Lecture 21: Avoidance Learning & Punishment Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Instrumental Learning & Operant Reinforcement
Advertisements

Lectures 14: Instrumental Conditioning (Basic Issues) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
Instrumental Conditioning Also called Operant Conditioning.
Lecture 11: Pavlovian Conditioning (Associative Content) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
Chapter 10 – Aversive Control: Avoidance and Punishment
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 9, Theories and Applications of Aversive Conditioning.
Lecture 17: Instrumental Conditioning (Associative Structures) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
Aversive Conditioning. ReinforcementPunishment Positive contingency Negative contingency Chocolate BarElectric Shock Excused from Chores No TV privileges.
Lectures 5&6: Pavlovian Conditioning (Basic Concepts & Generality)
Inhibitory Pavlovian Conditioning Stimuli can become conditioned to signal the absence of a US— such learning is called Inhibitory Conditioning CS+ = excitatory.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 9 – Motivation.
THEORIES AND APPLICATIONS OF AVERSIVE CONDITIONING Chapter 7 1.
There’s never just one reinforcer Hmm…what to do?
Aversive Control of Behavior: Punishment & Avoidance Lesson 16.
Instrumental Learning A general class of behaviors inferring that learning has taken place.
Lecture 20: Extinction (Pavlovian & Instrumental) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
How do animals “know” when a schedule is on extinction?
Lecture 18&19: Stimulus Control (Pavlovian & Instrumental) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
Lectures 7&8: Pavlovian Conditioning (Determining Conditions) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 8 – Aversive Conditioning.
Avoidance Conditioning Combining Classical and Operant Conditioning Classical and operant conditioning often take place in the same situation. We saw this.
Aversive Control: Avoidance and Punishment
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Learning Chapter 5.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 10 – A Synthetic Perspective on Instrumental Learning.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning
Punishment.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 9 – Motivation.
Negative Reinforcement
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 10 – A Synthetic Perspective on Instrumental Learning.
Operant Conditioning Thomas G. Bowers, Ph.D. Penn State Harrisburg.
OPERANT CONDITIONING DEF: a form of learning in which responses come to be controlled by their consequences.
Chapter 10 Aversive Control: Avoidance and Punishment.
Lectures 12 & 13: Pavlovian Conditioning (Learning-Performance) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
Operant Conditioning Unit 4 - AoS 2 - Learning. Trial and Error Learning An organism’s attempts to learn or solve a problem by trying alternative possibilities.
Chapter 6: Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov Terminology –Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS): evokes an unconditioned response without previous conditioning.
Learning Prof. Tom Alloway. Definition of Learning l Change in behavior l Due to experience relevant to what is being learned l Relatively durable n Conditioning.
Learning.
Aversive Control Negative Reinforcement Avoidance Learning Escape Learning.
B.F. SKINNER - "Skinner box": -many responses -little time and effort -easily recorded -RESPONSE RATE is the Dependent Variable.
Chapter 6 Learning. Table of Contents Learning Learning defined on page –Classical conditioning –Operant/Instrumental conditioning –Observational learning.
Operant Conditioning Unit 4 - AoS 2 - Learning. Trial and Error Learning An organism’s attempts to learn or solve a problem by trying alternative possibilities.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 10 – A Synthetic Perspective on Instrumental Learning.
CHAPTER 4 Pavlovian Conditioning: Causal Factors.
Psychology 2250 Last Class Characteristics of Habituation and Sensitization -time course -stimulus-specificity -effects of strong extraneous stimuli (dishabituation)
College Board - “Acorn Book” Course Description 7-9% Unit VI. Learning 1 VI. Learning.
Table of Contents CHAPTER 6 Learning. Table of ContentsLEARNING  Learning  Classical conditioning  Operant/Instrumental conditioning  Observational.
4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall5-1 Learning Chapter 5.
Copyright McGraw-Hill, Inc Chapter 5 Learning.
Innate Behavior Patterns Reflex Tropism –kinesis (undirected) –taxis (directed) Fixed Action Pattern –species-specific; unlearned; goes to completion Reaction.
LEARNING  a relatively permanent change in behavior as the result of an experience.  essential process enabling animals and humans to adapt to their.
Learning Experiments and Concepts.  What is learning?
OPERANT CONDITIONING. Learning in which a certain action is reinforced or punished, resulting in corresponding increases or decreases in behavior.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 6 (Cont.) Factors Affecting Appetitive Learning.
Instrumental/Operant Conditioning. Thorndike’s Puzzle Box.
Knowledge acquired in this way.
Chapter 6 Learning and Behavior Learning n A more or less permanent change in behavior that results from experience.
Steven I. Dworkin, Ph.D. 1 Basic Principles of Operant Conditioning Chapter 6.
Extinction of Conditioned Behavior Effects of Extinction  the rate of responding decreases  response variability increases  experiment by Neuringer,
Working Hypothesis: If created by conditioning, could be eliminated using principles of conditioning Behavior Therapy: treatment based on environmental.
Operant Conditioning – Chapter 9 Theories of Learning October 19, 2005 Class #25.
Table of Contents Chapter 6 Learning. Table of Contents Learning –Classical conditioning –Operant/Instrumental conditioning –Observational learning Ivan.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Monday February 10, 2003.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 10 – A Synthetic Perspective on Instrumental Learning.
Chapter 6 Learning. Objectives 6.1 How We Learn Distinguish among three major types of learning theories focusing on behavior. 6.2 Classical Conditioning.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 3 – Nuts and Bolts of Conditioning (Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning)
Chapter 6 LEARNING. Learning Learning – A process through which experience produces lasting change in behavior or mental processes. Behavioral Learning.
Punished Again. Punishment Outside the Laboratory Common examples of punishment used with children Punishment – extra chores – writing an essay (often.
Consequences for Avoiding Bad Things
Chapter 12 Avoidance Learning
PSY402 Theories of Learning
Presentation transcript:

