Learning Theory

    Cards (19)

    • Initiation
      Parental and peer role modelling and vicarious reinforcement
    • Vicarious reinforcement modelling
      Teenagers observe their peers and role models smoking
    • Operant conditioning
      Rewarded behaviours will increase in frequency - addictive instances and behaviours are rewarded immediately meaning they are learned quickly
    • How does operant conditioning explain smoking continuation?

      Smoking is associated with positive feelings and therefore the continuation of the behaviour acts as a reward (positive reinforcement) causing continuation of the behaviour.
    • Negative reinforcement
      Not smoking leaves an addicted individual feeling withdrawal symptoms, so they smoke to reduce those feelings
    • Maintenance
      When repeated many times, smoking becomes an established behaviour because of the positive consequences. People maintain their habit because they don't want to deal with withdrawal symptoms
    • Cue reactivity
      With regular smoking the person comes to associate specific moods, situations or environmental factors (smoking related cues) with the rewarding effects of nicotine. These cues often trigger relapse.
    • Before conditioning
      Unconditioned stimulus -> unconditioned response
    • During conditioning
      Neural stimulus + unconditioned stimulus -> unconditioned response
    • After conditioning
      Conditioned stimulus -> conditioned response
    • Unconditioned stimulus -> unconditioned response
      Cigarettes - smoking a cigarette
    • Neural stimulus + unconditioned stimulus -> unconditioned response
      Beer garden + cigarettes -> smoking a cigarette
    • Conditioned stimulus -> conditioned response
      Beer garden -> smoking a cigarette
    • Supporting evidence for the role of SLT - NIDA (2005)

      90% of US smokers started smoking as adolescents.
      This was mainly attributed to observing and imitating peers.
    • Supporting evidence for the role of SLT - Brynner (1969)

      Media images of smoking create perceptions of being attractive and tough.
    • Supporting evidence for the role of operant conditioning - Goldberg et al (1981)

      - Monkeys were reinforced with nicotine for pushing a lever.
      - Monkeys pressed the lever at a rate that was a similar level to cocaine dependency.
    • Supporting evidence for the role of cue reactivity - Calvert (2009)

      When regular smokers are shown cigarette packets, their brains show a physiological activation in the ventral striatum and nucleus accumbens (The Common Reward Pathway).
      - brains are activating at the sight of a cigarette packet
    • Issues with animal research
      Issues with generalising the findings of animal research to human addiction, specifically the cognitive aspects of SLT.
    • Gender differences in patterns of nicotine addiction
      Lopez et al (1994) found that women start smoking later than men and their smoking habits are often linked to stress not reward