behaviourist approach

Cards (19)

  • When did the behaviourist approach emerge in psychology?

    At the beginning of the 20th century
  • What does the behaviourist approach focus on instead of introspection?

    Observable events, i.e. stimuli and responses
  • How do behaviourists explain human behaviour?

    Through a basic form of learning known as conditioning
  • What are the basic assumptions of the behaviourist approach?

    • Behaviour is learned from experience.
    • Only observable behaviour is measurable scientifically.
    • It is valid to study animal behaviour.
    • There is no genetic influence on behaviour.
  • What natural reflex do all animals, including humans, have when food is placed in their mouth?
    Salivation
  • What is classical conditioning?

    Learning through association between stimuli and responses
  • What happens when other stimuli are consistently associated with a stimulus in classical conditioning?

    They eventually trigger the same response
  • Who first demonstrated classical conditioning?

    Ivan Pavlov
  • What did Pavlov's research reveal about dogs?

    They could be conditioned to salivate to the sound of a bell
  • How did Pavlov's dogs learn to associate the sound of the bell with food?

    By repeatedly presenting the bell sound at the same time as food
  • What are the key principles of operant conditioning?

    • Learning by consequence.
    • Positive reinforcement: increases likelihood of behaviour.
    • Negative reinforcement: increases likelihood by avoiding negative consequences.
    • Punishment: decreases likelihood of behaviour.
  • What is the basic idea behind Skinner's theory of operant conditioning?

    Organisms produce different behaviours that have consequences
  • What is a 'Skinner box' used for?

    To investigate operant conditioning in rats
  • How does reinforcement frequency affect behaviour response?

    • Continuous Reinforcement: low response rate, quickly extinguished.
    • Variable Interval: stable response rate, slowly extinguished.
    • After an unpredictable number of responses: high response rate, unlikely to be extinguished.
  • What is a strength of the behaviourist approach?

    It is scientific and uses experimental methods to measure observable behaviour
  • How did Skinner manipulate consequences in his research?

    By using reinforcement to measure effects on rat behaviour
  • What is a weakness of the behaviourist approach?

    It ignores other factors that could be causing behaviour
  • Why is the behaviourist approach considered to reduce human interaction complexity?

    It simplifies behaviour to a stimulus-response relationship
  • What is environmental determinism in the context of the behaviourist approach?

    All behaviour is determined by past conditioned experiences