Generalization, Stimulus Control, and Generalization
Concepts and Categories
Theories
Memory and Thinking
Give me a "P"
100

While you are driving, if you approach an intersection and the traffic light turns red, you move your foot to the brake pedal. 

Stimulus control

100

People form mental concepts of objects, which permit them to respond appropriately to new objects they encounter

categories

100

An approach to categorization which assumes that organisms associate the many features of category exemplars with reinforcers (or category labels) and then respond to new items according to the combined associative strengths of their features.

Feature theory
100

An attentional or memory mechanism that helps predators search for specific hidden prey

Search Image

100

refers to the fact that a reward can sometimes seem to weaken- and a nonreward can sometimes seem to strengthen-instrumental actions.

Paradoxical

200

Ed Wasserman did an experiment which pigeons learned to                                 between four categories at a time

discriminate

200

are closely related to our knowledge of the world, and people can more easily learn those that are consistent with their knowledge.

Concepts

200

exposure to the different types of trials results in the formation of just such as a prototype

Prototype theory

200

Important for reasoning, learning, and comprehending

Working Memory

200

implies that learning under partial reinforcements is more vigorous than learning under full reinforcements

Partial-reinforcement extinction effect (PREE)

300

In order to increase                      , we must complete trainings in various environments or settings.

generalization

300

Refers to any class the members of which share one or more defining features

Concept Formation

300
Individuals make category judgments by comparing new stimuli with instances already stored in memory

Exemplar theory

300

Includes knowledge, regulation, and experience

Metacognition

300

PIT means...

Pavlovian Instrumental Transfer

400

Telling the difference between a baby's cries

Discrimination

400

Hernstein, Loveland, and Cable did experiments on categorization and discrimination, utilizing the stimuli of.....

trees, water, and Margaret

400

The principle of this is that creating a long-term memory is something that happens in stages; first we perceive something through our sensory memory, which is everything we can see, hear, feel or taste in a given moment.

Information Processing Theory

400

a mental state in which an organism forced to endure aversive stimuli, then becomes unable or unwilling to avoid subsequent encounters with those stimuli, even if they are “escapable,” presumably because it has learned that it cannot control the situation.

learned helplessness

400

Advertisers pair their products with items that arose

positive emotions

500

Overcoming a fear of flying by going through exposure therapy

Generalization

500

Seeing three dogs and a cat and knowing which groups belong together

Categorization

500

Mowrer noted that in any avoidance situation there are usually cues or warning signals in the environment that tell the organism that an aversive event is about to happen, which lead to this

two factor theory

500

Two important SSDRs are

flight and freezing

500

A decrease or elimination of unwanted behaviors

Punishment

M
e
n
u