SLT Flashcards

(18 cards)

1
Q

who developed the SLT approach

A
  • Alert Bandura
  • he argued that classical/operant conditioning could not account for all human learning
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2
Q

what is a role model

A
  • a person who carries out an attitude or behaviour to be learned
  • they become this when they are seen to possess similar characteristics to the observer or are attractive or of a higher status
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3
Q

what is a live model

A

a type of role model who is actually present in our environment

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4
Q

what is a symbolic model

A

a type of role model who are present in the media e.g. celebrities

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5
Q

what is identification

A

the extent to which an individual relates to a role model and feels that they are similar to them, so want to be like a role model

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6
Q

what is modelling

A

when a role model precisely demonstrates a specific behaviour so that it can be imitated by an observer
observational learning occurs ( watching what the role model models and learning how to do it)

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7
Q

what is vicarious reinforcement

A

reinforcement that is not directly experiences, but occurs through observing someone else being reinforced in a behaviour

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8
Q

what is imitation

A

using someone as a model and copying their behaviour. It is sometimes called modelling

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9
Q

what is the order in SLT

A
  1. Role models
  2. live/symbolic models
  3. identification
  4. modelling
  5. vicarious reinforcement
  6. imitation
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10
Q

how does SLT suggest that behaviour is learned

A

learned from experience, in a social context

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11
Q

Bandura et al.’s study

A
  • half of the children (aged 3-5) were exposed to adult role models interacting aggressive with a life-sized Bobo doll
  • the adult was striking it with a mallet, being verbally aggressive
  • adult left, and the children were physically and verbally aggressive to the doll, alike the adult
  • other half were exposed to adult role models interacting non-aggressively with the doll
  • the adult left and the child expressed no aggression
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12
Q

what are mediational processes

A

the cognitive processes that occur between stimulus and response that affect whether the learned behaviour is produced

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13
Q

what are the 4 mediational processes

A

motivation
attention
retention
reproduction

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14
Q

what is motivation (mediational process)

A

the will or desire to perform the behaviour (usually linked to vicarious reinforcement)

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15
Q

what is attention (mediational process)

A

noticing and paying attention to the behaviour of the person they want to imitate

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16
Q

what is retention (mediational process)

A

remembering the behaviour so that they can do the same

17
Q

what is reproduction (mediational process)

A

consideration of our ability to perform the behaviour

18
Q

assumptions of SLT

A
  • Bandura believed that there are important mental processes that lie between the stimulus and response. Therefore, it combines principles from both the behaviourist and cognitive approaches
  • means that learning and performance are not the same activity- we can observe a behaviour and learn it, but choose not to perform it
  • sees people as active manipulators of their own environment rather than passive receivers of experiences
  • concerned with human rather than animal behaviour