57
The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE) Frode Svartdal University of Tromsø Oct. 2013

The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

  • Upload
    tucker

  • View
    33

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE). Frode Svartdal University of Tromsø Oct. 2013. Extinction: Basics. Extinction is defined in terms of a reinforcement process Extinction contingencies The stimulus (S R or US) is discontinued The learning contingency is discontinued - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Frode SvartdalUniversity of TromsøOct. 2013

Page 2: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Extinction: Basics Extinction is defined in terms of a

reinforcement process Extinction contingencies

The stimulus (SR or US) is discontinued The learning contingency is discontinued

Extinction process The conditioned response is reduced

(strength, frequency, etc.) Relearning, … not forgetting

Page 3: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Catania, 1984)

Extinction: BasicsOperant conditioning

Page 4: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Extinction: BasicsClassical conditioning

Page 5: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Factors affecting the extinction rate In general: Fast acquisition / high rate of

responding fast extinction Amount of reward

High fast extinction Variability

Stimulus Response Reinforcement

Some forms of learning do not extinguish (easily)

Evaluative conditioning (e.g., Diaz, Ruiz, & Beyens, 2005)

= high ext. persistence

Page 6: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Factors affecting the extinction rate Partial Reinforcement Extinction

Effect

Partial (Intermittent) Reinforcement (PRF) increased extinction response

Continuous Reinforcement (CRF) reduced extinction persistence

Page 7: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

First demonstrations

Operant conditioning;free operant; rats;Skinner (1938)

Classical conditioning;blink response; students;Humphreys (1939)

100%

50%

Page 8: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Ferster & Culbertson, 1975

Free operant

Page 9: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PRF

CRF

Free operant

Compared to CRF:

PRF • higher asymptotes• more persistent responding under extinction

EXTINCTION

Page 10: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Rats, maze running speed under extinction (Weinstock, 1954)

CRF

PRF (30%)

Page 11: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Classical conditioning (rats): PREE

25%

50%100%

Extinction

PRF response rateLOWER than CRF response rate

15%

Page 12: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Classical conditioning; eyelid; human subjects(Svartdal & Flaten, in prep.)

Page 13: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Operant conditioning; humans;Svartdal, 2003, Exp. 4

Page 14: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Conclusions (… preliminary) PREE is a very robust outcome

Measures & species Bar pressing, rats Maze running, rats Pecking, pigeons Blink reflex, humans, rabbits …

Contingency Operant/instrumental

Discrete trial Free operant

Classical

Page 15: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

But… How general is the PREE?

Reversed PREE observed under some conditions

Generalized PREE observed under some conditions

Alternative methods of analysis Nevin (1988): ”PREE is an artefact because

of wrong method of analzing extinction performance”

Response unit issue PREE or not dependig on how the response

is defined (Mowrer & Jones, 1945!

Page 16: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Reversed PREE

What happens if the subject is exposed to a mixture of PRF and CRF contingencies?

Page 17: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Reversed PREEPavlik & Carlton, 1965: Rats; bar

pressing, free operant

Gr. 1: Single contingency; CRF Gr. 2: Single contingency; PRF Gr. 3: Two signalled schedules

alternated for the same subjects; CRF + PRF

Page 18: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Reversed PREEConventionalPREE

Page 19: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Reversed PREEReversedPREE

Page 20: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Reversed PREEPavlik & Carlton (1965): Single reinforcement schedules (CRF vs. PRF) in

between-groups experiments PREE Two schedules (CRF vs. PRF) for the same subjects

Reversed PREEOther research Reversed PREE observed Generalized PREE (overall increased persistence,

but no difference between conditions) Conventional PREE rarely if ever observed in within-

subjects manipulations of CRF - PRF

Page 21: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE as a generalization: Ecological validityIf applied to a situation with a very specific

schecule for a specific behavior PREE

Example:Single mother – child is begging for

toys only from mom

If applied to various situations with mixed contingencies Reversed PREEGeneralized PREE

Example:Mother and father – child begs for toys

from both

Page 22: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Response unit issue

Page 23: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Free operant responding: What is the response unit?

