 When a behaviour ( response) is followed by the addition of an unpleasant stimulus or the removal of a pleasant stimulus  I.e. Receiving an electric.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Psychology
Advertisements

Reinforcement and punishment
Operant Conditioning Skinner, positive & negative reinforcement, response cost, punishment and schedules of reinforcement.
Classical Conditioning
3. Operant Conditioning = A form of learning for which the likelihood of a particular response occurring is determined by the consequences of that response.
Instrumental Conditioning Also called Operant Conditioning.
Warm up Does punishment really work with teens? If so, when is it most effective? Is there anything that might be more effective than punishment? What?
Learning Unit 5. Topics in Learning Unit Defining Learning Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning Cognitive Learning.
Learning – Operant Conditioning AP Psychology Chapter 6.
Operant and Classical Conditioning.  Cognition: how we acquire, store, and use knowledge  Learning: A change in knowledge or behaviour as a result of.
Operant Conditioning Big Question: Is the organism learning associations between events that it does not control (classical) OR is it learning associations.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Learning Chapter 5.
Conditioning and Learning Processes Chapter Process by which a neutral stimulus becomes capable of eliciting a response because it was repeatedly.
Reward and Punishment.  Cats escape from box to get a treat  At first its all trial and error  When successful the behaviour is rewarded  This good.
Behavioral Theories of Learning. Behavioral Learning Theory O Behavioral learning theory- focus on the ways in which pleasurable or unpleasant consequences.
O PERANT C ONDITIONING Year 12 Psychology Unit 4 Area of Study 1 (chapter 10, page 476)
* No matter the various interpretation of Behaviorism, all focus on measurable and observable aspects of human behavior. * Behaviors and actions, rather.
Learning.
Operant Conditioning Unit 4 - AoS 2 - Learning. Trial and Error Learning An organism’s attempts to learn or solve a problem by trying alternative possibilities.
OPERANT CONDITIONING Changing Behavior Through Reinforcement and Punishment.
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Chapter 6: Learning.
Operant Conditioning Unit 4 - AoS 2 - Learning. Trial and Error Learning An organism’s attempts to learn or solve a problem by trying alternative possibilities.
OPERANT CONDITIONING.  Many of the behaviours in animals and humans cannot be explained in terms of classical conditioning.  Many complex behaviours.
Chapter 7 Learning. Classical Conditioning Learning: a relatively permanent change in behavior that is brought about by experience Ivan Pavlov: – Noticed.
© 2013 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. LearningLearning Chapter 5.
Unit 6 Learning. Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov – Russian scientist who did the famous dog experiments – UR: reflexive behavior – US: Stimulus that.
Chapter 2 BIOLOGY AND BEHAVIOUR BY: DR. UCHE AMAEFUNA (MD).
Learning positive and relatively permanent change in behavior” “It is continuous and a result of gaining new experiences 1.
 Operant conditioning is simply learning from the consequences of your behavior the “other side” of the psychologist’s tool box, operant conditioning.
Dr. Ramez. Bedwani.  Different methods of learning  Factors affecting learning.
Consultancy Project Experiential Learning MGT529 Dr. Khurrum S. Mughal.
Operant and Classical Conditioning.  Learning is involved in almost every phenomenon psychologists study and occurs in many different ways.  Every person.
Learning How learning occurs through reinforcement and conditioning.
Learning Experiments and Concepts.  What is learning?
Assignment #2 Deadline changed to JUNE 4 th Will mostly focus on Ch 7 Talk about that after the midterm on Monday Topics will be announced on Monday.
Operant Conditioning A type of learning in which behavior occurs more frequently if followed by reinforcement or occurs less frequently if followed by.
OPERANT CONDITIONING. Learning in which a certain action is reinforced or punished, resulting in corresponding increases or decreases in behavior.
Learning and Conditioning. I. The Assumptions of Behaviorism A. Behaviorists are deterministic. B. Behaviorists believe that mental explanations are ineffective.
Operant Conditioning A learning process by which the likelihood of a particular behaviour occurring is determined by the consequences of that behaviour.
Operant Conditioning. Operant Conditioning – A form of learning in which voluntary responses come to be controlled by their consequences. What does this.
B. F. Skinner Radial Behaviorism B.F. Skinner ( ) 1925: Hamilton College (NY): degree in English, no courses in psychology Read about Pavlov’s.
Operant conditioning (Skinner – 1938, 1956)
Knowledge acquired in this way.
Unit 5: Learning (Behaviorism)
Kick Off Choose a partner. Designate one person as the experimenter and one as the subject. Come take a slip from the table. Notice the number on it. Follow.
-SKINNER BELIEVED THAT CLASSICAL CONDITIONING DIDN’T ALLOW FOR ENOUGH CONTROL OVER AN ORGANISM’S BEHAVIOR - HE SAW IT MORE AS JUST A REFLEX (REACTION)
It explains learning in terms of observable behaviours and how they are influenced by stimuli from the environment.
Operant Conditioning Reinforcement – when a stimulus or event occurs that strengthens or increases the probability of a response reoccurring positive (+)
Thorndike, Skinner, Bandura, oh my!Bandura Module 10.
TOKEN ECONOMIES Token economy programmes are used to obtain desirable behaviour in closed institutions such as prisons, and they are used for juvenile.
METHODS OF TREATING OFFENDERS A)TOKEN ECONOMY B)ANGER MANAGEMENT.
Unit 1 Review 1. To say that learning has taken place, we must observe a change in a subject’s behavior. What two requirements must this behavioral change.
 This approach explains how organisms learn new behaviours/modify existing ones.  Reward /punishment  Overt behaviour took in concideration-not internal.
Chapter Four: Choice Theory: Because They Want To.
Trial and error learning Thorndike’s puzzle box. Trial and error learning This type of learning occurs when an organism attempts to learn by undertaking.
Learning HSP3M. Conditioned Learning  Definition: Acquiring patters of behaviour in the presence of an environmental stimulus  i.e. learning to respond.
B.F. Skinner. Operant Conditioning  By the 1920s, John B. Watson and other behaviorists were becoming influential, proposing new forms of learning other.
Operant conditioning Learning by consequences. Ratatouille Ratatouille is hungry and performs various exploratory behaviours By chance he presses the.
CONDITIONING CLASSICAL AND OPERANT CONDITIONING BSN-II, RLE-II.
>>0 >>1 >> 2 >> 3 >> 4 >> CONDITIONING CLASSICAL AND OPERANT CONDITIONING Renée Camille L. Laguda, BSN III.
Classical Conditioning
Learning by consequences
METHODS OF TREATING OFFENDERS
UNIT 4 BRAIN, BEHAVIOUR & EXPERIENCE
Operant Conditioning Preamble: Skinner believed that we both predict & control behaviour. Thus by manipulating the environment, you can manipulate behaviour.
Operant and Cognitive Learning
The N tional Dog Training Academy
Learning Psychology Unit 3.
Agenda To Get: To Do: Guided notes Intro Unit 7: Learning
Operant Conditioning.
Presentation transcript:

