Chapter 6 - Learning.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Psychology
Advertisements

A.P. Psychology Modules 20-22
Learning Theories Goal  How do we learn behaviors through classical conditioning?
Chapter 6: Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov A type of learning in which a neutral stimulus acquires the ability to elicit a response. How.
©John Wiley & Sons, Inc Huffman: Psychology in Action (8e) Psychology in Action (8e) by Karen Huffman PowerPoint  Lecture Notes Presentation Chapter.
Chapter 6: Learning. Section 1: Classical Conditioning.
Lecture Overview Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning Cognitive-Social Learning The Biology of Learning Using Conditioning & Learning Principles.
Learning How do we learn through our environment? Classical Conditioning – Neutral stimulus acquires ability to produce a response Operant Conditioning.
Chapter 8 Learning.  Learning  relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience.
Conditioning. Ivan Pavlov Russian scientist – he wanted to learn about the relationship between digestion and the nervous system Accidentally discovered.
LEARNING.
Chapter 6 LEARNING Section 1: Classical Conditioning
Learning Orange Group. Classical conditioning- a type of learning in which an organism comes to associate stimuli. ex: Dog salivate to food Bell rings-No.
Chapter 7: Learning 1 What is learning? A relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience First test - purpose? To assess learning First test.
Chapter 6: Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov Terminology –Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS): evokes an unconditioned response without previous conditioning.
Chapter 6: Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov Terminology –Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) –Conditioned Stimulus (CS) –Unconditioned Response (UCR)
Learning Chapter 6 Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning
Chapter 6 Section 1. Chapter 6 Section 1 Section 1 Classical Conditioning Learning Or Not.
Section 1: Classical Conditioning
INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY
Chapter 6 Learning. Table of Contents Learning Learning defined on page –Classical conditioning –Operant/Instrumental conditioning –Observational learning.
© 2013 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
Chapter 7 Learning. Classical Conditioning Learning: a relatively permanent change in behavior that is brought about by experience Ivan Pavlov: – Noticed.
Chapter 6: Learning 1Ch. 6. – Relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience 1. Classical Conditioning : Pairing 2. Operant Conditioning :
Learning Theories Learning To gain knowledge, understanding, or skill, by study, instruction, or experience.
© 2013 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. LearningLearning Chapter 5.
READ!. Unit 4: Learning and Cognition Chapter 6: Learning.
Learning Dr. Cody Reardon. Reaction How do you learn these habits that all of you have? Stimulus- something that produces a reaction Response- a reaction.
Classical Conditioning
Introduction to Psychology Unit 5: Learning Instructor: Sara Barnett.
Learning Review Flashcards for Terms on the Test.
Learning. A. Introduction to learning 1. Why do psychologists care about learning? 2. What is and isn’t learning? IS: A relatively permanent change in.
Chapter 6 Learning.
Chapter 9 Learning.
Learning Principles and Applications
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.
How do you think modern technology affects learning? How do you think modern technology affects learning?
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?
Learning and Conditioning. I. The Assumptions of Behaviorism A. Behaviorists are deterministic. B. Behaviorists believe that mental explanations are ineffective.
Principles of Learning. “ Give me a dozen healthy infants, allow me to control the environment, and I can make them into anything I want.”
9/30/04Learning Learning/Behaviorism It’s all about conditioning Two Types: –Classical Conditioning –Operant Conditioning.
Learning  relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience  Helps us …
Unit 6: Learning. How Do We Learn? Learning = a relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience. 3 Types:  Classical  Operant.
Def: a relatively permanent change in behavior that results from experience Classical Conditioning: learning procedure in which associations are made.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. THREE KINDS OF LEARNING Learning –A relatively enduring or permanent change in behavior that results from previous experience.
Chapter 8 Learning. A relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience. learning.
Learning. Our next chapter is on learning... As high school seniors, if you could write to your past self as a freshman entering high school, what advice.
Table of Contents Chapter 6 Learning. Table of Contents Learning –Classical conditioning –Operant/Instrumental conditioning –Observational learning Ivan.
Psychology in Action (8e) PowerPoint  Lecture Notes Presentation Chapter 6: Learning 1.
Unit 6: Learning. How Do We Learn? Learning = a relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience.
Principles of Learning
Chapter 6 Notes AP Tips. Know about classical conditioning and Ivan Pavlov. Classical conditioning: the repeated pairing of an unconditioned stimulus.
Learning is achieved through experience.  Learning is a relatively permanently change in behavior as a result of experience Principles; 1. Learning is.
Chapter 6 Learning. Chapter Overview Will be some of the first Psychology information you learn in college Will be some of the first Psychology information.
Learning Principles & Applications 7-9% of AP Exam.
Chapter 6 LEARNING. Learning Learning – A process through which experience produces lasting change in behavior or mental processes. Behavioral Learning.
Conditioning and Learning Unit 6 Conditioning and Learning Modules
Learning Chapter Review.
Learning.
PowerPoint Image Slideshow
Chapter 6: Learning Ch. 6.
Case Study: The Little Albert Experiment
Essentials of Understanding Psychology
ESSENTIALS OF UNDERSTANDING
Chapter 5 Learning.
Chapter 6: Learning.
Part 1- Behaviorist Learning Theory
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 6 - Learning

