PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 4 – Nuts and Bolts of Conditioning (Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Theories of Learning Chapter 4 – Theories of Conditioning
Advertisements

Facebook Group: The group is called: Psych281 Spring08 Available only to University of Alberta network Sorry to be rude but… Please don’t add me as a friend.
Introduction to Psychology Learning. Learning refers to an enduring change in the way an organism responds based on its experience –Distinct from Drug.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 4 – Theories of Conditioning.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 9, Theories and Applications of Aversive Conditioning.
Prior to conditioning Conditioning After conditioning
Chapter 4 – Classical Conditioning: Mechanisms Important characteristics of the CS and US –1) Novelty of CS and US Latent Inhibition –association account.
Chapter 6: Learning (Behaviorism)  Classical Conditioning  Operant Conditioning  Observational Learning.
Factors Influencing Respondent & Operant Learning: Part 2 Lesson 10.
Chapter 3: Pavlovian Conditioning: Foundations Pavlovian Conditioning or Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov –Early 1900s –A Russian physiologist digestive.
Classical Conditioning Pavlov’s experiment - psychic secretions. Pavlov was a Russian physiologists who studied digestion. He won the Nobel prize in physiology.
Introduction to Psychology, 7th Edition, Rod Plotnik Module 9: Classical Conditioning Module 9 Classical Conditioning.
Conditioned Inhibition
Learning How do we learn through our environment? Classical Conditioning – Neutral stimulus acquires ability to produce a response Operant Conditioning.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. 3 Kinds of Learning l Classical Conditioning n Kind of learning in which a neutral stimulus acquires the ability to produce.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning MR. McKinley First a quick video… games/videos/pavlovs-bell.htm
Lectures 7&8: Pavlovian Conditioning (Determining Conditions) Learning, Psychology 5310 Spring, 2015 Professor Delamater.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 3 – Nuts and Bolts of Conditioning (Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning)
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 8 – Aversive Conditioning.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 5 – The Role of Conditioning in Behavior.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 4 – Theories of Conditioning.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Wednesday, November 19, 2003 Chapter 6 -- Traditional Theories (Cont.)
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 4 (Cont.) Indirect Conditioning Applications of Conditioning.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 9 – Motivation.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 2 – Learning and Adaptation.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Monday January 13, 2003.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Wednesday January 15, 2003.
Introduction to Learning Chapter 1. A Definition of Learning  Learning is: An experiential process Resulting in a relatively permanent change Not explained.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 3 – Nuts and Bolts of Conditioning (Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning)
Classical Conditioning
Learning Theories Goal  How do we learn behaviors through classical conditioning?
Chapter 6: Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov Terminology –Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS): evokes an unconditioned response without previous conditioning.
4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall5-1 Learning Chapter 5.
Learning Ms. Simon Do Now: Define Learning. Definition Learning is a relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience.
Dr. Ramez. Bedwani.  Different methods of learning  Factors affecting learning.
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.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapters 2 & 3. Acquisition, Extinction, and Spontaneous Recovery.
Innate Behavior Patterns Reflex Tropism –kinesis (undirected) –taxis (directed) Fixed Action Pattern –species-specific; unlearned; goes to completion Reaction.
Lecture 2: Classical Conditioning. Types of learning Habituation and sensitization Classical (Pavlovian) conditioning Instrumental (Operant) conditioning.
Learning Experiments and Concepts.  What is learning?
Experimental Evidence  Rats drink little saccharin water at first but increase over time.  Loud tones (110 db) produce different responses depending.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Chapter 3 (Cont.) Indirect Conditioning Applications of Conditioning.
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 2 – Learning and Adaptation.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. THREE KINDS OF LEARNING Learning –A relatively enduring or permanent change in behavior that results from previous experience.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. 3 Kinds of Learning l Classical Conditioning n Kind of learning in which a neutral stimulus acquires the ability to produce.
PSY402 Theories of Learning Friday January 17, 2003.
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.
4 th Edition Copyright 2004 Prentice Hall5-1 Psychology Stephen F. Davis Emporia State University Joseph J. Palladino University of Southern Indiana PowerPoint.
Basic Learning Processes Robert C. Kennedy, PhD University of Central Florida
PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 3 – Nuts and Bolts of Conditioning (Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning)
ATTRIBUTES OF LEARNING AND CLASSICAL CONDITIONING.
PSY402 Theories of Learning
Long lasting change in behavior due to experience.
Introduction to Learning
PSY 402 Theories of Learning
Introduction to Psychology
Attributes of Learning and Classical Conditioning
PSY402 Theories of Learning
Factors Influencing Respondent & Operant Learning
PSY 402 Theories of Learning
PSY402 Theories of Learning
Demonstration of Learning
PSY 402 Theories of Learning
PSY402 Theories of Learning
PSY402 Theories of Learning
Classical and Operant Conditioning
Presentation transcript:

PSY 402 Theories of Learning Chapter 4 – Nuts and Bolts of Conditioning (Mechanisms of Classical Conditioning)

Classical vs. Instrumental  The modern view is that these two types of learning involve similar learning processes, but differ in the following ways. 1. In Classical conditioning, two stimuli are associated with each other but in Instrumental conditioning, a stimulus and a response are associated. 2. In Classical conditioning, the response is a reflex or involuntary action but in Instrumental conditioning, the response is a voluntary, freely emitted behavior.

Pavlov’s Conditioned Reflex  Conditioning -- a stimulus that initially produces no response can acquire the ability to produce one.  Learning occurs through pairing in time and place of one stimulus with another stimulus that produces an involuntary response.

Political Classical Conditioning

Obama Too

Caught up in the Moment?

Conditioning Processes  Stimulus generalization – stimuli like the CS become able to evoke the conditioned response.  Extinction – if the UCS and CS are not paired, the CS loses its ability to produce a conditioned response.  Spontaneous recovery – an extinguished CS briefly returns but quickly goes away again.

What is Learned?  Pavlov believed the association was between the two stimuli (tone and meat powder), not between the tone and salivation. Stimulus substitution Either is possible

Conditioning Situations  Sign-tracking (autoshaping) – animals must recognize signs of food (UCS) and respond (UCR). Pigeons pecking at key. This is a UCR, not an operant response, because pecking behavior is specific to the food stimulus.  Eyeblink conditioning UCR is rapid, CR is slow. Many trials are needed (100 pairings)

3.7 Autoshaping in pigeons (Part 1)

3.7 Results of autoshaping tests in pigeons (Part 2)

3.5 Design of eyeblink conditioning experiment in rabbits (Part 1)

3.5 Results of eyeblink conditioning experiment in rabbits (Part 2)

Conditioned Emotional Responses  Fear is an anticipatory pain response based on past experience.  Fear is conditioned (becomes a CR) whenever a CS is associated with an aversive (painful or undesirable) event.  Fear motivates two responses: Escape (when pain is present) Avoidance (when pain is about to happen)

Fear conditioning  Avoidance is not a good measure of fear.  Suppression of an operant behavior occurs with a feared stimulus. First – an operant behavior is learned (bar press). Second – a CS is paired with an aversive UCS (light with shock). Third – the CS is presented in the operant chamber and the effect on operant responding is measured.

3.6 Conditioned suppression in rats (Part 1)

Suppression Ratio D uring CS Suppression Ratio = D uring CS + Without CS  The amount of time during and without the CS is equal.  The more fear, the lower the suppression ratio. Ratios typically fall between 0 and.5 This will be on the midterm

3.6 Conditioned suppression in rats (Part 2)

Flavor Aversion Learning  Garcia – rats will not drink water with saccharin if they get ill after drinking. Significant avoidance occurs after just one trial.  Human food aversions are related to illness (89% of the time). Even if illness occurs hours later it is linked to the previous meal. Not cognitive – you can know the food is not to blame and still feel an aversion to it.

