Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Classical conditioning is a basic form of learning in which a stimulus that produces an innate reflex becomes associated.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007
Advertisements

Classical Conditioning.  Turn to your partner what is the earliest memory you have of learning to do something?  What enabled you to learn what you.
PowerPoint® Presentation by Jim Foley Learning © 2013 Worth Publishers.
Chapter 6: Learning (Behaviorism)  Classical Conditioning  Operant Conditioning  Observational Learning.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning
LEARNING.
Classical Conditioning. A. Definitions 1.Classical conditioning: learning that takes place when originally neutral stimulus comes to produce a conditioned.
LEARNING.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. 3 Kinds of Learning l Classical Conditioning n Kind of learning in which a neutral stimulus acquires the ability to produce.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning MR. McKinley First a quick video… games/videos/pavlovs-bell.htm
general psychology Firouz meroei milan Conditioning and Learning Classical Conditioning 1.
I. What is learning? chapter 9. Definitions Learning A relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience [p300] Classical conditioning— learning.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Learning Chapter 5.
Learning. How Do We Learn? Most learning is associative learning. – Learning that certain events occur together.
 Classical Conditioning – The type of learning in which a stimulus acquires the capacity to evoke the response initially evoked by another stimulus ◦
Chapter 6 LEARNING Section 1: Classical Conditioning
Famous Psychology Experiments
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Chapter 6 Learning This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited.
LEARNING. How do we learn? Most learning is associative learning Learning that certain events occur together. Learning is a relatively permanent change.
Learning Ms. Simon Do Now: Define Learning. Definition Learning is a relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience.
Learning (Conditioning). Learning is how we Adapt to the Environment Learning— A relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience.
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING. LEARNING Learning is a relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience. Conditioning = Learning.
Learning and Classical Conditioning . How Do We Learn? Learning is defined as a relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience.
Classical Conditioning Chapter 6 Psychology. Learning  Learning: some kind of change in behavior or knowledge that is long-lasting due to an increase.
Classical Conditioning
1 Yip sir ( 葉錦熙 ). 2 Learning 1. Behaviorism –Promoted by John B. Watson –View that psychology… should be an objective science study.
Learning A relatively permanent change in –behavior, –knowledge, –capability, or –attitude –that is acquired through experience –and cannot be attributed.
Classical Conditioning Mr. Koch Psychology Forest Lake High School.
Conditioning / I. Learning / A. Any relatively permanent change in behavior as a result of practice or experience. Changes due to growth or maturation.
Learning Experiments and Concepts.  What is learning?
DEF: A RELATIVELY DURABLE CHANGE IN BEHAVIOR OR KNOWLEDGE THAT IS DUE TO EXPERIENCE LEARNING.
The Cognitive Domain of Psychology: Chapter 7 – Learning Module 15 – Classical Conditioning.
Unit 7: Learning. Behaviorism Belief that behavior is learned –genetics has little to do with it. “nurture-only” belief, mainstream1960s and 70s.
Knowledge acquired in this way.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. THREE KINDS OF LEARNING Learning –A relatively enduring or permanent change in behavior that results from previous experience.
Unit 6 - Learning Module 26. Learning Process of acquiring new and relatively enduring information or behaviors.
Module 9 Classical Conditioning. 3 Kinds of Learning l Classical Conditioning n Kind of learning in which a neutral stimulus acquires the ability to produce.
Learning What does it mean to learn?
Rat Maze Activity complete the maze starting at the ear and ending at the tail you must work on your own to complete it receive a small piece of candy.
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING UNIT 7- LEARNING LESSON 1.
Copyright © Allyn and Bacon Chapter 6 Learning This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited.
Something to Think About  Please take the next five minutes to address the following questions on a piece of paper: What is learning? What is learning?
Learning Classical Conditioning.  Ivan Pavlov   Russian physician/ neurophysiologist  Nobel Prize in 1904  studied digestive secretions.
Chapter 6 Notes AP Tips. Know about classical conditioning and Ivan Pavlov. Classical conditioning: the repeated pairing of an unconditioned stimulus.
Classical Conditioning
LEARNING Learning is achieved through experience. Anything that we were born knowing how to do is not a result of learning, but everything else is. We.
Basic Principles of Learning How do we learn anything? What are the basic principles of learning?
Section 1: Classical Conditioning. Classical Conditioning- a person’s or animal’s old response becomes attached to a new stimulus An example of learning.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Chapter 6 Learning This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited.
LEARNING: PRINCIPLES & APPLICATIONS CLASSICAL CONDITIONING.
Classical Conditioning DAY 2 AP PSYCH. Review Time is important ▪ Usually must have repeated pairings of the UCS and NS to produce and CR. – If Pavlov.
Learning: Classical and Operant Conditioning Learning
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
Long lasting change in behavior due to experience.
Classical Conditioning: Learning by Response
LEARNING Conditioning Classical
What Sort of Learning Does Classical Conditioning Explain?
Basic Learning Concepts and Classical Conditioning
LEARNING Chapter 6.
Learning Chapter 6.
Classical Conditioning
Relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience.
Bell Work Are there any foods that you avoid because they made you ill in the past? Is there anything that you associate with fear? Clowns? Darkness? Cats/Dogs?
Famous Psychology Experiments
Learning.
LEARNING DEF: a relatively durable change in behavior or knowledge that is due to experience.
Classical Conditioning
Learning Learning is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience. Associative Learning- learning to associate 2 events,
Presentation transcript:

