Chapter 4: Behavioral Principles: Respondent and Operant Conditioning Flashcards
The term respondent conditioning is interchangeable with terms you may
be more familiar with…
classical conditioning and Pavlovian conditioning
Behavioral principles
procedures that have a consistent effect and are so simple that they
cannot be broken down any further
Behavioral techniques
combinations of behavioral principles
The basic principle of respondent (classical/Pavlovian) conditioning
is that a
neutral stimulus, followed closely by an unconditioned stimulus that elicits an unconditioned
response, will no longer be a neutral stimulus and will instead come to elicit that response.
Unconditioned stimulus
a stimulus that elicits an unconditioned response naturally
-e.g., you chew food (unconditioned stimulus) in your mouth and sweat when you are
hot (unconditioned stimulus), you didn’t need to learn that you need to do that
Unconditioned response
- the innate response that is elicited by an unconditioned stimulus
(also called a respondent behavior)
-e.g., you chew (unconditioned response) food in your mouth and sweat (unconditioned
response) when you are hot, you didn’t need to learn that you need to do that
Unconditioned reflex
the unconditioned stimulus causes an unconditioned response
-the stimulus-response relationship occurs without any learning taking place
Respondent conditioning
*Most stimuli do not elicit an unconditioned response- therefore, stimuli often become paired
with what occurs immediately after it, linking these two things together.
Conditioned stimulus
initially neutral stimulus that elicits a conditioned response, after it has been paired with a stimulus that elicited the response
Conditioned response
the response that is elicited by a conditioned stimulus after
classical/respondent conditioning has taken place
Conditioned reflex
the conditioned stimulus causes a conditioned response
-the stimulus-response relationship occurs through learning (classical conditioning/respondent
conditioning)
–> which is a stimulus-response sequence in which a stimulus elicits a response b/c the stimulus was paired with a different stimulus that elicited that response
For example:
-a basketball player misses a free throw in the first game of the season with a new coach
(neutral stimulus). If the coach yells (unconditioned stimulus) at the athlete and the athlete
becomes scared of the coach (unconditioned response), they will be fearful (now a conditioned
response) of missing their next free-throw (now a conditioned stimulus)
Eliminate
We can eliminate conditioned reflexes. For instance, if the coach did not yell at the athlete
after more missed free throws, we may see the extinction of the response- the athlete would
no longer be worried about missing a free throw.
Counterconditioning
may occur if the sport psychologist talks to the coach about their
reaction. Instead of yelling, the coach is encouraged to say, “I’m proud of your efforts- keep your head high” after the athlete misses their free throw. We are now putting in a new and
very different conditioned response. This is effective because we’ve eliminated the initial
conditioned response and put a different conditioned response in its place.
Operant conditioning
The other form of conditioning is operant conditioning. In operant conditioning, the behavior is
modified by the consequences within the environment.
Positive reinforcement
comes in often in sport- athletes do something (behavior), and the
effect is something that encourages the behavior (a positive reinforcer), it is more likely for the
athlete to do it again.
e.g., a softball player at bat taps her bat on the ground in a specific rhythm and scores a home
run (a positive reinforcer). She would be more likely to tap it again in the future in the same
way.