behaviourist approach

    Cards (26)

    • who began the behaviourist movement
      John Watson in 1913
    • what is the behaviourist approach
      attempts to explain behaviour in terms of learning, studying changes in behaviour that are caused by a person's direct experience of their environment
    • what are explanations called
      stimulus-response (S-R)
    • who created classical conditioning
      Ivan Pavlov
    • why were labs used
      it is argued that lab experiments are the best way to achieve these outcomes, allowing strict control of any extraneous variables
    • why were animals used
      it was more convenient and made replication easier, behaviourists believed there was no qualitative difference between man and animals
    • NS
      neutral stimulus
    • UCS
      unconditioned stimulus
    • UCR
      unconditioned response
    • What were paired together
      NS & UCS
    • CS
      conditioned stimulus
    • CR

      conditioned response
    • What does scientific mean
      only focus on observable behaviour which can be objectively measured
    • who created operant conditioning
      Skinner
    • what is operant conditioning 

      learning through consequences and reinforcement
    • positive reinforcement
      add or give something positive to make the behaviour more likely
    • negative reinforcement
      something unpleasant stops, to make behaviour more likely
    • punishment
      add something negative to decrease that behaviour
    • describe skinners box
      • on a wall there is a lever that delivers food. the rat wanders until it accidentally presses the lever
      • leave the animal in the box and measure how frequently the animal pressed the lever over time
      • frequency indicates the strength of the conditioning of the behaviour
    • why do behaviourists not collect qualitative data
      • it is subjective, so not scientifically recognisable
      • it isn't repeatable
      • it is open to interpretation
    • what are the positives of the behaviourist approach
      • real life applications
      • scientific credibility
      • using animals
    • explain real life applications
      applied to a broad range of behaviours. Classical conditioning has been used to treat phobias, how phobias are learnt allowed development of therapies (systematic desensitisation which attempts to control a patients fear response)
    • explain scientific credibility
      brought the methods of science into psychology by focusing on measurable, observable behaviour within highly controlled labs. Emphasised the importance of scientific processes (objectivity & replication)
    • explain the positives of using animals
      gives more control, means you reduce the effect of demand characteristics and individual differences, more easily repeatable
    • what is a criticism of the behaviourist approach
      ethics of using animals
    • explain the negatives of using animals
      the ethics is questioned e.e. pavlov connecting a tube to the dogs cheek, animals also behave differently to animals as humans have much more complex cognitive processes
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