The association of a stimulus and response that results in a change of behaviour
What is operant conditioning?
The association of behaviour and consequences that results in a strengthening or weakening of behaviour
What is the 'law of effect'?
a positive consequence for a response will become more likely to occur whereas a negative consequence for a response will become less likely to occur
What is positive reinforcement?
encouragement of behaviour with a reward
What is negative reinforcement?
strengthing behavior by removing undesired action
What is punishment?
behaviour less likely to occur because of negative consequences
What is positive punishment?
punishment added as a result of behaviour
What is negative punishment?
removal of desired consequence as a result of behviour
What is a token economy?
tokens (that can be exchanged for items/privileges)to reward desirable behaviors and punish undesirable behaviours by removing tokens
What is primary reinforcement?
stimuli that is essential to survival
What are the strengths of operant conditioning
High credibility - scientific method
High applicability - use of token economies
What are the weaknesses of operant conditioning?
Subjective - affected by confounding variables
Unethical
Environmentally deterministic
Faults in behaviour system
Who created operant conditioning?
B.F. Skinner
What is extinction - classical conditioning
if the conditioned stimulus is continually presented without the unconditioned stimulus then the conditioned response gradually dies out
What is one trial learning - classical conditioning
when conditioning occurs after one trial
What is discrimination - classical condiotioning
the conditioned response is produced only by presentation of the original stimulus, it does not extend to similar stimuli
What is generalisation - classical conditioning
extension of the conditioned response from the original stimulus to similar stimuli
What is spontaneous recovery - classical conditioning
if a conditioned response is not reinforced, it becomes extinct, but after a period of time the response may reappear
What are the strengths of classical conditioning?
High credibility - scientific method
Can be applied to humans
Applicable to know how to remove conditioned response
What are the weaknesses of classical conditioning?
Unethical
Environmentally deterministic
Low applicability
Who invented the behaviourist approach?
John Watson
What are the basic concepts in the behaviourist approach?
Based on empiricism
Human nature is based on our environment - blank slate
Focused on observable behaviour
Outline Little Albert's experiment
Watson paired a white rat with a loud bang repeatedly to create an association between the unrelated stimuli and Little Albert began fearing the rat without the noise
What type of conditioning was Little Albert's experiment?