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Observational Learning Unit 6 Learning A relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience. Types Associative Learning of Learning Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning Observational Learning Observational Learning Learning by observing others. Also called social learning. Modeling The process of observing and imitating a specific behavior. Experiment A research method in which an investigator manipulates one or more factors to observe the effect on some behavior or mental process. Guinness Mirror Book of World Records Video Clip Neurons Video Clip Part I Mirror Neurons Video Clip Part II Major Contributions self-efficacy reciprocal determinism Bobo Doll Experiment Bobo Doll Experiment Children exposed to the model, imitated the same acts and words they observed in the model. Bobo Doll Experiment Video Clip Prosocial Effects Positive and helpful models can promote similar behavior in others. Examples: Reading to children Nonviolent action - Gandhi and MLK, Jr. European Christians who risked their lives to rescue Jews from the Nazis usually had a close relationship with at least one parent who modeled strong moral or humanitarian concern. Consistency Models are most effective when their actions and words are consistent. Hypocrisy Many models use the “Do as I say, not as I do” principle. Children will tend to imitate the hypocrisy by doing what the model did and saying what the model said. Antisocial Nature & Nurture Effects Aggression can be genetic, but it is environmental. Television Models bullying, sex without consequences, men are tough, women are gentle, etc. Reflects culture’s mythology not its reality. During the late twentieth century, the average child viewed 8000 TV murders and 100,000 other acts of violence before finishing elementary school. Does not include cable programming or video rentals. In an analysis of more than 3000 network and cable programs aired in the 1996-97 season: Nearly 6 in 10 featured violence 74% of the violence went unpunished 58% did not show victim’s pain Nearly half the incidents involved “justified” violence Nearly half involved an attractive perpetrator In the U.S. and Canada, homicide rates doubled between 1957 and 1974, just when TV was introduced and spreading. White South Africans were first introduced to TV in 1975. A similar near-doubling of the homicide rate began after 1975. Elementary school children with heavy exposure to media violence (via TV, videos, and videogames) also tend to get into more fights. What can we conclude about TV, video games, and other media? Correlation A measure of the extent to which two factors vary together, and thus how well either factor predicts the other. As “A” Increases “B” Increases As “A” Increases “B” Decreases We see a pattern or a relationship between viewing violence and acting violently, but we cannot determine that one causes the other. Viewing Violent TV Increases Violent Behavior Increases Violent Behavior Increases Viewing Violent TV Increases