Fundamental Philosophical Issue: Behaviorists view man no more than an animal; humans commit violence like animals.
Holy Quran: Some people live like four-legged animals, others like birds soaring to the sky.
Operant Conditioning: BF Skinner: human learning is voluntary and intentional; classical conditioning targets involuntary behaviors.
Operant conditioning modifies voluntary behavior through consequences; Pavlovian conditioning conditions involuntary behaviors.
Skinner used rats and pigeons; applied Pavlov’s conditioned reflexes to study behavior.
Skinner box: lever(s), stimulus light(s), reinforcer delivery (e.g., food).
Skinner’s Experiment with Rats:
Extinction: Behavior weakened by not experiencing positive condition or stopping negative condition.
No reinforcement leads to extinction.
Discrimination: Reinforcement only under specific condition (e.g., light on → food, light off → no food).
Responses continue in reinforced condition, decrease in non-reinforced.
Demonstrates operant conditioning and shaping behavior.
Generalization:
Response Discrimination: Only reinforced activity increases; non-reinforced activities decrease.
Example: Green light → food → bar pressing increases; Red light → no food → bar pressing decreases.
Human behavior: work for rewarded activities, leave unrewarded activities.
Principles of Learning Theory:
Schedules of Reinforcement:
Fixed Interval Schedule: First correct response after set time reinforced; same time period each cycle.
Produces high response near end of interval, slow after reinforcer delivery.
Variable Interval Schedule: First correct response after unpredictable time reinforced; average equals specific number over trials.
Produces slow, steady response rate (e.g., pop quizzes).
Fixed Ratio Schedule: Reinforcer given after specified number of correct responses; best for learning new behavior.
Produces high, steady response with brief pause after reinforcer (e.g., food pellet after 15 bar presses).
Variable Ratio Schedule: Number of responses needed for reinforcement changes; best for maintaining behavior.
Produces high, steady response rate; examples: gambling, lottery.
Things to Remember:
| Aspect | Description |
|---|---|
| Philosophical Issue | Behaviorism views humans as animals; Quranic contrast |
| Operant Conditioning | Skinner's voluntary learning via consequences |
| Skinner’s Experiment | Lever pressing reinforced by food; extinction without reward |
| Extinction | Behavior weakens without reinforcement |
| Discrimination | Reinforcement under specific conditions |
| Reinforcement Schedules | Fixed/Variable Interval/Ratio; variable ratio most effective |