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Transcript
Myers’ Psychology
®
for AP ,
2e
David G. Myers
PowerPoint Presentation Slides
by Kent Korek
Germantown High School
Worth Publishers, © 2014
AP® is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board ®, which was not involved in the production of, and does not endorse, this product.
Unit 6:
Learning
Unit 06 - Overview
• How We Learn and Classical Conditioning
• Operant Conditioning
• Operant Conditioning’s Applications, a
Comparison to Classical Conditioning
• Biology, Cognition, and Learning
• Learning By Observation
Click on the any of the above hyperlinks to go to that section in the presentation.
ADAPTATION
• Adaptation is adjusting to a changed
environment
• Development involves adapting to
increasingly complex environments, using
knowledge gained from experience
• Instinctive behavior is adaptive
(ex:imprinting, others?)
5
Definition
Learning is a relatively permanent change in an
organism’s behavior due to experience.
Learning is more flexible in comparison to the
genetically-programmed behaviors of Chinooks,
for example.
6
HABITUATION
• Habituation is a type of learning: adapting
to stimuli that do not change
• It is NOT because the organism has learned
about a relationship or an association
• Opponent Process Theory by Richard
Solomon is based on habituation. What
topic have we associated with this theory?
7
Opponent Process
Pleasure
Pain
8
OPPONENT PROCESS
THEORY
• Habituation to repeated stimuli is the result
of two interacting processes:
– A Process = fixed automatic, emotional,
unlearned response (1st HIGH)
– B Process = initially slower reaction, triggered
by the A Process; counter effect of A Process –
this reaction starts to increase with repeated
exposure (crash)
– Explains emotions (gift), drug dependency
9
How Do We Learn?
EXPERIENCE IS THE KEY TO
LEARNING
We learn by association. Our minds
naturally connect events that occur in
sequence.
2000 years ago, Aristotle suggested this
law of association. Then 200 years ago
Locke and Hume reiterated this law.
10
How Do We Learn?
Classical Conditioning
How Do We Learn?
Operant Conditioning
Let’s try it !!
13
ACTIVITY
• What behavior (response) was demonstrated?
• What action (stimulus) led to the behavior?
• Was the behavior voluntary or involuntary? Did
this change?
• What word (neutral stimulus) became associated
with the stimulus?
• How long did this take?
• What might cause the response to disappear?
14
Classical Conditioning
Sovfoto
Ideas of classical conditioning originate from old
philosophical theories. However, it was the
Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov who elucidated
classical conditioning. His work provided a basis
for later behaviorists like John Watson and B. F.
Skinner.
Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)
15
BEHAVIORISM
• Behaviorism is a view that Psychology
should:
– Be an objective science (currently accepted)
– Study behavior without reference to mental
processes, therefore a rejection of introspection
(currently not accepted)
16
Classical Conditioning
Pavlov’s Experiments
Pavlov’s Experiments
Before conditioning, food (Unconditioned
Stimulus, US) produces salivation
(Unconditioned Response, UR). However, the
tone (neutral stimulus) does not.
18
Pavlov’s Experiments
During conditioning, the neutral stimulus (tone)
and the US (food) are paired, resulting in
salivation (UR). After conditioning, the neutral
stimulus (now Conditioned Stimulus, CS) elicits
salivation (now Conditioned Response, CR)
19
PAVLOV’S EXPERIMENT
• Basic Components of Classical Conditioning:
– Natural reflex (automatic, involuntary)
– Stimulus causes behavior
– Response is the reaction
Association of neutral stimuli with stimuli that
produces response
Unconditioned = Unlearned
Conditioned = Learned
20
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
(WRITE THIS DOWN!)
• TERMINOLOGY
–
–
–
–
Conditioned = Learned
Unconditioned = Unlearned
Stimulus = Causes a response
Response = Behavioral reaction to stimulus
• BASIC COMPONENTS:
–
–
–
–
Natural reflex (automatic, involuntary)
Neutral stimulus
Association of stimuli
Timing
21
Acquisition
Acquisition is the initial stage in classical
conditioning in which an association between a
neutral stimulus and an unconditioned
stimulus takes place.