Mowrer & Jones,1945:

What should be counted as the response unit - single responses or the unit of responses required for reinforcement?

Free-operant Intermittent reinforcemet, e.g., FR4

Page 24: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Response unitFR4

Reinforced responses

Page 25: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE Total responses

Total responses / reinforcement ratio

Reversed PREE

Page 26: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Nevin: PREE is an artefact

Page 27: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE: Alternative analyses

Nevin, 1988: Behavioral momentum• ”RPREE” is the rule – the response is

stronger following CRF• in free-operant responding (but not in discrete-

trial experiments) • following extended training

• Extinction performance• Traditional measure: Number of responses • Nevin: Slope of the extinction curve

Page 28: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE

RPREE

SHORT LONG

Absolute numberof responses

Relative to initial ext response level

Nevin, 1988

Page 29: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE vs. RPREE – important variables

Dependent measure No. of responses vs. relative change

Type of situations Free operant vs. discrete trial

Complexity of situation One vs. more schedules (e.g., multiple

schedule) Design

Between groups vs. within subjects

Page 30: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE typically observedMeasure Number of responses

Situation Discrete trial

Schedule Single

Design Between-groups manipulation of reinforcer rate

Other CRF schedule must be 100%

Page 31: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE: My interests Interaction PREE & Reversed PREE Cognition (verbalization) related to

behavioral PREE

Page 32: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

The experimental situation”Computer responses”presented

Left, right

Subject responsesrecorded

Left, right

Page 33: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

The experimental situationTask Complete a four-response chain of responses started by

the computer E.g.: Computer: L R Subject: R L

Instructed task: Identify and apply the functional rule(s) ”Obtain as many correct answers as you can.”

Rules (depending on experiment) ”Repeat computer sequence” ”Reverse computer sequence”

Feedback (visual, autitory) for correct answer; nothing happens if answer is incorrect

Page 34: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

The experimental situation

Manipulations (between groups and/or within groups)

RuleReverse (typically used)Repeat

ContingencyCRF (100%)PRF (20-60%)

Page 35: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

The experimental situation Reward rate manipulated

Between groups Within subjects (multiple schedule)

Discrete trial situation; fixed number of trials 180 acquisition trials 40 extinction trials

Page 36: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Conventinal PREE; operant responding; students; Svartdal, 2003, Exp. 4

Page 37: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Reversed & conventional PREE; operant responding; students; Svartdal, 2000

Reversed PREE Purpose: Explore the relationship

between PREE and RPREE PREE vs. RPREE: Contradiction or

compatible effects? Method

Independent groups: PRF and CRF Within: CRF and PRF

Page 38: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Svartdal, 2000 ctd. Multiple schedule, alternating Group 40/40

Half trials (signalled): 40% Half trials (signalled): 40%

Group 80/80 Half trials (signalled): 80% Half trials (signalled): 80%

Group 80/40 Half trials (signalled): 80% Half trials (signalled): 40%

PRF

”CRF”

”CRF” + PRF

Page 39: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE80%40%

* No. of responses: RPREE* Relative change: No difference

Page 40: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Svartdal, 2000 ctd. Relationship between schedule

components Simplest assumption: Modulation

between component schedules: 60% + context = 60% reference 60% + context = 100% reduced

persistence 60% + context = 20% increaced

persistence

Page 41: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Performance of a 60% schedule depending onother schedule = 100%, 60%, or 20%Svartdal, 2000

Page 42: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Svartdal, F. (2000). Persistence during extinction: Conventional and Reversed PREE under multiple schedules. Learning and Motivation, 31, 21-40.

