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October 23, 2007 Behaviorism: Antecedent Influences Clever Hans Van Osten: the man who traveled with Clever Hans Stated that animals have the ability to be as intelligent as humans Devastated at Pfungsts results of Clever Hans and blamed the horse, stating Clever Hans was deceitful. Van Osten died and Hans was sold to a jeweler who charged people money to see Hans’ talent Pfungst found that Clever Hans was using non verbal cues to answer the mathematical questions No one really cared about Pfungsts findings and found Clever Hans to still be interesting The Influence of Animal Psychology on Behaviorism Jacques Loeb (1859-1924) Tropism: involuntary, forced movement (reflexes) Associative Memory: an association between a stimulus and a response Watson The promoter of the Behaviorist Ideas Brought in ideas for objectivism, mechanicism, animal psychology, and functionalism (which he wanted to destroy) Interested in only observable behaviors Interested in working with Loeb, but Angell talked him out of it Robert Yerkes Started a primate lab Strengthened the whole idea of comparative psychology Small Invented the first rat maze Had mentalistic ideas Charles Henry Turner African American Grad Student Wrote a book on Ants and Ant Behaviors (Watson praised his book) Had problems getting a job in comparative psychology because of his “color,” except for in Missouri and Georgia; his job problems might have been due to the lack of job opportunities and respect in comparative psychology Turned to Applied Psychology Edward Lee Thorndike (1874-1939) Received his education in the United States (Harvard) Wanted to study children; was told not to do research with children anymore because he had to loosen their clothes to take their measurements Started studying chicks Maze His landlord wouldn’t let him keep the chicks in his room so William James took them home. Went to Columbia University with his best chicks Spent 50 years at Columbia University Made $70,000 annually in the early 1900’s As soon as he got his degree, he stopped working with animals and went back to studying children What Thorndike is known for: Connectionism: the human mind is made up of connections between situations and responses (deals with objective kinds of things) Associationism vs. Connectionism Puzzle Box: put a cat in a box and the cat would need to perform certain tasks to get out of the box and receive the reward of food. The cat would accidentally get out, and then repeat the same behavior to continue to get out of the box. Coined the term Learning Curve Law of Effect: repeating a behavior that has positive results Law of Exercise: the more responses used the more associations Speculation Experimentation: given credit for changing psychology from speculation to experimentation Ivan Pavlov Russian Physiologist Injured his head which lead him to be tutored at home as a child A clumsy man Animal Physiology was his interest Education on Animal Physiology was very far away, Pavlov walked there Dedicated to research Did not want any distractions by practical matters He made an agreement with his wife that she should take care of the practical matters and he will do his research, and not smoke, drink, or play cards. Lived in poverty most of his life Professor at 41 Students gave him money for his “lectures.” It was actually pity money and he used it to improve his lab Had over 150 Lab Assistants in his lifetime Hot tempered, had a sense of humor, very human with his dogs Studied nerves of the heart, digestive glands, conditioned reflexes (accidental study coming from digestion) Psychic Associations (the name of the reflexes) UCS-food UCR-salivation CS-foot steps CR-Salivation Tower of Silence (got rid of all other things that would affect the responses of the dogs in his research). Looked at extinction, spontaneous recovery, generalization, discrimination, higher order conditioning (which sounds like research from Thorndike and Twitmeyer) Poor E.B. Twitmeyer In 1904 he presented the Knee Jerk Reflex Victim of bad timing-no one paid attention to his ideas Vladimir Bekhterev (1857-1927) Enemy of Pavlov (Pavlov gave Bekhterev’s book a bad review) Focused on humans and motor conditioning Applied Pavlovian principles to humans Associated reflexes Died mysteriously: sent to treat Stalin; diagnosed Stalin with severe paranoia; Bekhterev died after he diagnosed Stalin and was buried immediately. He son was also ordered to be killed. Functionalism was a good bridge between structuralism and animal psychology. October 30, 2007 Chapter 10: The Beginnings of Behaviorism Little Albert Loud noise associated with white, furry objects Little Albert became frightened by all white, furry objects Never had a debriefing Watson was involved in a scandal and was kicked out of J. Hopkins, so he never found Little Albert for his official debriefing John Broadus Watson (1878-1958) “Environment determines who we are, and what we become” Mom was religious, dad was a womanizer (prone to violence, affairs, and drinking) His family lived in poverty Dad ran off with another woman when John was 13 John Watson was a trouble maker Got in trouble for carrying a gun John’s mom wanted him t be a clergyman Went to school in Greenville, SC at Furhman University Never received his degree because he “failed a class” Planned to be a clergyman until his mother died Went to University of Chicago Took classes under Dewey 1903 received his PhD at age 25 Graduated with honors The youngest to graduate with a PhD in psychology from University of Chicago