Behaviourism
Behaviourism
Behaviourism
Behaviorism
By:-
Anusha Tomar
Daksha Katahra
Geetika Gundhi
Guntasha Sabharwal
Isha Mehta
Tejala Valluri
Timeline Of Behaviourism Amity Institute of Psychology and Allied Sciences
WATSON &
IVAN PAVLOV B. F. SKINNER
ROSALIE
Began studying the Work upon
Conducted the
salivary response behaviourist principles
famous Little Albert
and other responses (published Walden II)
Experiment
IVAN SECHENOV
JOHN B. WATSON CLARK HULL
Reflex of the brain B. F. SKINNER
Psychology a Principles of
was published, Piblished ‘Beyond
behavioural view,
introducing the behaviourism was Freedom & Dignity’-
outlined many views
concept of inhibition published argued about free will
of behaviourism
responses in the CNS
Amity Institute of Psychology and Allied Sciences
What is Behaviourism?
• This theory is that human and animal behaviour can be
explained in terms of conditioning, without appeal to thoughts
or feelings, and that psychological disorders are best treated by
altering behaviour patterns.
• It assumes that all behaviors are either reflexes produced by a
response to certain stimuli in the environment, or a consequence
of that individual's history, including especially reinforcement
and punishment, together with the individual's current
motivational state and controlling stimuli.
• Behaviorism combines elements of philosophy, methodology,
and psychological theory.
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Types of Behaviourism
• Originally, behaviourism started with
METHODOLOGICAL BEHAVIORISM
1.
• The above later inspired
NEOBEHAVIORISM (E.G.,
2. RADICAL BEHAVIORISM).
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Types of Behaviourism
• METHODOLOGICAL BEHAVIOURISM: considered
Psychology as purely objective experimental branch of natural
science. Its goal is to predict and control the behaviour.
• Introspection is of no value as it has no scientific basis.
• They say no difference between a man and an animal.
• Watson's (1913) methodological behaviourism asserts the mind is
tabula rasa (a blank slate) at birth.
• RADICAL BEHAVIOURISM: was founded by B.F. Skinner and
agreed with Watson’s belief of what the goal of psychology
should be.
• Skinner accepts the view that organisms are born with innate
behaviours, and thus recognizes the role of genes and biological
components in behaviour.
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Assumptions in Behaviorism
• The behaviorist perspective holds four assumptions as its bases. The four
assumptions are: Determinism, Empiricism, Reductionism and Environmentalism.
• Determinism: This views that all our behavior is determined by past events. This
means that behavior can be predicted with knowledge of the stimulus causing the
behavior.
• Empiricism: This assumption believes that psychology is scientific and hence
should be empirical. It means that behavior is over and can be observed, recorded
and measure and does not need support from mental events.
• Reductionism: This means that human behavior can be reduced to simple
components of stimulus and response (S-R) associations which are learnt. These are
learnt by an individual through conditioning.
• Environmentalism: This assumption believes that all behavior results from
experience and less from biology and genetics. This views behavior as a result of
environmental factors than internal factors and supports Nature in the Nature Vs
Nurture debate.
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Ivan Pavlov
Theory
Pavlov was a behaviorist. This means that his theories focused on observable behavior, because behavior can be
measured and thought can not. The human mind should be interpreted as a black box that can not be opened. Only
was goes in the box and what comes out can be known. Scientific evidence is the keyword in his theory.
Pavlov studied reflexes, automatic behavior that is caused by a stimulus from the environment. Some reflexes, such
as blinking your eyes when a puff of air comes in it, or the sucking of a baby when something is put in his/her
mouth. This automatic behavior can be manipulated. This is called conditioning. In this conditioning process, a
unconditional stimulus is given to a person. This stimulus causes a reflex on its own. When the unconditional
stimulus is now given to the person together with a stimulus that does not cause a reflex on its own. Thus, a
unconditional stimulus is given together with a conditional stimulus. Because the presence of the unconditional
stimulus, the reflex is caused. This process of stimulus-response is repeated for a number of times. After a while, the
unconditional stimulus is not offered any more. Only the conditional stimulus is offered. Because of the repeated
association of the unconditional and the conditional stimulus, the conditional stimulus will now cause the reflex on
its own. Classical conditioning is succeeded.
Pavlov's theories where very influential, in particular in the field of child psychology.
Ivan Sechnov
• Briefly stated, Sechenov’s psychological system rests on five
interrelated theses:
• A consistent physical monism: Sechenov held that psychology will
become a science only insofar as it studies the muscular and neural
action of the psyche. He asserted that no “conceivable demarcation
[from a scientific point of view] can be found between obvious
somatic, i.e., bodily, nervous acts and unmistakable psychical
phenomena”
• Physiological and psychical reactions are both considered to be
reflex actions: in Sechenov’s words, “All movements bearing the
name of voluntary in physiology are reflex in a strict sense”, and a
thought “is the first two-thirds of a psychical reflex”
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Ivan Sechnov
• (3) The reflex as the mechanism of association: “An association is,”
according to Sechenov, “an uninterrupted series of contacts of the end
of every preceding reflex with the beginning of the following one”.
The actual experience of an event and the memory of it are both
represented by identical psychical reflexes but are evoked by
different stimuli.
• (4) The psychic as associative in genesis and central neural in
mediation: perception and ideas merge from associations of reflexes
and their integration in the sensory sphere; both association and
integration are mediated by the central nervous system.
• (5) A radical environmentalism: the largest part of thoughts and ideas,
999 parts out of 1,000, as Sechenov would have it, derives from
training, and only a minimal part is due to heredity.
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Contributions of J. B. Watson
• Watson’s behaviorist theory focused not on the internal emotional and
psychological conditions of people, but rather on their external and outward
behaviors. He believed that a person’s physical responses provided the only
insight into internal actions. He spent much of his career applying his theories
to the study of child development and early learning.
• Child psychology: In 1928, he published Psychological Care of Infant and
Child, cautioning people against providing children with too much affection
and endorsed the practice of treating children like miniature adults. He
believed that excessive early attachments could contribute to a dependent,
needy personality in adulthood. He specifically argued against thumb-
sucking, coddling, and excessive sentimentality, and he emphasized that
parents should be open and honest with children about sexuality.
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Emotions
• According to Watson emotions are conditioned in an individual. Behaviorism
emphasizes on people’s external behavior and emotions are just the physical
responses to it.
• He believed that there are 3 emotions which are innate from birth:Fear, Rage and
Love.
• Fear: There are two stimuli which produce it naturally- sudden noise and loss of
support. When a child grows then various other stimuli begin to exist in the
environment producing fear.
• Rage: It is an innate response to body movement of child being constraint. When
a young child is held in a way in which they cannot move then the child stiffens
the body and screams. Later other situations can also lead to such reactions as
child associates this with physical restrain.
• Love: According to Watson love is an automatic response from infants toward
action by others like, tickled or patted. This is shown through smile and laughter.
Infants do not specify love towards any person but are conditioned to do so.
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Neobehaviorism
• Neobehaviorism is a system of psychology that followed
behaviorism with no clear separation between the two, and
is predominantly associated with B. F. Skinner. The
neobehaviorist movement lasted from approximately 1930
to 1960 and supported the idea that all learning and
behavior can be described in terms of conditioning.
• Operant conditioning (or instrumental conditioning) is a
term coined by B. F. Skinner in 1937 and is a type of
learning in which an individual’s behavior is modified by
its consequences; the behavior may change in form,
frequency, or strength.
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