8.2 Flashcards

1
Q

three main types of learning

A
  1. associative learning
    - classical conditioning
    - operant conditioning
  2. non associative learning
    - habituation
    - sensitization
  3. observational
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2
Q

Associative learning + difference in classical and operant conditioning

A

form associations among stimuli, behaviours or both
- classical: we pair stimuli that occur sequentially, e.g. bees and being stung
- operant: behaviours and consequences, e.g. studying and good grades

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3
Q

Nonassociative learning: used to both, but opposites

A

learning that involves changes in the magnitude of responses to stimuli

  • habituation: reduces our reactions to due repeated experiences, e.g. will children habituate to a higher tolerance for violent behaviour with video game exposure?
  • sensitization: response increases with every episode of the stimulus
    (stimulus does not change, behaviour does), e.g. being startled by each thunder clap
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4
Q

Observational learning

A

learning by watching the actions of another organism/person

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5
Q

Classical conditioning

A

the process by which we learn to associate an originally neutral stimulus (does not elicit UC response) to an unconditioned stimulus response

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6
Q

Unconditioned (UCS) vs conditioned stimulus (CS)

A

stimulus that elicits a response without prior experiment
=> dog food

Therefore, conditioned stimulus is an event which significance is learned thru classical conditioning

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7
Q

Unconditioned or natural response (UCR) VS conditioned response (CR)

A
  • response to UCS without prior experience
    => dog drooling when he smells the food

CR is a learned reaction

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8
Q

Acquisition - what 3 factors do u need?
- stimulus s_lien_e
- stimulus o_der
- time between _eutr_l stimulus and unconditioned st_mulus

A

development of a learned response (don’t need the UCS anymore)

3 factors
- clearly discernible, e.g. a high tone bell => more salient for conditioning process to take place
- NS before the UCS => allows the NS to become CS (A leads to B)
- immediate succession as the organism can view the 2 stimuli as related

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9
Q

Extinction

A

reduction of a learned response
- this is due to the UCS not being presented after the CS, so the organism does not hv a response to the CS
- CS => NS
- it is not forgetting, rather new learning overriding old learning

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10
Q

Spontaneous recovery:
- extinction learning does not lead to unlearning the CR, but lesser strength compared to CR in acquisition

A

reappearance of conditioned responses after periods of rest

  • effects of conditioning do not disappear completely, even when the CR disappears in extinction
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11
Q

Inhibition: pred_cts the a_sen_e of a UCS
what kind of conditioning?

A

Classical conditioning
- conditioned stimulus predicts the absence of a UCS
=> pair light + shock leads to fear of the light
=> but pair light + sound and no shock leads to not fearing light when there’s sound

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12
Q

Generalization

A

tendency to respond to stimuli similar to an original CS
=> being afraid of organisms resembling bees

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13
Q

Discrimination

A

learned ability to distinguish or differentiate between CS and other stimuli
=> restricting response to the CS

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14
Q

High order conditioning

A
  • make distant predictions abt the occurrence of significant events - CS associated with UCS
  • another stimulus that precedes the CS, also associated with the UCS
    => lab assistant walking - rings bell - sets out food
    => repetition of trials, the dog can salivate upon hearing the footsteps
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15
Q

Latent inhibition: when you get food poisoning after pizza (numerous times) and some candy (new), which one do you think is the cause and why?

A

takes more time to learn abt a familiar CS compared to an unfamiliar CS
=> easier to learn something novel, opposed to un-learning familiar
=> conditioning is easier for novel stimulus

=> e.g. but also confirmation bias?

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16
Q

Aversion therapy: how do you reduce the attractiveness of a conditioned stimulus??

A

counterconditioning

=> reduce attractiveness of a CS by pairing it with an unpleasant UCS instead of a pleasant one

e.g. alcohol and nausea

17
Q

Systematic desensitization: ppl re_ax

A

counterconditioning

  • people relax while being exposed to stimuli that elicited fear
18
Q

Conditioned taste aversion: learned av_id_nce

A

learned avoidance of a particular taste

  • stimulus triggers involuntary response