Title: Elicited or Unconditioned Behavior
1Elicited or Unconditioned Behavior
- Occurs without past experience
- Modifiable with experience (examples habituation
and sensitization
2Some Types of Elicited Behaviour
- An eliciting or unconditioned stimulus elicits a
response without any prior learning - Types of Elicited Behaviour
- Simple Reflex
- Orienting Reflex
- Taxis (taxes)
- Kinesis (kineses)
- Fixed/Modal Action Patterns
3FAPs/MAPs
- Sequence of behaviors directed at the eliciting
(sign or releasing) stimulus - Sometimes requires underlying drive (hydraulic
model) - Vigor of response depends on how closely the sign
stimulus corresponds to the ideal stimulus (e.g.,
cute baby) - Small (non-ideal), Normal (ideal), Supernormal
(exaggerated ideal)
4Releasing Stimulus
Back
5Back
6Supernormal stimulus
An accurate 3-dimensional model of a herring
gull's head (a), and a 'supernormal' bill (b).
7Supernormal stimulus
8Habituation
- a simple type of learning which is shown by a
change in elicited behaviour over trials - defined as a reduction in responsiveness
(frequency, magnitude) over successive trials - sometimes short-lasting and sometimes long
lasting
9Habituation-One Type of Modifiability
Eric Kandel and Aplysia
10Kandels Experiments
Touch Siphon
Gill Withdrawal
11Habituation
gill withdrawal
touch
12Forms of Habituation
- Short-Term
- lasts only a few minutes
- best if stimulus applied at short intervals (2-s)
- Long-Term
- lasts weeks
- best if stimulus applied at longer intervals
(30-s)
13Simplified Circuit
14Whats the Mechanism of Short-term?
decreases in synaptic transmission
loss of skin sensitivity
decrease in motor synapse
fatigue
15Not Muscle Fatigue
Spontaneous
Evoked
Pinsker et al., (1970) Science 1671740
16Whats the Mechanism of Short-term?
decreases in synaptic transmission
loss of skin sensitivity
decrease in motor synapse
fatigue
17Not Motor Synapse
Before
skin
SN
After
electrical
MN
record
gill
Kupfermann et al., (1970) Science 1671743
18Whats the Mechanism of Short-term?
decreases in synaptic transmission
loss of skin sensitivity
decrease in motor synapse
fatigue
19Skin Sensitivity?
Stage 1
Kupfermann et al., (1970) Science 1671743
20Not Skin Sensitivity
Kupfermann et al., (1970) Science 1671743
21Whats the Mechanism of Short-term?
decreases in synaptic transmission
loss of skin sensitivity
decrease in motor synapse
fatigue
22Mechanism of Short-term Habituation
Decrease in neurotransmitter released at the
synapse with both the motor neuron and
the interneuron!
23Mechanism of Long-Term Habituation
Change in the number of synapses!
24Some Properties of Habituated Responses
- Spontaneous Recovery
- Dishabituation
- Generalization
25Spontaneous Recovery
26Dishabituation
Hi
Response
Habituation Dishabituation
Lo
Number of Presentations
27Generalization
28Sensitization- Another Type of Modifiability
- enhanced response to a benign stimulus after
exposure to a noxious one (most common) - for example, startle
- enhanced response after repeated presentations of
a not so benign stimulus (less common) - for example, kindling
29Rat Startle
30Human Startle
31Kindling
- repeated stimulation of hippocampal cells
increases responsiveness - after being sensitized, very little stimulation
is required to produce the seizures - related to epilepsy
32Dual Process Theory
Competition between two separate processes
1. S-R System Habituation
2. State System Sensitization
33Examples
34Conditions Favouring Habituation
- Calm organism
- Shorter interstimulus intervals
- Less variable interstimulus intervals
- Low intensity
- Less complexity
- More trials
35Interstimulus Interval
36Complexity
Looking Time
Trials
37Imagine
Kendra is an overly anxious person. She
worries about the smallest things. Some examples
of the unpleasant symptoms she experiences
include excessive sweating, heart palpitations,
and a fitful sleep. Her anxiety places her at
risk for depression, heart disease, and diabetes.
A genetic test reveals Kendra has a vulnerability
in the promoter region of her serotonin
transporter gene. Her doctor tells her that if
her mother had been more loving and attentive
when Kendra was younger, she might have been
calmer. The doctor maintains experience can
program calmness, and calmness acquired by
experience is inheritable.
38Epigenetics and Early Experience
- Genes affect bodily processes, including
emotional regulation - Two copies of the short version of a promoter
for the serotonin transporter gene is a risk
factor
39Maternal Behavior
licking and grooming (LG) and arched-back
nursing (ABN)
Low LG-ABN mothers
High LG-ABN mothers
40Attentive Mothering
- Licking and arched-back nursing by mother
- an immediate calming effect on baby rats in the
first week after birth - a long-term reduction in stress responsiveness
- the promoter for the short version of serotonin
transporter gene is switched on by attentive
mothering - so, a vulnerable pup with two short copies of the
promoter for the serotonin transporter gene is
cured by its mothers licking (short gene works
better) - this environmental effect is passed along to the
pups own offspring
41Brain of Vulnerable Baby Rat
high LG-ABN mother
short gene expressed
less anxiety
42Cross-fostering Studies
43Imagine
Kendras doctor gives her a prescription for
a pill that will promote the activity of the
malfunctioning gene. No other therapy is
necessary. Kendras children inherit the faulty
gene, but its function is enhanced.