Untitled Flashcard Set

LOQ 7-7: What is operant conditioning?

  • Operant conditioning: A type of learning where behavior is shaped by consequences, meaning actions followed by rewards increase and actions followed by punishment decrease.


LOQ 7-8: Who was Skinner, and how is operant behavior reinforced and shaped?

  • B. F. Skinner: B. F. Skinner studied how consequences control behavior and expanded operant conditioning research.

  • Law of effect: Based on Edward Thorndike, stating that rewarded behaviors repeat while punished behaviors weaken.

  • Skinner box: A controlled chamber where animals learn behaviors by pressing levers or pecking keys for rewards.

  • Reinforcement: Any consequence that increases the likelihood of a behavior happening again.

  • Shaping: Reinforcing small steps (successive approximations) toward a desired behavior until the full behavior is learned.

  • Discriminative stimulus: A cue that signals when a behavior will be reinforced, like a green traffic light.


LOQ 7-9: How do positive and negative reinforcement differ, and what are the basic types of reinforcers?

  • Positive reinforcement: Strengthens behavior by adding something desirable, like praise or food.

  • Negative reinforcement: Strengthens behavior by removing something unpleasant, like ending pain or stopping an alarm.

  • Primary reinforcers: Innately rewarding stimuli, such as food, water, or pain relief.

  • Conditioned reinforcers: Learned rewards linked to primary reinforcers, like money, grades, or praise.

  • Immediate vs. delayed reinforcers: Immediate rewards strengthen learning faster, while delayed rewards require self-control.


LOQ 7-10: How do different reinforcement schedules affect behavior?

  • Continuous reinforcement: Reinforces every response, causing fast learning but fast extinction.

  • Partial (intermittent) reinforcement: Reinforces sometimes, causing slower learning but stronger resistance to extinction.

  • Fixed-ratio schedule: Reinforces after a set number of responses, producing high responding with pauses.

  • Variable-ratio schedule: Reinforces after unpredictable responses, producing very persistent behavior.

  • Fixed-interval schedule: Reinforces after a fixed time, producing stop-and-go behavior.

  • Variable-interval schedule: Reinforces after unpredictable time intervals, producing steady responding.


LOQ 7-5: Why does Pavlov’s work remain so important?

  • Scientific impact: Pavlov showed learning could be studied objectively using observable, measurable behavior.

  • Universal learning: Classical conditioning applies across species, helping organisms adapt to their environment.


LOQ 7-6: What are applications of classical conditioning, and how did Watson apply it to fear?

  • Drug cravings: Environmental cues associated with drug use can trigger relapse.

  • Food cravings: Foods paired with pleasure can create strong conditioned urges.

  • Immune system: Conditioned stimuli can trigger immune responses.

  • Learned fears: John B. Watson showed fears can be conditioned, as seen in the Little Albert experiment.