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Today’s Class • • • • What is learning? Types/classes of learning Adaptive significance Extending the domain TA Judith Asem You asked for it… • What: Review Session with Judith first half of material for Exam 2 (4/4) • When: Tuesday, 3/12 6:30-8:00pm • Where: Krieger 205 Attention, Learning, and Memory external sensory information + internal representations (ideas) = adaptive responses PERCEPTION receive information LEARNING acquire knowledge from information MEMORY store and retrieve knowledge Learning • Alters behaviors – Overt vs. covert behaviors • What was learned? • We see a change in behavior Social Interaction Types/Classes of Learning ―Simple‖ learning processes • Nonassociative – Objects and events • Associative – Relationships ―Complex‖ learning processes • To be continued… Goal: to make a behavior amenable to scientific study! Nonassociative Learning • Exposed once or repeatedly to a single type of stimulus • Consider reflexes Aplysia (―sea slug‖) Nonassociative learning • Habituation – First to occur in infants – ↓ response • Sensitization – Strong or noxious stimulus – ↑ response Nonassociative (Event) Learning • Habituation Habituation of startle response 35 Magnitude of startle response 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 Trials 17 19 21 23 25 27 Nonassociative (Event) Learning • Habituation • Dishabituation Habituation and dishabituation of startle response 35 Magnitude of startle response 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 Trials 15 17 19 21 23 25 Nonassociative (Event) Learning • Habituation • Dishabituation • Sensitization Habituation and dishabituation of startle response 35 Magnitude of startle response 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 Trials 15 17 19 21 23 25 Nonassociative (Event) Learning Habituation Dishabituation Sensitization Synaptic basis of habituation and sensitization Habituation and dishabituation of startle response 35 30 Magnitude of startle response • • • • 25 20 15 10 5 0 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 Trials 15 17 19 21 23 25 Associative Learning • Classical/Pavlovian Conditioning – Event-event learning – Stimuli and events – Pavlov’s dog • Operant/Instrumental Conditioning – Behavior-event learning – Consequences of behavior – Types of reinforcers • Acquiring information about relationships between stimuli/events, behavior, and consequences Classical Conditioning Pairing: CS US UR species-typical behavior Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning CS - CR Why? What about in the real world? The Office Pavlovian Conditioning bell (CS) food (US) orient (OR) salivate (UR) salivate (CR) CS = conditioned stimulus US = unconditioned stimulus OR = orienting response CR = conditioned response UR = unconditioned response Pavlovian Conditioning bell (CS) food (US) orient (OR) salivate (UR) CS = conditioned stimulus US = unconditioned stimulus OR = orienting response CR = conditioned response UR = unconditioned response salivate (CR) Pavlovian conditioning as learned adaptation. Pavlovian conditioning as knowledge acquisition. Adaptive Significance Pavlovian conditioning as learned adaptation. • Emotional behavior – Incentive motivation and hunger – Fear and anxiety – Phobias – Role of amygdala Adaptive Significance Pavlovian conditioning as learned adaptation. • Emotional behavior – Incentive motivation and hunger – Fear and anxiety – Phobias – Role of amygdala • Biological responses – – – – Digestion Immune responses Analgesia Drug tolerance and addiction – Anticipatory (proactive) regulation Acquisition of Pavlovian Associations Pavlovian conditioning as knowledge acquisition. • Stimulus-stimulus (S-S) vs stimulus-response (S-R) associations – Learning ―how‖ vs. learning ―what‖ (procedural vs declarative) – ―Light means slobber‖ vs ―Light means food‖ – Devaluation experiment (―behavioral syllogism‖): • Light—food Men are mortal • Food—illness Craig is a man • Light? Craig is mortal Test after devaluation 60 50 40 % CR Maintain: Light—food | food—illness | light? Devalue: Light—food | food /// illness | light? 30 20 10 0 Maintain • Role of prefrontal cortex, amygdala vs striatum Devalue Group Acquisition of Pavlovian Associations Pavlovian conditioning as knowledge acquisition. Acquisition of Pavlovian CR 30 25 Drops of saliva 20 15 10 5 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Trial (CS-US) 7 8 9 Acquisition of Pavlovian Associations: Interstimulus Interval Interstimulus-interval (ISI) function 100 90 80 Percent CRs 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -1000 -500 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 CS-US interval (m sec) Condition for learning or content of learning? Acquisition of Pavlovian Associations: Cue to Consequence 60 Garcia Experiment 40 % CR Bright+Noisy,Tasty -- illness -orBright+Noisy,Tasty -- pain 50 tasty bright+noisy 30 20 10 0 illness pain US Extending Pavlovian Associations: Generalization Generalization 100 % response 80 60 40 20 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 Tone Frequency (herz) 7000 8000 9000 Extending Pavlovian Associations: Second-Order Conditioning Second-order conditioning 50 Unpaired: light—food | tone /// light 40 % response Paired: light—food | tone—light 30 Paired Unpaired 20 10 0 1 2 3 Sessions 4 5 Extending Pavlovian Associations: Sensory Preconditioning Sensory preconditioning 30 Paired: tone—light | light—food | tone? 25 Unpaired: tone /// light | light—food | tone? % CR 20 15 10 5 0 Paired Unpaired Group Associative Learning • Classical/Pavlovian Conditioning – Event-event learning – Stimuli and events – Pavlov’s dog • Operant/Instrumental Conditioning – Behavior-event learning – Consequences of behavior – Types of reinforcers • Acquiring information about relationships between stimuli/events, behavior, and consequences Instrumental/Operant Conditioning Instrumental Operant (Thorndike) (Skinner) Pairing: R - Rif Instrumental/Operant Conditioning More flexible, adaptive form of learning Reinforcement What is the consequence? Appetitive (approach) Positive Rif Negative Rif Aversive (escape) Reinforcers primary (unlearned) reinforcers Reinforcers secondary (conditioned) reinforcers Second-Order Conditioning • Human and nonhuman animals can learn hierarchical associations. • Light Tone Food • Animals will ―work‖ to get the light. • But why? – It is, eventually, paired with food. In the Laboratory What about in the real world? Big Bang Theory Types/Classes of Learning ―Simple‖ learning processes • Nonassociative – Objects and events • Associative – Relationships ―Complex‖ learning processes • To be continued… Goal: to make a behavior amenable to scientific study! Today’s Class • What is learning? • Types/classes of simple learning processes – Nonassociative • Habituation and Sensitization – Associative • Pavlovian/Classical and Operant/Instrumental • Adaptive significance – Emotional behavior and biological responses – Learned adaptation and knowledge acquisition • Extending the domain – Generalization, second-order conditioning, sensory preconditioning – Reinforcement and reinforcers Attention, Learning, and Memory external sensory information + internal representations (ideas) = adaptive responses PERCEPTION receive information LEARNING acquire knowledge from information MEMORY store and retrieve knowledge You asked for it… • What: Review Session first half of material for Exam 2 (4/4) • When: Tuesday, 3/12 6:30-8:00pm • Where: Krieger 205