 When a behaviour ( response) is followed by the addition of an unpleasant stimulus or the removal of a pleasant stimulus  I.e. Receiving an electric shock after an undesired behaviour

 Occurs when a behaviour ( response) that had previously been followed by a pleasant stimulus is followed by no stimulus at all.  Ie. The rat pushing the lever and not receving food  Eventually the rat would learn that there was no food to come after the lever was pressed.

 Both will decrease behaviours  Initially with extinction, the behaviour to be removed will increase as the subject repeatedly tries to get the reward  Only by completely eliminating the rewards ( positive reinforcements) that follow particular behaviours will subjects be sufficiently discouraged from repeating those behaviours

 Repeat offenders/felons prison sentences are forms of punishment, but sometimes the punishment is not enough  Felons will go back to the crimes previously committed because they receive the same rewards they previously received for committing those crimes, and that behaviour- reward connection is a greater motivator than the punishment-behaviour deterrent connection

 In groups you are to come up with different experiments to try and modify an individuals behaviour.  Students must use methods of Behaviour modification to do this.  Each group should have 3 different situations with 3 different ways to alter the behaviour. The 3 different situations should come from each of the different methods that we have talked about. Operant conditioning, classical conditioning, and the 3 rd should look at someone in prison for committing a heinous crime ( you decide what crime)