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Chapter 6 study notes

Latent learning involves acquiring knowledge that isn't immediately evident through behavior, challenging the behaviorist view that learning requires observable changes. Edward Tolman introduced cognitive maps, mental representations of physical spaces, which play a crucial role in certain types of learning.

Chapter 6 study notes

Chapter 6 study notes

Learning Styles

an individual’s preferred or optimal method of acquiring new information

Discovery Learning

Once increasingly popular way of imparting this knowledge is discovery learning: giving students experimental materials and asking them to figure out the scientific principles on their own

Accelerated Learning

Other companies promise consumers ultrafast techniques for learning
These methods, known as Superlearning or Suggestive Accelerative Learning and Teaching Techniques (SALTT), supposedly allow people to pick up new information at anywhere from 25 to several hundred times their normal learning speeds

Sleep-Assisted Learning

Other studies from the former Soviet Union seemingly provided support for the claim that people could learn new material, such as tape-recorded words or sentences, while asleep
Recent evidence demonstrates that while asleep, participants can acquire classically conditioned responses to smells
One group of investigators exposed sailors to Morse code (a shorthand form of communication that radio operators sometimes use) while asleep
Many proponents of sleep-assisted learning-learning new material while asleep- have made extraordinary claims regarding this technique’s potential

Instinctive Drift

tendency for animals to return to innate behaviours following repeated reinforcement

Preparedness and Phobias

PHOBIAS
genetic influences probably play a role in the acquisition of certain phobias
PREPAREDNESS
evolutionary predisposition to learn some pairings of feared stimuli over others owing to their survival value

Preparedness may render us likely to develop illusory correlations between fear-provoking stimuli and negative consequences

Insight Learning

Another serious challenge came from a German psychologist during World War I: Wolfgang Kohler Moreover, because the chimps were often in the same cage, they might engaged in observational learning Still, Kohler’s suggests that at least some smart animals can learn through insight rather than trial and error There’s good evidence that humans can, too

Observational Learning

MIRROR NEURONS
cell in the prefrontal cortex that becomes activated by specific motions when an animal both performs and observes that action

Using brain techniques, researchers have identified what appears to be a similar mirror neuron system in humans, but they’ve yet to identify individual mirror neurons, as they have in monkeys

These neurons seem tuned to extremely specific behaviour

learning by watching others
also contributes to our learning of maladaptive habits
spares us the expensive of having to learn everything firsthand
In many cases, we learn by watching models: parents, teachers, and others who are influential to us

Latent Learning

One of the first serious challenges to the radical behaviourist account of learning was mounted by Edward Chace Tolman (1886-1959), whose contribution to the psychology of learning cannot be overestimated
COGNITIVE MAP
mental representation of how a physical space is organized It also suggested that thinking, in the form of cognitive maps, plays a central role in at least some forms of learning
learning that’s not directly observable

The Law of Effect

INSIGHT: grasping the underlying nature of a problem
principle asserting that if a stimulus followed by a behaviour results in a reward, the stimulus is more likely to give rise to the behaviour in the future

OPERANT CONDITIONING

Schedules of Reinforcement
PARTIAL REINFORCEMENT

VARIABLE INTERVAL (VI) SCHEDULE

pattern in which we provide reinforcement for the first response following a variable time interval, with the actual intervals varying randomly around some average

VARIABLE RATIO (VR) SCHEDULE

pattern in which we provide reinforcement after a variable number varying randomly around some average

FIXED INTERVAL (FI) SCHEDULE

pattern in which we provide reinforcement after a variable number of response following a specified time interval

FIXED RATIO (FR) SCHEDULE

pattern in which we provide reinforcement following a regular number of responses

only occasional reinforcement of a behaviour, resulting in slower extinction than if the behaviour had been reinforced continually This principle of partial reinforcement may help to explain why some people remain trapped for years in terribly dysfunctional, even abusive, relationships

CONTINUOUS REINFORCEMENT

reinforcing a behaviour every time it occurs, resulting in faster learning but faster extinction than only occasional reinforcement

Terminology of Operant Conditioning
PUNISHMENT

outcome of consequence of a behaviour that weakens the probability of the behaviour

Punishments, like reinforcements, can be either positive or negative depending on whether they involve administering a stimulus- positive- or taking one away- negative

REINFORCEMENT

DISCRIMINATIVE STIMULUS (S^d)

stimulus associated with the presence of reinforcement

outcome or consequences of a behaviour that strengthens the presentation of the behaviour

NEGATIVE REINFORCEMENT

the removal of a stimulus (what we would usually think of as an unpleasant stimulus) following a behaviour that strengthens the probability of the behaviour

POSITIVE REINFORCEMENT

the presentation of a stimulus (what we would usually think of as a pleasant stimulus) following a behaviour that strengthens the probability of the behaviour

Psychologists also refer to operant conditioning as instrumental conditioning, because the organism’s response serves an instrumental function Behaviourists refer to receive a reward produced by the animal to receive a reward as operants, because the animal “operates” on its environment to get what it wants
learning controlled by the consequences of the organism’s behaviour

Higher-Order Conditioning

developing a conditioned response to a conditioned stimulus by virtue of its association with another conditioned stimulus
Each progressive level results in weaker conditioning, just as a verbal message become less accurate as it’s passed from one person to another Allows us to extend classical conditioning to a host of new stimuli

Principles of Classical Conditioning

Stimulus Discrimination
process by which organisms display a less pronounced conditioned response to conditioned stimuli that differ from the original conditioned stimulus
Stimulus Generalization
process by which conditioned stimuli similar, but not identical, to the original conditioned stimulus elicit a conditioned response
Spontaneous Recovery
Sudden reemergence of an extinct conditioned response after a delay following an extinction procedure RENEWAL EFFECT: sudden reemergence of a conditioned response following extinction when an animal is returned to the environment in which the conditioned response was acquired
Extinction
gradual reduction and eventual elimination of the conditioned response after the conditioned stimulus is presented repeatedly without the unconditioned stimulus
Acquisition
learning phase during which a conditioned response is established The steepness of this curve varies somewhat depending on how close together in time the CS and UCS are presented

Pavlov's Discoveries

CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS):
initially neutral stimulus that comes to elicit a response due to association with an unconditioned stimulus
CONDITIONED RESPONSE (CR):
response previously associated with a non-neutral stimulus that is elicited by a neutral stimulus through conditioning
UNCONDITIONED RESPONSE (UCR):
automatic response to a non-neutral stimulus that does not need to be learned
UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS (UCS):
stimulus that elicits an automatic response without poor conditioning
CLASSICAL (PAVLOVIAN) CONDITIONING:
form of learning in which animals come to respond to a previously neutral stimulus that had been paired with another stimulus that elicits an automatic response