Lecture 7 - Learning in humans Flashcards

1
Q

Why do people have a craving for drugs?

A
  • smokers often report reduced desire to smoke where smoking is forbidden
  • craving for drugs can be the result of conditioning
  • the CS is the taste of the cigarette, the US is the absorption of nicotine into the bloodstream
  • this absorption evokes a pleasurable UR for the smoker
  • following sufficient pairings the CR also evokes pleasure
  • to encourage the smoker to quit smoking we want to prevent the CR from occurring
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2
Q

What are the 3 ways to stop smoking?

A
  1. abstinence (will-power)
    - unlikely to work as the CS-US pairing is not broken by abstinence and it only takes one or 2 experiences to relapse
  2. extinction
    - we could arrange it so that the cigarette tasted the same but contained no nicotine
    - this would prevent the US from occurring and the CR would go into extinction
    - this treatment is likely to be unsuccessful, because it is likely that the smoker will be exposed to nicotine in the future and the CR will recover
  3. counterconditioning
    - is the basis of aversion therapy
    - the CR is not extinguished but is replaced with another CR
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3
Q

What is a phobia?

A

an irrational fear of an ‘objectively harmless’ stimulus

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4
Q

Conditioning and phobias?

A
  • Sometimes the direct CS e.g. a dentists drill is not the main phobic stimulus but other things associated with the drill such as the dentists chair or waiting room
  • Even without direct experience of a traumatic US or pain-causing CS, humans could form an association via vicarious conditioning even if the UR is evoked via story-telling
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5
Q

How to treat phobias - Jones 1924?

A
  • first person to develop behavioural therapy
  • used baby Peter
  • had a fear of rats and rabbits
  • tried ‘modelling’ at first - observing others interacting happily with rats and rabbits
  • developed a programme of desensitisation
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6
Q

How to treat phobias - Systematic desensitisation - Wolpe & Lazarus?

A
  • therapist performs structured interviews with the patient to get a list of cues associated with anxiety and will rank them in order of their likelihood to evoke anxiety
  • relaxation paired with anxiety cues
  • new association with relaxation reduced effectiveness of cues
  • ethical issues especially when using flooding so some therapists have turned to VR
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7
Q

Skinner and reinforcers?

A
  • Primary reinforcers = those that need no experience to be effective
  • Access to food, water, and sex have all been used as primary reinforcers
  • Reinforcers are important for changing an animals behaviour
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8
Q

Premack principle?

A
  • Preferred activities can act as reinforcers for less preferred activities
  • Homme et al (1963):
    -> used the Premack principle to reinforce good behaviour in nursery children using creative activities that the children preferred to engage in
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9
Q

Secondary/ conditioned reinforcers?

A
  • Some reinforcers aren’t effective from birth, their value has to be learned = secondary or conditioned reinforcers
  • e.g. = money
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10
Q

Social reinforcers?

A
  • social reinforcement = category of both primary and secondary reinforcers
  • Allen et al 1964:
    -> studied a nursery school child who engaged in odd behaviour and would only talk to adults
    -> he instructed teachers to only give her attention when playing with other children
    -> within a day her contact with children went from 10 to 60%
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11
Q

Delay of reinforcement?

A
  • Can change the likelihood of producing a particular behaviour
  • Rachlin and Green (1972):
    -> pigeons could choose one response to give immediate access to grain for a short time, a different response for longer access, but only after a delay
    -> Choosing the response that led to a delay would result in getting access to food for twice as long as the immediate reinforcer
    -> Despite this, the pigeons chose the response associated with the smaller reward on 95% of occasions
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12
Q

Token economy?

A
  • If children behave in class the token (conditioned reinforcer) can be delivered immediately
  • Can be exchanged for a wide range of primary reinforcers so different children can be reinforced differently
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13
Q

Fox, Hopkins and Anger 1987?

A
  • Reduction of injuries in mine workers using token economy
  • 12 year period, injuries fell by 68% and 85%
  • Cost of injuries per year $260k
  • Cost of tokens $12k
  • Unions insisted on writing tokens into contracts
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