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Learning chapter 6 How do we learn? classical conditioning (Pavlovian conditioning) operant conditioning (instrumental conditioning) observational learning (modeling) • Learning is a relatively permanent change in an organism's behavior due to experience • By conditioning and by observation we adapt to our environments. Conditioning • the process of learning associations -certain events occur together • The events may be stimuli (as in classical conditioning) • or a response and its consequences (as in operant conditioning 5 Classical Conditioning 6 A type of learning in which an organism comes to associate stimuli. (Animals can learn simple associations) A neutral stimulus signals an unconditional stimulus – and begins to produce a response that anticipates and prepares for the unconditional stimulus. Also know as Pavlovian or respondent conditioning. Operant Conditioning 7 We learn to associate a response (our behavior) and its consequences and repeat acts followed by good results. Pressing a lever on a slot machine pays us money and so we keep doing it (even if we are losing money) Ivan Pavlov – Classical conditioning • By creating a visual or auditory stimulus just before feeding his dogs, Pavlov discovered that they began salivating after observing the stimulus, even when no food was visible. • He determined that animals developed "conditional reflexes" based on prior experiences. • Pavlov's psychology studies also focused on the reflexes that occur in response to stress and pain. His laboratory in St. Petersburg has been turned into a museum. Figure 6.1 Classical conditioning apparatus Terminology Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) Conditioned Stimulus (CS) Unconditioned Response (UCR) Conditioned Response (CR) • UCS is a stimulus that elicits an unconditioned response without previous conditioning… Pavlov’s meat powder • UCR is an unlearned reaction to a UCS that occurs without previous conditioning… salivating • CS is a previously neutral stimulus that has acquired the capacity to elicit a conditioned response... the sound of a tone • CR is a learned reaction to a conditioned stimulus… salivating to the tone Classical conditioning 13 • US – unconditioned stimulus. Naturally and automatically triggers a response FOOD • CS - conditioned stimulus- the neutral stimulus • UR- unconditioned response - the unlearned, naturally occurring response to the unconditioned stimulus. SALIVATION • CR- conditioned response - the learned response to a previously neutral stimulus. BELL SALIVATION More Terminology • Trial = pairing of UCS and CS • Acquisition = initial stage in learning • Stimulus contiguity = occurring together in time and space Some behaviors are learned after only one trial, or pairing, while others take many trials. 3 types of Classical Conditioning • Simultaneous conditioning: CS and UCS begin and end together • Short-delayed conditioning: CS begins just before the UCS, end together • Trace conditioning: CS begins and ends before UCS is presented Processes in Classical Conditioning • Extinction: CS and UCS are no longer paired and the response to the CS is weakened • Spontaneous Recovery: the response is still there, just not active, because of spontaneous recovery – when an extinguished response reappears after a period of non-pairing Processes in Classical Conditioning • Stimulus Generalization: conditioning generalizes to additional stimuli that are similar to the CS (Little Albert) • Discrimination: the opposite of generalization; that is, the response is to a specific stimulus… similar stimuli don’t work • Higher-order conditioning: CS functions as if it were a UCS to establish new conditioning (tone produces saliva, tone paired with light, light produces saliva) Applications of classical conditioning • John Watson used classical conditioning procedures to develop advertising campaigns for a number of organizations, including Maxwell House, making the “coffee break” an American custom 18 Applications of classical conditioning • Alcoholics may be conditioned (aversively) to alcohol by reversing their positive-associations with alcohol. • Through classical conditioning, can a drug (with a specific taste) that affects the immune response cause the taste of the drug to invoke the immune response? 19