Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Classical vs Operant
Conditioning
- Classical Conditioning is
also known as
Associational Learning
- Classical conditioning uses
stimuli that an organism does
not control; in operant
conditioning, behaviors are
associated with a consequence.
- First described by Ivan Pavlov, classical
conditioning takes place when one stimulus that
is reliably paired with a second stimulus begins to
elicit the same response as the second stimulus.
- Pavlov and Contiguity -Temporal association between 2 events that
occur closely together in time. The more closely in time the 2 events
occur, the more likely they are were to become associated; as time
passes the association is less likey
- CONTIGUITY - Pairing the
conditional stimulus (CS)
and the unconditional
stimulus (US) produces the
learning
- S-R (STIMULUS-RESPONSE) The CS
becomes "connected to the conditional
response (CR)
- S-R LEARNING, a
direct connection or
association is
established between
the CS and the CR.
- S-S LEARNING, leads to a
formation of an association
between the conditioned and
unconditioned stimuli. As a
result of this association,
presentation of the CS activates
a neural representation of the
unconditioned stimulus US,
which in turn leads to the CR.
- The use of a neutral
stimulus, originally paired
with one that invokes a
response, to generate a
conditioned response
- STIMULUS In
psychology, any energy
patterns (e.g. light or
sound) which are
registered by the senses
- Operant Conditioning
- Operant conditioning, first investigated by
Thorndike and then by Skinner, concerns what
happens when a behavior (the instrumental
response or operant) is immediately followed
by an unconditioned stimulus, as when
lever-pressing is followed by food.
- A technique of behavior modification, developed by B.F.
Skinner, that utilizes positive and negative reinforcement
and positive and negative punishment to alter behavior.
- Reinforcement Theory
states that people are more
likely to perform a specific
behavior if it is followed by
something pleasurable.
- Reinforcement:
The process
whereby a
behavior with
desirable
consequences
comes to be
repeated.
- Positive reinforcement strengthens a behavior by providing a
consequence an individual finds rewarding. For example, if your
teacher gives you £5 each time you complete your homework
(i.e. a reward) you are more likely to repeat this behavior in the
future, thus strengthening the behavior of completing your
homework.
- Punishment: A suffering by pain or
loss imposed as retribution
Punishers: responses from the
environment that decrease the
likelihood of a behavior being
repeated
- Operant conditioning can involve two types of punishment: positive
punishment (or type I punishment), in which a response is punished
by presenting an aversive stimulus into the organism's surroundings
(e.g. a brief electric shock or loud noise); and negative punishment (or
type II punishment), in which a valued stimulus is removed (e.g., the
removal of a feeding dish or favorite toy)
- Classical and operant
conditioning are types of
associative learning that
are influenced by
cognitive and biological
processes.
- conditioning the process
of modifying a person's
behavior