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1 THEORIES AND APPLICATIONS OF AVERSIVE CONDITIONING Chapter 7 Escape, Avoidance, & Punishment 2 We usually respond to aversive events by either 1) making a response the will let us escape from the aversive situation (Escape), or 2) making a response that will let us avoid the aversive situation (Avoidance), or 3) stop doing something that caused an aversive (Punishment) Escape Conditioning 3 Escape response: a behavioral response to an aversive event that is reinforced by the termination of the aversive event Escape Examples 4 Pressing button removes cold Proposal Gone Bad ¼ wheel turn terminates a tail shock AKA“Negative” Reinforcement 5 S R OAversive Negative Relationship p(O/R) < p(O/noR) Escape from Aversive Events 6 Several factors play a role in determining whether an organism learns to escape aversive events Intensity of the aversive stimulus (facilitates learning) Absence of negative reinforcement (impairs learning) Impact of delayed reinforcement (impairs learning) There are also many factors that affect the efficiency of the escape response Elimination of an Escape Responses 7 An escape response can be extinguished No longer terminating the aversive stimulus following the escape response However, the response will continue for some time until the organism learns that the escape response no longer terminates the aversive event Vicious Circle Behavior 8 Vicious circle behavior: an escape response that continues despite punishment, due to a failure to recognize that the absence of the escape behavior will not be punished It occurs because the organism doesn’t realize that not responding will not lead to punishment The Avoidance of Aversive Events 9 Avoidance response: a behavioral response that prevents a potential aversive event Active (Do something) Passive (Don’t do something) Passive Avoidance Behavior 10 Refers to avoiding a potential aversive by not acting. Don’t jump off the10 meter diving board In passive avoidance situations, the more severe the aversive event, the faster the acquisition of the passive avoidance response One-Way Active (Subject Escapes) 11 Warning CS Shock US Response Time One-Way Active (Subject Avoids) 12 Warning CS Shock US Response Time Two-Way Active Avoidance Behavior 13 The organism is placed in one chamber (A) and exposed to a cue before it is shocked To avoid the shock, it must run to the other side (B) before the shock is presented After this, the animal remains in side B for a short intertrial interval (ITI) Two-Way Signaled Active 14 Light= CS Gridshock= US Rat Shuttle Box 15 The stimulus is then presented again and the animal must run back to side A Thus, the animal avoids the shock by running back to the place it was previously shocked This model requires the animal to ignore situational and contextual cues and pay attention to only one cue (the signal) Two-Way Unsignaled Active 16 S-S interval: R-S interval: 20 s 40 s 60 s The Severity of the Aversive Event 17 In most cases, the greater the severity of the aversive event, the more readily the subject will learn the avoidance response The final level of performance is also higher in most cases Two-Way active avoidance is often impaired with increasing intensity. 18 In the two-way avoidance model, learning is inversely related to severity of shock That is, the more severe the shock, the slower the learning of the response This may be due to the fact that the animal experiences conflict about going back into the place it was previously shocked The greater the shock, the greater the conflict Avoidance Puzzle 19 Question: How can the absence of an event act as a reinforcer? Answer: Something tangible has happened. Fear is removed inside the organism. Mowrer’s Two-Process Theory of Avoidance 20 1. (Pavlovian): Pairings of situational CSs with an aversive US cause a fear CR to develop 2. (Instrumental): Responding causes removal of the CS, which in turn removes the fear CR Avoidance learning is escape learning; the organism learns to escape from the CS and the fear that it elicits. Is Fear Termination a Reinforcer? 21 Stage 1 Stage 2 CS-US Conditioning Escape ToneShock Shuttle Tone Off D’Amato’s Modification of Two-Process 23 D’Amato asserts that we are motivated to approach situations associated with relief as well as to escape events paired with aversive events The relief experienced following avoidance behavior rewards the response Removal of anticipatory pain (US) as well as anticipatory fear (CS) might also play a role Four Challenges for the Two-Process Theory 24 1. “Unsignaled” avoidance 2. Avoidance does not readily extinguish 3. Level of fear is not always positively correlated with avoidance (fearless avoidance) 4. Extinguish warning stimulus doesn’t always eliminate avoidance Fear in Active Avoidance? 