Human Growth and Developmen1
Human Growth and Developmen1
Human Growth and Developmen1
General principles of
The acquisition of classically conditions generally occurs gradually; with each pairing of the
conditioning stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus, the learned response/condition response is
strengthened.
For example, in the Pablo’s experiments, the more frequently the tuning of fork was pairing food
and the more often the tone insisted salivation.
The principle of generalization and discrimination
Generalization occurs when an animal/a person responds to a second stimulus similar to the
original conditions, stimulus without a prior training with the second stimulus; whereas,
discrimination is the ability to respond differently to different stimulus.
Principle of extinction
A classically condition response is a subject to changes like any other behaviour i.e. Parlor
discovered that if he stopped presenting food often then the sound gradually cost its extinct in the
dog.
After he repeatedly struck the tuning fork without giving food, the dog no longer associated
giving sound with the food, thus the sound no longer elicited the salivation. He termed this effect
extinction because the condition response had gradually died out.
Principle of spontaneous recovery
After extinction, it does not mean that the animal/the person is completely unlearned the
condition response. We can introduce a rest period in which the condition stimulus is not tested.
The previously extinguished condition response (salivation) may reappear when the condition
stimuli is presented again but is not followed by the unconditioned stimulus.
Classical conditioning and human behaviour
Using the principle of conditioning, a practical solution of a condition of bed wetting was
discovered by a scholar O. Hobart Mover and his wife Mollie (1938) and they said that one
reason for bed wetting occur is that children do not wake up during the night when they have full
bladder.
Mover developed a device known as ‘bell and pad’ it consisted of two metallic perforated with
small holes and attached by wires to a battery – run alarm. Then the thin metal sheets were
mapped insulated or padded and were placed under the child’s bed sheet. When the sleeping
child moistens bed sheet with the first drops of urine, the pad closes causing the alarm to go on
and wake up the child and the child could wake up and use the bathroom.
In the experiment above, the alarm is the unconditioned stimulus that produces reaction.
The sensation of a full bladder is the conditioned stimulus which before conditioning did not
produce wakefulness. After several pairings of the full bladder (conditioning stimuli) and the
alarm, the child is able to awaken to the sensation of a full bladder even without the help of the
alarm.
Schedules of reinforcement
Scheduling of reinforcement refers to the timing and the frequency of reinforcement.
Behaviour that is reinforced every time it occurs is said to be on a continuous schedule of
reinforcement. However, when reinforcement occurs only on alternatively, then it is said to be
partial.
Ratio schedules
Refers to number of correct responses that an individual or organism makes between
reinforcements.
1.Fixed ratio shedule
Under this, reinforcement depends on a specified quantities of responses such as rewarding every
4th responses.
Examples
A student who receives a good grade after completing a specified amount of work.
A typist who is paid by the number of pages he/she can type.
2.Variable ratio shedule
Here reinforcement does not require that a fixed or set number of responses be made for each
reinforcement thus the number of reinforcement changes.
3.The interval shedule
This is the amount of time that elapses before reinforcement ia made available. It may be fixed or
variable.
4.Fixed interval shedule
This refers to the 1st response after a predetermine time as a last since the last reinforcement was
reinforced/made thus the time interval is constant.
Variable interval schedule
Here the time at which the reinforcement becomes available changes through out the
coinditioning procedure.
STIMULUS CONTROL
B. F. Skinner proposed the law of effect to explain the relationship between behaviour and
reinforcements (i.e. rewards or punishments). He observed that, responses that are followed by
pleasant consequences are strengthened while those that are followed by unpleasant
consequences are weakened.
B. F. Skinner therefore used the terms discriminative stimulus to refer to the stimulus situations
in which operant responses are rewarded.
Cognitive theory
(The Gestalt School of Thought)
The cognitive theory is based on the Gestalt School of Thought/Gestalt’s theories.
The scholars involved here were Wertheimer, Kohler, Koffta, Wolfgang etc.
These were originally theorioes of perceptin, interested in the way the brain imposes patterns in
the perceived world.
Broadly, cognitive theory is interested in how people understand materials and things in them.
What Gestalt is
These are groups of theories that focused in the minds perceptive ability.
The word Gestalt has no direct translation in English but it refers to “a way something has been
Gestalt i.e. placed or put together thus common translations include; to form or to shape.”
The Gestalt theorists followed the basic principle thatb the ‘whole’ is greater than some of its
parts. In other words, the whole ( a picture of a car) carried a different in altogether a greater
meaning than its individual components.
PERSONALITY DVELOPMENT
Personality
This is the individual thinking, feeling and acting.
Personbality refers to anything inside an individual that makes the individual thinks, feels and
acts differently from others.
Thus personality can be defined generally as charactristics consistently displayed and uniquely
combined In each of us.
It accounts for both the differences among people and the consistencies in an individuals’s
behaviour over time and in different situations.
Personality development
This is a process by which a personality is developed in an individual thus the construction of an
individual thoughts, feelings an dactions towards an event/phenomenon.
Theories of personality development
Sigmund Freud was a medical doctor in Thiena.
He first took an interst in psychotherapy after noticing that some of his patients improved after
they had the chance to talk and vent out emotions regarding their painful childhood experiences.
His basic ideas; he believed that human beings are controlled by instincts and drives. According
to this theory, human beings do have three levels of awareness:-
1.The conscious level; this is the material that one is aware of at aparticular moment.
2.Preconscious level; this contains thoughts and feelings which although are not part of our
conciousness but one can easily recall.
3.Unconscious level; it contains thoughts or feelings that an individual is totally unable to access
to conscious. The material in this level does manifest itself indreams, slip of tongues.
Structures of Personality (Structural concept of the mind)
In addition to these levels of awreness, Freud also identified these structural divisions of
personality and these are the ID.
This is the part inherited at birth. It is an organized, irrational, pleasure oriented and totally self
centred. It is also the source of libido (sexual urge). Since its primary aim is pleasure, the ID has
no sense of morality.
The Ego
This is the aspect of our personality that develops from the ID through a person’s interaction
with the environment.
A new botrn baby possesses the ID and imagines that everything she/he wants he/she will get.
However, as she/he grows up, she gets to realize that it is not the ‘centre of the world.’
Reality teaches her/him that sometimes, he/she will not get what he/she wants; as a result, she/he
learns to postpone the need until it is convinient to satisfy the need.
The Super Ego
This is the third component of an individual personality structure. Freud perceived the super ego
as the co – parental moral attitudes and social behaviour learnt in childhood stage.
Thoughts parented with super ego lead to an evaluation of some behaviours as good or bad.
The super ego thus has 2 parts
i.Conscience; it judges our behaviour as either good or bad.
ii.The ego/ideal; this is the image of perfection i.e. our ideal selves.
The super ego is governed by the morality principle.
ID – governed by pleasure principle.
Ego – governed by immorality principle
Super ego – governed by morality.