Married to one of his students (she was 19, he was 25) Preferred to work with animals and children as his subjects Offered a position at J. Hopkins (1908) Baldwin caught at a Brothel and asked to resign/fired Same sort of scandal would happen to Watson Watson 2 Kids Voted most handsome professor A womanizer Rosalie Raymer Watson spent time with her in his lab Watson wrote her objective love letters Watson’s wife found these letters, sent them to the Baltimore Sun where they were published. Watson was forced to resign and never went back to Academic Psychology Watson married Raymer Watson started working in the Ad Business Made $25,000 annually Was behind the slogan “I’d walk a mile for a camel” Came up with the idea of celebrity endorsements Watson wrote controversial articles for magazines Watson wrote books on child rearing (believed in objective parenting) Said parents were too impotent Parents showed too much emotion towards their children Watson’s son said that he remembers Watson shaking his hand before tucking him in for bed at night Watson was very into Nurture and not Nature Nurture as in a strict upbringing without a lot of love/affection Watson’s children Had severe depression 2 kids committed suicide, the other tried numerous times and then had a mental breakdown Rayner died at 37 This was the first time that Watson showed any emotion towards his children. He hugged them, sent them off to boarding school and then never spoke of Rayner again. Watson was successful He had a mansion, enjoyed drinking, flirted with society, etc. He gave up all of these things with Rayner died. He became “wacky” Watson’s Idea of Behaviorism: objective study of behavior Used the following methods Observation with or without instruments Testing Methods Verbal Reports Conditioned Reflexes (got this from Behkterev) Watson was into stimulus-response, and not introspection Calkins disagreed with his thoughts on introspection (other psychologists also disagreed) Verbal reports are similar to introspection Acts: complex behaviors made up of little things Subjects of Behaviorism (Watson) Instincts: socially conditioned, not really existent; you don’t inherit anything from your parents except for love, rage, and fear (which are all associated and learned) Emotions: disagreed with W. James; stated that there is association with emotions Thoughts: thinking is a motor process; 73% of people talk to themselves when they are thinking Little Albert Replication Peter (Subject) Was afraid of white rabbits The researcher unconditioned this fear November 1, 2007 Behaviorism Continued Criticisms It freed people of customs and culture- wiped the slate clean Revolutionary compared to other psychologies 1920: Outbreak of Psychology There were articles, magazines about psychology, and people were using it in their lives Joesph Jastrow A hyperactive popularizer of psychology Wrote keeping mentally fit articles and “Self Help” Articles 3 Main people that did not agree with everything Watson said Edwin Holt (1873-1946) PhD at Harvard Disagreed with Watson’s view of consciousness and said that it doesn’t exist Agreed with Watson that your environment does influence instinctual behaviors He was given some credit for identifying drives like hunger, thirst Said people do things for a reason or a goal. Looked at the purpose Karl Lashley (1890-1958) Student of Watson Studied brain mechanisms and intelligence Law of mass action: the efficiency of learning is a function of the total mass of cortical tissue Equipotentiality: the idea that one part of the cerebral cortex is essentially equal to another in its contribution to learning OR if parts of your brain don’t work, other parts will make up for it EX. if you are blind, you may have better hearing The Brain is more complex than what Watson said All Parts of the brain contribute to learning William McDougall Wrote the first social psychology like textbook Clashed with Watson He was not very well liked Believed in Free will 1924: the Battle of Behaviorism: debate with Watson and McDougall; many attended this debate; they debated on the nature of behaviorism. McDougall said that introspection was important and attacked Watson’s verbal reports; McDougall had more points, but Watson was better liked Watson 20 years as an Academic Psychologist By the time he was done, he set the light for behaviorism---which served as a rebellion and then drifted out 3 Categories of Behaviorism Watson’s School Neobehaviorism (Tolman, Skinner, Hull) Neo-Neobehaviorism (1960-1990) IQ Zoo Breland and Breland Trained animals to do things like play piano, drums, etc. No matter what, the animals still used their basic instincts/natural tendencies Shoed instincts are important in behaviorism Operationalism (Percy Bridgman): ensure testability of all experiments; if you cannot test it, it doesn’t exist Criticisms of Operationalism Restating an old concept Completed a 7 vol. work after he found out he was terminally ill, then he killed himself November 6, 2007 Edward Chace Tolman (1886-1959) Into the idea of purposive behavior (different from other behaviorists) Brother is a famous mathematician Electrochemistry (looked for a degree in this, until the works of W. James influenced him to study philosophy, then psychology) Not into introspection Taught comparative psychology at Berkeley Worked for pre CIA Anti-Communism Oath: employees of Berkeley had to take this oath in order to keep their jobs. Tolman refused along with others and then they sued the school. They were given their jobs back. Purposive Behaviorism Rejects introspection, but all acts are done for a specific goal Reinforcement isn’t necessary, just a purpose Observable Variables: environmental stimuli, physiological drives, hereditary, previous training, and age Intervening Variables: affect what you do, but you cannot see it (an ulterior motive) Reinforcement has little influence on learning Tolman’s ideas are that we have cognitive maps. It’s not repetition; you form a map in your head with a purpose in mind. Cross Shape Maze with Rats as his Subjects Two Conditions: 1. Food always in same place, but rats start in different spots (rats found the food quickly). 