Lecture 21: Avoidance Learning & Punishment Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater

Avoidance Learning: 2 Tasks Rats learn to escape foot shock by shuttling from one side to the other once shock occurs in the presence of a warning stimulus. They also learn to avoid foot shock by shuttling from one side to the other in the presence of the warning stimulus prior to the scheduled shock delivery. 1. Signaled Avoidance learning task (shuttle box avoidance)

Avoidance Learning: 2 Tasks In this case rats will get a foot shock within a specific time interval if they do not make the avoidance response. This is called the shock-shock interval (S-S). If they make the target response (e.g., lever press, shuttle jump, wheel run, etc), this will Delay the next shock for some time. This is called the response-shock interval (R-S). Better avoidance learning occurs with short S-S and long R-S intervals. The animals use the passage of time as a discriminative cue (a warning stimulus) for when responding will be effective. 2. Unsignaled Avoidance learning task (Sidman avoidance)

Avoidance Learning: 2 Tasks Responding on this schedule increases over time since the last response, and is related to the length of the response-shock (R-S) interval. 2. Unsignaled Avoidance learning task (Sidman avoidance) Sidman (1966)

Avoidance Learning: Theoretical Approaches 1. Two-Process theory Pavlovian Process (warning stimulus associates with shock US, and produces a fear CR) Instrumental Process (termination of the warning stimulus and the fear CR negatively reinforces the response) Evidence: Escape from Fear studies (EFF)

Avoidance Learning: Theoretical Approaches In this study, Pavlovian fear conditioning occurs first. One group gets Delayed conditioning, another gets simultaneous conditioning, and the third gets CS and US Unpaired (this is the control group). Then all groups are trained in a shuttle avoidance task, but no shocks are presented. Instead, the CS is presented and shuttle avoidance responses turn off the CS. The Delayed and Simultaneous pairings groups both show decreased shuttle avoidance latencies over trials, whereas the unpaired group does not. This indicates that the response is negatively reinforced simply as a function of turning off the CS. 1. Two-Process theory Pavlovian Process (warning stimulus associates with shock US, and produces a fear CR) Instrumental Process (termination of the warning stimulus and the fear CR negatively reinforces the response) Evidence: Escape from Fear studies (EFF)

Avoidance Learning: Theoretical Approaches 1. Two-Process theory Pavlovian Process (warning stimulus associates with shock US, and produces a fear CR) Instrumental Process (termination of the warning stimulus and the fear CR negatively reinforces the response) Evidence: Escape from Fear studies (EFF) Problem: While the warning stimulus evokes a fear CR early in training, this fear CR goes away with extended training even though the avoidance response does not. Lovibond, et al (2008) study One stimulus, A+, signals avoidance. A second, B+, is a Pavlovian CS. A third, C-, is not paired with shock. Humans could avoid finger shock (mild) by pressing a key in the presence of A. Skin conductance responses are a measure of fear CRs, and these go down to A, but increase On B+ trials over training. Shock expectancies increase to B, but decrease to A. This study shows that avoidance responding persists even when fear to A does not.

Avoidance Learning: Theoretical Approaches 1.Two-Process theory 2.Safety-signal Hypothesis Safety signals are response-produced cues that signal the absence of shock. They, in essence, become conditioned inhibitors of fear. And, they positively reinforce the response that leads to them. Evidence: Presenting an explicit stimulus following each avoidance response results in that stimulus becoming a conditioned inhibitor of fear. These explicit stimuli also speed up the rate of avoidance learning. 3.SSDR theory and concept of predatory imminence Some responses are easier to learn than others (e.g., running vs rearing) This is because some responses are innate “species specific defense reactions” Which behavior occurs depends on how far away from the threat the animal is at any moment. This will partly determine the type of avoidance responses occur. E.g., rats and snakes….

Avoidance Learning: Theoretical Approaches 1.Two-Process theory 2.Safety-signal Hypothesis 3.SSDR theory and concept of predatory imminence 4.Expectancy theory Animals acquire R – No Shock and No R – Shock associations (expectations) These determine avoidance responding, as a rational decision making process. Explains why avoidance responding is difficult to extinguish.

Avoidance Learning: Theoretical Approaches 1.Two-Process theory 2.Safety-signal Hypothesis 3.SSDR theory and concept of predatory imminence 4.Expectancy theory Animals acquire R – No Shock and No R – Shock associations (expectations) These determine avoidance responding, as a rational decision making process. Explains why avoidance responding is difficult to extinguish. Interesting experiment: Learned Helplessness Effect Animals in the yoked inescapable shock group later learn to avoid poorly. Is this due to “learned helplessness” (an expectation that responding has no effect)? But explicit backward cues following shock alleviate the harmful effects of inescapable shocks. That result supports the view that safety signals play a role (Jackson & Minor, 1988, chap 5).

Punishment: Important Factors 1.Shock intensity & gradual increases in severity 2.Response contingency (contingent more effective than non-contingent shocks) 3.Delay of punishment (increasing delay reduces its effectiveness) 4.Schedules of punishment 5.Schedules of positive reinforcement 6.Availability of alternative reinforced responses 7.Effects of discriminative stimuli 8.Punishment as a signal for availability of positive reinforcement (e.g., attention)

Punishment: Theoretical Approaches 1.Conditioned emotional response theory 2.Avoidance theory (other competing behaviors are negatively reinforced) 3.Thorndike’s negative law of effect (punishment weakens the S-R association) 4.Expectancy theory