all behavior is learnt from environment through association
all behavior is observable
born as a blank slate
animals and humans behave similarly
they aim to find objective results, to do this they often use lab studies
classical conditioning - pavlov's dogs
the dogs had a unconditioned stimulus of food with an unconditioned response of salivating. there was a neutral stimulus of a bell which produced no response. when the bell was introduced when giving food the dog eventually started salivating at the sound of the bell. the bell became a conditioned response
this supports the theory that animals and humans learn through association as the dog associated the bell with food which lead to a response
operant conditioning - skinner
positive reinforcement - adding something good for behavior
negative reinforcement - removing something bad for behavior
positive punishment - adding something bad for behavior
negative punishment - taking away something good for behavior
skinnerrat box - operant conditioning
hungry rat was introduced in a box with a lever that when pulled released food, when the rat realised that the lever leads to food it pulled it more consistently.
this backs up operant conditioning as the positive reinforcement leads to repeated behavior
evaluation
pros:
controlled, scientific research
lead to increased therapy and real world application
cons:
low ecological validity
reductionist as animal behaviors are just reproduced onto humans
deterministic as no free will over behavior only past experiences affect behavior nothing else