Page 43: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Cognition in PREE• Currently: Strong cognitive arguments to interpret

conditioning in terms of cognition• Classical conditioning: Lovibond & Shanks, 2002• Operant conditioning: Shanks & St John, 1994• Implicit learning doubted: Shanks, 2005• Extinction: Lovibond, 2004

• Basic argument:

CONTINGENCY CONSCIOUS APPREHENSION BEHAVIORAL CHANGE

CONTINGENCY CONSCIOUS APPREHENSION NO BEHAVIORAL CHANGE

• Large number of studies supporting this assumption

Page 44: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Cognition in PREE So, since the behvioral PREE is

very robust, a ”cognitive PREE” must be easy to measure

Basic prosedure: Behavioral acquisition under

100% vs. 60% reinforcer rate Measurement of verbalized PREE

Page 45: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Cognition in PREEPrediction of persistence:”How likely is it that you will continueresponding if reward no longer appears?”

Several experiments havedemonstrated no sensitivityto learning history inpredictions

Page 46: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

T rl1 T rl3 T rl5 T rl7 T rl9 T rl11 T rl13 T rl15 T rl17 T Ext0 ,0

0,1

0,2

0,3

0,4

0,5

0,6

0,7

0,8

0,9

1,0

Responses (proportion of possible)

100/100 60/60

3 extinction trials;immediate behavioralsensitivity

No differencein predictions

Svartdal & Silvera, in prep.

Page 47: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Cognition in PREERetrospective judgments:”How many responses did you emit afterreward no longer appeared?”

Subjects are very accurate in descrbing their own behavior, including their own extinction persistence

Page 48: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Cognition in PREESvartdal, F. (2003).

Extinction after partial reinforcement: Predicted vs. judged persistence. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 44, 55-64.

Page 49: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Meta-cognitive PREE?

We all have long experience with various contingencies

Maybe a ”meta-cognition” evolves: Uncertain outcomes Persist Certain outcomes Quit

Page 50: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Meta-cognitive PREE?

Scenarioes presented to subjects, manipulation Reliable outcome vs. Unreliable outcome

Persistence judgments of behavior

Page 51: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Meta-cognitive PREE?

Naive students: No effect ofoutcome manipulation

Page 52: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Meta-cognitive PREE?Psychology students(have read about PREE)

Naive students

Page 53: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

Meta-cognitive PREE?

Svartdal, F. (2000). Persistence during extinction: Are judgments of persistence affected by contingency information? Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 41, 315-328.

Page 54: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE: TheoryMowrer & Jones:

Diskriminasjonshypo- tesen PRF:

Læringbetingelsene ekstinksjonsbetingelsene Generalisering til ekstinksjon

CRF: Læringbetingelsene # ekstinksjonsbetingelsene Liten generalisering til ekstinksjon

Page 55: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE: TheoryAmsel: Frustrasjonshypotesen

PRF: Forventning om belønning frustrasjon når

belønning uteblir Frustrasjons-cues assosieres med

læringssituasjonen Under ekstinksjon: Frustrasjon pga uteblitt

belønning Læringssituasjonen ekstinksjonssituasjonen

CRF: Frustrasjon oppstår ikke under læring Læringssituasjonen # ekstinksjonssituasjonen

Page 56: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE: TheoryCapaldi: Sequential hypothesis

PRF: Ikke-belønnede trials blir signal på at belønning

snart vil følge: … N N N R N N N R … Dvs.: Det opparbeides en forventning om

belønning når belønning uteblir Under ekstinksjon: Mange responser pga

forventning om belønning CRF:

Ingen erfaring med uteblitt belønning under læring

Under ekstinksjon: Få responser

Page 57: The partial reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

PREE: Theory Status:

Diskriminasjonshypotesen står svakt Amsels hypotese står rimelig sterkt Capaldis hypotese står ganske sterkt Nevins modell: Ingen hypotese i vanlig

forstand Discrete-trial-situasjonen

Capaldi og Amsel dominerende Fri-operant-situasjonen

Svak teoretisk forståelse