Chapter 9 - Behavioral psychology Flashcards
classical conditioning
a form of stimuli-response in which an initially neutral stimulus acquires the ability to evoke the same innate reflex as another stimulus that originally evoked it
- Pavlov
unconditioned reflex
consists of unconditioned stimulus and unconditioned response
conditioned reflex
consists of the conditioned stimulus and conditioned response
- what Descartes described as learned reflexes
unconditioned response
a natural response to a particular stimulus, an unconditioned stimulus
conditioned response
the response when the unconditioned response is combined with a conditioned stimulus
higher-order conditioning
happens once a conditioned stimulus has acquired the power to elicit a conditioned response, one can use that sequence to condition yet another conditioned stimulus
- the new conditioned stimulus was never paired with the original unconditioned stimulus
generalization
when one shows the same conditioned response to a slightly different stimulus
differentiation
when taking 2 approximately similar stimuli but associating a different response to each, dogs learn very well between these 2 stimuli
experimental neurosis
when exposed to 2 or more stimuli whith different responses at the same time
John Watson
argued that if psychology was to become a true science, it had to focus on observable behavior
- no mind was required, all complex behaviors are learned
behaviorism
a psychological approach that focuses on observable behavior rather than mental processes
“black box”
only the behavior that comes out of the box is analyzed, because everything that is not observable is in the black box
Watson’s work on emotions
showed that all emotions are built up through conditioning
- observed fear, rage, and love
radical environmentalism
environmental factors are more important than heredity in determining behavior
- people are a product of their environment and the conditioing they recieve
Little Albert experiment
at first the baby wasn’t scared of the rat, but when the rat came close the researchers banged 2 metal poles over the baby
- loud noise (unconditioned stimulus) induced fear (unconditioned response)
- after a while the baby was scared of the rat and generalized his fears to other white furry things like rabbits or beards