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Classical Conditioning

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1 Classical Conditioning
Chapter 3 Classical Conditioning

2 Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (1849-1936)
Classical (Pavlovian) conditioning Medical physiologist Digestion Human/animal differences Conditioned reflexes en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ivan_Pavlov_(Nobel).png en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:One_of_Pavlov%27s_dogs.jpg

3 Terminology Unconditional stimulus (US) Unconditional response (UR)
Stimulus that elicits the innate reflex (e.g., food) Unconditional response (UR) Reflex action that occurs in response to US (e.g., salivation) Conditional stimulus (CS) Any stimulus that doesn’t originally elicit the UR (e.g., bell) Conditional response (CR) The action elicited by the CS (e.g., salivation)

4 Conditioning and Awareness
Awareness of conditioning not required for learning

5 Innate US-UR is an innate stimulus-behaviour “Reflex” Hardwired
Stereotypic pattern of behaviour

6 Example: Bell and Food CS US UR CR Later Trials CS US UR
First Few Trials Time CS = bell US = food UR = salivation CR = salivation

7 Processes Acquisition Extinction Acquiring a CR E.g., pair CS with US
Reduce/eliminate a CR E.g., present CS without US

8 Measuring Conditioning
Sometimes difficult to measure CR e.g., if CS & US close together, CR & UR can overlap Test trial (probe trial) Give CS alone Intensity Does CR intensity increase with experience?

9 Example: Eyeblink Conditioning
CS (tone) US (airpuff) Airpuff on eye Blink UR vs. CR eyeblinks UR blink faster than CR blink CR (blink) UR (blink)

10 Example: Taste Aversion
Very strong Very persistent Usually conditioned after one presentation Experiment Rats fed novel food (CS) Injected with lithium chloride (US) Choice: novel food or regular food Chose regular food

11 Higher-Order Conditioning
CSs and USs can be associated (First-order) CSs can be associated with other CSs Second-order conditioning

12 First-Order Conditioning
tone (CS1) food (US) salivation (CR)

13 Second-Order Conditioning
light (CS2) tone (CS1) salivation (CR) Risk of extinction? salivation (CR) tone (CS1) food (US)

14 CS+ and CS- CS+ (excitatory CS) CS- (inhibitory CS)
CS predicts occurrence of US Activates behaviour related to US CS- (inhibitory CS) CS predicts non-occurrence of US Suppresses behaviour related to US

15 PAVLOV’S PROCEDURE Trial Type A Trial Type B CS+ CS- US Randomize trial type presentation NEGATIVE CONTINGENCY PROTOCOL CS- US Context cues serve as CS+

16 Testing for CS- CS- produces absence of CR No CR
You’ve produced CS- Haven’t learned anything How to measure nothing… Summation test Measure CR with CS+ Compound stimulus of CS+ & CS-; measure CR Retardation of acquisition Trained CS- and novel stimulus; pair both with novel US for same number of trials Measure CR for both Prior learning of CS- inhibits learning new association

17 Short Delay Conditioning
Strongest and most rapid Simple autonomic responses: 5-30 seconds Quick skeletal responses: 0.5 seconds CS US or

18 Long Delay Conditioning
Other distracting stimuli? Timing estimation required CS US or

19 Trace Conditioning From “memory trace” Must remember CS
Other stimuli interfere trace interval CS US

20 Simultaneous Conditioning
Weaker than short delay CS can’t signal onset of US Not predictive CS US

21 Backward Conditioning
Ignores order; US comes first CS has no predictiveness Might become CS- CS US

22 Influences in Classical Conditioning

23 CS-US Contiguity Closeness together in time and/or space
Usually, more learning if greater contiguity between CS & US Type of conditioning may influence this e.g., eyeblink vs. taste aversion

24 CS-US Contingency If-then situation X iff Y
Consistency of pairing CS and US Greater contingency, greater learning

25 Stimulus Features Nature of stimulus affects its conditioning ability
Intensity Novelty

26 Compound Stimuli Two+ simple CSs presented at the same time
Paired with US

27 Overshadowing Salience
Exclusive regulation of CR by most salient CS in compound stimuli

28 Latent Inhibition Repeatedly present neutral stimulus (N)
Pair N with US Harder to condition N as CS CS- or habituation

29 Blocking CS1 -- US CS1 and novel stimulus (CS2) with US CS1 --> CR
CS2 --> no or very weak CR

30 Textbook Error: p. 77 “But suppose we eat two foods, one spicy and the other bland. If we then become sick, thanks to blocking we are likely to develop an aversion to the spicy food -- even though it may have been the bland food that caused our illness.”