1. In most cases, for conditioning to occur, the
neutral stimulus needs to come before the
unconditioned stimulus.
2. The time in between the two stimuli should
be about half a second.
22
Acquisition
The CS needs to come half a second before the US
for acquisition to occur.
23
Learning to enjoy exercise
24
CC Clip / Worksheets
http://www.youtube.com/wat
ch?v=WfZfMIHwSkU
•CC Boxes – on your own
•CC - Partner work
25
Extinction
When the US (food) does not follow the CS
(tone), CR (salivation) begins to decrease and
eventually causes extinction. Example?
26
RECONDITIONING
THE QUICK RELEARNING OF A
CONDITIONED RESPONSE AFTER
EXTINCTION
Example: Soldier is redeployed and
quickly goes back to survival
responses.
27
Spontaneous Recovery
After a rest period, an extinguished CR (salivation)
spontaneously recovers, but if the CS (tone) persists
alone, the CR becomes extinct again.
28
Spontaneous Recovery
• Examples:
• Soldier ducks/dives at the site of a fast
approaching car
29
Stimulus Generalization
Tendency to respond to
stimuli similar to the CS is
called generalization. Pavlov
conditioned the dog’s
salivation (CR) by using
miniature vibrators (CS) on
the thigh. When he
subsequently stimulated
other parts of the dog’s
body, salivation dropped.
30
Stimulus Discrimination
Discrimination is the learned ability to distinguish
between a conditioned stimulus and other stimuli that
do not signal an unconditioned stimulus. Example?
31
BABY ALBERT
1. Read case study
2. Complete question #1; you may not
proceed to next question until you get a
“yes” from me.
3. You may not ask another student for help.
4. After receiving your “yes” move on to the
remaining questions.
32
Baby Albert #1
UCS = loud bang
UCR = startle & cry
NS = white rat
CS = white rat
CR = startle & cry
GS = other animals / white fury things
33
Applications of Classical
Conditioning
Brown Brothers
Watson used classical
conditioning procedures to
develop advertising
campaigns for a number of
organizations, including
Maxwell House, making the
“coffee break” an American
custom.
John B. Watson
34
SECOND ORDER
CONDITIONING
• ALSO referred to as Higher Order Conditioning
• When a conditioned stimulus acts like an
unconditioned stimulus, creating conditioned
stimuli out of events associated with it.
• Example? (next slide)
• Very important adaptive characteristic of cc in
preparing organism for life threatening events
35
2nd Order Conditioning
1st order conditioning
•Food (US) = salivate
(UR)
2nd order conditioning
•Same as before
•Container (NS) = Food
(US) = Salivate UR)
•Alarm clock (NS1) =
Container (CS) =
Salivate (CR)
•Container (CS) =
Salivate (CR)
•Alarm clock (CS2) =
Salivate (CR)
36
2nd Order Conditioning
(Money)
• 1st order:
Product = Pleasure
Money = Product = Pleasure
• 2nd order:
Money = Pleasure
37
Extending Pavlov’s Understanding
Pavlov and Watson considered consciousness,
or the mind, unfit for the scientific study of
psychology. However, they underestimated
the importance of cognitive processes and
biological constraints.
38
Cognitive Processes
Early behaviorists believed that learned
behaviors of various animals could be reduced
to mindless mechanisms.
However, later behaviorists suggested that
animals learn the predictability of a stimulus,
meaning they learn expectancy or awareness of a
stimulus (Rescorla, 1988).
39
Pavlov’s Legacy
Pavlov’s greatest contribution
to psychology is isolating
elementary behaviors from
more complex ones through
objective scientific
procedures.
