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Section
1: Introduction to Learning Theory and Behavioral Psychology
Section
2: Classical and Operant Conditioning
Section
3: Reinforcement and Reinforcement Schedules
Classical and Operant
Conditioning
Classical
Conditioning. One
important type of learning, Classical Conditioning, was actually discovered
accidentally by Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936). Pavlov was a Russian physiologist
who discovered this phenomenon while doing research on digestion. His
research was aimed at better understanding the digestive patterns in dogs.
During his experiments, he would put meat
powder in the mouths of dogs who had tubes inserted into various organs to
measure bodily responses. What he discovered was that the dogs began to
salivate before the meat powder was presented to them. Then, the dogs began
to salivate as soon as the person feeding them would enter the room. He soon
began to gain interest in this phenomenon and abandoned his digestion
research in favor of his now famous Classical Conditioning study.
Basically, the findings support the idea that
we develop responses to certain stimuli that are not naturally occurring.
When we touch a hot stove, our reflex pulls our hand back. It does this
instinctually, no learning involved. It is merely a survival instinct. But
why now do some people, after getting burned, pull their hands back even
when the stove is not turned on? Pavlov discovered that we make associations
which cause us to generalize our response to one stimuli onto a neutral
stimuli it is paired with. In other words,
hot burner = ouch, stove = burner,
therefore, stove = ouch.
Pavlov began pairing a bell sound with the
meat powder and found that even when the meat powder was not presented, the
dog would eventually begin to salivate after hearing the bell. Since the
meat powder naturally results in salivation, these two variables are called
the unconditioned
stimulus (UCS) and the unconditioned
response (UCR), respectively. The bell and salivation are not
naturally occurring; the dog was conditioned to respond to the bell.
Therefore, the bell is considered the conditioned
stimulus (CS), and the salivation to the bell, the conditioned
response (CR).
Many of our behaviors today are shaped by the
pairing of stimuli. Have you ever noticed that certain stimuli, such as the smell
of a cologne or perfume, a certain song, a specific day of the year, results
in fairly intense emotions? It's not that the smell or the song are the cause
of the emotion, but rather what that smell or song has been paired
with...perhaps an ex-boyfriend or ex-girlfriend, the death of a loved one,
or maybe the day you met you current husband or wife. We make these
associations all the time and often dont realize the power that these
connections or pairings have on us. But, in fact, we have been classically
conditioned.
Operant
Conditioning.
Another
type of learning, very similar to that discussed
above, is called Operant Conditioning. The term
"Operant" refers to how an organism operates
on the environment, and hence, operant conditioning
comes from how we respond to what is presented to
us in our environment. It can be thought of as learning
due to the natural consequences of our actions.
Let's explain that a little further. The
classic study of Operant Conditioning involved a cat who was placed in a box
with only one way out; a specific area of the box had to be pressed in order
for the door to open. The cat initially tries to get out of the box because
freedom is reinforcing. In its attempt to escape, the area of the box is
triggered and the door opens. The cat is now free. Once placed in the box
again, the cat will naturally try to remember what it did to escape the
previous time and will once again find the area to press. The more the cat
is placed back in the box, the quicker it will press that area for its
freedom. It has learned, through natural consequences, how to gain the
reinforcing freedom.
We learn this way
every day in our lives.
Imagine the last time you made a mistake; you most likely remember that
mistake and do things differently when the situation comes up again. In that
sense, youve learned to act differently based on the natural consequences
of your previous actions. The same holds true for positive actions. If
something you did results in a positive outcome, you are likely to do that
same activity again.
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