Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

LEARNING HOW TO TRAIN FISH and OTHER ANIMALS. Learning How can you tell if a fish or person is learning? How can a person discriminate if an organism.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "LEARNING HOW TO TRAIN FISH and OTHER ANIMALS. Learning How can you tell if a fish or person is learning? How can a person discriminate if an organism."— Presentation transcript:

1 LEARNING HOW TO TRAIN FISH and OTHER ANIMALS

2 Learning How can you tell if a fish or person is learning? How can a person discriminate if an organism is exhibiting a learned behavior and not an instinctual behavior?

3 WHAT IS LEARNING? Any change in behavior To a specific situation That is not instinctual And is repeated over and over again In similar circumstances

4 Types of Learning 1. Classical Conditioning 2. Operant Conditioning

5 IVAN PAVLOV

6 PAVLOV’S EXPERIMENTS

7 CLASSICAL CONDITIONING Is a type of learning in which an organism elicits a reflex or an emotion (involuntary responses) to a normally neutral stimulus. –Ex. A person having a knee jerk when they see a doctor in a white coat –Ex. A person feeling fear when they see red flashing lights behind them

8 CLASSICAL CONDITIONING PARADIGM When an unconditioned stimulus is paired with a neutral stimulus the organism elicits an unconditioned response. If repeated over and over again the neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus and elicits a conditioned response similar to the unconditioned response associated with it.

9 vocabulary UCS (unconditioned stimulus) is a stimulus such as a loud noise, contact, or food that an organism involuntarily responds to. CS (conditioned stimulus) – a neutral stimulus, such as a bell or red light, that an organism normally doesn’t respond to but does begin to respond to as a result of association with a UCS

10 Vocabulary 2 UCR (conditioned response) a response that involuntarily occurs (ex reflex, emotion) as a result of an unconditioned stimulus. CR (conditioned response) a response (ex. reflex, emotion) to a normally neutral stimulus that has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus

11 PAVLOV’S EXPERIMENTS BELL + FOOD SALIVATION NS + UCS UCR ____________________________ BELL SALIVATION CS SALIVATION

12 ACQUISITION FOR MOST SPECIES The neutral stimulus must be presented first followed by the UCS within ½ second to elicit the response. With repetition the NS becomes the CS meaning the CS elicits a response similar to that of the UCS

13 BEFORE CONDITIONING

14 DURING CONDITIONING

15 AFTER CONDITIONING

16 CLASSICAL CONDITIONING AND THE CLASSROOM In the area of classroom learning, classical conditioning primarily influences emotional behavior. Things that make us happy, sad, angry, etc. become associated with neutral stimuli that gain our attention.

17 EXAMPLES OF CLASSICAL CONDITIONING Neutral Stimulus + UCS UCR You + Tapping on tank Fear CS CR You Fear _____________________________ You + Food Digestive enzymes YOU Digestive enzymes

18 THINK What other examples of classical conditioning can you think of? –Reflexes – with fish – with people –Emotions – with fish – with people

19 Human Examples Neutral Stimulus + UCS UCR Grade of F + Parent Screaming Fear CS CR Grade of F Fear

20 CLASSICAL CONDITIONING AND EMOTION For example, if a particular academic subject or remembering a particular teacher produces emotional feelings in you, those emotions are probably a result of classical conditioning. Neutral Stimulus + UCS UCR Grade A + Hug Happy CS CR Grade A Happy

21 Stimulus Generalization When a stimulus that is slightly different but similar is presented the organism may respond similarly. NS +UCS UCR Red light + Food Salivation CS CR Red Light Salivation Pink Light Salivation

22 Examples of Stimulus Generalization What examples of stimulus generalization can you think of in regard to classical conditioning? How is stimulus generalization related to drug overdose? How is it related to phobic behavior and neurosis?

