Social Learning Theory Flashcards
How is SLT different to learning theory?
It says there’s a mediation between stimulus and response
Who studied Bobo Dolls?
Albert Bandura
What is observational learning?
Learning by watching others
What is vicarious reinforcement ?
Learning by observing the consequences of the behaviour of others..
List 3 features of role models
Similarly- eg same sex or ethnic background
Higher status - may be age
Can be in our real lives or known through media, eg famous rugby player
When are we most likely to imitate behaviour?
When it’s performed by a role model who we see being positively reinforced
What is internalisation?
Learning the ways that our role models act and making them our own. Envisaging how they would act in unseen situations and replicating this, eg wearing “jazzy” socks to school coz we think our role model would!
What are the cognitive processes involved in social learning?
Attention
Retention
Reproduction
Motivation
Matty saw his friend Joey steal a mobile phone from a year 8 boy. He sold it to another boy and made £30, which helped to pay for a trip to see Harry Styles. Matty didn’t imitate him, even though Joey was the coolest boy in school. Matty’s mum had already paid for the trip, and gave him a generous monthly allowance. Why didn’t Matty copy Joey?
Matty had paid attention, retained the information, and was capable of reproducing it. He knew where the Year 8 boys left their phones. However he was not motivated to imitate as the reward was not worth it. He had enough money!
What is modelling?
Observing and imitating another person
In Bandura’s 1961 study, how many conditions were there?
Three
- Children observed an adult role model behaving aggressively to a bobo doll
- Children observed an adult role model playing with other toys and ignoring the bobo doll - playing nicely
- Children had no exposure to role models
Outline the sample for Bandura’s 1961 study
36 girls and 36 boys
Mean age of 52 months
Matched participants design - like matched pairs but over 3 groups
Name 3 participant variables that Bandura needed to match in the 1961 study
Age
Gender
Previous aggressive tendencies
When the children were able to play in the room that they had observed, how long were they observed for? (1961 study)
20 minutes
What did Bandura find from his 1961 study. 3 things?
Those exposed to aggressive role models imitated a lot of their aggressive acts
Those in other conditions showed hardly any aggressive behaviour
Aggressive behaviour was slightly higher in the control group than the non-aggressive group