Psychology of learning and behavior Barry Schwartz, Edward A. Wasserman, Steve J. Robbins
Dil: İngilizce : , Baskı: 5th ediTanım: XV, 378 p. figure, picture, graphic 24.2 cmİçerik türü:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780393975918
- 150.1943 S24 2002
Materyal türü | Geçerli Kütüphane | Yer Numarası | Kopya numarası | Durum | Notlar | İade tarihi | Barkod | Materyal Ayırtmaları | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | CIU LIBRARY Genel Koleksiyon | 150.1943 S24 2002 (Rafa gözat(Aşağıda açılır)) | C.1 | Kullanılabilir | İnfix Yayıncılık | 0066314 |
Includes index(A35-A49 p.)
Includes references(A1-A32 p.)
1 Human Nature, Science and Behavior Theory
2 Understanding
3 Understanding and Science
3 Causes Generalization and Law
5 Experimentation: The Tool of Science
6 Science and Human Nature
8 Psychology, Behavior, Theory and Learning
10 Philosophical Background of Behavior Theory
10 Descartes and Hobbes: Man of Medicine
12 Associationism
13 Biological; Background of Behavior Theory
14 Darwin and Evolution
16 The Emergence of Behavior Theory
17 Single Event Learning :Habituation
17 Event- Event Learnıng: Pavlovian Conditioning
18 Behavıor - Event Learnıng: operant Conditioning
20 Learning about Humans By Studying Animals
21 Summary
24 Single Event Learning: Habituation
25 Separating Habtuation from Sensory Adaptation of Motor Fatigue
26 Evidence for a Learning Explanation
29 Applying the Principles: Response Recovery In Everyday Life
30 Conditions that Produce Habituations
32 Mechanisms of Habituation
32 Dual-Process Theories
34 Neuroscience and Learning : The Neural Mechanism of Habituation
36 A Memory Theory of Habituation
40 Summary
41 Pavlovian Conditioning :Basic Phenomena
42 The classic Conditioning experiment
43 Acquisition and Extinction
44 The Scope Of Pavlovian Conditioning Research
45 Eyeblink Conditioning
45 Conditioning Fear
46 Neuroscience and Learning :The Neural Mechanism of Eyeblink Conditioning
51 Applying the Principles: Causes and Treatments of Phobia
53 Conditioned Keypecking
53 Taste Aversion Learning
55 The Need For Controlled Procedures in Studies of Pavlovian Conditioning
56 Applying the Principles: Food Aversions in Cancer Patients Receiving Chemotherapy
57 Temporal Relations between the CS and the US
58 Delay Conditioning
58 Simultaneous Conditioning
59 Temporal Conditioning
59 Backward Conditioning
60 Other Variables Affecting Pavlovian
60 The CS and The US
61 Qualitative Relation between CS and US
64 Constrain on Learning
64 Unbiased Environments
66 Unbiased Environments and Substitutability
69 Summary
70 Pavlovian Conditioning Casual Factors
71 Contingency
74 Locating the US in time
76 Informativeness Redundancy and Blocking
77 Applying the Principles: predictiveness, fear and Anxiety
80 Pavlovian Conditioning and Inhibition
80 inhibition in the Nervous System
81 Conditioned Inhibition of Behavior
82 Detecting Inhibition
82 External Inhibition and Disinhibition
82 Indirect Measures of Inhibition
83 Direct Measures of Inhibition
83 Condition Producing Inhibition
83 Extinction
84 Conditioned Inhibition Training
84 Negative Contingency Training
85 Inhibition of Delay
85 Discrimination and Generalization
85 Excitatory and Inhibitory Generalization Gradients
87 Backward Conditioning
87 Necessary Condition For Inhibition
88 Appling the Principles :Experimental Neurosis
89 Summary
91 Pavlovian Conditioning Explanations
92 The Rescorla-Wagner
93 Rescorla-Wagner Theory and Compound Stimuli
94 Rescorla-Wagner Theory and Contingency
95 Rescorla-Wagner Theory and Inhibition
96 A Surprising Prediction
97 Conditioning and Changes In CS Effectiveness
97 latent Inhibition
99 learned Irrelevance