Ivan Pavlov
(1849-1936)
40
Applications of Classical
Conditioning
1. Alcoholics may be conditioned (aversively)
by reversing their positive-associations with
alcohol.
2. Through classical conditioning, a drug (plus
its taste) that affects the immune response
may cause the taste of the drug to invoke the
immune response.
– Lemon flavored drug
immune
system
– Lemon
immune system
41
ACTIVITY
42
SHAPING EXERCISE
• How did we get the subject to perform the
behavior?
• What if we had waited until he/she was able
to perform the behavior perfectly before we
reinforced it?
• Shaping: reinforcing successive
approximations
43
Operant & Classical Conditioning
1. Classical conditioning
forms associations
between stimuli (CS
and US). Operant
conditioning, on the
other hand, forms an
association between
behaviors and the
resulting events
(consequences).
44
Operant & Classical Conditioning
2. Classical conditioning involves respondent
behavior that occurs as an automatic
response to a certain stimulus. Operant
conditioning involves operant behavior, a
behavior that operates on the environment,
producing rewarding or punishing stimuli.
45
Skinner’s Experiments
Skinner’s experiments extend Thorndike’s
thinking, especially his law of effect. This law
states that rewarded behavior is likely to occur
again.
Yale University Library
47
Using Thorndike's law of effect as a starting
point, Skinner developed the Operant chamber,
or the Skinner box, to study operant
conditioning.
Walter Dawn/ Photo Researchers, Inc.
48
From The Essentials of Conditioning and Learning, 3rd
Edition by Michael P. Domjan, 2005. Used with permission
by Thomson Learning, Wadsworth Division
Operant Chamber
Operant Chamber
The operant chamber,
or Skinner box, comes
with a bar or key that
an animal manipulates
to obtain a reinforcer
like food or water. The
bar or key is connected
to devices that record
the animal’s response.
49
Shaping
Shaping is the operant conditioning procedure
in which reinforcers guide behavior towards the
desired target behavior through successive
approximations (hot/cold activity).
Fred Bavendam/ Peter Arnold, Inc.
Khamis Ramadhan/ Panapress/ Getty Images
A rat shaped to sniff mines. A manatee shaped to discriminate
objects of different shapes, colors and sizes.
50
SHAPING
• AN EXAMPLE OF UNINTENDED
SHAPING. (child’s tantrum)
• CHAINING
• Linking in a sequence of several different reinforced
behaviors
(ex. Learning to tie your shoes)
51
Types of Reinforcers
Any event that strengthens the behavior it
follows is a reinforcer. A heat lamp positively
reinforces a meerkat’s behavior in the cold.
Reuters/ Corbis
52
BIG BANG THEORY
EXAMPLE
•
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guroaQ
RFsX4
53
Refer to / Study …
Operant Conditioning
Charts handout
54
NEGATIVE REINFORCEMENT
• Remember: the behavior increases due to
the removal or the end of an aversive
stimuli
• Two types:
– Escape conditioning: organism learns to make a
response to end the negative reinforcement
• Ex. Dog partition box – jumps/yelps when shocked
– Avoidance conditioning: organism learns to
avoid the negative reinforcer.
55
• Avoidance conditioning (continued):
– A powerful influence on everyday behavior
Example? (ex. Dentist, getting shots, truancy)
– Maintains phobias etc. because the response is
reinforced by the reduction of the fear
56
Primary & Secondary Reinforcers
1. Primary Reinforcer: An innately reinforcing
stimulus like food or drink.
2. Conditioned Reinforcer (sometimes called a
secondary reinforcer): A learned reinforcer
that gets its reinforcing power through
association with the primary reinforcer.
Example? (light & food, money & stuff)
57
Immediate & Delayed Reinforcers
1. Immediate Reinforcer: A reinforcer that
occurs instantly after a behavior. A rat gets
a food pellet for a bar press.
2. Delayed Reinforcer: A reinforcer that is
delayed in time for a certain behavior. A
paycheck that comes at the end of a week.
