learning and conditioning lect 1 Flashcards

1
Q

what is learning

A

relatively permanent change in behaviour as a result of experience

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2
Q

what are the two main types of learning

A
  1. behaviour changes bc of stimulus presentations e.g classical cond, stimulus and response etc
    2.behaviour changes bc of stimulus response contingencies e.g operant cond = S + R + consequence
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3
Q

what is habitation

A

-as stimuli recur, responding occurs with smaller magnitude
-it is non associative learning
-e.g snail tapping, tapping a snail shell causes them to withdraw but if you do it repeatedly they learn it isnt a threat so no need to withdraw anymore

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4
Q

why is habituation important

A

-allows us to be free from distraction, can zone out of unimportant noise in the environment

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5
Q

weakness of habituation

A

-may become too accustomed to the stimuli and miss something important

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6
Q

habituation as a non associative learning process

A

-basic biological process
-reduction in innate automatic processes
-NOT same as extinction
-no CR
-e.g babies stare at novel stimulus more than a stimulus they are familiar with until this novel stimulus is habituated

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7
Q

Epstein research into habituation

A

-administered lemon and lime juice
-salivation and liking (hedonic rating) was measured
-in trials 1-2, salivation increased
-at trial 10, salivation and hedonic response reduced

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8
Q

what can habituation be involved in

A

-stress (increased tolerance to stressors)
-pain (increased tolerance to pain)
-eating (getting used to strong/sweet flavours)
-drug use (drug tolerance)
-fear (desensitisation)

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9
Q

what are the principles of classical cond

A

-pavlov studied psychic salivery responses
-noticed if bell occurs same time as feeding, salivation begins before food after repeated associations
-food = UCS
-salivation = UCR
-bell = NS
repeated pairing
-salivation = CR
-bell = CS

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10
Q

what is discrimination

A

-ability to discriminate between CS + other stimuli
-eg discriminating between bell tone (CS) and other unconditioned sounds such as a whistle
-discriminate stimulus is a CS associated with either the appearance of UCS (CS) or with its absence

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11
Q

what is contingency awareness

A

awareness there is a pairing between 2 stimuli
-pp showing cond can verbalise this link (when pairing is masked by distractor task, cond is not seen)
-pairing creates an expectancy

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12
Q

what is extinction in CC

A

-CR ceases when CS is repeatedly present without concurrent pairing with the UR
-cond is not always permanent
-extinction is gradual and also not permanent
-after rest period, organism will elicit the CR when CS is presented (spontaneous recovery)

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13
Q

fear vs anxiety

A

-can be measure by blinking startle response (blinking at camera when flash appears
-DSM 5: fear is an emotional response to real or perceived imminent threat
-anxiety: anticipation of future threat

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14
Q

strength of fear and anxiety

A

adaptive and increases chance of survival

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15
Q

weakness of fear and anxiety

A

maladaptive: it is excessive and persistent

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16
Q

acquisition of fear

A

-fear can be conditioned
-e.g car accident
may associate car with threat of accident

17
Q

what is fear generalisation

A

fear response to a particular stimulus transfers to another stimulus eg little albert scared of whit fluffy things

18
Q

is there an adaptive function to fear generalisation

A

yes, allows organisms to rapidly respond to novel stimuli related in some way to a previously learned stimulus
-it is maladaptive if non threatening stimulus perceived as a threat

19
Q

weaknesses of little albert study

A

watson and rayner
-unethical procedure and outcomes
-lacks experimental control
-poor population validity

20
Q

who was little albert

A

Beck
-Douglas Merritte
-child of someone who worked with Watson
-died at age 6
-not healthy or normal, had cognitive deficits

Powell
-albert barger
-lived long and healthy life
-fear of furry animals
(more consistent with facts about little albert)

21
Q

study of overgeneralisation

A

Dunsmoor
-6 cross cultural facial expressions e.g joy, saddness, disgust etc
-we are responsive to fear in peoples faces
-paired ambiguously fearful face with an electric shock repeatedly
-neutral face was low fear intensity also presented
-measured response by skin conductance
-greatest generalisation to most fear intense faces, not to most perceptually similar
-we might be predisposed to generalise faces showing fear

22
Q

lissek study

A

-2 groups of pp
-10 rings graded in size
-cond pp have to startle blink reflex when presented with either small or large ring
-panic patients: stronger generalisation than control pp
-cond fear in panic patients generalised to rings with 3 units of dissimilarity to CS, only 1 unit in controls

23
Q

evaluation of fear and anxiety conditioning

A

+evidence to support pavlovian fear and anxiety cond in humans and animals
-contingency learning in humans is varied and needs to be taken into account
-why do some people not develop fear where other people do
-uneven distribution of fears/anxieties
-spontaneous remission (fear symptoms rapidly disappear with no treatment)

24
Q

applications of CC

A

-taste aversions e.g having a bad experience with a food
-generally you need repeated pairings for CC, but food aversions generally only have 1 pairing
-bad consequence of food e.g sickness occurs much later, UCS does not occur at same time as UCR

25
Q

what is the garcia effect

A

duration between CS + UCS may be long (hours) but result in cond
(a survival response)

26
Q

why is garcia effect important biologically

A

helps us to deeply learn to avoid toxic food

27
Q

further applications of CC

A

-can occur in anxiety, panic disorder, eating disorder etc
-can be used as a treatment for these things
-helps understanding of relationship between disorders
-aids understanding of substance abuse
-helps develop theories based on CC

28
Q

substance misuses

A

-cues are involved e.g stimuli associated with addiction, can be important in relapse
-absence of cues can assist recovery

29
Q
A