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Related Concept Videos

Introduction to Learning01:18

Introduction to Learning

Learning is the process of acquiring knowledge or skills through practice or experience, leading to long-lasting behavioral changes. This acquisition occurs through interaction with the environment and requires practice or experience. For instance, mastering a skill such as surfing requires considerable practice and experience, highlighting the essential role of repeated interactions with the environment in learning.
In contrast to learned behaviors, unlearned behaviors such as crying, sexual...
Instinctive Drift01:05

Instinctive Drift

Instinctive drift refers to the tendency of animals to revert to their innate behaviors despite repeated reinforcement. Breland and Breland demonstrated this concept in an experiment with a raccoon. The raccoon was trained to pick up two coins and place them in a container in exchange for food. Initially, the raccoon learned to associate the coins with food, making them a conditioned stimulus or a substitute for food. However, over time, the raccoon became less willing to put the coins into the...
Generalization, Discrimination, and Extinction01:24

Generalization, Discrimination, and Extinction

Generalization, discrimination, and extinction are key concepts in operant conditioning that influence how behaviors are learned and maintained.
Generalization occurs when a behavior reinforced in one context is performed in similar situations. For instance, a student who studies diligently for calculus and receives excellent grades might apply the same study habits to psychology and history, expecting similar results. Generalization shows how learning in one setting can influence behavior in...
The Behavioral Perspective on Personality01:19

The Behavioral Perspective on Personality

Behaviorists view personality as primarily shaped by environmental reinforcements and consequences. According to this perspective, behavior is influenced by external stimuli, and individuals adjust their actions based on rewards and punishments. Over time, learning histories — accumulated patterns of reinforcement — play a significant role in shaping personality. Behaviors that lead to positive outcomes are reinforced, while those resulting in negative outcomes are diminished. Radical...
Purposive Learning01:22

Purposive Learning

E. C. Tolman emphasized the purposiveness of behavior — the idea that much of our behavior is goal-directed. For instance, employees who aim for a promotion work diligently to meet their targets. Tolman argued that when classical conditioning and operant conditioning occur, the organism acquires certain expectations. In classical conditioning, a child might fear a dog because they expect it to bite. In operant conditioning, a person might consistently work overtime because they expect a bonus...
Cognitive Learning01:21

Cognitive Learning

Cognitive learning is based on purposive behavior, incidental learning, and insight learning.
E. C. Tolman's theory of purposive behavior emphasizes that much behavior is goal-directed. He argued that to understand behavior, we must look at the entire sequence of actions leading to a goal. For instance, high school students study hard, not just due to past reinforcement but also to achieve the goal of getting into a good college.
Tolman introduced the idea that behavior is influenced by...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 29, 2026

Operant Procedures for Assessing Behavioral Flexibility in Rats
08:30

Operant Procedures for Assessing Behavioral Flexibility in Rats

Published on: February 15, 2015

The dynamics of learning and behavioral flexibility.

Jonathan D Wallis1

  • 1Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute and Department of Psychology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. wallis@berkeley.edu

Neuron
|September 29, 2011
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Behavior relies on distinguishing good from bad environmental cues. Morrison et al. reveal distinct brain dynamics in processing stimulus value, crucial for adaptive responses.

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Last Updated: May 29, 2026

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Behavioral Science
  • Computational Neuroscience

Background:

  • The ability to differentiate between beneficial and detrimental environmental stimuli is fundamental for survival and adaptive behavior.
  • Understanding the neural mechanisms underlying stimulus valuation is a key challenge in neuroscience.

Discussion:

  • This study investigates the neural dynamics associated with processing the value of environmental stimuli.
  • It highlights that different types of dynamical interactions characterize the processing of beneficial versus detrimental stimuli.
  • These findings suggest a neural basis for distinguishing between positive and negative environmental cues.

Key Insights:

  • Qualitatively different dynamical interactions exist between brain structures involved in processing environmental stimulus value.
  • These distinct neural dynamics are critical for the fundamental capacity to distinguish beneficial from detrimental stimuli.
  • The research provides novel insights into the neural computations underlying behavioral valuation.

Outlook:

  • Future research could explore how these distinct dynamical interactions are learned and modified.
  • Investigating the role of specific brain circuits in mediating these differential dynamics is warranted.
  • This work opens new avenues for understanding neurological and psychiatric disorders characterized by impaired stimulus valuation.