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Avoidance Learning and Learned Helplessness01:14

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Avoidance learning and learned helplessness are critical concepts in understanding behavioral responses to negative stimuli.
Avoidance learning occurs when an organism learns that a specific behavior can prevent an unpleasant outcome. For example, a student who receives a bad grade may start studying harder to avoid future poor grades. This behavior persists even when the negative outcome is no longer present. Avoidance learning is powerful because it maintains behavior in the absence of the...
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Children master language quickly and with relative ease, supported by both biological predisposition and reinforcement. B. F. Skinner (1957) proposed that language is learned through reinforcement, while Noam Chomsky (1965) argued that language acquisition mechanisms are biologically determined.
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Forgetting is a complex cognitive phenomenon influenced by several factors, among which interference and decay are particularly prominent. These processes explain why individuals often struggle to retrieve specific information from memory, leading to lapses in recall that can be observed in everyday situations.
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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...
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Forgetting is an intrinsic aspect of human memory, characterized by the gradual loss or inaccessibility of information over time. Hermann Ebbinghaus, a pioneering psychologist, extensively studied this phenomenon and formulated the forgetting curve. This curve illustrates that memory loss occurs rapidly immediately after learning and then decelerates over time. Several mechanisms contribute to forgetting, including encoding failure, storage decay, retrieval failure, and interference.
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Albert Bandura's observational learning, also known as imitation or modeling, occurs when a person observes and imitates another's behavior. It is a quicker process than operant conditioning. A well-known example is the Bobo doll study, where children who saw an adult acting aggressively towards the doll were more likely to act aggressively when left alone, compared to those who observed a nonaggressive adult. Many psychologists view observational learning as a form of latent learning...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Dec 10, 2025

Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization
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Experience is Instrumental in Tuning a Link Between Language and Cognition: Evidence from 6- to 7- Month-Old Infants' Object Categorization

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Can Young Children Ignore Irrelevant Events, or Subevents, During Verb Learning?

Tyler J Howard1, Blaire M Porter1, Jane B Childers1

  • 1Trinity University.

Journal of Cognition and Development : Official Journal of the Cognitive Development Society
|September 1, 2020
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Children can learn new verbs even with distracting events present. By 3½ years, children can ignore irrelevant actions and learn verbs in complex, real-world situations.

Keywords:
event processinginterleaved examplesverb learning

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Irrelevant Stimuli and Action Control: Analyzing the Influence of Ignored Stimuli via the Distractor-Response Binding Paradigm
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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Development
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Linguistics

Background:

  • Children's verb acquisition benefits from exposure across varied situations.
  • Everyday learning contexts often include distracting events interleaved with target information.
  • Structural Alignment theory provides a framework for understanding how children map language to events.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate if children can learn verbs when irrelevant events are present.
  • To examine children's ability to segment dynamic actions into relevant subevents for verb learning.
  • To determine the age at which children can successfully ignore irrelevant information during verb acquisition.

Main Methods:

  • Study 1: 2½- and 3½-year-olds were exposed to dynamic events with interleaved irrelevant events, compared to control conditions.
  • Study 2: 2½-, 3½-, and 4½-year-olds learned verbs in conditions where relevant and irrelevant events flowed sequentially or were controlled.
  • Verb extension tasks were used to assess learning in all experimental and control groups.

Main Results:

  • Children in experimental conditions successfully extended verbs, unlike those in control groups.
  • 3½-year-olds demonstrated greater success than 2½-year-olds in Study 1.
  • In Study 2, older children (3½- and 4½-year-olds) succeeded where 2½-year-olds did not, indicating an age-related improvement in ignoring irrelevant subevents.

Conclusions:

  • Children aged 3½ years and older can learn new verbs by effectively ignoring irrelevant concurrent or sequential events.
  • These findings highlight children's capacity for robust verb learning in ecologically valid contexts with distractions.
  • The ability to filter irrelevant information is crucial for successful language acquisition in naturalistic settings.