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Aversive Control: Avoidance and Punishment

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1 Aversive Control: Avoidance and Punishment

2 Avoidance/Escape Escape: getting away from an aversive stimulus in progress Avoidance: preventing the delivery of an aversive stimulus Negative contingency between response and aversive stimulus Increase in operant responding

3 Brogden et al. (1938) Guinea pigs
CS = tone, US = shock, UR = pain, CR = running Classical conditioning group CS followed by US Avoidance group CS -- CR --> no US CS -- no CR --> US

4 Discriminative Avoidance
Stimulus signals onset of aversive US Avoidance Escape CS CS US US R R

5 Shuttle Box Standard experimental paradigm

6 Escape In presence of aversive stimulus Make response
Aversive terminated Negative reinforcement

7 Avoidance “Paradox” Make response before aversive delivered
Behaviour clearly increases, so reinforcer But what is taken away (or delivered)? Mowrer & Lamoreaux (1942) “…not getting something can hardly, in and of itself, qualify as rewarding.”

8 Two-Process Theory Two mechanisms: classical and instrumental
1. Classical conditioning process activated by CS when avoidance not made; CR of fear produced 2. Negative reinforcement: successful avoidance removes fear caused by CS Classical and instrumental conditioning processes are independent Avoidance = escape from fear, not prevention of shock

9 Acquired Drive Experiment
Phase 1: condition fear to CS through classical conditioning procedure Phase 2: let subject make operant response to terminate CS No shock Drive to avoid learned through classical conditioning

10 Brown and Jacobs (1949) Rats in shuttle box
Experimental and control groups Phase 1: light/tone CS --> shock Phase 2: CS --> no shock; turn CS off by crossing barrier Measure: time to change sides Supports two-process theory Termination of fear CS drives operant response

11 Rescorla & LoLordo (1965) Dog in shuttlebox Pair tone with shock
No signal Response gives “safe time” Pair tone with shock Tone increases rate of response CS+ can amplify avoidance CS- can reduce avoidance

12 Problems for Theory Fear a necessary component
Fear reduction with experience

13 Kamin, Brimer & Black (1963) Rats
Lever press in operant chamber for food Auditory CS+ for shock; avoidance in shuttle box until: 1, 3, 9, 27 avoidances in a row CS+ in operant chamber; check for suppression of lever press

14 Alternation of Behaviour (Yo-yo)
Every successful avoidance puts CS on extinction With extinction, fear drops, so motivation to avoid decreases Resulting in more shocks, strengthening CR again and increasing avoidance response But… we don’t really see this

15 Persistence of Avoidance
Sometimes a problem Phobias Need to extinguish avoidance Flooding, response prevention

16 Sidman Free-Operant Can avoidance be learned without warning CS?
Shocks at random intervals Response gives safe time Extensive training, but rats learn avoidance (errors, high variability across subjects)

17 Hernstein & Hineline (1966)
Rapid and slow shock rate schedules Response switches from rapid to slow Shift back to rapid random so no time signal Response produces shock reduction

18 Reduction of Shock Frequency
Molar account Response reduces in amount of shocks over long run Negative reinforcement Overall shocks taken away, behaviour increases

19 Safety Signals Molecular account Positive reinforcement
Context cues associated with “safety” Either SD or CS- Making response gives safety Giving explicit stimuli makes avoidance learning easier

20 SSDRs Species-specific defense reactions Innate responses; evolved
SSDRs predominate in initial stages of avoidance Hierarchy If first SSDR works, keep it If not, try next, etc. Aversive outcome (punishment) is the selector of appropriate avoidance response

21 SSDRs Fight, flight, freeze
Also thigmotaxis, defensive burying, light avoidance, etc. Environmental content influences selected SSDR E.g., freezing not useful if predator right in front of you… Some responses easier to learn than others E.g., rats: wheel run --> avoid shock (easy) E.g., rats: rear --> avoid shock (hard)

22 Predatory Imminence Different innate defensive behaviours at different danger levels

23 Differences from SSDR 1. Behaviours in anticipation, not response
2. Predatory imminence, not environmental cues leads to response 3. Not selected via punishment

24 Punishment Positive punishment Negative punishment Time out
Delivery of stimulus --> reduction in behaviour Negative punishment Removal of stimulus --> reduction in behaviour Time out Overcorrection

25 Introduction of Punisher
Effective use of punishment Tolerance Start with high(er) intensity Can then reduce and behaviour will remain suppressed

26 Response-Contingent vs. Response-Independent
Does your response cause the aversive outcome? More behavioural suppression if aversive stimulus produced by operant response Phase 1: train on VI-60 sec light Phase 2: tone light FR-3 response-independent punishment punishment Yoked Suppression ratio tone Trials

27 Delay Interval between response and delivery of aversive
Longer the delay, less suppression of behaviour

28 Punishment Schedule Continuous or intermittent schedules Azrin (1963)
Different FR punishment schedules; responding maintained with VI reinforcement no punishment FR 1000 FR 500 Cumulative responses FR 100 FR 5 Time

29 Positive Reinforcement Schedules and Punishment
Without some positive reinforcement, behaviour generally stops quickly As in previous study, responding maintained with appetitive outcome on VI schedule Interval Overall decrease VI: suppressed but stable FI: scalloping Ratio Increases post-reinforcement pauses

30 Alternative Sources of Reinforcement
Options No alternatives but punished behaviour Alternative behaviours (e.g., differential reinforcement schedules; DRA, DRI, etc.) Availability of reinforceable alternatives increases suppression of punished response no punishment Punishment, no alternative response available Cumulative responses Punishment, alternative response available Time

31 SD for Punishment Suppression limited to presence of SD
E.g., garden owl E.g., cardboard “cops” and “kids”

32 Punishment as SD for Availability of Pos. Reinf.
Sometimes punishment seeking behaviour Punisher becomes S+ for positive reinforcement E.g., masochism, children seeking attention

33 CER Theory of Punishment
Estes (1944) Conditioned suppression E.g., freeze prevents lever press CER incompatible with making response Punishment suppresses behaviour through same mechanism In real world, no explicit CS Stimuli immediately before punished response serve this function Estes (1969): incompatible motivational state

34 Avoidance Theory of Punishment
Tied to two-process theory Engage in incompatible behaivour Prevents making punished behaviour Strengthening of competing avoidance response Not weakening of punished response Same theoretical problems of avoidance

35 Negative Law of Effect Thorndike (1911) Similar to Premack Principle
Positive reinforcement and punishment are symmetrical opposites Similar to Premack Principle Low probability behaviours reduce high probability behaviours Forced to engage in low-valued behaviour after doing high probability behaviour


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