Title: Chapter 12: Theories of Learning
1Chapter 12 Theories of Learning
- A History of Psychology
- (3rd Edition)
- John G. Benjafield
2Ernest R. Hilgard (19042001)
- Wrote series of popular and influential textbooks
- Introductory text most successful academic
textbook of the 1970s - Conditioning and Learning (1940)
- Theories of Learning (1948)
- Became a defining survey textbook
- Served as a prototype for later survey textbooks
3E.R. Guthrie (18861959)
- Trained in logic and philosophy of science
- Concluded The laws of logic are conventions and
not laws of thought. - Skeptical of notions of possibility of completely
rigorous deduction, ultimate validity in an
argument - Presented his theory of learning in an informal
way
4Contiguity
- Continguity A combination of stimuli which has
accompanied a movement will, on its recurrence,
tend to be followed by that movement. - Principle at the core of Guthries learning theory
5Repetition
- Typical view repetition acts to strengthen the
connection between stimulus and response - Guthries view repetition provides the
opportunity for additional stimuli to become
associated with a response
6Reward
- Typical view reinforcement strengthens the
connection between stimulus and response - Guthrie reward acts to prevent the animal from
unlearning the association formed just before the
reward
7One-Trial Learning
- Guthries writing was in touch with everyday life
- Suggestions for meeting the problems of animal
training, child rearing, and pedagogy - Ex. breaking a habit
- 1. Find the cues that initiate the action
- 2. Practice another response to these cues
8Clark L. Hull (18841952)
- Motivational theory
- Based on the concept of drive
- Drive any persistent and intense stimulus
- Similarities shared with psychoanalytic
hypotheses about motivation
9The Formal Structure of Hullian Theory
- Guthries approach
- Simple, practical ideas
- Informal relation between theory and data
- Hulls approach
- Abstract, technical
- Precise relation between theory and data
- Illustrates the kind of procedures recommended by
logical positivists
10The Hypothetico-deductive Method
- Hull attempted to create a mathematical theory
from which could be deduced the facts of learning - Postulates intended to describe the basic laws
of behaviour - Intervening variables represent hypothetical
processes that occur inside the organism and are
supposed to govern behaviour - Theorems experimentally testable hypotheses
about behaviour
11Postulates
- Theory was an elaboration of Thorndikes law of
effect - Primary reinforcer any stimulus that results in
a reduction in drive - Secondary reinforcer a stimulus that initially
has no reinforcing properties but acquires them
through association with a reinforcing stimulus
12Postulates
- Drive (D)
- Major motivational concept in Hulls theory
- Tends to increase as a function of the amount of
time that has elapsed since the last
reinforcement
13Postulates
- Habits learned connections between stimuli and
response - Formed as a result of reinforcement
- Habit strength is equal to 1 minus 11 to the
minus aN - N is the number of times a response to a stimulus
has been reinfroced - a has a constant value (.03)
14Postulates
- Stimulus-intensity dynamism (V) amount of energy
possessed by a stimulus that impinges on the
organism - Incentive motivation (K) amount of reward that
follows a response - Reaction potential amount of energy
available for a response
15Postulates
- Reactive inhibition acts as a negative
drive that is reduced by not responding - Conditioned inhibition negative habit
that tends to make the organism less likely to
respond
16Kenneth W. Spence (19071967)
- Worked closely with Hull
- Attempted to explain Köhlers transposition
experiments - Animals learn relationships between stimuli
- Realized Köhlers Gestalt explanation was a
threat to an associationist form of explanation,
like Hulls
17Charles E. Osgood (19161991)
- Graduate work at Yale
- Extended the Hullian approach
- Mediational processes
- A way of explaining how stimuli acquired meaning
for an organism
18The Semantic Differential
- Mediating processes often associated with words
- Mediators carry the meanings of words,
particularly their emotional or affective
meanings - Semantic differential technique rate a person,
thing, or event on a set of seven-point bipolar
scales
19E.C. Tolman (18861959)
- 1914 Converted to behaviourism
- Phenomenology in operational behaviouristic
terms - Blend of methodological behaviourism and Gestalt
psychology with other influences
20Purposive Behaviour
- Subject matter behaviour described with
reference to the goal that the animal is seeking - Molar descriptions in terms of what the
behaviour is intended to accomplish - Molecular descriptions in terms of specific
muscular and glandular reactions - Tolman attempted to explain molar behaviour,
therefore purposive behaviour
21Cognitive Maps
- The explanation of purposive behaviour requires
an understanding of how an animal represents its
environment - Cognitive maps
- Contain expectancies representations of what the
animal is likely to find by following the
different routes represented in the map - Expectancies integrated into sign Gestalts
representations of the way one event leads to
other events in the cognitive map
22The Place vs. Response Controversy
- Does learning consist of the formation of
stimulusresponse connections? - Does learning consist of the formation of
expectations?
23The Verbal-Learning Tradition
- Studies of verbal learning
- Ebbinghaus nonsense syllables
- Calkins paired associates
- Concerned with uncovering the basic laws of the
formation of associations in humans
24Acquisition
- Irvin Rock (19221995)
- Tested the hypothesis of one-trial learning
- Results repetition plays no role in the
formation of associations - Some criticisms re experimental procedures used
25Serial Learning
- When asked to learn lists of nonsense syllables,
participants learn the middle of the list more
slowly than the ends - Real world context?
- Roediger and Crowder (1982)
- Listing names of the presidents of the United
States shows serial position curve
26The Fate of Verbal Learning
- Benton J. Underwood (19151994)
- By the 1960s, verbal learning considered dull
- Symposium Verbal Behavior and General Behavior
Theory - Adequacy of an associationist approach to the
study of learning was called into question
27D.O. Hebb (19041985)
- Studied with Karl Lashley
- Career at McGill University
- First foreign president of the American
Psychological Association (Canadian)
28The Organization of Behavior
- Neuropsychology combined aspects of psychology
with neurophysiology - Cell assemblies physiological mediating
processes responsible for representing
stimulation - Hebb rule when neuron A fires neuron B, some
change occurs in A or B or both, which then
increases As capacity to fire B in the future - Phase sequences
- Phantom limbs
29Motivation
- Arousal system the nonspecific or diffuse
projection system of the brain stem which was
shown . . . to be an arousal system whose
activity in effect makes organzied cortical
activity possible
30Experiments in Sensory Deprivation
- Funded in part by the Canadian Department of
National Defence - Participants paid undergraduate students
- Procedure participants placed in insolation
chambers, received only unpatterned sensory
stimulation
31Experiments in Sensory Deprivation
- Results
- Participants began to have hallucinations after
23 days - Participants more likely to believe propaganda
than controls - Participants less able to think about problems
- Participants quit the experiment quickly
32Albert Bandura (1925)
- Undergraduate degree at University of British
Columbia - PhD at University of Iowa
- Influenced by Kenneth Spence
33Social-Learning Theory
- Stressed the importance of modelling in shaping a
persons learned behaviour - Modelling takes place through observational
learning - Observational learning a person can acquire
novel responses through the observation of
another persons actions - Bandura has drawn out the social implications of
modelling
34Behaviour Modification
- Mary Cover Jones (18961987)
- Study with boy named Peter, afraid of furry
objects - Placed a caged rabbit nearby while the boy was
fed - Decreased distance between rabbit and boy on
subsequent occasions - Systematic desensitization
35Reciprocal Determinism
- Is the person or the situation more important in
determining behaviour? - Reciprocal determinism assumes neither that the
environment controls behaviour nor that people
are free to do as they wish - Triadic reciprocal causation the person, the
environment, and behaviour interact so as to
determine each other