Associative learning Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two forms of associative learning?

A

Two forms = Pavlovian/classical conditioning and operant/instrumental conditioning

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2
Q

What is Pavlovian/classical conditioning?

A

Learning about the environment/sensitive to the environment- two stimuli- second stimulus has reward properties

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3
Q

What is operant/instrumental conditioning?

A

How you operate on the environment- what you do and the consequences of your behaviour

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4
Q

What is Pavlovian conditioning?

A

Stimulus causes another stimulus causing a response e.g. bell and dog causing salivation (Pavlov’s dog).

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5
Q

What is the experiment with Pavlov’s dog?

A
  • Unconditioned stimulus (food) causes dog to salivate – unconditioned response
  • Conditioned stimulus – bell is rung and dog is presented with food (UCR)
  • Dog learns to associate bell with food – a conditioned response (usually 4-5 trials)
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6
Q

What is temporal contiguity?

A

I.e. CS (conditioned stimulus) and UCS must be close in time- bell has to be presented close to food

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7
Q

What is contingency?

A
  • CS reliably predicts UCS- dog learns predictability

- a cognitive view – knowledge about the relationships between 2 stimuli

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8
Q

What is spontaneous recovery?

A
  • extinction is learning a new association- new piece of learning- if leave the bell for the day and then ring again- get a partial response
  • dog remembers light used to predict food
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9
Q

What is latent inhibition?

A

-past learning experience changes acquisition of new associations- try associate bell with new behaviour- will be slower in learning than a dog that never heard a bell

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10
Q

What are the biological constraints- Seligman

A

SELIGMAN: sauce béarnaise -> vomiting
• CS (sauce) + UCS (sickness)-> UCR (vomiting) then CS(sauce) -> CR (unpleasant taste)
• Overcome time delay = gap between taste sauce and illness = 6 hrs
• Selectivity of conditioning, no aversion to wife/plates

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11
Q

What are the biological constraints- Garcia & Koelling

A

• Exposed rats 3 forms of water: plain, flavoured, water bright and noisy
• Exposed to flavoured/bright and noisy = 3 groups: mild dose of x-rays on 3 occasions/dose of lithium/electrocuted
• If during conditioning the water resulted in sickness
o Avoided flavoured water, drank lots of plain/bright and noisy water
• If during conditioning = pain = avoid bright, noisy water

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12
Q

What is someones response to chemotherapy?

A

Anticipatory nausea/vomiting (20-40%).

Chemo causes nausea-stimuli can become paired with nausea without even having chemo.

Take a child to next chemo session- see hospital sign- throw up, see on calendar wall chemo, child throws up

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13
Q

What is the second order of conditioning?

A

Child becomes sick before chemo session

  • new CS successively paired with old CS
  • new CS able to elicit CR
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14
Q

What is generalisation?

A

Greater similarity of new CS, more likely to elicit CR- bad experience with one dog- doesn’t like dogs anymore

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15
Q

What is discrimination?

A

Responding to differences via reinforcement- scared of dogs but able to tolerate one certain dog

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16
Q

What is the law of effect?

A

There is a Law of Effect – behaviours that are followed by good things happen more often.

17
Q

What are the different types of reinforcers?

A
  • Primary (unconditioned) = natural desire e.g. food, sleep
  • Secondary (conditioned) = non-natural desire e.g. money
  • Social = behaviours such as smiling, praising, nodding
18
Q

What are reinforcers that increase response?

A

Those that increase responding

  • positive reinforcement
  • negative reinforcement
19
Q

What are the reinforcers that decrease response?

A
  • extinction

- punishment

20
Q

What is positive reinforcement?

A

Reward by doing something correct.

21
Q

What is negative reinforcement?

A

Undesirable stimulus is removed

22
Q

What is shaping?

A

Changing behaviour to desirable through reinforcement

23
Q

What is chaining?

A

Complex behaviours broken into component parts. Each stage in sequence positively reinforced. Reinforcer cues next stage in sequence.

24
Q

What is Skinner’s rat?

A

Evidence of positive reinforcement: hungry rat put in chamber and presses lever to dispense and receive food. Takes less time to press lever second time - conditioned
Evidence of negative reinforcement: rat put in chamber with a strong (undesirable current) and presses lever to stop it. Takes less time to press lever second time - conditioned

25
Q

What are token economies?

A

Provide someone with something when they do well

-address behaves of groups of people
-wide range of target behaviours
• early programme daily spending vs. later accumulation
• peaked in adult psychiatry in 1960/70s
-community care, cost constraints, inflexibility
-negative press – coercive, degrading
• used in schools, learning disability

26
Q

What is negative reinforcement?

A
  • escape or avoidance of aversive event e.g. shock, loud noise
  • parent negatively reinforced, so more likely to pick up baby as crying stops
  • child positively reinforced for crying
27
Q

What is extinction?

A

E.g. baby crying- weak response like not picking up the baby will prevent the baby needing parent to pick baby up when crying

28
Q

What is continuous reinforcement?

A

Continuous = behaviours that are reinforced every time they occur. Quick reinforcement

29
Q

What is partial reinforcement?

A

Partial = behaviours that are intermittently reinforced take longer to extinguish

30
Q
  1. What is fixed ratio?
  2. What is variable ratio?
  3. What is fixed interval?
  4. What is variable interval?
A
  1. Vending machine
  2. Slot machine
  3. Checking mail box
  4. Checking email