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Download Module 26: Classical Conditioning
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Learning Module 26 Adaptation to the Environment • Learning— the process of acquiring new behavior & knowledge/info that is relatively permanent • A relatively permanent change in behavior and/or knowledge due to experience Learning by Association • Most learning comes from association – we connect events that occur in sequence. • Hearing one song on a playlist cues you to what song is coming next. • When behaviors are repeated in a certain context/environment/situation, the behavior becomes associated with that context – Over time the repeated behavior becomes a habit when you are in that situation/context. – The situation/context triggers the habitual behavior associated with it. (Takes about 66 days to form a habit) – Associative Learning = predicting the immediate future • We accurately guess what’s coming next by linking two events together. Habituation vs. Adaptation Adaptation is recoverable. Habituation is not. • Habituation – reduced sensitivity to a stimulus, even if the stimulus changes. • Our reaction is strong at first but not when the stimulus or something like it happens again. • A turtle draws its head back into its shell when its shell is touched. After being touched repeatedly, the turtle realizes it’s not in danger and no longer hides. – It has habituated. (see more examples) • Adaptation – Your reduced sensitivity to an unchanging and constant stimulus. • You don’t notice the cool water after you’ve been in the lake. • Don’t notice a watch on your wrist but when you move it, you suddenly notice it again. • If the stimulus changes, your sensitivity to it goes back to its original level Behaviorism • The view that psychology should restrict its efforts to studying observable behaviors, not mental processes. • Founded by John B. Watson – Thought that all human behavior is a result of conditioning or due to past experience and environmental influences. – Claimed he could take any child and train him to become any type of specialist. Classical Conditioning • A type of learning where a formerly neutral stimulus gains the power to cause a response because it predicts another stimulus that already produces that response • OR to put it simply: When an animal learns to do a natural reflexive response to something that it would normally not do the response to. • Form of learning by association Stimulus-Response Relationship • Stimulus - anything in the environment that one can respond to • Response – any behavior or action You quickly realize that the “flush” predicts hot water. Stimulus-Response Relationship After linking the two stimuli together, the originally neutral “flush” elicits/causes a response. You’ve learned by association! Ivan Pavlov (1849–1936) Pavlov’s Dogs • Studied digestive reflexes and salivation • “Psychic secretions” were made by dogs to things like seeing the researcher or hearing their approaching footsteps. Pavlov’s Research Apparatus Ivan Pavlov • Watch “Pavlov’s Discovery of Classical Conditioning” (3 min) - online – Video #6 from Worth’s Digital Media Archive for Psychology. – Click on link below to view. Neutral Stimulus — Bell Neutral Stimulus = No Response • Exists BEFORE conditioning/learning has occurred • Does not normally elicit (cause) a response or reflex action by itself – a bell ringing – a color – a clicking metronome • None of these would naturally cause a dog to salivate. Unconditioned Stimulus — Food Unconditioned Stimulus = • Always elicits/causes a reflexive action: an unconditioned (unlearned) response – Food causes salivating – blast of air causes blinking – Loud noise causes one to startled or scared Unconditioned Response — Salivating Unconditioned Stimulus = Unconditioned Response • The automatic/natural response to the unconditioned stimulus • A response to an unconditioned stimulus— naturally occurring & not learned – Salivation at smell of food – Eye blinks at blast of air – Startle reaction in babies Conditioned (Learned) Stimulus — Bell Conditioned Stimulus = • The stimulus that was originally neutral becomes conditioned or learned after it has been paired repeatedly with the unconditioned stimulus • Will eventually cause the unconditioned response by itself – The Bell predicts food is coming so the dog salivates – What was once neutral is now learned/conditioned because it now causes something to happen. Before it did not. Conditioned (Learned) Response - Salivating Conditioned Stimulus = Conditioned Response • The original unconditioned response becomes conditioned/learned after it has been caused by the conditioned (previously neutral) stimulus • Usually the same behavior as the UR Classical Conditioning NEUTRAL STIMULUS (NS) UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS (US) will elicit NO REACTION will elicit a REFLEX ACTION Unconditioned Response (UR) UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS (US) NEUTRAL STIMULUS will elicit a (CS) Unconditioned Response (UR) (NS) CONDITIONED CONDITIONEDSTIMULUS STIMULUS REFLEX ACTION will elicit a CONDITIONED RESPONSE (CR) Pavlov’s Experiment Pavlov’s Experiment Pavlov’s Experiment Classical Conditioning Terms • • • • • Aquisition Extinction Spontaneous recovery Generalization Discrimination training Acquisition • The process of developing a learned response • The initial learning that takes place in the during/learning stage of conditioning when the animal starts to associate the NS with the US. Acquisition Extinction • The diminishing of a learned response • When the CS is continually presented without the UCS then the CR will eventually begin to disappear. Spontaneous Recovery • The reappearance, after a rest period, of an extinguished conditioned response • After a period of time if the CS is presented, the CR returns. • Learning may disappear but is not eliminated. Spontaneous Recovery Generalization • Process in which an organism produces the same CR to two similar stimuli (CS) • The more similar the substitute stimulus is to the original used in conditioning, the stronger the generalized response Different alarms still have the same effect = wake you up Discrimination • Ability of an animal to not respond to a new NS/CS that is too different from the original CS. • The subject learns that one stimuli predicts the UCS and the other does not. Where’s the bell? = After learning to salivate to a bell, Pavlov’s dogs didn’t drool to other sounds. Generalization vs. Discrimination Higher-Order/Second-Order Stimulus • A new NS gets associated with a previously learned CS and starts to trigger the CR. John B. Watson and Little Albert • 11-month-old infant • Watson and his assistant, Rosalie Rayner, classically conditioned Albert to be frightened of white rats • Led to questions about experimental ethics To Watch a Short Video on Watson and the Little Albert experiment click HERE. Online version (4 min) Little Albert – Before Conditioning UCR Little Albert – During Conditioning UCR Little Albert – After Conditioning CS: rat (CR) Little Albert – Generalization & Discrimination (Generalization) (Discrimination) Could Little Albert’s Fear Have Been Undone? • YES!!! Through Counter Conditioning! • Must pair the conditioned stimulus (Rat) with something that is incompatible with fear (Candy). Mary Cover Jones • Notice how we start with a conditioned stimulus not a neutral stimulus BEFORE: Rat Fear CS = CR DURING: Rat Candy Happy CS + UCS = UCR AFTER: Rat Not Scared CS = New CR Candy Happy UCS = UCR Mary Cover Jones’ Peter Experiment Classical Conditioning & Drug Use Responses Similar to the Drug’s Effect: Classically Conditioned Drug Effect • Drugs that are regularly used to restore NORMAL functioning produce a conditioned response (CR) similar to the drug’s effect. (see diagram below) • This can result in a Placebo Response – a psychological & physiological reaction to a fake treatment or drug. – You feel more alert after drinking decaffeinated coffee Responses OPPOSITE to the Drug’s Effect: Classically Conditioned Compensatory Response • Drugs that are regularly used to DISRUPT normal functioning produce a conditioned compensatory response (CCR) opposite to the drug’s effect. • This is caused by your body naturally trying to compensate and restore normal functioning. • Eventually, stimuli that reliably precede the administration of a drug cause a physiological reaction that is opposite to the drug’s effects. • May be one explanation for the characteristics of withdrawal and tolerance The Conditioned Compensatory Response Siegel’s CCR Studies • If a drug abuser does their drug in an unfamiliar setting they will run the risk of overdose because they will not have the CCR effect before they take the drug. • Spontaneous recovery is a reason people relapse when they find themselves in a similar situation to the one in which they regularly used the drug. Siegel’s Rat Study • Over the course of a month, rats gradually developed tolerance to increasing amounts of heroin. • Then, they were injected with an overdose of almost twice as much heroin as they had become accustomed to receiving. • Rats that were injected with the heroin overdose in the same setting in which they had previously received heroin were twice as likely to survive as were rats that were injected in a different setting. • Almost all the rats in the control group that had not previously been exposed to heroin died. CCR & Drug Overdose • Some heroin addicts have died after injecting their usual amount of heroin in an unfamiliar environment. Why?