The behaviourist approach Flashcards

1
Q

classical conditioning

A

learning by association
-when two stimuli are repeatedly paired together (an unconditioned stimulus) and a new neutral stimulus. The neutral stimulus eventually produces the same respond that was first produced by the unlearned stimulus alone

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2
Q

operant conditioning

A

a form of learning in which behaviour is shaped and maintained by its consequences.
Possible consequences of behaviour include positive reinforcement, negative reinforcement or punishment

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3
Q

reinforcement

A

a consequence of behaviour that increases the likelihood of that behaviour being repeated, can be negative or positive

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4
Q

Pavlovs research

A
  • classical conditioning
  • revealed that dogs could be conditioned to salivate to the sound of a bell if that sound was repeatedly presented at the same time as they were given food
  • pavlovs dogs learned to associate the sound of a bell (stimulus) with the food (another stimulus) and would produce the salivation respond every time
  • showed how a neutral stimulus in this case a bell can come to elicit a new learned respond (conditioned response) through association
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5
Q

Skinners theory

A
  • (1953)- suggested learning is an active process whereby husked and animals operate on their environment
  • positive reinforcement- receiving a reward when a certain behaviour is performed
  • negative reinforcement- when an animal or human avoids something unpleasant
  • punishment- an unpleasant consequence of behaviour
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6
Q

Skinners research

A

repeated Thorndikes experiment on cats

  • put rats in a box with a lever, every time the rat activated the lever a food pellet came out, the rats continued this behaviour (positive reinforcement)
  • also showed how they could be conditioned to perform the same behaviour to avoid an unpleasant stimulus
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7
Q

law of effect

A

any behaviour that is followed by pleasant consequences is likely to be repeated and an behaviour followed by unpleasant consequences is likely to be stopped

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8
Q

scientific credibility

A
  • objectivity and replication helped create psychology as a science
  • highly controlled lab settings
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9
Q

real life application

A
  • operant conditioning is the basis of token economy systems in institutions such as prison
  • classical conditioning has been applied to the treatment of phobias
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10
Q

mechanist view of behaviour

A

suggests people play a much more active role in their own learning compared to animals

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11
Q

environmental determinism

A

behaviourist approach sees all behaviour as determined by past experiences that have been conditioned
-skinners suggested everything we do is due to our reinforcement history- ignores free will

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12
Q

ethical and practical issues

A

although the experiment was highly controlled, the animals involved were exposed to stressful and aversive conditions which may have affected how they reacted

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