Script - Report On Behavioral Theory Etc
Script - Report On Behavioral Theory Etc
Recognize it? Two words are different but it should remind you of Antecedent,
Behavior, and Consequence. It looks the same because it is the same. Stimulus is
another word for antecedent and is whatever comes before the behavior, usually
from the environment, but we know that the source of our behavior could be
internal too. Response is a behavior. And of course, consequence is the same word.
The definitions for these terms are the same as the ones you were given in Module 1
for the ABCs of behavior. Presenting this framework is important, because operant
conditioning as a learning model focuses on the person making some response for
which there is a consequence. As we learned from Thorndike’s work, if the
consequence is favorable or satisfying, we will be more likely to make the response
again (when the stimulus occurs). If not favorable or unsatisfying, we will be less
likely. In Section 6.7, we will talk about respondent or classical conditioning which
developed thanks to Pavlov’s efforts. This type of learning focuses on stimulus and
response.
As we have seen, the basis of operant conditioning is that you make a response for which there is a
consequence. Based on the consequence you are more or less likely to make the response again. This
section introduces the term contingency. A contingency is when one thing occurs due to another. Think
of it as an If-Then statement. If I do X, then Y will happen. For operant conditioning this means that if I
make a behavior, then a specific consequence will follow. The events (response and consequence) are
linked in time.
What form do these consequences take? There are two main ways they can present themselves.
Schedules of Reinforcement
Skinner further described schedules of reinforcement in his operant
conditioning research. These schedules determine when specific behaviors
are reinforced (either based on the number of responses or time) and
impact how strong a learned behavior becomes.