Deck 11: Behaviorism

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Question
The work of Russian scientists Sechenov, Bekhterev, and Pavlov was among the antecedents of behaviorism.
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Question
John B. Watson became a prominent behaviorist after a successful career in advertising.
Question
Watson argued that consciousness is not a legitimate subject for scientific study.
Question
According to Watson, habits and inborn reflexes are primarily a matter of subvocal speech.
Question
Watson proposed that emotions involve the striped muscles while instincts involve the unstriped muscles.
Question
Hunter used experiments with delayed reactions and with the temporal maze to study symbolic processes.
Question
Karl Lashley used his studies of mass action and equipotentiality to demonstrate that learning is a series of chained reflexes.
Question
Skinner proposed that any stimulus that changes the probability of a preceding response is a reinforcer.
Question
Watson's, Hull's, and Spence's versions of behaviorism were molar, while McDougall's, Tolman's, and Lashley's was molecular.
Question
Classical behaviorism was replaced by information theory and cognitive psychology.
Question
Among the antecedents of behaviorism were

A) Russian reflexologists
B) Hunter's work on symbolic processes in animal
C) Tolman's sign-Gestalt expectations
D) Lashley's work on mass action and equipotentiality
Question
Loeb, Romanes, Morgan, Jennings and Lubbock

A) all studied animal behavior
B) all undertook studies of delayed reaction
C) were among the reflexologists of the mid 20th century
D) showed that instincts are hereditary, but that habits are reflex arcs
Question
John B. Watson argued that

A) all of these
B) thinking is subvocal speech
C) consciousness is not a legitimate subject for scientific study
D) conditioning can explain all learned behavior
Question
The S-R connection, according to the behaviorists, is

A) the basic unit of behavior
B) a result of hereditary instinctual processes
C) an inborn reflex
D) subvocal speech
Question
The motor theory of thinking proposes that

A) thought is subvocal speech or other minute muscular movements
B) thinking is an instinctive motor phenomenon
C) conditioning controls instinctive thought processes
D) "motors" in the brain control thinking
Question
Hunter's procedure of delayed reaction

A) studies animals' responses to stimuli that have been removed
B) investigates behavior in the temporal maze
C) measures responses to delayed subvocal speech
D) shows that animal behavior may display features that occurred at lower levels of evolution
Question
Lashley's extirpation experiments on rat memory

A) all of these
B) demonstrated mass action and equipotentiality
C) showed that parts of the brain can take on new functions
D) convinced him that learning is not a series of chained reflexes
Question
Hull's drive-reduction theory of reinforcement argued that

A) reduction of a drive is required for reinforcement
B) satisfiers strengthen, and annoyers weaken, S-R connections
C) the hypothetico-deductive method generates "cognitive maps"
D) none of these
Question
Skinner's utopian society, Walden Two, is based on

A) the environmental control of behavior
B) classical Pavlovian conditioning
C) cognitive "sign-Gestalt expectations"
D) Hullian drive-reduction reinforcement
Question
Classical Watsonian behaviorism

A) dominated US psychology during the second quarter of the 20th century
B) dominated US psychology during the last quarter of the 20th century
C) superseded information-based cognitive psychology
D) was followed by the dominance of structuralism and functionalism
Question
What did Pavlov mean by a "conditional reflex?"
Question
What role did conditioning play in Watson's behaviorism?
Question
What was Watson's position on the role of consciousness in a science of psychology?
Question
What is the motor theory of thinking?
Question
How did the behaviorists contrast instincts and habits?
Question
What role did drive reduction play in Hull's hypothetico-deductive theory of reinforcement?
Question
Why did Hull argue that psychology must use what he called the hypothetico-deductive method?
Question
What was Guthrie's single law of learning?
Question
What is meant by "physicalism" and by "cgs terms?"
Question
What two principles of brain function did Lashley propose?
Question
What preceding school is most closely related to behaviorism?
Viewable by instructor only
Answers to short answer questions for Chapter 11: Behaviorism
Question
What is "subvocal speech," and what role did it play in the behaviorist school?
Question
How did Hunter propose to study symbolic processes in animals?
Question
What did Lashley mean by "mass action" and by "equipotentiality," and what experimental results led him to conclude that they characterize the brain?
Question
Contrast Tolman's molar with Hull's molecular approach
Question
What did Tolman mean by "sign-Gestalt expectations?"
Question
What was Skinner's operational definition of a "reinforcer?"
Question
What, according to Skinner, is "descriptive behavioristics?"
Question
What is a "cognitive map," according to Tolman?
Question
What was the chief objection of the behaviorist school to all the other schools?
Question
Briefly summarize the history of the behaviorist school during the 20th century
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Deck 11: Behaviorism
1
The work of Russian scientists Sechenov, Bekhterev, and Pavlov was among the antecedents of behaviorism.
True
2
John B. Watson became a prominent behaviorist after a successful career in advertising.
False
3
Watson argued that consciousness is not a legitimate subject for scientific study.
True
4
According to Watson, habits and inborn reflexes are primarily a matter of subvocal speech.
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k this deck
5
Watson proposed that emotions involve the striped muscles while instincts involve the unstriped muscles.
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k this deck
6
Hunter used experiments with delayed reactions and with the temporal maze to study symbolic processes.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Karl Lashley used his studies of mass action and equipotentiality to demonstrate that learning is a series of chained reflexes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Skinner proposed that any stimulus that changes the probability of a preceding response is a reinforcer.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Watson's, Hull's, and Spence's versions of behaviorism were molar, while McDougall's, Tolman's, and Lashley's was molecular.
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k this deck
10
Classical behaviorism was replaced by information theory and cognitive psychology.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Among the antecedents of behaviorism were

