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Psychology
Approaches
Behaviourism
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Created by
Katie Eyley
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Cards (8)
What is the behaviourist approach ?
100%
nature
Born as as
blank
slate for all
experience
Argues that in order for psychology to be
scientific
it should focus on
observable
behaviour which can be
objectively
measured
doesn’t focus on
cognitive
processes which can only be
inferred
as they don’t help psychology to be scientific
It is valid to
generalise
from animal research to humans because
human
learning is the
same
as
animal
learning
What are the two main forms of learning for the behaviourist approach?
operant
conditioning +
reinforcement
Classical
conditioning
What is Classical
Conditioning
?
learning by
association
Ivan
Pavlov
-dogs could be
conditioned
to
salivate
at the sound of a
bell
, if that sound was
repeatedly
presented just before they were given
food
Gradually the dogs learnt to
associate
the sound of the bell (
stimulus)
with the
food
shows how a
neutral
stimulus
can become a
conditioned
response
Classical Conditioning case study
Little
Albert
stimulus
generalisation
conditioned to fear
furry
things e.g. rabbit, santa mask, fur coat
Operant
Conditioning ->
reinforcement
+ punishment
positive
reinforcement =
adding
a
pleasant
consequence to increase desired behaviour e.g. achievement points
negative
reinforcement =
taking
away an
unpleasant
consequence to increase desired behaviour e.g. removing seating plans
punishment
=
adding
something
unpleasant
or
taking
away something pleasant to
decrease
behaviour e.g. detentions or taking away free periods
Operant Conditioning
B.F.Skinner
- box
lever for food pellet =
positive
reinforcement
lever to avoid
electric
shock
= negative reinforcement
Strengths of the behaviourist approach
uses
controlled
research
focuses on
observable
behaviour within controlled
lab
settings
behaviourists have broken behaviour into
stimulus response units
allowing us to establish
cause
and
effect
real world
applications -
token economy
systems
Weaknesses
of the behaviourist approach
oversimplifies
learning
+ ignores other influences on behaviour
Environmental
determinism-
> all behaviour determined by past experiences that have been
conditioned
ignores influence of
free
will - skinner suggested
free
will was an
illusion
Ignores
conscious
decision - conscious processes