Our next chapter is on learning Our next chapter is on learning... As high school seniors, if you could write to your past self as a freshman entering high school, what advice would you give yourself? Consider your experiences thus far, the lessons you have learned, and the situations you wish you had handled better or would have preferred not to have experienced at all. This entry MUST be at least ONE full page.

Think about it... How did you learn...to learn? What study skill strategies work for you?

True or False Becoming sick from eating a certain food can be a genuine learning experience. If you are afraid of snakes, it may help to surround yourself with them. Negative reinforcement is the same thing as punishment. People who watch a lot of violence on television are more likely to be violent themselves than people who watch less violence on television. http://www.learner.org/series/discoveringpsychology/08/e08expand.html http://watchdocumentary.com/watch/discovering-psychology-episode-08- learning-video_1f745f1c9.html

Why are A's better than B's? Why do certain old songs evoke a rush of sensations that you used to feel back when the song was popular?

Classical conditioning Conditioning --> learning Stimulus --> something that produces a response Response --> a reaction Learning that takes place when an originally neutral stimulus comes to produce a conditioned response because of its association with an unconditioned stimulus Wait, what????

Ivan Pavlov Pavlov and the salivating dogs... Can dogs "learn" to salivate to ANY stimulus that signaled meat or food?

Pavlov’s Experiments

Pavlov’s Experiments

Pavlov’s Experiments

Pavlov’s Experiments

Important concepts Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) - a stimulus that causes a response that is automatic Unconditioned response (UCR) - the automatic response Conditioned response (CR) - a learned response to a stimulus that was previously neutral, or meaningless Conditioned stimulus (CS) - a stimulus that has come to elicit a CR because it has been associated with the UCS

Everyday applications of Classical Conditions Can openers Car alarms Scents

Adapting to the environment Taste aversions - a learned avoidance of a particular food Extinction - when a conditioned stimulus is no longer followed by the unconditioned stimulus, it will eventually lose its ability to evoke the CR Spontaneous recovery - occurs when a previously extinguished CR suddenly reappears after a period of time

Continued... Generalization - the act of responding in the same ways to stimuli that seem to be similar Discrimination - the act of responding differently to stimuli that are not similar to each other

Classical conditioning and fears/habits Flooding Systematic desensitization Counterconditioning Bell-and-pad method for bed-wetting

Little Albert!!!

Section 1 Review Answer in your notebooks… Describe Pavlov's experiment with dogs using the following terms: UCS, UCR, CS, and CR. Explain what is meant by extinction, spontaneous recovery, generalization, and discrimination in classical conditioning. Define flooding, systematic desensitization, counterconditioning in your notebooks! In your own words, define classical conditioning.

1. Develop a fear of teddy bears by using the principles of classical conditioning. Identify the UCS, UCR, CS, CR 2. What could be done to extinguish this fear?

Identify the UCS, UCR, CS, CR 1. Every time someone flushes a toilet in the apartment building, the shower becomes very hot and causes the person to jump back. Over time, the person begins to jump back automatically after hearing the flush, before the water temperature changes. 2. You eat a new food and then get sick because of the flu. However, you develop a dislike for the food and feel nauseated whenever you smell it. 3. An individual receives frequent injections of drugs, which are administered in a small examination room at a clinic. The drug itself causes increased heart rate but after several trips to the clinic, simply being in a small room causes an increased heart rate. 4. John Watson conducted an experiment with a boy named Albert in which he paired a white rat with a loud, startling noise. Albert now becomes startled at the sight of the white rat.

