Operant conditioning
classical conditioning
Social learning theory
Cognitive
Biological
100
Developed the theory of operant conditioning through his research using rats

Skinner

100

We learn through association

Define classical conditioning

100

Aggressive, non aggressive, control

What are the 3 different groups in Bandura's research?

100
What are some examples of cognitive processes

Memory, perception, attention, language, problem-solving

100

Twin studies

How can we measure the biological basis of behaviour?

200

One is the addition of an unpleasant consequence, and the other is the removal of something unpleasant

What is the difference between punishment and negative reinforcement?

200

Food, bell

What are the stimuli involved in Pavlov's study

200

A behaviour becomes a strong part of an individual and their personality

what is internalisation?

200

Mental frameworks based on past experiences 

What is a schema

200

Traits that enhance survival are passed on to offspring

What is natural selection

300

Any event that strengthens behaviour

What is reinforcement?

300

Something that is natural

What do we mean by 'unconditioned'

300

Attention, Retention, Motor Reproduction, Motivation

What are the 4 mediational processes in social learning theory?

300

Input → Process → Output (like a computer).

What is the information processing model based on?  

300

It used methods that are replicable, measurable, and objective

Why is the biological approach considered one of the most scientific approaches?

400

Food 

What was the reward in Skinner's study

400

a previously neutral response that , through learning, has gained the power to cause a conditioned response

What is a conditioned stimulus?

400

The both involve elements of vicarious learning

How does social learning theory and operant conditioning overlap?

400

Focuses on internal processes, not just observable behaviour.

How does the cognitive approach differ from the behaviourist approach?

400

Developing drug treatments for mental disorders

How does the biological approach contribute to the real world

500

How often reinforcement is given during operant conditioning

What are schedules of reinforcement? 

500

It assumes we can apply the results of animal research to humans

Why does classical conditioning lack generalisability?

500

It acknowledges the role of mental (cognitive) processes in learning, unlike pure behaviourism.

How does SLT bridge the gap between the behaviourist and cognitive approaches?

500

Drawing conclusions about mental processes based on observed behaviour.

What is meant by inference in cognitive psychology?

500

It simplifies behaviour by ignoring social and psychological factors

Why is the biological approach considered reductionist?