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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Learning
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
gre
,
psychology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Reversal of conditioning - dissociating behaviour from a cue - Repeatedly withholding reinforcement or disassociating the behavior from a cue
Escape conditioning
Age affects learning
Sensitization
Extinction
2. Performance = Drive x Habit; will do what has worked in the past to satisfy drive
Thorndike (book)
Clark Hull
Scaffolding learning
Latent learning
3. Drive to reduce cognitive dissonance - holding conflicting ideas simultaneously whether beliefs - attitudes - or actions
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4. Learned reinforce - often through society; money - prestige - rewards
Henry Murray - David McClelland
Secondary Reinforcement
Trace conditioning
Token economy
5. Previous CS now a UCS (e.g.*bell > [ light > food > ] salivation)
Incidental learning
M.E. Olds
Educational psychology
Higher-Order conditioning
6. Applied expectancy-value theory to individual behaviour in large organizations (e.g. those lowest on totem pole have least motivation since little incentives)
Victor Vroom
Yerkes-Dodson effect
Preparedness
Primary Reinforcement
7. Fritz Heider'S balance theory - Charles Osgood and Percy Tannenbaum'S congruity theory - Leon Festinger'S cognitive dissonance theory; what about individuals who often seek stimulation - novel experience - or self-destruction?
Sensitization
Spontaneous recovery
Example theories and problem?
Superstitious behaviour
8. Punishment to decrease likelihood of a behaviour - ex: drug Antabuse to treat alcoholism
Example theories and problem?
Drive-reduction theory
Aversive conditioning
Extinction (classical conditioning)
9. Previous CS now a UCS (e.g.*bell > [ light > food > ] salivation)
Chaining
Positive Reinforcement
Second-Order conditioning
Clark Hull
10. Takes place without reinforcement - knowledge not immediately expressed - e.g. learning while watching chess
Trace conditioning
Latent learning
Chaining
Age affects learning
11. Learning curve
State dependent learning
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Extinction (classical conditioning)
Unconditioned Response (UCR)
12. Law of effect
E. L. Thorndike
Habituation
Stimulus discrimination
Age affects learning
13. Attitude change - based on balance of 'Sentiment' or liking relationships - if the net affect valence multiplies out to a positive result
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14. Operant conditioning
Stimulus generalization
B. F. Skinner
Operant conditioning
Autoshaping
15. CS presented after UCS (e.g. food - then light); proven ineffective; accomplishes only inhibitory conditioning - harder time pairing CS with UCS later even with forward conditioning
Spontaneous recovery
Backward Conditioning
Leon Festinger'S cognitive dissonance theory
Theory of association
16. Removal of a negative event that increases likelihood of a particular response; while punishment introduces a negative event to decrease likelihood of a response
Autoshaping
Extinction (operant conditioning)
Yerkes-Dodson effect
Negative Reinforcement
17. Ability to discriminate between different but similar stimuli (door bell is different from phone ringing)
Stimulus discrimination
Negative Reinforcement
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Incidental learning
18. Rewards after a certain period of time rather than number of behaviours; can be argued that it does little to motivate an animal'S behaviour
E. L. Thorndike
Fixed interval schedule
Variable interval schedule
Drive-reduction theory
19. Not-so-neutral stimulus - elicits response without conditioning (e.g. salivation)
Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)
Age affects learning
Conditioned Response (CR)
Negative transfer
20. Promotes extinction of undesirable behaviour - negative stimulus presented after behaviour to decrease likelihood of reoccurrence - Skinner thinks it is not effective in long run
Basic types of drives
Conditioned Response (CR)
Punishment
Leon Festinger'S cognitive dissonance theory
21. Learn 3-20 - constant 20-50 - drops 50+
Garcia effect
Age affects learning
Continuous motor tasks vs. discrete motor tasks
Drive-reduction theories
22. By having an apparatus (e.g. lever) - an animal controls its reinforcements (e.g. food) through behaviours (e.g. pressing) - shaping its own behaviour
Sensitization
Theory of association
Autoshaping
Extinction
23. Individuals are motivated by what brings most pleasure and least pain
Preparedness
Hedonism
Simultaneous Conditioning
Sensitization
24. Performance = Expectation x Value; expectancy-value theory; goals they expect they can meet and how important goal is
Autonomic conditioning??? (still need example)
B. F. Skinner
Edward Tolman
Latent learning
25. Pairing of the CS and the UCS in which the CS is presented before the UCS - delayed conditioning and trace conditioning
Stimulus discrimination
Simultaneous Conditioning
John Atkinson