CC Review 1. Ivan Pavlov’s experiments with the salivating dogs yielded information about … 2. What’s spontaneous recovery again??? 3. In Ivan Pavlov’s experiment, what was the conditioned stimulus? 4. A person’s mouth watering at the thought of a meal is a(n) … 5. In Watson’s experiment with “Little Albert,” Albert was conditioned to fear not only white rats, but anything white and furry. What is this an example of? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2c4_l2oe22U (Frasier) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nE8pFWP5QDM (The Office) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYxUdPj-EEY (CC in High School) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qy_mIEnnlF4 (OC Big Bang Theory)

Answer in your notebooks... How can we influence people's behaviors? How do we increase/decrease the occurrence of various behaviors? Provide 2 examples

Operant Conditioning Actions have consequences that can either increase or decrease the likelihood that the behavior will reoccur.

Reinforcement The process by which a stimulus increases the chances that the preceding behavior will occur again Primary reinforcers - food, water Secondary reinforcers - grades, money, attention, social approval B.F. Skinner http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qy_mIEnnlF4

Skinner’s Experiments Edward Thorndike’s Law of Effect B.F. Skinner Behavioral technology Behavior control

Law of Effect = Thorndike’s principle that behaviors followed by favorable consequences become more likely, and that behaviors followed by unfavorable consequences become less likely.

Skinner’s Experiments Operant Chamber (Skinner Box)

Operant Chamber = in operant conditioning research, a chamber (also known as a Skinner Box) containing a bar or key that an animal can manipulate to obtain a food or water reinforcer; attached devices record the animal’s rate of bar pressing or key pecking.

Is negative reinforcement and punishment the same thing???

+ vs. - Positive reinforcement - increases the frequency of the behavior (most effective for elementary-age children)  Negative reinforcement - increases the frequency of the behavior by taking away something bad

Punishment Unwanted events that decrease the frequency of a behavior - does not teach alternate acceptable behavior - tends to only work when guaranteed - may try to leave situation than change behavior - can create anger and hostility - may be imitated as a way of solving problems - sometimes accompanied by unseen benefits that make the behavior more likely to be repeated

Schedules of Reinforcement Continuous reinforcement - reinforcement of a behavior every time the behavior occurs Partial reinforcement – behavior that is not reinforced every time; behaviors tend to last longer if no longer reinforced

Schedules... Fixed interval - the first target response after a fixed amount of time has passed is rewarded Variable interval - varying amounts of time go by between reinforcements (pop quizzes) Fixed ratio - a fixed number of target responses must be made before a reward is given Variable ratio - the number of target responses required for a reward changes (lottery tickets) * extinction also occurs in operant conditioning

Answer on a separate sheet of paper... 1. Explain the difference between classical conditioning and operant conditioning. 2. Name four types of reinforcers. 3. How are fixed schedules of reinforcement different from variable schedules? 4. How do parents and teachers use rewards and punishments to influence behavior? Give an example of each.

Contrasting Classical and Operant Conditioning

Applications of Operant Conditioning Shaping - a technique in which successive approximations of a behavior are reinforced They see me rollin’…

Latent Learning Learning that is hidden until it is needed Cognitive maps Learning may not be evident until reinforcement is given (Tolman’s rats)

Do video games increase violent behavior in teens???? DEBATE!!! Do video games increase violent behavior in teens???? Remember: If you are on the PRO or CON side…be ready to present your side with supporting evidence Jury Members – 2 sources must be summarized relating to either side of the debate. Include source.

Observational Learning "Do what I say not what I do?" Albert Bandura

Bandura’s Experiments

Dependent On… Attention Retention Ability to reproduce Motivation

Who are your role models???

By the time you graduate…you have spent more time watching TV than sitting in school. The average US student has witnessed about 8000 murders and well over 100,000 violent acts by the end of elementary school.

Aggression can be learned through observation. There is a correlation Aggression can be learned through observation. There is a correlation... It is NOT a cause- effect relationship.

Section 3 Review How might studying a cookbook for fun be a form of latent learning? Provide an example of observational learning that takes place in school. Has observation of violence through the media affected YOUR behavior?