Transcript
Page 1: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what

paradigm is it dominated by today?• There is a causal relationship

between actions and outcomes

• There is some degree of control over actions according to the anticipation of, and desire for, the outcome

• The circuits in the BG allow for control and expression of this paradigm (i.e. via the A-O and S-R systems later discussed)

Edward Thorndike

Clark L. Hull

Page 2: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

Explain the two important contributors to behavior: the remembered value of the expected outcome, and the

knowledge of the causal relationship between the action and the outcome.

• “remembered value of the expected outcome”– We can learn the reward of an action and

respond/act accordingly• “knowledge of the causal relationship

between the action and the outcome”– We know that there is a relationship between how

we act and what the outcome will be.– This allows us to place value on certain actions and

the rewards we receive from them

Page 3: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

Explain the two important contributors to behavior: the remembered value of the expected outcome, and the

knowledge of the causal relationship between the action and the outcome.

• “remembered value of the expected outcome”– Our sensitivity to manipulations of outcome value

determines whether an action is habitual or goal-directed

• “knowledge of the causal relationship between the action and the outcome”– This acknowledges the intentionality of behavior

itself

Page 4: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

Explain the experimental paradigms used to study these two psychological functions.

• The value of the outcome is increased(inflated) or decreased(devalued).– Devaluation is far more common because it is

easier to reduced the value of a reward.– If performance changes based on outcome value,

then the behavior is controlled by the anticipation of the outcome (goal directed action)

Page 5: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

Explain the experimental paradigms used to study these two psychological functions.

• The Action-outcome (A-O) contingency is manipulated. (outcome depends on action)– Often done through contingency degradation

• Introduces free rewards that are independent of any action

– Instrumental contingency can be viewed as the probability of reward given a particular action relative to the probability of a reward given no action.• If the probabilities are the same, then the contingency is

said to be completely degraded.

Page 6: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

The A-O and S-R Systemsand Habit Formation

• A-O : Action-Outcome• S-R: Stimulus-Response• Both engaged under different conditions• Amount of training or number of rewarded

responses plays significant role in shift between systems-habit formation

• Promoted by overtraining• Schedule of reinforcement also plays a role

Page 7: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

14. What are interval and ratio schedules?• Ratio Schedules:

– Response results in a certain probability of a reward (more responses= more rewards)

– Produce goal directed actions• Controlled by A-O contingency• A rat knows that a specific outcome

will produce a reward, so the rat will direct it’s actions to reach that outcome

• Interval Schedules:– A response is rewarded only after

a certain time interval has passed – Produce stimulus response (S-R)

habits

Page 8: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

14. How do they relate to research on BG function?

• Consensus that A-O and S-R systems control instrumental behaviors– Engaged in different conditions

• Amount of training determines the shift from A-O to S-R (habit formation)

• Use of interval schedules in these studies explains why they failed to find evidence for A-O learning– Even when reinforcement was equated, interval

schedules produced habits, and ratio schedules did not

Page 9: If behavior was dominated in the past by Hull’s S-R reinforcement paradigm, what paradigm is it dominated by today? There is a causal relationship between

14. How do they relate to research on BG function?

• So…– DMS, specifically the pDMS (posterior

dorsomedial striatum) is involved in goal directed behavior (A-O learning)

– DLS is involved in habit formation (S-R learning)


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