Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Learning

A

Learning is a process that allows animals to modify their behaviour on the basis of experience
‘Change in cognitive state due to experience’

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2
Q

3 dimensions of learning

A
  1. What are the conditions needed to learn?
  2. What is learned?
  3. What are the effects of learning?
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3
Q

Dimension 1: what are the conditions needed to learn?

A

What age, sex, species or past experience is necessary?
Context is important - learning the skill must be ecologically relevant
Early life effects are often overlooked

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4
Q

Dimension 2: What is learned?

A

Experience can change the strength of the association between stimuli and response
What is learned depends on to what extent there is an innate ‘template’

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5
Q

Dimension 3: what are the effects of learning?

A
  • What behaviour will occur as a result of learning?
  • Is information used immediately or later?
  • Does information alter a whole behavioural strategy to just a single behaviour?
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6
Q

Describe classical conditioning

A

Unconscious/instinctive learning, associative, predictive
Pair an unconditioned stimulus with a conditioned stimulus that gives a conditioned response
After repeated exposure, the unconditioned stimulus should also lead to the conditioned response
E.g. dogs learning to salivate when a bell rings, expecting food

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7
Q

What is blocking?

A

When a conditioned stimulus is so closely associated with an unconditioned stimulus + response that no other CS can become associated with it

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8
Q

Rescorla-Wagner model

A

V = associative strength between a conditioned stimulus and an unconditioned response
/\ = maximum associative strength possible
🔼 = change in associative strength during trial
Shows that more trials leads to more accurate decision making

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9
Q

‘Extinction’ of learning

A

Learned associations can be lost if associative strength is weakened due to a lack of reinforcement in trials
Predicted by Rescoria-Wagner model
However it is quicker to relearn associations than to learn them de novo

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10
Q

Simultaneous associative learning

A

Bees can learn two contrasting associations simultaneously

Different molecular pathways: aversive (electric shock - dopamine) and appetitive (sugar - octopamine)

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11
Q

Molecular mechanisms behind universal pavlovian conditioning

A

Classical conditioning is phylogenetically widespread
Neurobiological and molecular mechanisms for conditioning across species are contrasting - example of convergent evolution

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12
Q

What type of plasticity is learning?

A

Phenotypic plasticity - change in phenotype due to the environment
Allows animals to adjust their foraging behaviour, predator avoidance and social behaviour

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13
Q

Evolution of learning

A
  • Acting on learnt material is a form of phenotypic plasticity, and the ability to be plastic is under selection
  • Depends on temporal stability of environment
  • Stable unchanging environment: inmate behavioural strategies, learning will introduce errors
  • Medium stability environment: changes across generations but stable within generations, will favour learning
  • Unstable changing environment: no point learning
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