Learning Flashcards

1
Q

Loss of response to repeated stimuli

A

Habituation

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2
Q

Increased response to repeated stimuli

A

Sensitization

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3
Q

Solving a problem using past skills

A

Insight learning

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4
Q

Learned behavior is not expressed until it is required

A

Latent learning

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5
Q

Reinforcement occurs at a fixed ratio for number of behaviors, regardless of time interval between

A

Fixed-ratio reinforcement

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6
Q

Reinforcement occurs at fixed time interval, regardless of the number of times behavior occurs

A

Fixed-interval reinforcement

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7
Q

Reinforcement after inconsistent number of behaviors

A

Variable ratio reinforcement

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8
Q

Reinforcement after inconsistent amount of time passes

A

Variable interval reinforcement

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9
Q

Ratio schedule vs interval schedule

A

Ratio schedules: Based on number of behavioral responses, produce rapid response rates

Interval schedules: Based on time interval, produce slower response rates

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10
Q

Tendency of an animal to revert to instinctive behaviors over behaviors taught through conditioning

A

Instinctual drift

Example: Dog may be taught to sit quietly before eating, but if hungry they will run for food

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11
Q

The learning of a target behavior through progressively reinforcing behaviors that approximate the target behavior

A

Shaping

Example: When teaching a dog to roll over, you reward them with a treat when they do behaviors that are “on the right track”. Over time they will roll more and more perfectly

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12
Q

Reinforcement occurs some but not all of the time

More resistant to extinction compared to continuous reinforcement

A

Partial reinforcement schedule

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13
Q

Reinforcement that occurs at a 1:1 ratio, meaning that for each behavior there is a reward

A

Continuous reinforcement schedule

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14
Q

adding something to encourage behavior (gas gift card for safe driving)

A

Positive reinforcement:

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15
Q

taking something away to encourage behavior (cessation of loud buzzing sound when you put on your seatbelt)

A

Negative reinforcement

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16
Q

adding something to discourage behavior. Example: Speeding ticket to discourage speeding

A

Positive punishment

17
Q

taking something away to discourage behavior. Example: Revoking license

A

Negative punishment

18
Q

Primary vs secondary reinforcers

A

Primary reinforcers: innately satisfying or desirable

Secondary reinforcers: must be conditioned to become reinforcers, such as previously neutral stimuli

19
Q

Primary vs secondary punisher

A

Primary punishers: innately undesirable (e.g. electric shock)

Secondary punishers: conditioned to be undesirable through associative learning (e.g. speeding ticket)

20
Q

Using a punishment or negative stimulus to associate negativity with an unwanted behavior
Example: Scolding a dog when they jump up to reach for food

A

Aversive conditioning

21
Q

Technique to help overcome phobias or anxiety disorders
First step: identify anxiety-inducing stimulus hierarchy. Second: learn relaxation/coping techniques. Third: progressively overcome situations in the established hierarchy
Also known as graduated exposure therapy

A

Systematic desensitization

22
Q

Changing a behavioral response by the association of positive actions with the stimulus
Also known as stimulus substitution

A

Counterconditioning

Example: Dog barks anxiously at the mailman. To change this, give dog a treat every time mailman comes. The dog now has a positive response to mailman instead of fear/anxiety

23
Q

Control of behavior through an unpleasant stimulus or consequence such as punishment or negative reinforcement

A

Aversive control

24
Q

Main two types of Aversive control to know

A

escape learning and avoidance learning

25
Q

Behavior learned in order to escape from an unpleasant stimulus that has already occurred
Example: Dinosaurs of Jurassic Park have broken out of their cages, we have to escape

A

Escape learning

26
Q

Behavior that avoids the averse situation entirely. Avoidance behavior is persistent and self-reinforcing due to the sense of relief
Example: Never visit Jurassic Park, we’ve avoided the dangerous situation entirely

A

Avoidance learning

27
Q

Powerful type of classical conditioning in which an organism becomes ill after consuming something (e.g. food)
Long lasting, powerful form of aversion

A

Taste aversion

28
Q

Unconditioned vs conditioned stimuli

A

Unconditioned stimuli lead to an innate, natural response. Example: Mouth watering when smelling food

Conditioned stimuli lead to learned behavior. Example: Washing hands before eating food

29
Q

a learning process that turns a previously neutral stimulus into an innate response

Occurs through repeated pairing of the neutral stimulus with a potent innate stimulus

Example: Repeatedly showing a dog food when ringing a bell will cause the dog’s mouth to water at the sound of a bell in the future

A

Classical conditioning

30
Q

Tendency or ability of a stimulus similar to the conditioned stimulus to elicit a conditioned response

Example: You ring a different-sounding bell to the one a dog was originally conditioned with

A

Generalization

31
Q

Learning the association between the unconditioned stimulus (e.g. food) and neutral stimulus (e.g. bell)

A

Acquisition

32
Q

When a conditioned response disappears due to a period when the conditioned stimulus is no longer paired with innate stimulus

Example: After conditioning a dog to salivate at the sound of a bell, Pavlov stopped pairing the bell sound with food. After a period of time, the dog no longer salivates at the sound of a bell.

A

Extinction

33
Q

Re-emergence of a previously extinguished conditioned response after a delay

A

Spontaneous recovery

34
Q

Early on in the extinction process, original behavior frequency suddenly and temporarily increases, followed by eventual decline and extinction of the behavior targeted for elimination

Example: A parent normally gives into a child throwing a tantrum, but to try to extinguish it the parent ignores the child. In response to being ignored, the child first intensifies the tantrums even more, before eventually learning to stop

A

Extinction burst