We may be inclined to engage in small immediate
reinforcers (watching TV) rather than large delayed
reinforcers (getting an A in a course) which require
consistent study.
58
Delayed Gratification
59
Reinforcement Schedules
1. Continuous Reinforcement: Reinforces the
desired response each time it occurs.
Learning is very rapid but extinction is also
rapid.
2. Partial Reinforcement: Reinforces a
response only part of the time. Though this
results in slower acquisition in the
beginning, it shows greater resistance to
extinction later on. You may need to start
with a continuous schedule.
60
PARTIAL OR INTERMITTENT
REINFORCEMENT TERMS
•
•
•
•
Fixed - Never changing
Variable - Changing
Interval - Having to do with time
Ratio - Having to do with behavior or
performance
61
Partial or Intermittent
Reinforcement Schedules
1. Fixed-ratio schedule: Reinforces a response
only after a specified number of responses.
e.g., piecework pay.
2. Variable-ratio schedule: Reinforces a
response after an unpredictable number of
responses. This is hard to extinguish because
of the unpredictability. (e.g., behaviors like
gambling, fishing.)
62
Interval Schedules
1. Fixed-interval schedule: Reinforces a
response only after a specified time has
elapsed. (e.g., preparing for an exam only
when the exam draws close.) Produces a
scalloping response
2. Variable-interval schedule: Reinforces a
response at unpredictable time intervals,
which produces slow, steady responses. (e.g.,
pop quiz.)
63
Skinner’s Experiments
Reinforcement Schedules
Schedules of Reinforcement
65
Reinforcement Schedules
• Handout 16-7
66
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
67
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved (Fixed Ratio)
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
68
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
69
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo (Variable Ratio)
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
70
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
71
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music from
Jeopardy every night at 7 pm (Fixed Int)
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
72
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach
73
IDENTIFY THE SCHEDULE OF
REINFORCEMENT: FI, VI, FR,
VR
• 1. Paid 10 dollars for every 20 puzzles
solved
• 2. Playing Bingo
• 3. Child who likes to hear theme music
from Jeopardy every night at 7 pm
• 4. Waiting for a sunny day to go to the
beach (Variable Interval)
74
Punishment
An aversive event that decreases the behavior it
follows.
75
PUNISHMENT
• REMEMBER:
• POSITIVE IS TO ADD
• NEGATIVE IS TO SUBTRACT
• DO NOT THINK IN TERMS OF GOOD
AND BAD!
76
PUNISHMENT
• With a partner:
– Give an example of positive punishment for a
child, a teenager, and an adult
– Give an example of negative punishment for a
child, a teenager, and an adult
77
PUNISHMENT
• What methods do parents and teachers use
to punish children/teens?
• What methods work? Why?
• What methods don’t work? Why?
• What is the difference between negative
reinforcement and punishment?
78
PUNISHMENT
• What methods do parents and teachers use to
punish children/teens?
• What methods work? Why?
• What methods don’t work? Why?
• What is the difference between negative
reinforcement and punishment?
– Neg. Reinf. = take away to increase a behavior
– Punishment = something to decrease behavior
79
PUNISHMENT
• Select an example you are comfortable
sharing of a time when you were punished.
Write a short journal type description of the
incident (one paragraph). What were the
short term and long term effects? The
paragraph will not be handed in, but will be
shared with a partner.
80
Punishment
Although there may be some justification for
occasional punishment (Larzelaere & Baumrind,
2002), it usually leads to negative effects.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Results in unwanted side effect such as fear.
Conveys no information to the organism.
Justifies pain to others.
Causes unwanted behaviors to reappear in its absence.
Causes aggression towards the agent.
Causes one unwanted behavior to appear in place of another.
