What is the research method used in the behaviourist approach?
Laboratory study.
Define classical conditioning:
Learning through the association of a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned response, producing a conditioned stimulus associated with a conditioned response.
Define operant conditioning;
A method of learning and maintenance where behaviour is influenced by its consequences, through positive and negative reinforcement.
What are the two key studies that support the behaviourist approach:
Outline Pavlov’s dog study:
Through classical conditioned, the dogs learnt to associate a bell (neutral stimulus into a conditioned stimulus) with food (stimulus) which would produce the salivation response (unconditioned response into a conditioned response)
Outline Skinner’s box study:
Rat was placed into a box with a lever that when pressed according to the signal light would release food (positive reinforcement). When the rat pressed the lever not at the signal light, the rat would receive an electric shock (negative reinforcement)
Name the four evaluation points for the behaviourist approach:
Explain the evaluation point ‘well controlled research (S)’ for the behaviourist approach:
Explain the evaluation point ‘real world application (S)’ for the behaviourist approach:
Explain the evaluation point ‘environmental determinism (L)’ for the behaviourist approach:
Explain the evaluation point ‘ethical issues (L)’ for the behaviourist approach:
Behaviourist approach - nature or nurture
Nurture
Which three approaches are reductionist?
Behavioural
Biological
Psychodynamic
What is reductionism?
The belief that human behaviour can be explained by breaking it down into its constituent parts.
Which two approaches support hard determinism?
What is determinism?
Belief that all behaviour has an internal or external cause and is thus predictable.
How is abnormal or faulty behaviour treated for the behaviourist approach?
Systematic desensitisation