Learning And Behavioral Analysis Learning Thesis

Provide an example of something you learned through positive reinforcement; provide an example of something you learned through negative reinforcement.

Through positive reinforcement, I learned how to throw a ball. My father taught me in the backyard, and the farther I threw it, the more he told me I had done a 'good job.' I learned through negative reinforcement not to breathe through my nose while swimming -- every time I breathed incorrectly, I would always choke on the water, which made me extremely aware of how I was breathing.

Provide an example (and the steps involved) of something you can teach a child or a pet through shaping.

You can housebreak a puppy through shaping. First, you keep the puppy in a crate because it does not want to soil its den, and only let it out of the crate when you can observe the puppy. When the puppy wants to 'go to the bathroom' and begins to sniff around, you take it immediately outside, and praise it lavishly and reward it for the behavior. When it soils the inside of the house, you say "NO," and if you have caught the puppy before doing 'the act,' then you take the puppy outside and praise it lavishly.

You're trying to help your friend modify his behavior. Provide an example. How would you address immediate and delayed consequences of both the problem behavior and the appropriate alternative behavior?

When trying to quit smoking, suggesting the friend 'stimulate' him or herself with something negative, like snapping a rubber band on his or her wrist, when the urge strikes him, is one way to use negative 'shaping' to quit. To use positive behaviors to encourage quitting in terms of delayed consequences, like the cost of smoking might be to encourage the...

...

Provide an example of a goal that is too distant in the future. What is the problem with such a goal? How can this problem be effectively addressed?
A too-distant goal for someone contemplating weight loss might be 'you will be less likely to get heart disease and Type II Diabetes when you are older,' because that age is not emotionally (only intellectually) tangible to a young person. A more reinforcing behavior might be 'you can be more effective at soccer and make the Varsity team next year, or wear a smaller size prom dress this June.'

Provide an example of something you learned via observational learning through classical conditioning and operant conditioning. Use separate examples for each.

A learned by observing that whenever you ask something potentially controversial of my mother in the morning, she will say 'no,' because she is not a morning person. This is an example of classical conditioning -- I learned to avoid the 'stimuli of my mother's 'no' because silence was rewarded at the breakfast table, if I needed something. I learned to ask at some other time of the day.

Through operant 'shaping' I learned the value of eating healthfully. I learned that if I didn't eat fast food, I felt better and had more energy throughout the day. The more I was mindful of my diet, the better I felt, and the less mindful, the worse I felt. On days when I was 'half-healthy' I felt okay, but not as good as when I really tried to stick to an effective eating program, so I was slowly shaped to adopting a better diet.

Cite this Document:

"Learning And Behavioral Analysis Learning" (2008, December 18) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/learning-and-behavioral-analysis-learning-25698

"Learning And Behavioral Analysis Learning" 18 December 2008. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/learning-and-behavioral-analysis-learning-25698>

"Learning And Behavioral Analysis Learning", 18 December 2008, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/learning-and-behavioral-analysis-learning-25698

Related Documents

Childhood Development Cognitive behavioral analysis paper on child 2 years old Analyzing play situations: Applying Piaget's theories to toddlers The developmental psychologist Jean Piaget, "emphasized the importance of schemas in cognitive development, and described how they were developed or acquired. A schema can be defined as a set of linked mental representations of the world, which we use both to understand and to respond to situations. The assumption is that we store these

Among all the measures, sentence imitation illustrated the greatest power in discriminating poor and adequate readers (2010). Another study conducted by Flax, Realpe-Bonilla, Roesler, Choudhury, and Benasich (2010) studied the profiles of children with a family history (FH+) of language-learning impairments (LLI) and a control group of children with no reported family history of LLI (FH-) with the hope of identifying "which language constructs (receptive or expressive) and which ages

Honeypot and Honeynet Emerging Technologies In the present IT environment, individuals and businesses are becoming more dependent an open network that includes the Internet where business transactions, government services and commercial activities are realized. However, the use of open network has led to the development of new information security issues and cyber threats that are being utilized by the cyber criminals. Thus, a mistrust in computer network technologies and telecommunications

Learning is one of the vital and fundamental elements in the life of a person that leads to growth and development, as it continues from birth till death. This learning process is noticeably witnessed by the individuals through the behavioral change pattern that occurs with the passage of time. In addition, the process commence from the time a person starts his education, matures and develops with their professional life (Kamble,

Learning and Cognitive Critique In modern day learning, it is important to integrate creative approaches in order to minimize mental redundancy among learners. At any given time, the human brain utilizes less than ten percent of its total capacity. This explains the powerful ability of the human brain to carry out complex information processes in short periods. This study presents the necessity of having a hybrid approach in responding to intellectual

Learning disabilities in children are sometimes difficult to identify. Children can go years without proper diagnosis. If they are never diagnosed, they can go well into adulthood without knowing anything was wrong, impacting their academic performance and career choices. Therefore it is important to understand what some of these learning disabilities are in order to identify it sooner and assist children once identified, by properly instructing the disabled child to