L3 - Instrumental/Operant Conditioning Flashcards

1
Q

What is classical conditioning?

A

One stimulus is followed by another stimulus
Their two activated mental representations become associated

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2
Q

What are the comparisons of classical and instrumental conditioning?

A

Similarity - Arises from pairing of two events in the world
Difference - R, not CS, is paired with US
Tidy up (R), praise (US) - happy (UR)

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3
Q

Where does the response come from?

A

The first event in the association depends on the learner
Making response is under their control
Can be followed by the US when another stimulus is present

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4
Q

What is a discriminative stimulus?

A

When the response is only followed by the US when another stimulus is present
There is always going to be present stimuli, cannot get rid of it

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5
Q

What is Thorndike’s law of effect?

A

If a response produces something nice we do it
If a response produces something nasty we don’t do it
It does require a response
There must always be a stimuli present

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6
Q

What is the difference between Thorndike’s view and the modern view?

A

Thorndike - US not incorporated in learning, respond because S is there, a habit
Modern view - US incorporated in learning, respond to ger US because it has value, goal directed action

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7
Q

What is reinforcement and punishment?

A

Positive reinforcement - getting something nice e.g. food
Negative reinforcement - omitting something nasty e.g. cancelling a shock
Positive punishment - getting something nasty
Negative punishment - omitting something nice

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8
Q

What are operant techniques?

A

Punishment - response > shock
Escape - response > no shock
Avoidance - response > no shock

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9
Q

What are the types of avoidance?

A

Passive - rat must stay where it is to avoid shock
Active - rat must move to other chamber to avoid shock
Signalled - explicit SC signal for shock
Sideman avoidance - Shock every 5 seconds but if they do action to avoid it it will go off every 10 seconds

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10
Q

What is being learned about the response?

A

A negative response is also an inhibitor
If you expect something bad to happen an it doesn’t it makes you happy

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11
Q

Why do you make the avoidance response?

A

Buzzer = shock
Buzzer + avoidance response = no shock
Responding leads to the omission of the shock which is a nice thing

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12
Q

What did Solomon and Wynne 1953 find regarding the persistence of avoidance response?

A

Dogs continued to jump for over 490 trials after the shock had stopped
Response is a conditioned inhibitor predicting absence of shock preventing CS from extinguishing

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13
Q

Why is it important to understand avoidance?

A

OCD
People develop persistent avoidance responses

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14
Q

What is appetitive reinforcement?

A

Operant technique
Response followed by appetitive US e.g. food
Scheduled reinforcement
Continuous reinforcement
Partial reinforcement

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15
Q

What are the different interval schedules?

A

Fixed - exactly every minute, get pocket money every Sunday, responding usually happens close to reinforcement
Variable - average, receive pocket money on random days, low steady rate of response

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16
Q

What are different ratio schedules?

A

Fixed ratio - every 10 responses
Variable ratio - on average every 10 responses
Reinforcing gambling behaviour