Does not erase an undesirable habit, it merely suppresses it
Ineffective unless applied immediately after and each time
Does not specify correct behavior
81
GUIDELINES IN USING
PUNISHMENT
• Specify why
• Concentrate on behavior not the person
• Should be immediate and strong enough without
being too strong
• Be careful of escalation (if punishment is not
given early enough, bad behavior escalates). What
might cause parent escalation? (Broken Window)
• Combine with other behavior
82
Extending Skinner’s Understanding
Skinner believed in inner thought processes and
biological underpinnings, but many
psychologists criticize him for discounting
them.
Or
83
Skinner’s Legacy
Skinner argued that behaviors were shaped by
external influences instead of inner thoughts and
feelings. Critics argued that Skinner
dehumanized people by neglecting their free
will.
Falk/ Photo Researchers, Inc
.
84
Application of Operant
Conditioning
•
•
•
•
At school
In sports
At home
For self-improvement
Applications of Operant
Conditioning
Skinner introduced the concept of teaching
machines that shape learning in small steps and
provide reinforcements for correct rewards.
LWA-JDL/ Corbis
In School
87
Applications of Operant
Conditioning - Examples?
•
•
•
•
Culturally approved gender roles
Discriminative stimuli (insomnia)
Socialization
Others?
88
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Contrasting Classical and
Operant Conditioning
Module 29:
Biology, Cognition, and
Learning
Biological Constraints on
Conditioning
Biological Constraints on
Conditioning
Biological Constraints on
Conditioning
Biological Constraints on
Conditioning
Biological Constraints on Conditioning
Limits on Classical Conditioning
• John Garcia
–Conditioned Taste Aversion
–Biologically primed associations
• Natural Selection and
Learning
–Genetic predisposition
TASTE AVERSION
ACTIVITY: SOUP
Use a 9 point scale (1 = dislike extremely)
• 1. Stirred by a thoroughly washed, used
flyswatter.
• 2. Flyswatter is brand new.
• 3. Thoroughly washed but used comb
• 4. Thoroughly washed, used dog bowl
110
TASTE AVERSION:
FAVORITE COOKIE
•
•
•
•
5.
6.
7.
8.
Dropped it on the grass first?
A waiter had taken a bite first?
An acquaintance had taken a bite first?
A good friend had taken a bite first?
111
TASTE AVERSION
• The association principle is everything
when it comes to food. Rozin’s results:
• 1. 82% a 4 or less (clean flyswatter)
• 2. 58% disliked (brand new flyswatter)
• 3. 76% disliked (clean, used comb)
• 4. 71% disliked (washed dog bowl)
112
Taste Aversion
•
•
•
•
5.
6.
7.
8.
Only 34% would pass up (grass)
84% reject (waiter)
31% reject (acquaintance)
Just 16% refuse (friend)
113
Taste Aversion and Biological
Predispositions
• Have you ever gotten sick after eating a
particular food?
• How did you feel about/react to the food
after the incident?
• How strong was this feeling/reaction?
• How long did the feeling/reaction last?
114
Biological Predispositions
Pavlov and Watson believed that laws of
learning were similar for all animals.
Therefore, a pigeon and a person do not differ
in their learning.
However, behaviorists later suggested that
learning is constrained by an animal’s biology.
115
Biological Predispositions
Courtesy of John Garcia
Garcia showed that the duration
between the CS and the US may be
long (hours as opposed to ½ sec.),
but yet result in conditioning. A
biologically adaptive CS (taste) led to
conditioning and not to others (light
or sound).
John Garcia
116
Biological Constraints on Conditioning
Limits on Classical Conditioning
Biological Constraints on Conditioning
Limits on Classical Conditioning
Biological Constraints on Conditioning
Limits on Classical Conditioning
Biological Constraints on Conditioning
Limits on Classical Conditioning
Biological Constraints on Conditioning
Limits on Operant Conditioning
• Naturally adapting
behaviors
• Instinctive drift
Biological Predisposition
Photo: Bob Bailey
Biological constraints
predispose organisms to
learn associations that
are naturally adaptive.
