Psychology: Approaches - Behaviourist approach

    Cards (15)

    • What are the assumptions of the Behaviourist approach?
      • All behaviour is learned
      • All behaviour can be unlearned
      • Both abnormal and normal behaviour are learned in the same way
    • What are the advantages of the behaviourist approach
      • Scientific credibility
      -Uses controlled methods
      -Lab setting = easier to replicate
      • Real life applications
      -Token economies used in prisons and psych wards
    • What are the negatives of the behaviourist approach
      • Ignores processes
      -Focus on stimulus and response
      • Environmental determinism
      -Says all behaviour is caused by experience, ignores free will
      • Ethical issues with animal experiments
      -Starving animals to make them hungry
      -Results also may not apply to humans
    • What are the bases of the behaviourist approach?
      • Watson and other theorists rejected introspection for it's subjectivity
      • Behaviourist approach has more control and objectivity
      • Animals replaced humans as experimental subjects
    • Classical Conditioning 

      -Involuntary responses and behaviours resulting from experiences + a response = association
      -Supporting study - Pavlovs Dogs (1902)
    • Evaluation
      +Scientific credibility
      >controlled methods
      >lab setting = easy to replicate
      +Real life application
      >token economies in prisons and
      psych wards
      -Ignores process
      >focus on stimulus and response
      -Environmental determinism
      >says all behaviour is caused by
      experience, ignores free will and
      biological factors
      -Ethical issues with animal
      experiments
      >starving rats to make them
      hungry
      >may not apply to humans
    • Operant conditioning 

      -Voluntary behaviour shaped by consequences
      -Link between behaviour and consequences
      -Supporting study = Skinners box
      -Positive/Negative reinforcement/punishment
      • positive reinforcement = giving something good = chance of behaviour increases
      • negative punishment = taking something bad = chance of behaviour increases
      • positive punishment = giving something bad = chance of behaviour decreases
      • negative punishment = taking something good = chance of behaviour decreases
    • Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)
      Causes natural / automatic response
    • Unconditioned response (UCR)
      Natural / automatic response
    • Neutral stimulus (NS)

      Causes no natural / automatic response
    • Conditioned Stimilus

      Learned - causes response
    • Conditioned response 

      Learned response
    • Little Albert study (1920)
      Goal-
      • Find out if CC could create fear
      Method-
      • Check NS is neutral (fluffy animals) to Albert
      • Check UCS causes UCR (banging pole causes fear) in Albert
      • Bang pole when Albert is in presence of fluffy animals
      • Give fluffy animals to Albert
      • Observe if Albert produces fear response
      Results-
      • Albert showed fear towards fluffy animals, extended to fluffy blankets, etc
      • Classical Conditioning can be used to create fear in humans
      Ethical issues-
      • Human subject used
      • Child was an orphan
      • Possible long term effects
      • No consent given
      • Lack of regulation
    • Skinners box
      • Pigeons made hungry
      • Put in box
      • Each time they peck disk = reward
      • Pigeons learn that pecking disk = reward, so continued
      • Pigeons can learn to respond to a stimulus