Albert Bandura: , demonstrated children can learn behavior through observing adults, Ivan Pavlov: , behaviors can be learned by associating an unconditioned stimulus that already elicits a particular response with a new stimulus so that the new stimulus elicits the same response, Robert Rescorla: wondered why the pairing of a CS and US does not always result in learning, said conditioning only occurs when one event reliably predicts another, B.F. Skinner: "We're all rats in a...", contributed significant research related to positive and negative reinforcement and punishment, Edward Thorndike: "Law of effect": behaviors followed by favorable consequences become more likely; behaviors followed by undesirable consequences become less likely, put cats in a puzzle box and timed how long it took them to escape; Skinner based his research on this research, done in the late 1800s-early 1900s , Edward Tolman: , demonstrated that learning may not be evident until an incentive to demonstrate it is present, John B. Watson: "Little Albert", demonstrated that emotions, not just behavior, can be conditioned, John Garcia: taste aversion, demonstrated that some learning can be biologically predisposed to occur faster,

Key Researchers Psychology of Learning

Bảng xếp hạng

Phong cách trực quan

Tùy chọn

Chuyển đổi mẫu

Bạn có muốn khôi phục tự động lưu: không?