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psychology approaches
classical + operant
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Created by
Izzy Holley
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behaviourist approach- believes that we are born as a blank slates (
tabula
rasa
) and all behaviour is learnt from the
environment
e.g. we are a product of
nurture
rather than nature
2 types of learning:
classical conditioning-
Pavlov
operant
conditioning-
skinner
classical
: learnt through
association
we pair
two
stimuli
together to create a
response.
pavlov's 1901 study:
unconditioned
stimulus (food) ->
unconditioned
response (salivating)
unconditioned
stimulus (food) + neutral stimulus (bell) ->
unconditioned
response (salivating)
conditioned
stimulus (bell) ->
conditioned
response (salivation)
operant conditioning- the
likelihood
of
repeating
a
behaviour
depends on its
consequences
, learning from
reinforcement
positive reinforcement- producing a
consequence
that is
satisfying
or pleasant
e.g. food or praise
negative reinforcement-
removing
something
unpleasant
to make the desired
behaviour
occur
e.g. putting on seatbelt to stop the alarm
punishment-
decreasing
the likelihood of a behaviour occurring by it being followed by an
undesirable
consequence
e.g.
detention
continuous reinforcement-
reinforcing
a
behaviour
every time
partial
reinforcement- only
reinforcing
a behaviour every
few
times
skinners rats
rat presses
lever-
> light
goes
on which signals
food
inside a
'skinners
box'
acts as a
reward
, so rat repeats behaviour
acts as
positive
reinforcement
, therefore rat is conditioned to press the
lever
(also did one where rat was getting electric shocks and had to press lever to stop it- negative reinforcement)
evaluation of behaviourist approach A03-
strengths-
used
experimental
methods
has real world
applications
weaknesses-
unethical
as done with
animals
cant
generalise
findings on humans
ignores
biological
approach