Biological and Social Learning Theories: Preparedness, Taste Aversion, and Bandura’s Bobo Doll Study

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Last updated 7:19 PM on 5/6/26
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12 Terms

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Biological preparedness

The tendency to learn certain associations more easily due to biological factors, such as developing fears of stimuli related to threats.

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Conditioned taste aversion

A learned, long-lasting avoidance of a specific food or drink that has caused illness, even if the food itself was not the cause.

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Biological constraints on learning

Limitations on learning that arise from an organism's biological makeup, such as rats associating taste with nausea rather than sound with nausea.

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Observational learning

A type of learning that occurs through observing the behaviors of others and the outcomes of those behaviors, rather than through direct reinforcement.

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Bobo doll study

An experiment by Albert Bandura demonstrating observational learning, where children imitated aggressive behavior towards a Bobo doll after observing an adult act aggressively towards it.

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Vicarious reinforcement

The process of learning through the consequences that others experience, where observing someone rewarded for a behavior increases the likelihood of the observer performing that behavior.

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Vicarious punishment

The process of learning through the consequences that others experience, where observing someone punished for a behavior decreases the likelihood of the observer performing that behavior.

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Mirroring

The phenomenon where certain neurons in the frontal lobe fire both when an individual performs an action and when they observe another individual performing the same action, facilitating imitation and empathy.

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Imitation

The act of observing and replicating the behavior, actions, or emotional expressions of others, which is crucial for learning, socialization, and cognitive development.

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Cultural transmission

The process of learning and passing on behaviors, customs, and norms through observation and imitation within a culture, such as fashion trends.

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Prosocial effects of observational learning

The positive social outcomes that occur when individuals observe and imitate kind or helpful behaviors in others.

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Antisocial effects of observational learning

The negative social outcomes that occur when individuals observe and imitate harmful or aggressive behaviors in others.