Download Nonassociative Learning

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Psychoneuroimmunology wikipedia , lookup

Emotion perception wikipedia , lookup

Metastability in the brain wikipedia , lookup

Neuroeconomics wikipedia , lookup

Executive functions wikipedia , lookup

State-dependent memory wikipedia , lookup

Biology and consumer behaviour wikipedia , lookup

Behaviorism wikipedia , lookup

Perceptual learning wikipedia , lookup

Perception wikipedia , lookup

Psychological behaviorism wikipedia , lookup

Mental chronometry wikipedia , lookup

Time perception wikipedia , lookup

Neural correlates of consciousness wikipedia , lookup

Prenatal memory wikipedia , lookup

C1 and P1 (neuroscience) wikipedia , lookup

Neural coding wikipedia , lookup

Negative priming wikipedia , lookup

Caridoid escape reaction wikipedia , lookup

Neuroethology wikipedia , lookup

Conditioned place preference wikipedia , lookup

Eyeblink conditioning wikipedia , lookup

Rheobase wikipedia , lookup

Learning wikipedia , lookup

Lateralized readiness potential wikipedia , lookup

Perception of infrasound wikipedia , lookup

Allochiria wikipedia , lookup

Evoked potential wikipedia , lookup

Feature detection (nervous system) wikipedia , lookup

Response priming wikipedia , lookup

Operant conditioning wikipedia , lookup

Stimulus (physiology) wikipedia , lookup

Psychophysics wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Nonassociative
Learning
Lecture 3
Reflexes
Inherited behaviors
 via genes
 Smallest unit of organized behavior
 sensory receptors
 neurons
 effectors
 Learning
 modification of existing behavior
 initially reflexive behavior ~

Withdrawal reflex
+
+
+
R
2 categories of learning
Similar characteristics
 Nonassociative
 modification of reflexes
(unconditional responses)
 Habituation
 Sensitization
 Associative
 Respondent learning
 Operant learning ~

Nonassociative Learning: Habituation




Living near the train tracks
Habituation
  response to repeated stimulus
 stimulus specific
Ignore biologically unimportant stimuli
Universal in animal kingdom
 evolved early
protozoans
~
Adaptiveness of Habituation
Conserves resources
 energy
 attention
 Stimuli w/o consequences
 response diminishes ~

Stickleback Fish
Males defend territory
 Attack when others
approach
 If other males do not
enter territory
 Attack response
diminishes ~

Habituation Phenomena
Gradually Decremental
Hi
Startle
Response
Lo
Number of Presentations
Spontaneous Recovery
Learning is relatively permanent
 Reinstatement of reflexive response
 due only to passage of time
 stimulus may again have
consequences ~

Spontaneous Recovery
Hi
Startle
Response
Stimulus
Time
Passes
Lo
Number of Presentations
Is it fatigue?
Temporary physiological change
 Motor?
 Sensory?
 Dishabituation
 introduce extraneous stimulus
 recovery of habituated response ~

Dishabituation: Example
Tone (Noise)  startle response in rat
 Repeat tone  habituation
 Flash a light
 Present tone  startle response ~

Dishabituation
Hi
Habituation
occurs
*Light (New)
+
Noise
Startle
Response
Lo
Number of Presentations
Dishabituation
Decrease in response not due to fatigue
 animal capable of response
 signals a new situation
 Response is inhibited
 by activity of neurons ~

Generalization
Organism reacts to similar stimuli in
the same way
 Greater the difference...
 less habituation evident
 Color perception in infants ~

Effect of Stimulus Intensity
Stimulus intensity
 Intense  stronger response
 Weak  weaker response
 Which stimulus will the organism
habituate to more quickly? ~

Stimulus Intensity
Hi
Strong stimulus
Startle
Response
Weak Stimulus
Lo
Number of Presentations
stimulus too strong  no habituation
•Biologically important ~
If
Sensitization
Increased responsiveness
 Following a noxious stimulus
 Less stimulus specific than
habituation
 general increase in vigilance
 sensitized responses to wide range
of stimuli
 Adaptiveness ~

Sensitization
Noise
Hi
Shock
Startle
Response
Lo
Number of Presentations
Duration:Habituation & Sensitization
Can be short term
 lasts hours
 Change in neural activity
 or long term
 several weeks
 change in neural structure ~

Habituation & Eating
1st taste most pleasant
  # tastes   pleasantness
 Role in meal termination
 e.g., popcorn, cashews
 Not just for taste
 also texture, shape, odor, etc. ~

Habituation & Eating: Rats
Cabanac (1971)
 Steady flow of sucrose into mouth
 tasty  disinterest  aversion
 Allow rats to eat all rat chow they want
 voluntarily stop
 offer sucrose: eat just as many calories ~

Habituation & Eating: Humans
Rolls (1990)
 Preference ratings for foods
 given meal of one of foods
 rated again   rating for just-eaten
food
 Given 2 meals
 different foods   same amount
eaten
 same food  2nd meal ate less ~
