“getting inside of your head”

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“Getting inside of your head”. Behaviorism. Only examines data that is public and observable Introspection is unimportant Personality = What you actually do Traits, UCS, CS experiences, do not matter Only B data matter. Behaviorism. What determines personality? The observed environment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: “Getting inside of your head”
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“Getting inside of your head”

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Behaviorism

• Only examines data that is public and observable– Introspection is unimportant

• Personality = What you actually do– Traits, UCS, CS experiences, do not matter– Only B data matter

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Behaviorism

• What determines personality?

• The observed environment– Not hidden process inside the mind

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Behaviorism

• All that matters is

1) A persons behavior

2) A persons environment

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Philosophical Roots

• Empiricism– Everything you know comes from experience

• Tabula Rasa

• Note how this is different than other approaches

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Philosophical Roots

• Associationism

• Two things become associated into one if they are repeatedly experienced close together

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Philosophical Roots

Book Noise

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Philosophical Roots

Lightning Thunder

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Philosophical Roots

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Philosophical Roots

• Both empiricism and associatoinism are all that is needed to explain all knowledge

• Even complex ideas can be seen as combinations of simple ideas– Reductionism

David Hume John Locke Thomas Hobbes

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Philosophical Roots

• One last element is missing

• What makes you go?

• Why do people behave at all?

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Philosophical Roots

• Hedonism

• People learn in order to– 1) Seek pleasure– 2) Avoid pain

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Philosophical Roots

• 1) Empiricism

• 2) Associationism

• 3) Hedonism

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Behaviorism

• “Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own specified world to bring them up and I'll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select--doctor, lawyer, merchant-chief, and yes, even beggarman and thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, or abilities”

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Learning

• A stable change in behavior as a function of one’s experience with the environment

• What learning is not– the acquisition of knowledge

Environment BehaviorLearning

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Types of Learning

• 1) Habituation

• 2) Classical Conditioning

• 3) Operant Conditioning

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Habituation

• Why do you jump less each time?

• You learned!

• Simplest type of learning

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Habituation

• The initial response can be maintained if the stimulus is changed or increased with each exposure

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Classical Conditioning

Why do you get anxious at the sight of a balloon and a pen?

Why do you cringe when you see fingernails and a chalk board?

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Ivan Pavlov

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Classical Conditioning

• Condition – “learned”

• Stimulus– a condition that elicits a response

• Response– a behavior done after the stimulus

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Classical Conditioning

• Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)

• Unconditioned Response (UCR)

• Conditioned Stimulus (CS)

• Conditioned Response (CR)

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Classical Conditioning

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Balloon

• Figure out the:

• Neutral Stimulus

• UCS

• UCR

• CS

• CR

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

• Make women/men love you!

• Figure out the:

• Neutral Stimulus• UCS• UCR• CS• CR

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

Neutral Stimulus No response

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

UCS UCR

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

Neutral Stimulus UCR

and UCS

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

CS CR

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

Day 1

But. . .

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

Day 2

But. . .

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

Day 100

But. . .

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Classical Conditioning in Dating

Day 150

Extinction

But. . .

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Or

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Or

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Or

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Or

Second-order conditioning

Something paired with the CS can itself begin to elicit the response

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Or

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Or

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Or

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Or

Stimulus Generalization

Stimuli like the CS well tend to elicit the same response as the CS

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Questionnaire

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Group Activity

• Why do you think a person might have social phobia?

• How would you cure a person with this problem?

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Classical Conditioning

• Social Anxiety– Social Phobia

• General Anxiety– Learned helplessness

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Classical Conditioning

• Example: Little Albert

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Classical Conditioning

• Phobias

• Typically occur through association– The feared object is paired

with an unpleasant feelings

• Flooding• Systematic desensitization

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Classical Conditioning

Food

Deliver good news not bad news