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Related Concept Videos

Operant Conditioning01:21

Operant Conditioning

Operant conditioning, a key concept in behavioral psychology, involves using reinforcement and punishment to alter the likelihood of a behavior being repeated. B.F. introduced this type of conditioning. Skinner focused on voluntary behaviors and the consequences that follow them, influencing whether these behaviors will be strengthened or diminished.
Reinforcement in operant conditioning can be positive or negative, both of which serve to increase the likelihood of a behavior. Positive...
Operant Conditioning Intervention01:24

Operant Conditioning Intervention

Operant conditioning serves as a foundational principle in therapeutic interventions aimed at modifying maladaptive behaviors. Central to this approach is the notion that behaviors, both adaptive and maladaptive, are learned through reinforcement. By analyzing the environmental factors that reinforce problematic behaviors, clinicians can design interventions to weaken these reinforcements and replace maladaptive behaviors with healthier alternatives.
In operant conditioning, behaviors that are...
Associative Learning01:27

Associative Learning

Associative learning is a fundamental concept in behavioral psychology, wherein a connection is established between two stimuli or events, leading to a learned response. This process is critical in understanding how behaviors are acquired and modified. Conditioning, the mechanism through which associations are formed, can be divided into two main types: classical conditioning and operant conditioning, each elucidating different aspects of associative learning.
Classical conditioning, also known...
Law of Effect01:06

Law of Effect

B.F. Skinner, a prominent figure in behavioral psychology, introduced operant conditioning by emphasizing the role of consequences in shaping behavior. This theory builds upon the law of effect proposed by Edward Thorndike, which posits that behaviors followed by satisfying outcomes are likely to be repeated. In contrast, those followed by unsatisfying outcomes are less likely to recur.
Edward Thorndike's foundational work involved studying learning in animals, particularly using puzzle boxes...
Role of Shaping in Operant Conditioning01:19

Role of Shaping in Operant Conditioning

Shaping is a technique used in operant conditioning to train complex behaviors by rewarding successive approximations toward the target behavior. This method is necessary because organisms are unlikely to perform complex behaviors spontaneously. Instead, shaping breaks down the desired behavior into small, manageable steps.
The steps involved in shaping begin with reinforcing any response that resembles the desired behavior. For example, parents might praise a child for picking up one toy. As...
Behaviorism01:28

Behaviorism

The field of behaviorism was pioneered by figures such as Ivan Pavlov, John B. Watson, and B.F. Skinner fundamentally shifted the focus of psychology to the observable and controllable aspects of human and animal behavior. This shift marked a critical evolution in the discipline, emphasizing scientific rigor and experimental methodology.
The core premise of behaviorism is its focus on observable behavior rather than internal thoughts or feelings. This approach argues that true scientific...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 10, 2026

Visual Classical Conditioning in Wood Ants
05:46

Visual Classical Conditioning in Wood Ants

Published on: October 5, 2018

Identifying a "default" visual search mode with operant conditioning.

Jun-ichiro Kawahara1

  • 1National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Central 6, 1-1-1 Higashi, Tsukuba 305-8566, Japan. jun.kawahara@aist.go.jp

Acta Psychologica
|July 17, 2010
PubMed
Summary

Attentional capture by irrelevant stimuli depends on search strategy. Participants defaulted to detecting any oddball (singleton detection mode), not just matching features, even when consciously trying to use feature search mode.

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Last Updated: Jun 10, 2026

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Neuroscience
  • Visual Perception

Background:

  • Task-irrelevant singletons can disrupt visual search performance.
  • Attentional capture is influenced by participants' search strategies: feature search vs. singleton detection modes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To determine the default visual search strategy in an ambiguous context without explicit instructions.
  • To investigate whether conscious set can override stimulus-driven attentional capture.

Main Methods:

  • Operant conditioning was used to train participants to search for a target in an ambiguous visual search task.
  • Participants' behavioral responses and self-reported strategies were recorded.

Main Results:

  • Participants behaviorally adopted the singleton detection mode as their default strategy.
  • Despite conscious reports of using feature search mode, attentional capture by irrelevant singletons persisted.
  • Conscious strategies did not prevent capture by salient, task-irrelevant stimuli.

Conclusions:

  • The visual system may default to relying on stimulus salience for attention deployment.
  • Conscious control does not always modulate attentional capture, challenging existing theories.
  • Stimulus-driven capture can occur even when participants consciously attempt to use a feature-based search set.