Trial & error learning Thorndike - VCE U4 Psych

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Thorndike Interested in studying animal intelligence He found that animal intelligence is based on the ability to form connections Set up puzzle-box experiments to investigate instrumental

description

This 4 slide file accompanies a youtube clip (see www.ePsychVCE.com to access link to clip). It covers Thorndike's Puzzle box experiment an his infamous 'law of effect'

Transcript of Trial & error learning Thorndike - VCE U4 Psych

Page 1: Trial & error learning Thorndike - VCE U4 Psych

Thorndike• Interested in studying

animal intelligence• He found that animal

intelligence is based on the ability to form connections• Set up puzzle-box

experiments to investigate instrumental conditioning

Page 2: Trial & error learning Thorndike - VCE U4 Psych

Trial & Error learning - Thorndike• Describes an organism’s attempts to

learn/solve a problem by trying alternative possibilities until a correct solution or desirable outcome is achieved

Usually involves 1. A number of attempts & a number of errors

- Before correct behaviour is learnt2. Motivation (to achieve a goal)3. Exploration – either random or purposeful4. Reward – the correct response is rewarded – • which will lead to repeat performance of

the correct response, strengthening the association between the behaviour & its outcome

• Once learnt behaviour will usually be performed quickly and with fewer errors

Page 3: Trial & error learning Thorndike - VCE U4 Psych

Thorndike’s Puzzle-box experiment• Thorndike put a hungry cat in a

‘puzzle box’ & placed fish, just out of reach

1. At first the cat to escape from the box through trial & error (random voluntary movements)

2. Eventually the cat accidentally pulled the string, escaped from the box so that it could reach its reinforcement (the fish)

• When the cat was put back in the box, once again it went through a series of incorrect responses before pushing the lever

• The cat became progressively quicker at escaping (and had fewer incorrect behaviours)

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Thorndike ‘Law of Effect’• Thorndike concluded that the cat had

learned the association between its behaviour (pulling the string) & the consequences (reaching the food)

• Results led Thorndike to devise the ‘Law of effect’ that is a behaviour that is followed by a satisfying consequence is strengthened (more likely to happen) than a behaviour that is followed by an annoying consequence which is weakened (less likely to occur)

• The food was a satisfying consequence – hence the cat would try to escape

• Behaviour that kept the cat in the box (annoying consequence) was less likely to occur