2. Food was in a different place, but rats only had to make 2 right turns to find the food (it took longer for the rats to find the food) Clark Leonard Hull (1884-1952) Stated, “Watson is too naïve. His behaviorism is too simple and crude.” Known for his debates against Tolman He was sick most of his life From a poor family Earned his PhD at 34 Studied mining engineering before psychology Objective individual Studied hypnosis for 10 years (which is odd because that is not objective) Believed in mechanism Believed in the hypothetic-deductive method (theory) Believed in drives (aka motivation): a state of bodily need, when you deviate from normal biological conditions Two types of drives: 1. Primary drives: hunger, thirst, sex, comfort 2. Secondary drives: learned things Law of primary reinforcement: reinforcers that reduce bodily need (habit strength) BF Skinner (1904-1990) Born in Pennsylvania Led a normal life Brother died of a cerebral hemorrhage at 16 Trained pigeons Unhappy at college He was in a fraternity, which he did not like He openly criticized faculty Received his degree in English After receiving his degree, he tried to be a writer for 2 years; he quit because he “had nothing to say” He was constantly rejected by women After reading Pavlov, etc. he decided to study psychology Skinner Box Differed from Hulls because he did not do theory testing. His approach was descriptive. Often referred to as Empty Organism Approach. He didn’t like explaining behaviors. He said that humans were controlled by their environment and not by themselves He did not deny drives, just stated that he didn’t want to use them He didn’t use large samples in research Operant Conditioning Called Pavlov’s conditioning “respondent conditioning” He said you are responding to a stimulus Operant Conditioning is different because there isn’t necessarily a visual antecedent stimulus and the organism can control/change the stimulus Law of Acquisition: strength of a behavior is increased when followed by a reinforcer Schedules of Reinforcement Took into account frequencies and time periods and their effects on behavior Found that shorter intervals between reinforcers would cause more frequent and faster a behavior would occur Successive Approximations: you reward a behavior gradually until the organism does what you want it to Aircrib: made his daughter this; it was a climate controlled box that had a roll of fabric as sheets, sound/humidity controlled When Skinner’s daughter was in 4th grade, Skinner went to “Dad’s Day” at her school. He said that the teachers were not effectively teaching the children and teaching them the wrong way Teaching Machines: it tells you if you are the right answer before you move on to the next question. This did not sell well…it was too ahead of the time Training Pigeons: he did this during WW2; he taught the pigeons to peck at a target; guide missles (which the military did not buy into, they picked up on radar) Brelands worked with Skinner Thy taught pigeons to take pictures with small cameras November 8, 2007 Skinner had a midlife crisis He wrote a book, “Walden Two” (a story of society being controlled by positive reinforcement) Skinner had an impact on Behavior Modification The use of positive reinforcement to control a variety of individuals or groups Found that you can reinforce more desirable behaviors, thus people will behave in more desirable ways Problems with Skinners Behaviorism He didn’t believe in theory He was overconfident about the things behaviorism could do Breland and Breland with Skinner Breland and Breland found the instinctive drift: reverting back to behaviors that take precedence over learned ones. Skinner believed that you could train animals to do anything with positive reinforcement Contributions of Behaviorism Shaped American Psychology Operant Conditioning was seen as humanitarian because you can use it to change behaviors to more positive and you can use it in a variety of settings Neo-Neo Behaviorism Introduced a cognitive element of Behaviorism Albert Bandura (1925-) Canadian PhD from the University of Iowa in 1952 Went to Stanford after U of I Subscribed to social cognitive theory: believes positive reinforcement can change behaviors, but also different because he believes in vicarious reinforcement (learning can occur by observing the behavior of others rather than directly experiencing reinforcement) Ex. Setting a good example for your younger siblings Said that we learn by modeling and children imitate behaviors BoBo Doll Study Children imitate aggressive behaviors to the Bobo Doll after watching an adult perform aggressive behaviors on the BoBo Doll Into the idea of self-efficacy: sense of self esteem and competence in a situation People who have high self efficacy are usually more successful in life and increases your ability to resist stress Behavior Modification Said that you can re-train people to do a behavior correctly Julian Rotter Social Cognitive Behaviorist Like