Bandura agreed that behaviour is learned through environment, however instead through observation and imitation
individuals observe reinforcement/punishment that others receive and this influences their behaviour
SLT is based upon behavioural approach, however it considers cognitive factors too
Bandura's bobo doll study
36 children were put in a room with a two-way mirror and observed a role-model's behaviour with a bobo doll. Some participants witnessed aggressive behaviour, whereas control group observed no aggression. The children were then allowed to play for 20 minutes.
Bandura's bobo doll study- findings
children who witnessed aggression showed more aggression when playing
boys acted more aggressively than girls
greater level of imitation when role model was same gender as the child
SLT key terms
imitation- when an individual copies behaviour
vicarious reinforcement- individuals are likely to copy behaviour if they have observed another person be rewarded for their behaviour, as well as observing the consequences
modelling- an influential person, if an individual imitates their behaviour then it is modelling
identification- they are likely to imitate someone else's behaviour if they identify with them, usually by sharing characteristics (e.g age or gender)
mediational processes- cognitive processes that take place between stimulus and response
mediational processes (ARRM)
Attention- person has to pay attention and notice the behaviour
Retention- person must remember the behaviour
Reproduction- person must be able to reproduce the behaviour
Motivation- person performs the behaviour after observing rewards/punishments
SLT- AO3
Bandura's study had methodological issues- bobo dolls are meant to be played with in an aggressive way, reduces validity
provides a more comprehensive explanation of behaviour- takes into account cognitive factors
can explain cultural differences in behaviour
ignores biological factors that may influence behaviour, much as genetics and disorders