yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The difference between classical and operant conditioning - Peggy Andover


3m read
·Nov 9, 2024

Translator: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

When we think about learning, we often picture students in a classroom or lecture hall, books open on their desks, listening intently to a teacher or professor in the front of the room. But in psychology, learning means something else. To psychologists, learning is a long-term change in behavior that's based on experience.

Two of the main types of learning are called classical conditioning and operant, or instrumental, conditioning. Let's talk about classical conditioning first. In the 1890's, a Russian physiologist named Ivan Pavlov did some really famous experiments on dogs. He showed dogs some food and rang a bell at the same time. After a while, the dogs would associate the bell with the food. They would learn that when they heard the bell, they would get fed. Eventually, just ringing the bell made the dogs salivate. They learned to expect food at the sound of a bell.

You see, under normal conditions, the sight and smell of food causes a dog to salivate. We call the food an unconditioned stimulus, and we call salivation the unconditioned response. Nobody trains a dog to salivate over some steak. However, when we pair an unconditioned stimulus like food with something that was previously neutral, like the sound of a bell, that neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus. And so classical conditioning was discovered.

We see how this works with animals, but how does it work with humans? In exactly the same way. Let's say that one day you go to the doctor to get a shot. She says, "Don't worry, this won't hurt a bit," and then gives you the most painful shot you've ever had. A few weeks later you go to the dentist for a check-up. He starts to put a mirror in your mouth to examine your teeth, and he says, "Don't worry, this won't hurt a bit." Even though you know the mirror won't hurt, you jump out of the chair and run, screaming from the room.

When you went to get a shot, the words, "This won't hurt a bit," became a conditioned stimulus when they were paired with pain of the shot, the unconditioned stimulus, which was followed by your conditioned response of getting the heck out of there. Classical conditioning in action.

Operant conditioning explains how consequences lead to changes in voluntary behavior. So how does operant conditioning work? There are two main components in operant conditioning: reinforcement and punishment. Reinforcers make it more likely that you'll do something again, while punishers make it less likely.

Reinforcement and punishment can be positive or negative, but this doesn't mean good and bad. Positive means the addition of a stimulus, like getting dessert after you finish your veggies, and negative means the removal of a stimulus, like getting a night of no homework because you did well on an exam.

Let's look at an example of operant conditioning. After eating dinner with your family, you clear the table and wash the dishes. When you're done, your mom gives you a big hug and says, "Thank you for helping me." In this situation, your mom's response is positive reinforcement if it makes you more likely to repeat the operant response, which is to clear the table and wash the dishes.

Operant conditioning is everywhere in our daily lives. There aren't many things we do that haven't been influenced at some point by operant conditioning. We even see operant conditioning in some extraordinary situations. One group of scientists showed the power of operant conditioning by teaching pigeons to be art connoisseurs. Using food as a positive reinforcer, scientists have taught pigeons to select paintings by Monet over those by Picasso. When showed works of other artists, scientists observed stimulus generalization as the pigeons chose the Impressionists over the Cubists. Maybe next they'll condition the pigeons to paint their own masterpieces.

More Articles

View All
i can't believe this happened.
What’s up you guys? It’s Graham here. So I just want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart to each and every one of you watching, especially the notification squad who smashes the like button and comments down below for the YouTube algorithm before…
Would you go to a restaurant in the rainforest? | Restaurants at the End of the World
You know, it start raining. And it can get really tricky for sure. Like it can get really, really tricky. And sometimes I need to go rescue people because they get stuck then they start kind of backing up and then they go out over the edge. I don’t see a…
Force, mass and acceleration | Movement and forces | Middle school physics | Khan Academy
So, I have three different asteroids over here, and they have different masses. We’ll talk a lot more about what mass means, but one way to think about it is how much stuff there is there. There are other ways to think about it. Let’s say that this first…
Inside NELK’s $250,000,000 Empire (The Full Story)
All right, I want to know something: who right now is doing it like Milk? Nobody! There’s nothing like us on the internet right now. Kyle’s talked about it being worth a quarter million recently on a podcast. Um, I think Happy Dad alone this year will be …
Estimating decimal addition (thousandths) | Adding decimals | Grade 5 (TX TEKS) | Khan Academy
So we have two questions here, but don’t stress out. Anytime I even see a lot of decimals, I’m like, okay, is this going to be a lot of hairy arithmetic? But what we see here, it does not say what 8.37 + 4926 is equal to. The equal sign is squiggly. That …
I Spent 72 Hours in Bhutan with National Geographic | Juanpa Zurita | Nat Geo’s Best of the World
I am currently standing on the longest suspension bridge of all Bhutan. I’m about to take you on a journey way up near some of the tallest mountains in the entire world. This country’s tiny, but mighty. And it’s in the Himalayas between Tibet and Nepal. T…