psychology, but he was disappointed about the lack of job opportunities in psychology (he was also Jewish which made it really hard for him to get a job) He was not fond of Skinners subjects, which were individual subjects (usually animals) Rotter said that we should study humans His focus was cognitive processes Locus of Control: the perceived source of reinforcement Internal: you are responsible for what happens to you Best in learning and motivation External: a lot of things that happen to you are out of your control Behaviorism ended up being more cognitive bases because of Rotter November 13, 2007 Gestalt Psychology: the whole is different than the sum of its parts; Gestalt means form or configuration Antecedents of Gestalt Immanuel Kant: conscious experience differs from sensory Ernst Mach: space form vs. time form Ex. Looking at a pregnant woman form the front vs. the side Christian von Ehrenfels: form emerges from sensation Just say no to W. James (the Gestaltian view) Act Psychology: its important what the mind does, not what is in it All people of Gestalt Psychology were taught by Stumpf Behaviorism was occurring in the United States as Gestalt Psychology was occurring in Germany Phenomenology: an approach to knowledge based on an unbiased description of immediate experiences as it occurs, not analyzed or reduced to elements Physics Influenced Gestalt Fields of force: regions or spaces traversed by lines of force, such as magnet or electric currents Phi Phenomenon (Wertheimer): the illusion that 2 stationary flashing lights are moving from one place to another Ex. Picture books, flashing Arby’s sign, stroboscope Wertheimer was on a train ride and noticed the phi phenomenon. He decided to stop and go to a toy store where he bought a stroboscope: a circular toy with holes in it. If you turned the circle you could see various pictures through the little slots and it made the pictures seem like a story or like the pictures were moving In 1912 Wertheimer published an article describing the Phi Phenomenon. This started Gestalt Psychology. 3 Founders of Gestalt Psychology Wertheimer (1880-1943) Koffka Kohler (1887-1967) All students of Stumpf Wertheimer was into stimulation He was a vivid lecturer Married his 22 year old student and let her know that his actual marriage was to gestalt psychology Koffka Wrote an article on perception---American’s weren’t interested Said that information without consciousness is senseless to developmental psychology Published a book on developmental psychology which did take off Kohler researched aspects of learning Studied chimps at Tenerife (an Island) for 7 years Wrote a book entitled Mentality of Apes WWI broke out during his study at Tenerife, and he told others that he could not leave. This was odd, because other people left Tenerife. Some people believed that he could be a spy After his study, he divorced his wife, cut off his kids, and remarried a rich woman. He brought his Apes back to Germany with him, but they died because of the weather differences Protested the dismissal of Jewish scholars, but he wasn’t Jewish Perceptual Constancy: a quality of wholenss or completeness in perceptual experience that does not vary even when the sensory elements change Gestalt Principles Law of proximity: objects near each other tend to be grouped together Law of continuity: lines are seen as following the smoothest path Law of Simplicity: items that are similar tend to be grouped together Law of Closure: objects grouped together are seen as a whole Law of Pragnanz or Simplicity: reality is organized or reduced to the simplest form Figure/Ground: we look at both positive and negative space Kohler Chimps and Insight (immediate or accidental learning is nonexistent; spontaneous learning) Studied 4 chimps; Sultan was the most important Kohler would put bananas high up in the air, give the chimps tools to get the bananas down, and watch them Thought chimps were as intelligent as humans Once, Sultans stick was not big enough to reach the bananas in the air, so he put one sick inside of another to make it long enough Sultan also learned by modeling The chimps solved problems which meant that there was evidence of insight Pavlov thought this study was interesting and decided to replicate it. It took Pavlov’s animals 2 months to figure out how to reach the reward. Thus, Pavlov believed that Kohler made up his quick results When children learn, they need to learn by the big picture not bits and pieces Gestalt Psychology spread quickly in Germany, but did not go over well in the US, Why? Behaviorism already took root Everything was in German; translation barrier Founders of Gestalt went to small colleges Been there, done that- rebellion to previous schools of psychology were already established in the US People thought that Gestalt only dealt with perception because of Koffkas title to his article Lewin Field Theory: Lewins system using the concept of fields of force to explain behavior in terms of one’s field of social influences Life space: all influences acting on a person at any given time Bluma Zeigarnik Effect: a certain tension in life force…satisfaction of the need reduces tension Ex. you remember things for an exam, but not after Lewin looked at social psychology too Criticisms of Gestalt Vague All theory with no empirical data Insight? (Pavlov’s replication of Kohler’s experiment) Poorly defined Principles (we already knew what Gestalt had to offer) Contributions of Gestalt Perception Learning Thinking Motivation Examples: how we look at psychology; how we teach; various therapies