Chapter 8 Learning - Germantown School District

Review 8.1: Classical Conditioning. Antonia lives in Alaska. She loves walking through falling ... begins to trigger an eye blink, and so it is now th...

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Chapter 8 Learning Review 8.1: Classical Conditioning Antonia lives in Alaska. She loves walking through falling snow and feeling the wet snowflakes on her face. Whenever a snowflake—the (1) unconditioned stimulus —falls into her eye, it triggers an eye blink, which is the (2) unconditioned response. Coincidentally, each time a snowflake falls into her eye, the school bell rings, which is a (3) conditioned stimulus. And, after several pairings with the snowflake in the eye, the bell also begins to trigger an eye blink, and so it is now the (4) conditioned response. This is the (5) acquisition stage of classical conditioning. While in school, the bell rings between class periods, but, of course, there are no snowflakes, which results in (6) extinction of Antonia’s eye blink response. At recess, another snowflake falls into her eye just as the warning bell rings to go back inside. When the final bell rings a few minutes later, Antonia finds herself blinking, which shows that she has experienced (7) spontaneous recovery of her eye blink response to the bell. If a clock chime similar to the original school bell were to be presented, responding with the eye blink would represent (8) generalization. Not responding to the similar stimulus would represent (9) discrimination. Review 8.2: Operant Conditioning Leon is trying to teach his cat to jump through a hoop. A small treat, a (1) primary reinforcer, or rubbing the cat’s ears, a (2) conditioned reinforcer, can be used to train or (3) shape this jumping behavior. In teaching the cat to jump through the hoop, Leon tries two different (4) variable reinforcement schedules. First he tries rewarding the cat after different amounts of time which is a (5) variable-interval schedule. Next, he tries rewarding the cat after different numbers of correct responses (jumping through the hoop), a (6) variable-ratio schedule. The steadiest rate of responding occurs with a (7) variable-ratio schedule. Leon chose jumping through a hoop because of the cat’s (8) biological predisposition to jump high and land on its feet. Review 8.3: Learning by Observation According to pioneering researcher Albert (1) Bandura, we learn not only by association but also by (2) modeling (imitating) the behavior of people who are successful, admirable, and (3) similar to us. For example, during holiday breaks, Lionel watcher Monday Night Raw, a World Wrestling Entertainment extravaganza, which (4) increases his aggressive tendencies. His broth er Michael won’t watch the wrestling, because he feels the pain of a choke hold, for example, as reflected in his brain’s (5) mirror neurons. Instead, Michael spends time with Grandma, who cooks for the poor during the holiday season, helping Michael to learn (6) prosocial behavior.