Forward Conditioning (types)
26. Natural reinforcement - without requirement of learning; food and water
Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
Primary Reinforcement
M.E. Olds
Cooperative learning
27. Teacher encourages independent learning - only provides assistance when needed
Second-Order conditioning
Charles Osgood and Percy Tannenbaum'S congruity theory
Scaffolding learning
Token economy
28. Higher arousal for simple tasks (motivation) - lower arousal for complex tasks (concentration); optimal arousal is an inverted U on a graph - Y-axis: performance - X-axis: arousal - Difficult task --> upside-down U shape - Simple task --> reaches pea
Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)
Henry Murray - David McClelland
Yerkes-Dodson effect
E. L. Thorndike
29. Preparedness - that certain associations are learned more easily than others; animals programmed to make certain connections; Garcia effect - nausea associated with food
Response learning
John Garcia
Superstitious behaviour
Second-Order conditioning
30. People learn through their culture. They learn acceptable and unacceptable behaviours through culture
Basic types of drives
Unconditioned Response (UCR)
Arousal
Social learning theory
31. Watson - everything can be explained by stimulus-response chains - chains are developed by conditioning; only objective and observable elements important
Behaviourism
Types of classical conditioning
Sensitization
Stimulus discrimination
32. Every correct response is met with reinforcement; quickest but most fragile learning - as soon as rewards stop coming - the animal stops performing
Chaining
Continuous Reinforcement Schedule
Observational learning
Autoshaping
33. Not all correct responses met with reinforcement; slower but more resistant; fixed ratio - variable ratio - fixed interval - variable interval; variable is best because it is unexpected - ratio gives better response since based on # of correct behavi
Primary Reinforcement
Partial Reinforcement Schedule (+types)
Drive-reduction theories
Delayed conditioning
34. What a person learns in one state is best recalled in that state
Perceptual/conceptual learning (+example)
Forward Conditioning (types)
Cooperative learning
State dependent learning
35. Shaping; Skinner rewarded rats first for being near lever then for touching it - reward for behaviours that brought them closer to the desired one (e.g. pressing lever)
Differential reinforcement of successive approximations
Unconditioned Response (UCR)
John Garcia
Partial Reinforcement Schedule (+types)
36. Does not produce a specific response on its own (e.g. light or bell)
Edward Tolman
Garcia effect
Backward Conditioning
Neutral Stimulus (NS)
37. Thorndike - precursor of operant conditioning - Cause-and-effect chain of behaviour; continue what rewards - stop what doesn'T
Law of effect
Learning
Punishment
Higher-Order conditioning
38. Medium amount of arousal best for performance
Positive Reinforcement
Age affects learning
Victor Vroom
Donald Hebb
39. Simultaneous - higher-order/second-order - delayed forward - trace forward - backward
Extinction
Types of classical conditioning
Operant conditioning
Yerkes-Dodson effect
40. Relatively permanent or stable change in behaviour as the result of experience
Extinction (operant conditioning)
Second-Order conditioning
Aptitude
Learning
41. Motivated to do what they do not want to do by rewarding themselves afterwards with something they like to do - Eat dessert after eating unwanted vegetable
Scaffolding learning
Behaviourism
Autoshaping
Premack principle
42. Reward or positive event that increases likelihood of a particular response
Victor Vroom
Operant conditioning
Positive Reinforcement
Punishment
43. Set of characteristics indicative of one'S ability to learn
Victor Vroom
Aptitude
Primary Reinforcement
Undergeneralization
44. Most time to learn but least likely to be extinguished; reinforcements are delivered after different numbers of correct responses - ratio cannot be predicted
Variable ratio schedule
Victor Vroom
Positive Reinforcement
Avoidance conditioning
45. Rewards delivered after differing time periods; second most effective strategy in maintaining behaviour
Sensitization
Aptitude
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Variable interval schedule
46. Lewin - grouping based on co-occurence in time and space; associate certain behaviours with certain rewards and cues
Arousal
Victor Vroom
Negative Reinforcement
Theory of association
47. Links together chains of stimuli and responses - learns what to do in response to particular triggers (leaving a building in response to fire alarm)
John Atkinson
Response learning
Differential reinforcement of successive approximations
Second-Order conditioning
48. Associative or dissociative attitudes on 7pt scale toward objects
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49. The failure to generalize a stimulus
Fixed ratio schedule
Undergeneralization
Social learning theory
Scaffolding learning
50. School of behaviourism
Conditioned Response (CR)
Extinction
Variable interval schedule
John B. Watson