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Operant Conditioning I
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Priscilla the Fastidious Pig
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Thorndike and Law of Effect
Rewarded behavior is likely to occur
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B. F. Skinner “Operant conditioning shapes behavior as a sculptor shapes a lump of clay” It’s all a matter of consequences
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Operant Conditioning Learning where responses come to be controlled by their consequences Classical conditioning = regulating reflexive, involuntary responses Operant conditioning = voluntary responses
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Skinner = Pigeons
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What the what!? How did he do that?
Shaping and reinforcement Shaping – operant technique, reward for closer and closer approximation of desired response
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Skinner says… Organisms tend to repeat responses that are followed by favorable consequences Understood best through idea of reinforcement – response is strengthened because it leads to rewarding consequences Defined AFTER THE FACT
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Tendency to patronize Chipotle increases
Rewarding stimulus presented: Most delicious meal you will ever have… ever Response: Go to Chipotle for a meal REINFORCEMENT IN OPERANT CONDITIONING Tendency to tell jokes increases Response: Tell jokes Rewarding stimulus presented: Friends laugh
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Primary vs. Secondary Reinforcers
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Generalization vs. Discrimination
Which is which? Kids only ask parents for sweets when they know the parents are in a good mood. A cat runs into the kitchen whenever a can opener is being utilized
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Basic Processes in Classical and Operant Conditioning
VS. Acquisition, Extinction, Stimulus Generalization, Stimulus Discrimination
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Operant Conditioning II
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Fixed-ratio schedule A rat is reinforced for every tenth lever press
A salesperson receives a bonus for every fourth gym membership sold
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Variable-ratio schedule
A slot machine in a casino pays off once every six tries on the average. The number of winning responses between payoffs varies greatly from one time to the next.
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Fixed-interval schedule
A man washing his clothes periodically check to see whether each load is finished The reward (clean clothes) is available only after a fixed time interval The man who checks his laundry before it is completed in the cycle does not receive reinforcement of clean clothes… because they’re not done yet
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Variable-interval schedule
Person wants to win a radio contest, so calls the station and gets a busy signal Getting through to the DJ is the reinforcer A rat is reinforced for the first lever press after a 1 minute interval, but the following intervals are 3 min, 2 min, and 4 min (average of 2 min)
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Conclusion: Faster responding leads to reinforcement sooner when ratio is in effect Variable schedules tend to generate steadier response rates Greater resistance to extinction
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Operant Conditioning II
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Positive vs. Negative Reinforcement
Study hint – THEY BOTH HAVE THE WORD REINFORCEMENT IN IT – so it has to REINFORCE the behavior either way
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Positive reinforcement: response is strengthened because it is followed by the presentation of a rewarding stimulus Ex: good grades, tasty meals, paychecks, scholarship, promotions, nice clothes, attention, flattery
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Negative Reinforcement: occurs when a response is strengthened because it is followed by the removal of an aversive stimulus ex: you rush home in winter to get out of the cold, you clean a house to get rid of a mess, you give in to an argument to avoid an unpleasant situation
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REINFORCEMENT IS REINFORCEMENT
Both positive and negative reinforcement involve a favorable outcome that STRENGTHENS a response tendency
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Positive vs. Negative Reinforcement in a Skinner Box
Behavior Consequence Rewarding stimulus presented: food delivered Response: Press lever + Tendency to press lever increases Aversive Stimulus removed: shock turned off Response: Press lever Tendency to press lever increases -
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Negative reinforcement applications
1. Escape learning: organism acquires a response that decreases or ends some aversive stimulation Ex: you leave a party where you were getting picked on by peers
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2. Avoidance learning: organism acquires a response that prevents some aversive stimulation from occurring Ex: you quit going to parties because of your concern about being picked on
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How does avoidance learning present an example of how classical conditioning and operant conditioning work together to regulate behavior? Ex: Rat, shuttle box, shock
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Punishment: Consequences that weaken responses
Punishment: occurs when event following a response weakens the tendency to make that response Super easy to mix-up How is this different from negative reinforcement?
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Punishment examples: If you wear a new outfit and your classmates make fun of it, your behavior will have been punished and your tendency to wear the same clothing will probably decline. 2) If you have a bad meal and a restaurant, your response will have been punished, and you will be less likely to go to the restaurant again.
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