Breland and Breland
(1961) showed that
animals drift (instinctive
drift) towards their
biologically predisposed
instinctive behaviors.
Marian Breland Bailey
122
Cognition’s Influence on
Conditioning
Cognition’s Influence on Conditioning
Cognitive Processes and
Classical Conditioning
• Predictability of an event
- Expectancy
• Stimulus
associations
Cognition’s Influence on Conditioning
Cognitive Processes and
Operant Conditioning
•Latent learning
•Cognitive map
•Insight
•Intrinsic motivation
•Extrinsic motivation
Latent Learning
Such cognitive maps are based on latent
learning, which becomes apparent when an
incentive is given (Tolman & Honzik, 1930).
126
Cognitive Maps
Evidence of cognitive processes
during operant learning comes from
rats during a maze exploration in
which they navigate the maze
without an obvious reward. Rats
seem to develop cognitive maps, or
mental representations, of the layout
of the maze (environment).
127
Motivation
Intrinsic Motivation:
The desire to perform a
behavior for its own
sake.
Extrinsic Motivation:
The desire to perform a
behavior due to
promised rewards or
threats of punishments.
128
Influences on Conditioning
Influences on Conditioning
Influences on Conditioning
Influences on Conditioning
Influences on Conditioning
Learning and Personal Control
Learning and Personal Control
• Cope
• Problem-focused coping
• Emotion-focused coping
Learning and Personal Control
Learned Helplessness
(Martin Seligman)
Learning and Personal Control
Learned Helplessness
• (Martin Seligman)
Learning and Personal Control
Learned Helplessness
• (Martin Seligman)
Learning and Personal Control
Learned Helplessness
• (Martin Seligman)
Learning and Personal Control
Learned Helplessness:
Depleting and Strengthening
Self-Control
OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING:
Cubing Exercise
• Develop ideas for picture, diagram, etc for each
concept regarding observational learning listed on
your sheet
• Record your ideas on your cube; make use of
color (enhances memory)
• Construct your cube
• Share ideas used on your cube with another
student pair
142
Learning by Observation
© Herb Terrace
Higher animals,
especially humans,
learn through observing
and imitating others.
©Herb Terrace
The monkey on the
right imitates the
monkey on the left in
touching the pictures in
a certain order to obtain
a reward.
143
Reprinted with permission from the American
Association for the Advancement of Science,
Subiaul et al., Science 305: 407-410 (2004)
© 2004 AAAS.
Mirror Neurons
Neuroscientists discovered mirror neurons in
the brains of animals and humans that are active
during observational learning.
144
Learning by observation
begins early in life. This
14-month-old child
imitates the adult on TV
in pulling a toy apart.
Meltzoff, A.N. (1998). Imitation of televised models by infants.
Child Development, 59 1221-1229. Photos Courtesy of A.N. Meltzoff and M. Hanuk.
Imitation Onset
145
OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
• Bandura Bobo Doll
Experiment
• BANDURA BOBO
DOLL
EXPERIMENT
146
Bandura's Bobo doll
study (1961) indicated
that individuals
(children) learn
through imitating
others who receive
rewards and
punishments.
Courtesy of Albert Bandura, Stanford University
Bandura's Experiments
147
Applications of Observational
Learning
Unfortunately,
Bandura’s studies
show that antisocial
models (family,
neighborhood or TV)
may have antisocial
effects.
148
Positive Observational Learning
Bob Daemmrich/ The Image Works
Fortunately, prosocial (positive, helpful) models
may have prosocial effects.
149
Gentile et al., (2004)
shows that children in
elementary school
who are exposed to
violent television,
videos, and video
games express
increased aggression.
Ron Chapple/ Taxi/ Getty Images
Television and Observational
Learning
150
Modeling Violence
Children modeling after pro wrestlers
Glassman/ The Image Works
Bob Daemmrich/ The Image Works
Research shows that viewing media violence
leads to an increased expression of aggression.
151
The End