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Classical conditioning is a basic form of learning in which a stimulus that produces an innate reflex becomes associated with a previously neutral stimulus, which then acquires the power to elicit essentially the same response What Sort of Learning Does Classical Conditioning Explain?

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 The Essentials of Classical Conditioning Neutral stimulus Any stimulus that produces no conditioned response prior to learning Examples; A bell sound is neutral… It does nothing until paired with a natural producing stimulus, such as food

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 The Essentials of Classical Conditioning Unconditioned response (UCR) Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) Conditioned response (CR) Conditioned stimulus (CS)

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 The Essentials of Classical Conditioning Unconditioned response (UCR) Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) Conditioned response (CR) Conditioned stimulus (CS) A stimulus that automatically (without conditioning) produces a reflexive behavior In Pavlov’s experiment, food was the UCS because it produced a salivation reflex, or UCR

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 The Essentials of Classical Conditioning Unconditioned response (UCR) Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) Conditioned response (CR) Conditioned stimulus (CS) The response elicited by an unconditioned stimulus without prior learning It’s reflective and involved NO LEARNING

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 The Essentials of Classical Conditioning Unconditioned response (UCR) Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) Conditioned response (CR) Conditioned stimulus (CS) A previously neutral stimulus (a bell/tone) elicits a conditioned response (dog salivating)

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 The Essentials of Classical Conditioning Unconditioned response (UCR) Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) Conditioned response (CR) Conditioned stimulus (CS) A response to a previously neutral stimulus that has become associated with the unconditioned stimulus The dog salivates at the sound of the bell

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Ivan Pavlov Russian physiologist, psychologist, and physician. Awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1904 for research pertaining to the digestive system. Pavlov is widely known for first describing the phenomenon of classical conditioning.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Pavlov’s Dog While doing experiments on salivation, he noticed dogs salivated before the food was in their mouths He eventually came up with an objective model of learning…. classical conditioning Ivan Pavlov

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007

Classical Conditioning Prior to conditioning Conditioning After conditioning Neutral stimulus (tone) (Orientation to sound but no response) Unconditioned stimulus (food in mouth) Unconditioned response (salivation) Neutral stimulus CS (tone) Unconditioned stimulus (food) + Conditioned response (salivation) Conditioned stimulus (tone) Conditioned response (salivation)