Acquired Changes in Response  Habituation – response to a repeated stimulus decreases with non-threat experience.  Sensitization – response to a variety of stimuli increases with a single threat experience.  Examples: Ingestional neophobia, fear of new food Rats orient less toward light, startle decreases Chicks are less frightened by shadows flying overhead with repeated exposure.

Factors Affecting Conditioning  Timing – how closely in time are the CS and UCS, and which occurs first.  Novelty of the CS and UCS.  Intensity (strength) of the CS and UCS.  Consistency of the pairing between the CS and UCS. If one or the other appears alone then conditioning is weakened.

Stimulus Presentation Paradigms  Delayed conditioning – the CS onset precedes the UCS onset.  Trace conditioning – the CS starts and ends before the UCS onset.  Simultaneous conditioning – the CS and UCS occur together.  Backward conditioning – the UCS starts and ends before the CS onset.  These paradigms will be on the midterm

3.8 Different ways to present CS and US in time This works best This doesn’t work at all This isn’t as good as delayed The longer the gap (trace interval) the worse this works

Temporal Conditioning  The UCS occurs at regular intervals in time.  Nominally, no CS is present, but aspects of the context in which the UCS occurs become conditioned to it.  Examples: Waking up just before the alarm goes off. Your dog knows when you will come home. Getting sleepy right around bedtime.

Massed vs Spaced Trials  Better learning occurs when trials are spaced out over time (spaced), rather than bunched together (massed).  Memory consolidation or rehearsal may be needed between trials.  The ratio between the exposure to the CS and the time in-between is the important factor. If both are the same duration, learning is weaker.

3.9 Trial spacing in Pavlovian conditioning This doesn’t work as well This works best

Importance of Contiguity  “Wait ‘til your father gets home” is an ineffective threat because punishment comes too late.  The further apart the CS and UCS in time, the less effective the conditioning. Intermediate stimuli can form a bridge.  Ideal ISI (inter-stimulus intervals) vary with the kind of animal and the kind of UCR.

Importance of Predictiveness  Preexposure to the CS (before it is paired with the UCS) reduces learning. Called latent inhibition because it inhibits learning of the CS-UCS association.  The same thing happens with preexposure to the US (before it is paired with the CS). Called the US preexposure effect  Threat without punishment instills no fear, even if the child has been punished before.

Effect of Presenting UCS Alone UCS always with CS UCS equally likely to occur alone or together with CS

Preparedness Affects Learning  Both instrumental and classical conditioning are affected by preparedness (the innate nature of the organism).  Flavor aversion learning is easier with taste cues than with visual cues, but not shock. Counterpreparedness – some CS’s cannot become associated with a UCS.  Preparedness makes a stimulus more salient.

Humans Show Preparedness  Humans show preparedness too, appropriate to our species.  Nausea can be associated with tequila but not with friends or a shot glass.  Snake and spider phobias may be especially prevalent due to preparedness. People associate shock with spiders or snakes more readily than with flowers or mushrooms.

Stimulus Intensity (Strength)  The stronger the US (UCS), the faster the learning and the stronger the association.  The stronger the CS, the better the learning. Salience – how attention-getting the stimulus is in relation to other stimuli in the environment. The most salient CS becomes associated with the UCS.  An overpowering CS may elicit a response of its own, preventing learning.

Effects of Stimulus Intensity

Pseudo-conditioning  Responses to the CS may occur due to the strength of the UCS, not learning. Once air has been puffed at the eye, blinking may occur in response to any stimulus that comes next, without any learning. Sensitization resulting from an intense UCS may cause the response to a CS to be increased, even when there is not greater learning.  A control group lets you tell the difference.

3.10 Bernstein’s experiment on taste aversion learning Mapletoff is a novel ice cream prepared with Maple and Walnut flavored extracts.

Conditioning and Addictions  Drugs can be associated with environmental cues present when the drugs are taken.  Instead of the drug response being conditioned, an opposite adaptive response is conditioned that lessens the drug’s effect. This is called drug tolerance.  Taking a drug under novel circumstances can produce a drug overdose because the compensatory effect is not present (no cues).