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Social Learning Theory

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Title: Social Learning Theory


1
Social Learning Theory
2
Social Learning Theory
  • Social learning theory focuses on the learning
    that occurs within a social context.

3
General principles of social learning theory
follows
  1. People can learn by observing the behavior is of
    others and the outcomes of those behaviors
  2. Learning can occur without a change in behavior.
    Behaviorists say that learning has to be
    represented by a permanent change in behavior, in
    contrast social learning theorists say that
    because people can learn through observation
    alone, their learning may not necessarily be
    shown in their performance. Learning may or may
    not result in a behavior change.

4
  • 3. Cognition plays a role in learning. Awareness
    and expectations of future reinforcements or
    punishments can have a major effect on the
    behaviors that people exhibit.
  • 4. Social learning theory can be considered a
    bridge or a transition between behaviorist
    learning theories and cognitive learning
    theories.

5
How the environment reinforces and punishes
modeling
6
Social Learning Theory/Observational Learning-
  • responses are influenced by observing others
    (models)
  • Learning primary factor in development- of
    personality
  • Behavior is shaped by observing and imitating
    others

7
Bandura- 4 Key Processes to Observational
Learning
  • Attention- must pay attention to anothers
    behavior
  • Retention- store a mental representation of what
    you witnessed for later retrieval
  • Reproduction- reproduce the response
  • Motivation- will the response pay off?

8
Banduras Study
  • Hypothesis- Children who witness aggressive
    actions by an adult model will display more
    aggressive behaviors than children exposed to no
    model or a non-aggressive model
  • i. Sex of model is important- more likely to
    imitate same-sex model
  • ii. Boys are more predisposed than girls towards
    imitating aggression b/c of highly
    masculine-typed behavior

9
Subjects
  • 36 boys, 36 girls
  • Ages 3-6

10
Experimental Conditions
  • i. 24- control group- No Model
  • ii. 24- experimental group- Aggressive Model
  • 1. Boy subgroup. male model
  • 2. Girl subgroup- male model
  • 3. Boy subgroup- female model
  • 4. Girl subgroup- female model
  • iii. 24- experimental group- Non-aggressive Model
  • 1. Boy subgroup male model
  • 2. Girl subgroup- male model
  • 3. Boy subgroup- female model
  • 4. Girl subgroup- female model

11
Experimental Procedures
  • i. Child in room with an adult model- child
    playing with potato prints
  • ii. Adult begins playing with tinker toys
  • iii.Then aggressive model attacks Bobo the Doll
  • 1. laid bobo on its side, sat on it, punched it
    in the nose
  • 2. picked up a mallet and hit the doll in the
    head
  • 3. tossed bobo in the air aggressively and kicked
    it about the room
  • repeated 3x saying Clock him in the nose, Hit
    him down, throw him in the air, kick him, pow
    and he keeps coming back for more and he sure
    is a tough fella
  • Took about 10 minutes

12
  • i. Non aggressive condition- model played with
    tinker toys for 10 min
  • ii. Then subjects taken to a room with attractive
    toys. They play for a little bit and then the
    researchers say these toys are reserved for other
    children.
  • iii. Researcher takes the child to another room
    with both aggressive and non-aggressive toys-
    subject plays in this room for 20 min (judges
    watch in a one-way mirror)
  • iv. Measures of Aggression (Operational
    Definition)
  • 1. all acts that imitated the physical aggression
    of the model
  • a. sitting on Bobo, punching it in the nose,
    hitting it with a mallet
  • b. imitation of the verbal aggression
  • c. other mallet aggression
  • d. non-imitative aggression

13
Results
  • Average of 38.2 instances of imitative physical
    aggression for male subjects exposed to the
    aggressive model
  • Average of 12.7 (imitative physical aggression)
    for female subjects who were exposed to an
    aggressive model
  • iii. Verbal aggression on average 17x for boys
    and 15.7x for girls

14
  • Why might there be a closer average when it comes
    to verbal aggression in boys and girls? Why a
    larger difference with they physical violence?
    P.88 Girls were more likely to imitate verbal
    aggression while boys more inclined to imitate
    physical violence.
  • Look at the chart- imitate verbal aggression and
    look at the huge difference between boys and
    girls depending on the sex of the model. What
    might account for this?

15
Subsequent Research
  • 1. Live adult model more influential than filmed
    model. Film model more influential than cartoon
    model.
  • 2. Children imitated violence more when they saw
    it rewarded and significantly less when the model
    is punished for aggressive behavior (What
    connections can you make with this concept to
    childrens cartoons?)

16
Edward TolmanLatent Learning Cognitve Mapping
  • behavior is cognitive purpose, could not be
    reduced to muscular stimuli/response.
  • Learning Principles behavior has direction and
    purpose. Organisms act for ends, as if behavior
    were purposeful. Expectations occur when
    sufficient motivation is present. Tolman
    undertook a series of studies to demonstrate the
    purposive nature of behavior.
  • Expectancy was a determinant of performance
    whereas learning was accomplished by a process of
    "cognitive mapping" on a latent level.

17
  • Experimented using rats and mazes, sometimes
    using food, others not.
  • He found that although the rats learned the maze
    with or without the stimulus of food but their
    intensity and speed with which the rate coursed
    the maze was affected by the offer of reward.

18
  • To successfully show that rats used cognitive
    maps rather than just running and turning right,
    he used his rats as examples. He would run them
    through a maze similar to the one pictured below
  • Learning that is hidden internally rather than
    shown in behavior is called latent learning.
  • Studies of latent learning support a distinction
    between learning, an internal process, and
    behavior or performance, an observable process.
    Learning is inferred from behavior but is not the
    same thing as behavior

19
Latent Learning Slides
  • https//docs.google.com/present/view?iddcgctkx_1f
    23fvfgmrevision_lateststart0themeblankcwjt
    rue\

20
Köhler Insight Learning
  • Studied chimps presented them with a reward that
    was out of reach, chimps devised ways to reach
    that reward (tools, etc.)
  • 3 properties of insight learning
  • insight-learning is based on the animal
    perceiving the solution to the problem.
  • insight-leaning is not dependent on rewards.
  • once a problem has been solved, it is easier to
    solve a similar problem

21
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