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dishabituation
recovery of response to a stimulus after habituation has occurred.
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classical conditioning
- taking advantage of reflexive unconditioned stimulus to turn a neutral stimulus into a conditioned stimulus
- process is called acquisition
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extinction
if bells rings enough times without dog getting the meat
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spontaneous recovery
an extinct conditioned stimulus is presented again, a weak conditioned response may be exhibited.
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generalization
broadening effect in which a stimulus similar enough to conditioned stimulus may produce the conditioned response
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discrimination
Pavlov's dogs could learn to distinguish between two different bell tones.
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operant conditioning
links voluntary behaviors with consequences in an effort to alter the frequency of those behaviors.
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father of behaviorism
- BF SKinner
- behaviorism is the theory that all behaviors are conditioned
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reinforcement
is the process of increasing the likelihood that an individual will perform a behavior
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positive reinforcers
increase a behavior by adding a positive consequence. Money is a strong positive reinforcer
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negative reinforcers
- they also increase the frequency of behavior, but they do so by removing something unpleasant
- aspirin takes away headaches, so that you are more likely to take aspirin next time you have a headache
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escape learning
negative reinforcement: the role of the behavior is to reduce the unpleasantness of something that already exists (like headache)
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avoidance learning
negative reinforcement is to prevent the unpleasantness of something that has yet to happen
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primary reinforcer
is the fish that is fed to the dolphins
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conditioned reinforcer
the clicker when trainers pair the fish with the clicker
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punishment
uses conditioning to reduce the occurence of a behavior
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positive punishment
adds an unpleasant consequence in response to a behavior to reduce that behavior
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negative punishment
- reduction of behavior when stimulus is removed
- ex. forbidding kid to watch tv as a consequence for bad behavior
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fixed ratio schedules
- reinforce a behavior after a specific number of performances of that behavior
- continuous reinforcement is a fixed ratio schedule when rat rewarded every third time it presses a bar
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variable-ratio schedule
reinforce a behavior after a varying number of performances of the behavior, but such that the average number of performances is relatively constant
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fixed interval schedules
- reinforce the first instance of a behavior after a specified time period has elapsed
- 60 seconds before the rat can get another pellet
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variable interval schedule
- reinforce a behavior the first time that behavior is performed after a varying interval of time
- rewarded after 20, 30 or 60 seconds
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which reinforcement schedule is most resistant to extinction and works the fastest?
variable ratio
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shaping in reinforcement
process of rewarding increasingly specific behaviors
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latent learning
- learning that occurs without a reward but that is spontaneously demonstrated once a reward is introduced.
- rats with food reward in the end performed just as well as those who had been trained to run the maze by operant conditioning
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preparedness
rewarding birds after they peck (they naturally do peck) works well...birds are prepared
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instinctive drift
it is hard to overcome instinctual behaviors in animals
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observational learning
by watching others
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mirror neurons
located in frontal and parietal lobes, fire when both individual performs the action and when individual observes someone else perform that action
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encoding
process of putting new information into memory
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maintenance rehearsal
repetition of a piece of information to either keep it within working memory or store it in short term (then long term)
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method of loci
associating each item in the list with a location along a route through a building that has already been memorized
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peg-word
- associates numbers with items that rhyme with or resemble the numbers
- one is with sun
- two with shoe
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chunking
taking individual elements of a large list and grouping them together into groups of elements with related meanings.
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elaborative rehearsal
the association of the info to knowledge already stored in long-term memory
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relearning
information is stored, though you may not be able to recall, relearning is faster
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spacing effect
longer the amount of time between sessions of relearning, the greater the retention of the info later on
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spreading activation
- when one node of our semantic network is activated, the other linked concepts are also activated
- priming is when recall is aided by first being presented with a word or phrase that is close to desired semantic memory
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alzheimer's disease
degenerative brain disorder thought to be linked to loss of acetylcholine in neurons that link to the hippocampus
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confabulation
process of creating vivid but fabricated memories
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agnosia
- loss of the ability to recognize objects, people, or sounds
- usually caused by physical damage to the brain by stroke or neurological disorder
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korsakoff's syndrome
- memory loss caused by thiamine deficiency in brain
- marked by retrograde and anterograde amnesia
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interference of forgetting
- retrieval error caused by the existence of other (usually similar) information
- proactive interference (old info interferes with new)
- retroactive interference: new info causes forgetting of old info
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prospective memory
- remains mostly in tact in old age when it is event based: when primed (seeing a grocery store and remembering to buy milk)
- time based prospective memory tend to decline with age (like taking meds everyday at 7pm)
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source amnesia
- person remembers the details of an event, but confused the context under which those details were gained
- person hears story and later recalls the story has having happened to him.
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synaptic pruning
weak neural connections are broken while strong ones are bolstered, increasing efficiency of our brain's ability to process info
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