2 - Learning
2 - Learning
2 - Learning
Objectives
(1) Explain respondent conditioning (learning
relationships between stimuli) and operant
conditioning (learning relationships between
responses and results).
(2)Explain social learning (observation and
imitation).
(3)Explain the basic neural processes of
behavior.
What is learning?
Learning is a relatively permanent change in
behavior as a result of experience.
The result is that the formally neutral stimulus, now called the
conditioned stimulus, elicits the conditioned response.
This process is repeated dozens of times
for the dog to salivate
An example in humans is represented in coupling foot
steps of the mother with feeding the baby. After
repeated coupling, the foot steps alone would elicit
suckling movements. The steps are as follows:
Escape:
The organism learns to terminate an
ongoing aversive event.
1- Generalization:
This means the transfer of acquired stimulus-
response relationship to other similar or related
stimuli.
Example:
The dog respond to sounds other than bell.
2-Discrimination
This is a process complementary to generalization.
Generalization is reaction to similarities, while discrimination
is reaction to differences.
Example:
If a stimulus (SI) is coupled with an unconditioned stimulus, then
another similar stimulus (S2) is presented, at first the two will
produce the response. On the following day, only S1 is
reinforced (selective reinforcement).
Further introduction of S2 will not give response. The organism
learns to differentiate between S1 and S2.
3- Reinforcement
Example:
If repeated presentation of the bell sound to the dog is
not followed by food, the conditioned response
(salivation) tends to be lost.
Extinction must be partial or complete.
Neurotransmitters
Glutamate, GABA, acetylcholine, dopamine, serotonin, and
norepinephrine.
Glutamate
Glutamate is the main excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain for learning.
Acetylcholine
The neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh) has been accorded an important
role in supporting learning and memory processes in the hippocampus
Dopamine
The most accepted theories of the neural basis of conditioning
in mammals involve a set of limbic structures activated by the
neurotransmitter dopamine.
Dopamine is released when the organism is presented with
stimuli relevant to learning, such as unconditioned, conditioned,
reinforcing, and discriminative stimuli.
Dopaminergic pathways linking mesencephalic structures to
limbic structures are pivotal for reinforcement efficacy.
Specifically, activation of the substantia nigra and ventral
tegmental area causes dopamine release in the striatum and
nucleus accumbens, where dopamine serves as a neural signal
of behavioral discrepancy.