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007

Watch the video The Office - Pavlov's dog The Office - Pavlov's dog on You tube

Classical Conditioning in Humans The smell of perfume.. a certain song… a specific day of the year… When it results in intense emotions

It's not that the smell or the song are the cause of the emotion, but rather what that smell or song has been paired with... …perhaps an ex-boyfriend or ex-girlfriend, the death of a loved one, or maybe the day you met your current husband or wife.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Acquisition The initial learning stage of classical conditioning Refers to the period of time when the stimulus (bell) comes to evoke the conditioned response. (salivation)

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Classical Conditioning Extinction and Spontaneous Recovery A Conditioned Response (CR ) is not permanent … it can be reversed, or made extinct BUT….it may return spontaneously

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Extinction Weakening of a conditioned response in the absence of an unconditioned stimulus The dog salivating (CR) is eliminated by repeated presentations of the bell (CS ) without the food (US)

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Spontaneous Recovery The reappearance of an extinguished, conditioned response after a time delay, usually at a lower intensity For example, cocaine addicts who are thought to be "cured" can experience an irresistible impulse to use the drug again if they encounter a stimulus with strong connections to the drug, such as a white powder

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Acquisition, Extinction, and Spontaneous Recovery (1) Acquisition (CS + UCS) (3) Spontaneous Recovery (CS alone) Rest period (2) Extinction (CS alone) (Time) Trials Strength of the CR (Weak) (Strong)

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Classical Conditioning Generalization and Discrimination Stimulus Generalization Giving a conditioned response (panic) to stimuli that are similar to the CS (spiders) Stimulus Discrimination Involves responding to one stimulus but not to stimuli that are similar

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Stimulus Generalization G iving a conditioned response (panic) to stimuli that are similar to the CS (dogs) Being bitten by a large dog results in fear of all dogs

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Stimulus Discrimination Responding to one stimulus but not to stimuli that are similar Being bitten by a large dog results in fear of only large dogs, but not all dogs

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Experimental Neurosis A pattern of erratic behavior when faced with difficult, stressful, or demanding choices Confusing stimuli may cause experimental neurosis Freakin’ Out

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Applications of Classical Conditioning Classical Conditioning explains many behaviors……such as cravings, aversions, and fears It is also useful in eliminating unwanted behavior

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Systematic Desensitization A behavior therapy used to treat phobias Example: Fear of snakes The patient is first taught a muscle relaxation technique. Then he or she is told, over a period of days, to imagine the fear- producing situation while trying to restrain the anxiety by relaxation At the end of the series, the strongest anxiety- provoking situation may be brought to mind without anxiety.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 A Fear of Snakes? They would then present increasingly unpleasant situations: a poster of a snake a small snake in a box in the other room a snake in a clear box in view touching the snake At each step in the progression, the patient is desensitized to the phobia using coping techniques As they realize that nothing bad happened to them, the fear is gradually extinguished. Once the patient had practiced their relaxation technique, the therapist would then present them with the photograph, and help them calm down.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Little Albert Albert was taught to fear a white rat when it was paired with a loud noise that scared the child. This fear was later generalized to other white, furry objects By present-day standards, Watson's experiment was unethical for several reasons. Albert's mother was not informed of the experiment. It was performed without her consent.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Little Albert

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Little Albert Albert's fear was not extinguished because he moved away before systematic desensitization could be administered. It is presumed that, although he still must have had fear conditioned to many various stimuli after moving, he would likely have been desensitized by his natural environments later in life.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Taste-aversion Learning A biological tendency in which an organism learns to avoid food with a certain taste after a single experience, if eating it is followed by illness Learned taste aversion may be nature's way of keeping us away from deadly foods.

Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 Taste-aversion This poses a problem for ‘Classical’ conditioning because it is not entirely learned. It appears to be part of our biological nature This leads some to question some parts of Pavlov’s theory