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Classical and Operant Conditioning: A Comprehensive Overview of Learning Theories, Cheat Sheet of Psychology

This is doc has main concepts about classical and operant conditioning, provides with main keywords and their explanations.

Typology: Cheat Sheet

2022/2023

Uploaded on 10/01/2023

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Behaviourism
Learning is a permanent change in our behaviour knowledge an attitude that is acquired through
experience.
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING- Also called respondent conditioning or Pavlovian conditioning.
explaining autonomic, involuntary emotional responses. Make connection with a past
experience. The Organism does not learn a new response, I just make an old existing response
into a new stimulus.
This is the simplest form of learning and in this case an association is learned between one stimulus
and another, a stimulus is any event in the environment to which an Organism responds.
- Robert rescorla, the most important element is whether the condition stimulus provides
information that enables the Organism to reliably predict the occurrence of the conditioned
stimulus.
- Research suggests that the inability to acquire classically conditioned responses maybe you want
the first sign of Alzheimer's disease and may appear prior to any memory loss.
- Environmental cues associated with the setting can act as conditioned stimuli to become
associated with the unconditioned stimulus.
The elements and processes
Reflexes are involuntary responses to a stimulus and there are two kinds of reflexes:
1- Conditioned, learned
2- Unconditioned, unlearned, they are built into the nervous system Like salvation.
Extinction is when a conditioned response is gradually inhibiting or suppressing.
Spontaneous recovery is weaker and shorter than the original.
Four factors that influence classical conditioning:
The number of pairings of the condition stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus
The intensity of the unconditioned stimulus
How reliably the condition stimulus predicts the unconditioned stimulus
The temporal relationship between the condition stimulus and unconditioned stimulus
The ideal time between the presentation of the condition and the unconditioned stimulus is about half a
second.
Although age itself may not impact learning age in fact affect the optimal time interval for learning to
occur.
Pavlov’s dog functional analysis.
Neutral stimulus- bell. only neutral before learning.
Unconditioned stimulus presence of food- unconditioned response salivate.
Conditioned (learned) stimulus bell - conditioned response salivate.
!!Warning!!:
unconditional and conditional response is the same.
The neutral and conditional are the same.
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Behaviourism

Learning is a permanent change in our behaviour knowledge an attitude that is acquired through experience.

CLASSICAL CONDITIONING - Also called respondent conditioning or Pavlovian conditioning.

 explaining autonomic, involuntary emotional responses. Make connection with a past experience. The Organism does not learn a new response, I just make an old existing response into a new stimulus. This is the simplest form of learning and in this case an association is learned between one stimulus and another, a stimulus is any event in the environment to which an Organism responds.

  • Robert rescorla, the most important element is whether the condition stimulus provides information that enables the Organism to reliably predict the occurrence of the conditioned stimulus.
  • Research suggests that the inability to acquire classically conditioned responses maybe you want the first sign of Alzheimer's disease and may appear prior to any memory loss.
  • Environmental cues associated with the setting can act as conditioned stimuli to become associated with the unconditioned stimulus.

The elements and processes

Reflexes are involuntary responses to a stimulus and there are two kinds of reflexes: 1- Conditioned , learned 2- Unconditioned , unlearned, they are built into the nervous system Like salvation. Extinction is when a conditioned response is gradually inhibiting or suppressing. Spontaneous recovery is weaker and shorter than the original.

Four factors that influence classical conditioning:

 The number of pairings of the condition stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus  The intensity of the unconditioned stimulus  How reliably the condition stimulus predicts the unconditioned stimulus  The temporal relationship between the condition stimulus and unconditioned stimulus The ideal time between the presentation of the condition and the unconditioned stimulus is about half a second. Although age itself may not impact learning age in fact affect the optimal time interval for learning to occur.

Pavlov’s dog functional analysis.

Neutral stimulus- bell. only neutral before learning. Unconditioned stimulus presence of food- unconditioned response salivate. Conditioned (learned) stimulus bell - conditioned response salivate. !!Warning!! :  unconditional and conditional response is the same.  The neutral and conditional are the same.

Conditions for classical conditioning to happen: 1- Contiguity 2- Recency, not for taste, because we can eat something and still recalling the taste buds even after several hours, days. 3- Preparedness 4- Order 5- Food and scapegoats Generalization - similar stimuli, Generalisation and discrimination has survival value. Discrimination - specific stimulus Extinction - response disappears. Spontaneous recovery - response might come back. Higher order - second level, it's when a neutral stimulus is paired with an existing condition stimulus becomes associated with and gains the power to elicit the same condition response. Advertising example.  OPERANT CONDITIONING - explaining voluntary responses. In this case the response comes first, and the consequence tends to modify the response in the future, and the consequences of behaviour are manipulated to increase or decrease the frequency of response.

  • We can speed the process up with a technique called shaping which is a technique that was employed by Skinner, in this case we reinforce any movement in the direction of the desired response.
  • Superstitious behaviour occurs when an individual believes that a connection exists between an act and its consequences although there is no relationship between the two example an athlete performing a ritual before the game.
  • Extinction occurs when re enforcers are withheld.
  • Discrimination involved in learning to distinguish between a stimulus that has been reinforced and other stimuli that may be very similar.
  • Discriminative stimulus, is the stimulus that signals whether a certain response or behaviour is likely to be rewarded, ignored, or punished. There are two types of reinforcement: 1- Positive , Adding 2- Negative , removing !!Warning!! : positive and negative have nothing to do with good or bad. Eg. Mom saying thank you and guilt tripping is the same positive. Reinforcement (more likely to behave that way) and punishment (less likely to behave that way) is the outcome. Primary enforcer is wonderful feels our basic physical need for survival and does not depend on learning. Secondary re enforcer is acquired or learned by association with other enforcers.

Escape learning is a learning to perform a behavior because the terminates an aversive event and it reflects the power of negative reinforcement. Avoidance learning, depends on classical conditioning and operant conditioning. The avoidance behavior is negatively reinforced and strengthen through operant conditioning. Learn helplessness is a passive resignation to aversive conditions learned by repeated exposure to aversive events that are incapable. This experiment was conducted by overmyer and seligman.

  • in classical conditioning the focus is precedes the response and in operant conditioning it's what follows the response.
  • Behavior modification is a method of changing behavior to a systematic program based on the principles of learning and most of them use the principles of operant conditioning.
  • token economies are programs that motivate socially desirable behavior by reinforcing it with tokens; these tokens may later be exchanged to desired goods like candy for free time. people in this program know what behavior will be reinforced and how they will be reinforced.
  • According to Albert bandura believe many our responses are acquired through observational learning, which is sometimes called modelling also, is learning that results when we observe the behaviour of others and the consequences. person will demonstrate the behaviour is called a model.
  • Inhabitations can be weakened or lost as a result of observation of their behaviour of others, and fears 2 can be acquired through observational learning, also aggressive behaviour.