Title: Factors Influencing Conditioning
1Factors Influencing Conditioning
1
- CS and US Intensity, and Attention to the CS
- Temporal relationship
- Predictiveness
- Preparedness
- Redundancy
2CS Intensity Affects Rate
2
Strong CS
CS
US
Weak CS
cs
US
3Suppression and CS Intensity
3
4Another CS Intensity Effect
4
Overshadowing the more salient CS wins if two
CS are trained in compound
Group Stage 1 Test Overshadow Ax ? US
cr Control ax? US CR
Note Undercase letters stand for weak intensity
CSs
5CS Attention and Latent Inhibition
5
Group Phase 1 Phase 2 Test Experimental
X,X,X X?US cr Control ---- X?US
CR
- Because the CS is a benign stimulus it will lose
the capacity to command ATTENTION if preexposed - Little x will eventually produce a robust CR
6The Influence of Intensity
- Exception The effect of the CS on the intensity
of the CR is sometimes seen when the subject is
exposed to both the high and the low intensity
CSs which are individually paired with the US on
separate trials.
7US Intensity Affects Rate and Asymptote
7
Strong US
CS
US
Weak US
CS
us
8Suppression and US Intensity
8
9Temporal Relationship
9
CS
Delay
US
Trace
CS
US
Simultaneous
CS
US
Explicitly Unpaired
CS
US
10Time Conditioning
- No distinctive CS
- UCS is presented at regular intervals
- The passage of time is CS
- To determine whether conditioning has occurred,
the UCS is omitted and the strength of the CR is
assessed
11Indirect Conditioning
11
- Many stimuli develop the ability to elicit a CR
indirectly - i.e., a stimulus that is never itself paired with
a UCS comes to elicit the CR - Two important ways for this to happen are
- Higher-order conditioning
- Sensory preconditioning
12Higher-Order Conditioning
12
Group Stage 1 Stage 2 Test Result HOC A?US
B?A B? cr Control C?US B?A B?
ziltch
HOC A modest CR develops to B because if signals
a reminder for the US, namely, the already
conditioned A.
13Sensory Preconditioning
13
Group Stage 1 Stage 2 Test Result SPC B?A
A?US B? cr Control B?A C?US
B? ziltch
SPC A modest CR occurs to B at test, because it
signals the A, which is now a reminder for the
US.
14CS-US Preparedness
14
From Garcia Koelling, 1966
Back
15Are forward pairings enough to generate a CR?
No!!!!!!!!
Predictiveness of the CS
15
16Predictiveness of the CS
- Predictiveness the consistency with which the CS
is experienced with the UCS, which influences the
strength of conditioning. - The pairing of a CS and UCS does not
automatically ensure that conditioning will occur.
17A Contingency Experiment
17
CS
US
Chance of US per CS 2/4 .5
Chance of US outside CS
0/10 0
Positively Correlated
18A Contingency Experiment
18
CS
US
Chance of US per CS 2/4 .5
Chance of US outside CS
5/10 .5
Uncorrelated
19A Contingency Experiment
19
CS
US
0/4 .0
Chance of US per CS
Chance of US outside CS
5/10 .5
Negatively Correlated
20Its a little like
20
- Animals are scientists, trying to make
cause-gteffect predictions. -
- trying to determine whether the US is
contingent on the CS - lots of pairings in the zero contingency group
21Quantifying
21
- p(USCS) proportion of CS trials with a US
- p(USno CS) proportion of background only
trials with a US - Dp p(USCS) - p(USno CS)
22Some Examples
22
Dp
- 20/20 1.0
- 15/20 .75
- 10/20 .50
- 10/20 .50
- 0/20 0
- 0/60 0
- 6/60 .10
- 30/60 .5
- 45/60 .75
- 60/60 1.0
1
2
3
4
5
231
1.0
Positive
2
P(US/ CS)
3
4
Negative
5
0
1.0
P(US/no CS)
24Redundancy
24
Group Stage 1 Stage 2 Test Result Blocking
A?US AB?US B? cr Control AB?US B?
CR
Blocking Limited or no acquisition of a CR to a
second conditioned stimulus, B, when it is
introduced alongside an already conditioned first
conditioned stimulus , A.
25Extinction Paradigm
- Extinction of a conditioned response when the
conditioned stimulus does not elicit the
conditioned response because the unconditioned
stimulus no longer follows the conditioned
stimulus
26Loss of the CRs
- Hull considered the extinction process to be a
mirror image of the acquisition. - It is not. One reason for faster extinction than
acquisition is that extinction alters the
motivation level via omission of the UCS. - Decline is also caused by the development of
inhibition rather than erasing the first-learned
CS-US association. - So, the CS is part excitatory and part
inhibitory after the end of the last extinction
trial
27Evidence for new learning
- A rest period after the last extinction trial can
produce spontaneous recovery. More rest causes
more spontaneous recovery. - If extinction takes place in a different context
than acquisition, a return to the original
context of acquisition causes the immediate
return of the CR (called ABA renewal).
28Duration of CS Exposure
- As the duration of CS-alone exposure increases,
the strength of the CR weakens - Shipley found total duration of CS alone
exposure, not number of extinction trials is
critical, but subsequent research has not always
confirmed his result.
29Exposure Therapy
29
- To increase sustained abstinence, some therapists
have used a technique that involves exposing the
addict to as many drug related cues as possible
during extinction. - Withdrawal responses and drug cravings decrease
as a result of exposure to drug-related cues.
30Systematic Desensitization
30
- Developed by Joseph Wolpe
- Used to inhibit fear and suppress phobic behavior
- SD uses counterconditioning and Wolpe based it on
three lines of evidence
31Systematic desensitization
31
- Involves performing deep muscle relaxation
techniques while first imagining, and then
experiencing, anxiety-inducing scenes - Relaxation involves cue-controlled relaxation, a
conditioned relaxation response that enables a
word cue (e.g., calm) to elicit relaxation
promptly
32Stages
32
- Systematic desensitization consists of four
separate stages - 1) construction of the anxiety hierarchy
- 2) relaxation training
- 3) counterconditioning the pairing of
relaxation with the feared stimulus and exposure
therapy - 4) assessment of whether the patient can
successfully interact with the phobic object
33Hierarchies
33
- Hierarchies may be either
- Thematic scenes all related to a basic theme
- Spatial-temporal based on phobic behavior in
which the intensity of the fear is determined by
distance either physical or temporal