Zusammenfassung der Ressource
51. Variable Rewards Are Powerful
Anmerkungen:
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If you studied psychology in the twentieth century, you may remember B. F. Skinner and his work on operant conditioning. Skinner studied whether behavior increased or decreased based on how often, and in what manner, a reinforcement (reward) was given.
- Schedules
- Interval
Anmerkungen:
- You provide a food pellet after a certain interval of time has passed, for example, five minutes. The rat gets a food pellet the first time he presses the bar after five minutes is up.
- Fixed
Anmerkungen:
- Reinforcement is based on time and the time interval is always the same.
- Variable
Anmerkungen:
- Reinforcement is based on time. The amount of time varies, but it averages to a particular time
- Ratio
Anmerkungen:
- Instead of basing the reinforcement on time, you base it on the number of bar presses. The rat gets a food pellet after every 10 bar presses.
- Fixed
Anmerkungen:
- Reinforcement is based on the number of bar presses, and the number is always the same
- Variable
Anmerkungen:
- Reinforcement is based on the number of bar presses. The number varies, but it averages to a particular ratio
- Takeaways
- For operant conditioning to work, the reinforcement (reward) must be something that
particular audience wants. Hungry rats want food pellets. What does your particular audience really
want?
- Think about the pattern of behavior you’re looking for, and then adjust the schedule of rewards to fit
that schedule. Use a variable ratio schedule for the maximum behavior repetition.