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Chapter 9: Learning Section 1: Classical Conditioning • PDN: Read page 284-285 • What is the best way to learn? • Learning: A relatively permanent change in behavior (or behavioral potential) due to experience. –Experience is the greatest teacher • Affect how the person is likely to act in the future • Behaviorism: An approach to psychology that emphasizes the study of observable behavior and the role of the environment as a determinant of behavior. –Focus of conditioning- involves associations between environmental stimuli & responses • Two types –Classical Conditioning –Operant Conditioning Classical Conditioning • Ivan Pavlov was studying the salivation in dogs • Eventually the dogs would start salivating just when brought to the laboratory & saw an empty bowl –Conditioned reflex because it depended on environmental conditions Pavlov’s Apparatus • Harness and fistula (mouth tube) help keep dog in a consistent position and gather uncontaminated saliva samples –They do not cause the dog discomfort 9-6 New Reflexes from Old • Original salivary reflex- Unconditioned response (UCR) –Food- unconditioned stimulus (UCS) • UCS- any event or thing that elicits a response automatically or reflexively • UCR- response that is automatically produced • Learning occurs when a neutral stimulus becomes the conditioned stimulus (CS) that is paired with a UCS • A CS elicits a CR, which is usually similar to the original unlearned one • Classical Conditioning: The process by which a previously neutral stimulus acquires the capacity to elicit a response through association with a stimulus that already elicits a similar or related response. 9-9 Terms • Conditioned Stimulus: An initially neutral stimulus that comes to elicit a conditioned response after being associated with an unconditioned stimulus. • Conditioned Response: A response that is elicited by a conditioned stimulus –it occurs after the conditioned stimulus is associated with an unconditioned stimulus. Principles of Classical Conditioning • Occurs in all species • Acquisition –A neutral stimulus that is consistently followed by an unconditioned stimulus will become a conditioned stimulus. Extinction • The weakening & eventual disappearance of a learned response • It occurs when the conditioned stimulus is no longer paired with the unconditioned stimulus. Wade and Tavris © 2005 Prentice Hall 9-12 • Spontaneous recovery- explains why completely eliminating a CR usually requires more than one extinction session Higher Order Conditioning • A procedure in which a neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus through association with an already established conditioned stimulus. 9-14 • May explain why some words trigger emotional response in us –Ex: Birthdays • May contribute to the formation of prejudices –Dumb Pollacks Generalization & Discrimination • Stimulus Generalization: –After conditioning, the tendency to respond to a stimulus that resembles one involved in the original conditioning. –Ex: sounds Wade and Tavris © 2005 Prentice Hall 9-16 • Stimulus Discrimination: –The tendency to respond differently to two or more similar stimuli. –Ex: difference between sounds What is actually learned in Classical Conditioning? • To be most effective, the stimulus to be conditioned should precede the UCS • The CS becomes a signal for the UCS • To become a CS, the neutral stimulus, must reliably signal or predict the UCS • Examples Review