Lesson 7 Behaviorist Perspective Week 7
Lesson 7 Behaviorist Perspective Week 7
LESSON 7
BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE
OBJECTIVES
PRIMING ACTIVITY
PRIMING ACTIVITY
BEHAVIORISM
• Ivan Pavlov
• Edward L. Thorndike
• John Watson
• Burrhus Frederick Skinner
DARAGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Salvacion, Daraga, Albay
IVAN PAVLOV
Findings:
▪ Stimulus Generalization. Once the dog has learned to salivate at the sound of
the bell, it will salivate at other similar sounds.
▪ Extinction. If you stop pairing at the bell with the food, salivation will
eventually cease in response to the bell.
▪ Spontaneous Recovery. Extinguished responses can be “recovered” after an
elapsed time but will soon extinguish again if the dog is not presented with
food.
▪ Discrimination. The dog could learn to discriminate between similar bells
(stimuli) and discern which bell would result in the presentation of food and
which would not.
DARAGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Salvacion, Daraga, Albay
Findings:
EDWARD L. THORNDIKE
▪ Edward Thorndike’s Connectionism Theory gave us the original S-R
framework of behavioral psychology.
▪ Thorndike explained that learning is the result of associations forming
between stimuli (S) and responses (R).
▪ Thorndike’s theory on connectionism, states that learning has taken place
when a strong connection or bond between stimulus and response formed.
DARAGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Salvacion, Daraga, Albay
EDWARD L. THORNDIKE
EDWARD L. THORNDIKE
EDWARD L. THORNDIKE
▪ Law of Readiness. States that the more readiness the learner has to respond
to the stimulus, the stronger will be the bond between them. When a person
is ready to respond to a stimulus and is not made to respond, it becomes
annoying to the person. For example, if the teacher says, “Okay, you will now
watch the movie (stimulus) you’ve been waiting for.” And suddenly the power
goes off. The students will feel frustrated because they were ready to respond
to the stimulus but were prevented from doing so.
DARAGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Salvacion, Daraga, Albay
EDWARD L. THORNDIKE
JOHN WATSON
▪ First American psychologist to work with Pavlov’s ideas.
▪ He became involved in human behavior research.
▪ He considered that humans are born with a few reflexes and the emotional
reactions of love and rage. All other behavior is learned through stimulus-
response association through conditioning.
▪ Watson applied classical conditioning in an experiment with a young child
and a white rat. At the beginning, the child was not afraid of the rat; but
Watson made a loud noise each time the child touched the rat. But because
the child was frightened by the loud noise, he soon became conditioned to
fear and avoid the rat. Later, the child’s response was generalized to other
small animals. Watson then “extinguished” or made the child “unlearn” fear
by showing the rat without the loud noise.
DARAGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Salvacion, Daraga, Albay
JOHN WATSON
ASSESSMENT TASK
ACTIVITY (INDIVIDUAL)
Observation
1. Choose a place where you can observe adult-child interactions- such as in a mall, in
church, at the playground, etc. Spend one hour observing such adult-child interactions.
Focus your attention on the stimulus-response-consequence patterns you observe.
2. Describe the consequences you observe. (It is better to write the details on the spot or as
soon as you finish your observation).
3. Answer these questions.
a. What kinds of stimuli for children’s and adult behavior did you observe?
b. What kinds of behaviors on the part of the children elicit reinforcement and
punishment consequences from the adult.
c. What kinds of behaviors of adults are reinforced or punished by the children?
d. What kinds of reinforcements and punishments seem to be the most successful?
e. Given this experience, what are your thoughts about operant conditioning? Do you
think children reinforce and punish adults as adults reinforce and punish them?
How might the two be interdependent?