99 Another Look at Blocking
100 Neuroscience and Learning :Neural Mechanisms Underlying Changes in CS Processing
103 Surprise and CS Salience
103 Psychological Status of the Rescorla Wagner Theory
103 Rehearsal and Conditioning
105 Blocking
105 Effects of Single Events Exposure on Conditioning
105 CS Preexposure( Latent inhibition)
105 Us Preexposure
106 Theory of Extinction
106 Summary
109 Pavlovian Conditioning: Storage
109 What is Learned in Conditioning
113 Manipulating Representations
114 Neuroscience and Learning :A Neural Distinction between URs and CRs
116 The Pavlovian Conditioned Response (CR)
119 The Adaptive Function of the Conditioned Response
121 CRs that Oppose URs
122 Opponent Process Theory
124 Challenge to the Conditioned Opponent Model
125 Role Of Conditioning in Human Drug Abuse
126 Using Conditioning Principles to Treat Addiction
126 Extinction
127 Counterconditioning
129 Competing Response Training
129 Association: The Process Unifying Diverse CRs
130 Summary
132 Operant Conditioning: Basic Phenomena
133 The Law of effect
134 The Behavior-Consequence Relation Some Methodological Issues
135 Measuring the Operant Response
135 The Conditioning Chamber
137 What is Operant Behavior ?
138 Which Operant Behavior Should be Studied?
139 Conditioning and Extinction
140 Creating Behavioral Unit
141 The Form of the Behavioral Unit
142 Constrained Operant-Reinforcer Learning
143 The Dancing Chicken
143 The Miserly Raccoon
144 Applying the Principles: Shaping New Behavior
146 The Nature of Reinforcement
146 Reinforcer Relativity
147 Applying the Principles :Eliminating Behavior
150 Neuroscience and Learning: The neural Mechanisms of reward
153 Conditioned Reinforcement
153 Establishing a Conditioned Reinforcer-Predictiveness
154 Observing Responses
156 Token Reinforcers
158 The Functions a Conditioned Reinforcers
158 Applications of Token Reinforcers
159 Applying the Principles: Token Reinforcement in Education
160 Negative Side Effects of Reinforcement?
163 Summary
165 Operant Conditioning: Causal Factors and Conditioning
166 What Produces Conditioning: Contiguity or Contingency
166 Evidence of Contiguity
167 Superstition
168 Another Look at Superstition
169 Another Look at Contiguity and Conditioning
171 Contingency Learning
173 Contingency Learning in Infants
174 Learned Helplessness
175 Applying the Principles: Learned Helplessness and Depression
178
179 How Do Animals Form Contingency Judgments
182 Operant Conditioning: What is Learned
183 Response -Reinforcer Learning
184 Stimulus-Reinforcer Learning
185 Stimulus -Response Association
185 Summary
186 Aversive Control of Behavior Punishment and Avoidance
187 Conditioned Suppression
188 punishment
189 The Effectiveness Of Punishment
190 Does Punishment Work?
191 Maximizing The Effects of Punishment
193 Punishment and General Suppression
195 Applying the Principles :Effectiveness of Punishment
197 Negativity of Punishment
197 Avoidance Bahavior
198 Discrete-Trial Signaled Avoidance
199 Neuroscience and Learning :The Neural Mechanism of Avoidance Learning
201 Shock Postponement
202 Theories of Aversive Control
203 Two-Factor Theory
207 Operant Theory
208 Cognitive Theory
210 Biological Theory
212 Applying the Principles: Eliminating Avoidance Behavior
213 Summary
215 The Maintenance of Behavior: Intermittent Reinforcement, Choice and Economics
217 Schedules of Intermittent Reinforcement
217 Fixed-Interval(FI) Schedules
217 Variable-Interval(VI) Schedules
218 Fixed-Ratio(FR) Schedules
218 Can Schedules of Reinforcement Maintain Behavior
219 Patterns of Behavior maintained by Reinforcement Schedules
221 Schedules of Reinforcement in the Natural Environment
221 Fixed Ratios
