The behaviourist approach is a psychological perspective that focuses on observable behaviour and the environmental factors that influence it
What is classical conditioning?
Learning by association. Occurs when two stimuli are repeatedly paired together.
What is operant conditioning?
Operant conditioning is a type of learning in which behaviour is strengthened or weakened by the rewards or punishments that follow it.
What do behaviourists believe?
Behaviourists believe that everyone is born 'tabularasa' meaning blank slate. They believe everything we learn is through our experiences.
What did Pavlov research?
Classicalconditioning
Explain Pavlov's research
Dogs salivate (UCR) when presented with food (UCS)
Dogs don't salivate when they hear a bell (NS)
He began to ring a bell before the dog was given food, and eventually it began to associate the ringing bell with food
The dog would salivate (CR) when it heard the bell (CS) even when no food was in the room
Describe the Little Albert experiment (Watson and Rayner)
Presented Albert with whiterat, he did not cry or was fearful of it
Struck a metal bar - Albert was scared of the loud noise and cried
Every time Albert would reach for the rat, they struck the metal bar
Albert would then be fearful of and cry when the rat was introduced even if the bar wasn't struck
His fear generalized to include anything with white fur
What is positive reinforcement?
Providing a reward or positiveconsequence after the behaviour occurs.
What is negative reinforcement?
Negative reinforcement is the removal of an unpleasant stimulus to increase the likelihood of a desired behaviour
What is positive punishment?
Application of an unpleasant stimulus to decrease the likelihood of a behaviour.
What is negative punishment?
Removal of a desirable stimulus to decrease a behaviour.
What are the examples of positive/negative reinforcement and positive/negative punishment in the Skinner box experiment?
Positive reinforcement: Giving food when the rat presses a lever
Negative reinforcement: Removing electricshock when the rat presses a lever
Positive punishment: Giving electricshock when the rat presses a lever
Negative punishment: Removing food when the rat presses a lever
What did Skinner research?
Operantconditioning
What is the continuous schedule of reinforcement?
Every single response is reinforced
What is the fixedinterval schedule of reinforcement?
Fixed intervals of time between reinforcements
What is the variableinterval schedule of reinforcement?
Random intervals of time between reinforcements
What is the fixedratio schedule of reinforcement?
Fixed number of responses before reinforcement occurs
What is the variableratio schedule of reinforcement?
Reinforcement is given after a random amount of responses, making the reward unpredictable
Define reductionism.
The belief that human behaviour can be explained by breaking it down into simpler component parts
Define determinism.
The view that free will is an illusion, and that our behaviour is governed by internal or external forces over which we have no control
Who conducted the Little Albert experiment?
Watson & Rayner
What is generalisation?
When the UCS is paired enough with the NS that the NS becomes a CS which produces the CR
What is extinction?
When the CS no longer produces the CR
What is spontaneousrecovery?
The sudden return of the CR to the CS
What is onetriallearning?
When the CR is produced from having one experience of the NS and UCS
Strengths of the behaviourist approach?
Principles of classical & operant conditioning have been used to treat psychological disorders, e.g. phobias
Uses scientificmethods to investigate behaviour which makes it easy to replicate
Weaknesses of the behaviourist approach?
Assumes humans have no freewill and behaviour is determined by environmental factors beyond conscious control - socially sensitive and criticised by humanists
Highly reductionist - doesn't take into account cognitive or sociological explanations for behaviour
Underestimates the influence of indirect experience - e.g. vicarious reinforcement from social learning theory