
happens every time.
Partial (intermittent) reinforcement: responses are
only sometimes reinforced.
There are 4 different types of partial reinforcement.