23 JOHN WATSON’S CLAIM Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own specified world to bring them up and I'll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select-- doctor, lawyer, merchant-chief, and yes, even beggarman and thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors." (1930)

24 LITTLE ALBERT

25

26 Little Albert Video Watch and enjoy

27 EXTINCTION When a CS is no longer followed by a UCS over a long period of time then the stimulus may no longer elicit a CR. Bell followed by no food may cause the dog to stop salivating when it hears the bell. Red flashing lights not followed by a siren or police may no longer elicit fear

28 OPERANT CONDITIONING

29 Operant conditioning is a form of learning in which responses come to be controlled by their consequences. It is also called stimulus-response learning. Stimulus Response (consequence) Human swim to top of tank (food) Learners connect certain stimuli with certain responses

30 OPERANT CONDITIONING THEORISTS Edward Thorndike, John Watson, and B. F. Skinner were the major theorists behind operant conditioning. It means to operate on or be influenced by the environment.

31 EDWARD THORNEDIKE 1874 - 1949 Graduate of Wesleyan Harvard Columbia Devised ways to conduct learning experiments and measure intelligence in children

32 THORNDIKE’S LAW OF EFFECT Responses that are closely followed by satisfaction will become firmly attached to the situation and therefore more likely to reoccur when the situation is repeated. Conversely, if the situation is followed by discomfort, the connections to the situation will become weaker and the behavior of response is less likely to occur when the situation is repeated.

33 THORNDIKE’S EXPERIMENTS For example, Thorndike performed research (summarized in Thorndike, 1911) on the ability of cats to learn to escape from a "puzzle box" (see Figure 1). Cats placed within the box had to learn to push a lever, pull on a wire loop, pull on a string, turn a "button," lift a latch, or push aside a door, in order to escape from the box. In some experiments, the cat had to perform two or three of these actions sequentially before the door would open. In still other conditions, the door opened only after the cats licked or scratched themselves. Cats were rewarded for these behaviors by food, which was placed outside the box.Thorndike, 1911

34 Thorndike’s Puzzlebox

35 EXAMPLES OF LAW OF EFFECT

36 JOHN WATSON’S CLAIM Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own specified world to bring them up and I'll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select-- doctor, lawyer, merchant-chief, and yes, even beggarman and thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors." (1930)

37 JOHN WATSON’S RESEARCH Emphasized the study of observable behavior rejecting theories of introspection and the unconscious mind Influenced Burrhus Frederic Skinner

38 B. F. SKINNER 1904 - 1990 Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten. Created Skinner Box Conducted behavioral studies on rats (shaping) Father of Behavior Modification

39 SKINNER BOX

40 TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT (REWARDS) 1. Primary – stimuli that meet a basic biological need such as: Food Water Proper temperature Touch Sex

41 TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT 2. Secondary Reinforcers – are rewarding because they are associated with primary reinforcers. Money Grades Praise Trophies Award certificates

42 MAJOR TECHNIQUES USED IN OPERANT CONDITIONING Outcome STIMULUSIncrease behavior Decrease behavior positivePositive Reinforcement Add stimulus Response Cost Remove Stimulus negativeNegative Reinforcement Punishment

43 Schedules of Reinforcement Continuous – reward every time Fixed Interval- after every x times Fixed Ratio- after x seconds Variable Interval – after around x times Variable Ratio – after around x minutes

44 SHAPING Sometimes an organization will not on their own elicit the desired response. You can gradually get them to perform the desired response by rewarding successive approximations of the desired response. Ex. Want fish to eat food inside glass bottle, but fish won’t go in. Reward fish for going closer to bottle, then closer, etc.

45 DISCRIMINATION LEARNING Learning to do one behavior instead of another to get a reward. Ex. Choosing to go to mirror building instead of class because class is boring and mirror building I associated with good food and friends. Fish chooses to eat only on left side of tank, not right side because you only feed it on left side.

46 Discrimination Learning Diagram Stimulus Generalization – respond to a similar stimulus in the same way expecting the same desired consequence Extinction – the stopping of a response because it is not followed by the desired consequence

47 Discrimination Learning

48 Discussion Learned Helplessness Use of Punishment


Download ppt "LEARNING HOW TO TRAIN FISH and OTHER ANIMALS. Learning How can you tell if a fish or person is learning? How can a person discriminate if an organism."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google