222 Variable Ratios
222 Fixed Intervals
224 The Study of Choice: Concurrent Schedules of Reinforcement
225 The Matching Law
226 The Matching Law In Operation
231 Applying the Principles :Procastination
232 Matching and Maximizing
234 Neuroscience and Learning: Electrical Brain Stimulation Can be Used to Study Choice Behavior and Matching
236 Choice and Foraging
237 Operant Behavior and Economics
238 The Concept of Demand
240 Demand and Choice
241 Substitutability of Commodities
242 Open and Closed Economic System
244 Summary
247 Stimulus Control of Operant Behavior
248 pervasiveness of Stimulus ControlPhenomena
249 Discrimination and Generalization
250 Procedures for Studying Stimulus
253 The Process of Discrimination
253 Predictiveness and Redundancy
255 Discrimination Training as a Stimulus Selector
256 Discrimination Training and Incidental Stimuli
259 Attention in Discrimination Learning
261 The Process Of Generalization Excitation and Inhibition
261 The Peak Shift
262 Neuroscience and Learning: The Neural Mechanism of Auditory Discrimination Learning
265 Transposition and the Nature of perceptual judgment
269 Compound Stimulus Control
270 Configural Stimulus Control
271 Positive Patterning
272 Negative patterning
272 Biconditional Discrimination
273 Summary
275 Interactions Between Pavlovian and Operant Conditioning
276 Distinguishing Pavlovian and Operant Conditioning
278 Operant Conditioning of Reflexive Response
279 Pavlovian Conditioning of Voluntary Behavior
280 The Omission Procedures
283 Pavlovian Contingencies and Operant Behavior
285 Types of Pavlovian Operant Combinations
287 Studies of Pavlovian Contingencies and Operant Behavior
289 Pavlovian Conditioned State as Information
290 Pavlovian and Operant Conditioning: one Underlying Process
291 Competition between Operant Response and Pavlovian CSs
293 Occasion Setting in Pavlovian and Operant Conditioning
296 Summary
298 Discrimination and Conceptualization
299 Discrimination and Generalization in a New Light
300 From Discrimination and Generalization to Conceptualization
302 Natural Concepts
302 Presence Versus Absence of Objects From Natural Concepts
303 Discriminating Objects in Multiple Natural Concepts
307 Conceptualization via Primary and Secondary Generalization
308 Nonsimilarity-Based Conceptualization
308 Joint Category Learning by Pidgeon
310 Abstracts Concepts
311 Matching to Simple by Pidgeon
312 Oddity Learning by Pidgeon
315 Same-Different Learning by Pidgeon
317 Summary
318 Memory and Cognition
320 Remembering and Language
321 Remembering and knowing
321 Delayed Matching to Sample
323 Basic Methods and Findings
326 Trace Theory
328 Complexity and Flexibility of Memory
335 Memory Loss
336 Selective Attention
339 Spatial Memory
344 Neuroscience and Learning :The Neural Mechanism for Spatial Learning
346 Control by Time
351 Control by Number
354 Summary
356 Human Learning and Cognitive Learning about Causes
357 Conditioning and Causation
357 Causality Detection
357 David Hume and Causality
358 Causation as a Psychological Impression
358 Conditions of Causation
358 A mechanical Model
358 Factors That Affect Causal Judgment
359 Comparative Psychology of Causal Association
359 Empirical Investigation of Human Causality
359 Contingency
366 Applying the Principles :Inhibition in Human Contingency Judgment
366 Reconciling Disparate Results
367 Temporal Contiguity
368 Applying the Principles: The Illusion of Control
371 Cue Competition
375 Applying the Principles : Blocking in Human Learning
376 Learning and Cognition: A Theoretical Perspective
377 Applying the Principles :why People Believe Weird things
378 Summary
A1 References
A33 Credits
A35 Name Index
A41 Subject Index