25 Fear declines with trials Stage 1 Active avoidance training Stage 2 Does warning CS suppress lever pressing? Cognitive View of Avoidance 26 Calculation of what choice will likely yield a better (less dangerous) situation Military PTSD “Malingers” Answers from Two-Process Theory of Avoidance 27 1. Temporal conditioning 2. “Conservation of fear” (Response so quick the feared stimulus not fully experienced) 3. Response as a stimulus that inhibits fear (safety signal) 4. Well learned response trigger by very small amounts of fear (habit learning) 5. “Response blocking” or “flooding” should increase fear 28 29 Although flooding seems to be very effective, many people do not want to participate in flooding because the initial anxiety is so great Alternative Theoretical Accounts of Avoidance Behavior 30 Species-Specific Defense Reactions (SSDRs) more concerned with the actual response aversive stimuli elicit strong innate responses (e.g., freezing, flight to dark area, fighting) species typical responses are readily learned as avoidance responses (e.g., jump = two trials versus lever-press = 1000s of trials) punishment originally thought to be responsible for the selection of the avoidance response Punishment 31 Punishment: use of an aversive event contingent on the occurrence of an inappropriate behavior The intent of punishment is to suppress an undesired behavior If punishment is effective the frequency, intensity, or both will decline THE NATURE OF PUNISHMENT 32 Thorndike’s Negative Law of Effect The negative law of effect states that punishment weakens the strength of an S-R bond The recovery of responding shortly after exposure to a mild punishment contradicts this view because the weakened bond should be permanent, not temporary Skinner’s Experiment on Punishment 33 Stage 1: Rats were reinforced with food on a VI schedule Stage 2: Extinction for two successive days First 10 min of extinction: One group of rats was punished Another group was not punished Skinner concluded that punishment was not an effective way to control behavior (refutes “negative law of effect”). The Effectiveness of Punishment 35 Punishment appears to suppress unwanted behaviors However, the suppression is often temporary In some cases, however, punishment permanently suppresses unwanted behaviors Increasing Effectiveness 36 intense/prolonged from start (no ramping up) response contingent rather than response independent immediately after the response rather than delayed continuous rather than partial reinforcement schedule Increasing Effectiveness 38 punished response is not otherwise being reinforced there is an alternative response to acquire reinforcer the punished response is not a species-specific defence reaction unsignaled Problems 39 person associated with punishment becomes aversive (40 to 1 rule) general suppression of responding imitation of the aggressive behavior involved in punishment; pain-initiated aggression escape/avoidance or aggressive responses in punishing situation (aka “vicious circle”) identifying punishers is difficult (attention might be positive) Types of Punishment 40 Punishment is the response-contingent presentation of an aversive event Positive punishment: addition of an aversive event (e.g. spanking) to reduce the undesirable behavior Negative punishment: removal of an appetitive event (watching TV) to reduce an unwanted behavior (aka: omission) Categories 41 There are two categories of negative punishment Response cost: an undesired response results in either the withdrawal of or failure to obtain reinforcement. Time-out from reinforcement (time out): a period of time during which reinforcement is unavailable Response Cost 42 Response cost: A negative punishment technique in which an undesired response results in either the withdrawal of or failure to obtain reinforcement Response cost is a form of negative punishment It refers to a penalty or fine contingent upon the occurrence of an undesired behavior 43 Response cost has been used to successfully treat a wide range of behaviors including: Self mutilation Smoking Overeating Tardiness Aggressiveness Time Out 44 Time out from reinforcement A negative punishment technique in which an inappropriate behavior leads to a period of time during which reinforcement is unavailable If a time out area is used, it must not be reinforcing