Behaviourist

    Cards (15)

    • What does the behaviourist approach focus on?
      Observable behaviour
    • What studies do behaviourists tend to rely on?
      Controlled lab studies to maintain more objectivity and control within research
    • What is classical conditioning?
      learning by association
    • What is the process of classical conditioning?
      • UCS -> UCR
      • NS + UCS
      • CS -> CR
    • How did Pavlov investigate classical conditioning?
      Conditioned dogs to salivate when bell rings

      Before conditioning:
      • UCS (food) -> UCR (salivation)
      During conditioning:
      • NS (bell) + UCS (food)
      After conditioning:
      • CS (bell) -> CR (salivating)
    • What is operant conditioning?
      Where behaviour is shaped and maintained by its consequences
    • How did Skinner research operant conditioning?
      • Rats in a skinner box
      • When a rat pushed lever when the light was on is was rewarded with food
      • The behaviour was repeated due to desirable consequence
      • Pressed lever to also avoid electric shock
    • What are the 4 behaviour consequences?
      • Positive reinforcement
      • Negative reinforcement
      • Positive punishment
      • Negative punishment
    • What is positive reinforcement?
      Receiving a reward when a behaviour is performed so it continues
    • What is negative reinforcement?
      When the behaviour removes something unpleasant so it continues
    • What is positive punishment?
      Behaviour stops as it causes an unpleasant consequence
    • What is negative punishment?
      Behaviour stops because it causes something pleasant to be taken away
    • Strengths of behaviourism?
      • Uses well controlled research and scientific methods - focuses on the careful measurement of observable behaviour within controlled lab settings
      • Real world application - e.g. phobias are acquired through classical conditioning
    • What does the behaviourist approach state?
      All behaviour is learned so it is influenced by our environment. The causes of behaviour are observable so we can measure them scientifically
    • Limitation of the behaviourist approach:
      • Research isn’t generalisable - based on animals, implies animals are the exact same as humans when they are not
      • Form of environmental Determinism - sees all behaviour as determined by past experiences, ignores any influence that Free Will might have. Ignores the influence of conscious decision
    See similar decks