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Behavioralism

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Behavioralism Psychological perspective that emphasizes the role of learning and experience in determining behavior. A strict behavioralist believes that babies are ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Behavioralism


1
Behavioralism
  • Psychological perspective that emphasizes the
    role of learning and experience in determining
    behavior.
  • A strict behavioralist believes that babies are
    tabula rasa (clean slate) and the study of
    psychology should focus purely on observable
    behaviors and not unobservable thoughts.

2
Two types of behavioral learning
  • Classical conditioning An INVOLUNTARY behavior
    is determined by what PRECEDES it (Ivan Pavlov)
  • Operant conditioning rewards and punishment A
    VOLUNTARY behavior is determined by the
    anticipation of something that FOLLOWS it. (B.F.
    Skinner)

3
Which is which?
  • A child is attacked by a dog. The child now
    experiences anxiety around all dogs.
  • You feel hungry in 3rd period most days because
    it is lunch time. When you enter your 3rd period
    class on an early release day at (930 am), you
    feel hungry.
  • You do your homework every night to get good
    grades and avoid being yelled at by mom.

Classical involuntary, stimulus precedes
behavior Operant voluntary, stimulus follows
behavior
4
Ivan Pavlovs Experiment with Classical
Conditioning
  • Pavlov paired a neutral stimulus (a bell) with a
    meat powder (which made the dog salivate).
  • Eventually, dog salivates to bell alone

5
Ivan Pavlov Conditioned Response
6
Identifying Parts
  • Unconditioned Stimulus (US)
  • Meat powder (Pavlov)
  • Unconditioned Response (UR) (Pavlov)
  • Salivation
  • Conditioned Stimulus (CS) (Pavlov)
  • Bell (Pavlov)
  • Conditioned Response (CR)
  • Salivation (Pavlov)
  • Hint replace conditioned with learned to
    make it more intuitive.

7
TASTE AVERSION You go to a fancy restaurant and
decide to try an appetizer youve never tried
before escargot. After dinner, you go to a
concert and get violently ill (from a stomach
virus thats been going around). From then on,
you cant even look at snails without feeling
sick.
  • UCS? Stomach virus
  • UCR? Feeling sick
  • CS? Sight of snails
  • CR? Feeling sick

8
A friend has learned to associate the sound of a
dentists drill to a fearful reaction because of
a painful experience she had getting a root
canal. In this example, what is the
  • UCS?
  • UCR?
  • CS?
  • CR?

9
A BMW commercial has lots of pretty people in it.
People who watch the commercial find the people
pleasing to look at. With repeated viewing, they
begin to associate the car with the pleasant
feeling.
  • UCS?
  • UCR?
  • CS?
  • CR?

10
Little Albert
  • John Watson famous behavioralist
  • Little Albert 11 month old orphan
  • Showed him a white rat. No fear.
  • Made a loud noise. Albert cried.
  • Showed him a white rat and made a loud noise.
    Albert cried. Repeated several times.
  • Eventually Albert cried at white rat alone.

11
Identify the parts
Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) Loud noise
Unconditioned Response (UCR) Fear/crying
Conditioned Stimulus (CS) White rat
Conditioned Response (CR) Fear/crying
12
Watson on childcare
  • Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed,
    and my own specified world to bring them up and
    Ill guarantee to take any one at random and
    train him to become any type of specialist I
    might selectdoctor, lawyer, merchant-chief, and
    yes, ever beggarman and thief, regardless of his
    talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities,
    vocations, and race of his ancestors. (1930)

13
Definitions of Observed Behaviors
  • Extinction diminished response to the
    conditioned stimulus when it is no longer coupled
    with UCS. (stop giving meat powder with bell and
    dog will stop salivating to bell)
  • Spontaneous recovery reappearance of an
    extinguished CR after a rest.
  • Generalization the tendency to respond to any
    stimuli similar to the CS (a dog may salivate
    when he hears ANY type of ringing)
  • Discrimination the ability to distinguish
    between the CS and similar stimuli (Dog only
    salivates to specific tone)

14
Application to Little Albert
  • If Little Albert generalized, what would we
    expect to happen?
  • He might cry at the sight of similar objects (he
    did rabbit, dog, sealskin coat, some rumors
    Santas beard)
  • How could we teach Little Albert to discriminate?
  • Continually expose him to stimuli similar to the
    rat, but only make the loud noise when exposing
    him to the rat
  • How could Little Alberts conditioning be
    extinguished?
  • Continually expose him to a white rat without
    making the loud noise (unfortunately, this was
    never done because Little Albert was adopted soon
    after the original experiments (he would be 83
    now if he is still alive probably scared of
    rats!)
  • If Little Albert is still alive, his fear of
    white rats is likely to have been extinguished
    (no loud noise when he sees a rat). However,
    occasionally, when he sees a rat, he may find
    that his heart races for a second or two. What
    is this called?
  • Spontaneous recovery
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