1.3.2 application of behaviourist approach to aversion therapy Flashcards
1
Q
How do behavioural therapies work
A
Based on the notion that most forms of mental illness occur through maladaptive or faulty learning, therefor, a person can re-learn how to behave in a more functional, healthy way (behaviour modification)
2
Q
How does classical and operant conditioning relate to aversion therapy
A
- Undesirable behaviour is learned through conditioning
- Alchoholic learns to associate alchohol with pleasure (classical conditioning)
- This is positively reinforced every time they have a drink (operant conditioning)
3
Q
Give an example of aversion therapy aims
A
- Aim for a patient to associate alchohol (undesirable behaviour) with an unpleasant or aversive stimulus (feeling sick)
- This should lead to the suppression of the undesirable behaviour
- Uses counterconditioning
4
Q
How does modern aversion therapy use operant conitioning instead?
A
- Use drugs which reward patients for abstinence with feelings of calmness (positive reinforcment)
- If behaviour is rewarded it will be repeated so using operant conditioning an alchohlic will abstain from drinking alchohol
5
Q
Give the equation for how aversion therapy works
A
- Undesriable stimulus response bond: Alchohol (controlled stimuli) = Pleasure (controlled response)
- Unconditioned stimulus-response bond: Drug causing nausia (Uncontrolled stimuli) = Nausia (uncontrolled response)
- Counterconditioned stimulus-response bond: Alchohol (controlled stimuli) = Nausea (controlled response)
6
Q
A