A) Russian reflexologists
B) Hunter's work on symbolic processes in animal
C) Tolman's sign-Gestalt expectations
D) Lashley's work on mass action and equipotentiality
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Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Loeb, Romanes, Morgan, Jennings and Lubbock

A) all studied animal behavior
B) all undertook studies of delayed reaction
C) were among the reflexologists of the mid 20th century
D) showed that instincts are hereditary, but that habits are reflex arcs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
John B. Watson argued that

A) all of these
B) thinking is subvocal speech
C) consciousness is not a legitimate subject for scientific study
D) conditioning can explain all learned behavior
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The S-R connection, according to the behaviorists, is

A) the basic unit of behavior
B) a result of hereditary instinctual processes
C) an inborn reflex
D) subvocal speech
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The motor theory of thinking proposes that

A) thought is subvocal speech or other minute muscular movements
B) thinking is an instinctive motor phenomenon
C) conditioning controls instinctive thought processes
D) "motors" in the brain control thinking
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Hunter's procedure of delayed reaction

A) studies animals' responses to stimuli that have been removed
B) investigates behavior in the temporal maze
C) measures responses to delayed subvocal speech
D) shows that animal behavior may display features that occurred at lower levels of evolution
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Lashley's extirpation experiments on rat memory

A) all of these
B) demonstrated mass action and equipotentiality
C) showed that parts of the brain can take on new functions
D) convinced him that learning is not a series of chained reflexes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Hull's drive-reduction theory of reinforcement argued that

A) reduction of a drive is required for reinforcement
B) satisfiers strengthen, and annoyers weaken, S-R connections
C) the hypothetico-deductive method generates "cognitive maps"
D) none of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Skinner's utopian society, Walden Two, is based on

A) the environmental control of behavior
B) classical Pavlovian conditioning
C) cognitive "sign-Gestalt expectations"
D) Hullian drive-reduction reinforcement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Classical Watsonian behaviorism

A) dominated US psychology during the second quarter of the 20th century
B) dominated US psychology during the last quarter of the 20th century
C) superseded information-based cognitive psychology
D) was followed by the dominance of structuralism and functionalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 41 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
What did Pavlov mean by a "conditional reflex?"
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k this deck
22
What role did conditioning play in Watson's behaviorism?
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23
What was Watson's position on the role of consciousness in a science of psychology?
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k this deck
24
What is the motor theory of thinking?
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25
How did the behaviorists contrast instincts and habits?
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26
What role did drive reduction play in Hull's hypothetico-deductive theory of reinforcement?
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27
Why did Hull argue that psychology must use what he called the hypothetico-deductive method?
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k this deck
28
What was Guthrie's single law of learning?
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29
What is meant by "physicalism" and by "cgs terms?"
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30
What two principles of brain function did Lashley propose?
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31
What preceding school is most closely related to behaviorism?
Viewable by instructor only
Answers to short answer questions for Chapter 11: Behaviorism
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k this deck
32
What is "subvocal speech," and what role did it play in the behaviorist school?
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k this deck
33
How did Hunter propose to study symbolic processes in animals?
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k this deck
34
What did Lashley mean by "mass action" and by "equipotentiality," and what experimental results led him to conclude that they characterize the brain?
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k this deck
35
Contrast Tolman's molar with Hull's molecular approach
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k this deck
36
What did Tolman mean by "sign-Gestalt expectations?"
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37
What was Skinner's operational definition of a "reinforcer?"
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38
What, according to Skinner, is "descriptive behavioristics?"
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39
What is a "cognitive map," according to Tolman?
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40
What was the chief objection of the behaviorist school to all the other schools?
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41
Briefly summarize the history of the behaviorist school during the 20th century
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