31 Sensory Preconditioing
Pair two neutral stimuli repeatedly Pair one with US repeatedly until CR produced Test other stimulus CR produced

32 Number of CS-US Pairings
Acquisition curve Non-linear Asymptote asymptote CR Strength Conditioning Trials

33 Intertrial Interval ITI
Time between each CS-US pairing (i.e., between trials) Generally, around 30 seconds effective

34 Extinction of CR

35 Extinction CS without US --> Extinction
Weakening and stopping of CR Not forgetting A type of conditioning CS paired with absence of US

36 Spontaneous Recovery After extinction, let time pass
Present CS again (no US) Temporary, small return of CR Shows extinction is not forgetting

37 Relearning/Reacquisition Effect
Extinguish CR Recondition with CS-US pairing Fewer trials required

38 Putting it Together Strength of CR Trials/Time Spontaneous Recovery
Acquisition Extinction Reacquisition Strength of CR CS&US CS alone CS alone CS&US Trials/Time

39 Theories of Classical Conditioning
Associationism, Stimulus Substitution, Preparedness, Rescorla-Wagner

40 Associationism Linking together of: Contiguity, similarity, contrast
Events Memories Actions and consequences Contiguity, similarity, contrast Central to study of learning and behaviour

41 Ebbinghaus’ Memory Experiments
Nonsense syllables E.g., ZOG, PAF, TOB One subject Recite from memory Savings E.g., if 10 trials initially, then after a delay 3 more trials, savings = (10-3)/10 = 7/10 = 70%

42 Major Findings List length Effects of repetition Effects of time
Overlearning Effects of time Role of contiguity Backwards associations Forgetting Curve Time between study and relearning 20min 1hr 8.8hr 1day 2days 6days 31days 100 75 50 25 Percent Savings

43 Classical Conditioning
Innate US-UR reflex pathway CS is associated with the US Through the associative process, CR is produced

44 Stimulus Substitution Theory
Pavlov CR and UR produced by same neural region CS takes on properties of US Substitution CR should be the same as UR

45 Example: Sign Tracking
Response not required US often food Stimulus (CS) indicates US availability Subject “tracks” the sign more and more CS takes on properties of US Pigeon autoshaping Longbox autoshaping F = CS F = US

46 Biological Predispositions
Burns & Domjan (2000) Timberlake & Grant (1975)

47 Problems with SST CS not a complete substitute for US
e.g., eyeblink differences Magnitudes CSs produce different responses Omissions and additions Compensatory conditional responses

48 Preparatory Response Theory
Learn responses that prepare organism for US occurrence Sometimes CR same as UR, sometimes different

49 Example: Drug Tolerance
Neurophysiological dependencies Siegel (1975) Contextual stimuli act as CSs Compensatory CR Morphine

50 Contextual Stimuli Theory
Rats on hotplate Between-groups study Independent variables: Morphine or placebo Location of injection (Home or Injection room) Dependent variable: time to lift feet

51 Results Control (placebo): 13 sec.
Exp. Gr. 1 (morphine): 24 sec. (day 1) to 13 sec. (day 4) Injection room gives contextual cues Compensatory CR Exp. Gr. 2 (morphine): Day 1-3 injection room: 24 --> 13 sec. latency Day 4 home room: 28 sec. latency

52 Interpretation US: Morphine UR: Pain reduction CS: Injection room
CR: Pain sensitivity CS prepares rats for morphine injection Body homeostasis

53 Rescorla-Wagner Theory
Contiguity account Associative strength CS acquires limited amount of associative strength on any one trial

54 Three Factors in Theory
Maximum associative strength Difference between current and maximum strength Number of additional CSs

55 Rescorla-Wagner Equation
DVn = c( - Vn-1) DVn: change in associative strength for CS on one trial c: represents salience of CS and US; a constant ( ) : maximum associative strength (magnitude of UR) Vn-1: associative strength already accrued by CS

56 Acquisition Phase Example: set c = 0.25,  = 10.0 Vn-1 starts at 0.0
For the first trial Vn-1 = V1-1 = V0 For the second trial Vn-1 = V2-1 = V1

57 Total associative strength Vn (or “VTotal”) after two trials:
First CS-US pairing: DVn = c( - Vn-1) DV1 = 0.25( ) = 2.5 Second CS-US pairing: DV2 = 0.25( ) = 1.88 Total associative strength Vn (or “VTotal”) after two trials: V1 + V2 = = 4.38 Third CS-US pairing: DV3 = 0.25( ) = 1.41

58 Acquisition Phase  Trial DVn Vn (VTotal) 0 0.00 0.00 1 2.50 2.50
Trials Associative Strength (Vn) DV3 DV2 DV1

59 Extinction Example: After first extinction trial:
Set c = 0.25,  = 0.0 After first extinction trial: DVn = c ( - Vn-1) = 0.25( ) = -2.5

60 Extinction Trials Associative Strength (Vi)  = 0.0 DV1 DV2 DV3

61 Blocking Learned CS blocks subsequent CSs Example
CS = tone, novel CS = light c = 0.25,  = 10.0 Completed 8 trials with just tone, V8 = 9.0 DVn = 0.25( ) Only 1 unit of associative strength left to split between the tone and the light Ultimately, Vtone=9.5 and Vlight=0.5


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