Social Learning Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of learning

A

Learning that influenced by observation of, or interaction with another animal
- requires an observer and a demonstrator
- demonstrator performs the behaviour later reproduced by the observer
- to qualify for social learning rather than social elicited or facilitated behaviour the observers performance must take place at a later time away from direct influence of the demonstrator (Shettleworth, p.467)

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1
Q

what is social facilitation?

A
  • type of social influence
  • Increase in behaviour due to presence of other performing that behaviour (e.g. humans yawning, budgerigars tretching (Gallup et al., 2017) migrating of sea turtle hatchlings, herd behaviour)
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2
Q

what is stimulus enhancement?

A
  • type of social influence
  • Increase in tendency to interact with object because of presence/actions of others
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3
Q

what is local enhancement?

A
  • type of social influence
  • Increase in tendency to approach location because of presence/actions of others.
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4
Q

what is affordance learning?

A
  • type of social influence
  • Learning about what can be done with objects or the environment, not necessary to have observed from another.
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5
Q

Food preference, Wrenn et al., (2003)

A
  • mice ate cinnamon or cocoa flavoured food
  • then placed in a cage with another mouse
  • 24hrs later observer given a choice of food
  • observer mouse ate more of the cued food than the novel food
  • amount consumed correlated with number of sniffs
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6
Q

Fear of predators, Mineka and cook (1988)

A
  • tested monkeys fear of snakes using observational conditioning
  • laboratory-reared monkeys observed a wild-reared monkey’s reaction to a real snake (boa constrictor), a model snake, and a toy snake
  • after the observation, the observer monkeys displayed more avoidance and fear behaviours than before observation
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7
Q

what is imitation?

A
  • copying behaviour
  • copying another’s behaviour exactly to reach the same goal
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7
Q

what is emulation?

A

extract actions not reproduced by observer but aims for same goal. Or actions are reproduced but for a different goal

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8
Q

Bidirectional task, Heyes and Dawson (1990)

A

aquisition
- Observation: Rats observe demonstrator pushing to left or right side.
- Test: placed in demonstrator box. Any response reinforced.
- Results: Left observers made more left pushes than Right observers

Reversal (after acquisition)
- Training (4 days): push left reinforced or right reinforced
- Demonstration: new (direction reinforced on test) or old (direction reinforced during training)
Test: response reinforced in OPPOSITE direction to training
Results: New learnt faster than old. Mean responses to criterion for New = 87.5 and for Old = 133.7

  • conclusion: response-reinforcer learning occurs via social means
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9
Q

Two-action procedure, Atkins and Zentall (1996)

A
  • trained Japanese quail to manipulate a treadle for a food reward
  • peck with beak or step with foot
  • observers made more responses with the same part of their body as used by the demonstrator
  • no stimulus enhancement
  • Also, quail more likely to copy behaviour if they observed the demonstrator get a reward
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9
Q

Chimpanzees & children, Horner and Whiten (2005)

A
  • Chimpanzees and young human children shown demonstrations of how to open a puzzle box
  • Demonstrations included unnecessary behaviours
  • When box was opaque, chimpanzees and children imitate sequence
  • When box was transparent, only children imitated. However, chimpanzees didn’t perform the unnecessary behaviours
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10
Q

Dogs, Huber et al. (2020)

A

found dogs performed irrelevant actions more when owner was the demonstator

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11
Q

Definition of teaching, Caro and Hauser (1992)

A
  • Teacher must modify its behaviour in the presence of naïve observer.
  • There is a cost to the teacher (or no immediate benefit).
  • The pupil acquires knowledge or learns a skill earlier or faster or more efficiently than it otherwise would have/not learn at all
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12
Q

Teaching in ants, Franks and Richardson (2006), Richardson et al. (2007)

A
  • Tandem running in temnothorax albipennis
  • ants show naïve ants where food is located
  • teacher modifies behaviour: runs slowly
  • cost to teacher: runs are much slower (x4 slower)
  • pupil learns skills: route is learned (but need more direct evidence)
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12
Q

How do Meerkats demonstrate teaching?

A
  • by showing the young how to catch scorpions and remove the sting