Learning and memory: an integrative approach
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Belmont, CA [u.a.]
Thomson Wadsworth
c2004
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXVI, 552 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0534619746 |
Internformat
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100 | 1 | |a Lieberman, David A. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Learning and memory |b an integrative approach |c David A. Lieberman |
264 | 1 | |a Belmont, CA [u.a.] |b Thomson Wadsworth |c c2004 | |
300 | |a XXVI, 552 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
650 | 7 | |a Conditionering (psychologie) |2 gtt | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Brief Contents
Part One Learning
1
Chapter
1
Щ
Some Basic Assumptions
3
Chapter
2
Щ
Foundations of Classical Conditioning
43
Chapter
З Ш
Principles and Applications of Conditioning
87
Chapter
4
Ш
Theories of Conditioning
115
ChapterS
Щ
Reinforcement
153
Chapter
6
Щ
Applications of Reinforcement
196
Chapter
7
Ш
Punishment
221
Chapter
8
Щ
Associative and Cognitive Processes
in Reinforcement
252
Part Two Memory
297
Chapter
9
Щ
An Introduction to Memory
299
Chapter
10
Щ
Sensory and Working Memory
334
Chapter
11
Ш
Long-Term Memory
376
Chapter
12
Ш
Retrieval
415
Chapter
13
Щ
Concepts, Learning, and Memory
464
Contents
Preface
xvi
Part One
Learning
1
CHAPTER
1
Some Basic Assumptions
3
Is Behavior Lawful?
5
Determinism versus Free Will
5
Determinism
5
Free will
6
Examples of Lawful Behavior
6
Obedience
6
Child abuse
7
Male violence
8
The Feeling of Freedom
8
Advertising
9
Sexual attraction
9
Neural Determinism
10
Movement
1
1
Emotion
1
1
Thought 1
2
Evaluation
12
How Should We Discover Any Laws?
13
Introspection
13
The unconscious
14
The
problem
of conforming reports
15
Evaluation 1
6
The Experimental Method
17
One thing at a time!
J
7
Clever Hans 1
8
The Nature of Scientific Progress
20
The slowness of progress
20
The artificiality of experiments
20
Behavioral and Cognitive
Approaches
22
Skinner s Radical Behaviorism
22
Cognitive Approaches
23
The Current Approach
24
The Use of Animals
25
The Advantages of Using Animals
25
Control of the environment
25
Simpler systems
26
Are Animal and Human Behavior Similar?
27
Problem solving
27
Language
28
Ethical Issues
31
CONTENTS
vii
Learning and Memory: An Overview
32
Learning
32
Hahituatian
33
Defining homing
33
Associative Learning
34
Classical conditioning
35
Operant
conditioning
35
Memory
37
Denning memory
37
Learning and memory
38
Summary
40
Glossary
41
Advanced Note
42
Review Questions
42
CHAPTER
2
Foundations of Classical
Conditioning
43
The Associative Tradition
44
The Reiex
44
The Association
45
The British Assockttmnists
46
The hws of association
46
Pavlov s Conditioned Reflexes
47
An Associative Analysis
48
Conditioning
49
Controlling the conditions
49
A typical experiment
50
Extinction
52
Trie concept of inhibition
54
ConâMoneâ inhibition
55
Other Phenomena
57
Semnďmder
conditioning
58
Counwconstioning
58
Generalization
58
Discriminaśon
59
The Need
кж
Control Grows
60
Conditioning Fear in Little Albeit
60
Alternative Explanations
61
Semitízatian
61
Pseudûconâitioning
62
What Behaviors Can Be
Conditioned?
64
Autonomie
and Skeletal Responses
64
Arousal
65
Brood sugar levels
66
Pain
66
Autoshaping
68
Conditioned Desires: Food, Sex and Drugs
69
Hunger
69
Sexual arousal
70
Drug craving
71
Conditioned Aversions
72
Fear
72
Taste-aversion learning
74
Conditioning and the Brain
76
The Neural Basis of Behavior
76
The Neural Basis of Learning
78
Moving at a snail s pace
78
Long-term
potentìatìon
79
Synoptic plasticity
79
Summary
82
Glossary
82
Advanced Notes
84
Review Questions
85
Sniffy Pro Exercises
86
Chapter
3
Principles ana Applications
of Conditioning
87
The Laws
öf
Association
88
Contiguity
88
TfieCS-US interval
88
Simultaneous and backward conditioning
89
Spatial contiguity
92
Frequency
92
Intensity
92
CONTmGlNCY
Ш
The Concept of Conttageacf
93
Contingency and Conditioning
95
Positive contingencies
96
Negative contingencies
97
viii CONTENTS
Preparedness
99
Taste-Aversion Learning
99
Implications
101
The role of contiguity in associative
¡earning
101
The uniformity of conditioning
101
The Adaptive Value of Preparedness
102
The value of conditioning
102
The value of preparedness
103
Blocking
103
Kamin*s Research
104
Surprise!
104
Implications
106
The role of contiguity
106
The
roh
of cognition
í
06
Applications
107
Phobias
10?
Systematic
desemitizätion
107
Exposure therapy
109
The origin of phobias
í
09
Aversion Therapy
110
Summary
112
Glossary
113
Review Questions
114
Sniffy Pro Exercises
114
Chapter
4
TbeoriesofCondakmng
115
The Rescorla-Wagner Model
The Importance of Surprise
í í
?
A Mathematical Model
117
ТЛе
¡earning curve
Î18
Quantifying surprise
í
19
Parameters
119
The
Rescohla^Wagnbr
Model:
Evaluation
121
Explaining the
Öld
122
Ccmăiuming
122
Extinction
123
Blocking
124
Contingency
125
116
Predicting the New
126
The Model s Limitations
129
Latent inhibition
129
Configurai
learning
129
Occasion setting
131
Evaluation
132
What Is Learned During
Conditioning?
133
Signai
or Substitute?
134
Stimulus substitution
134
Expectations
137
A Two-System Hypothesis
138
The brain s evolution
139
Two routes to fear
140
A Closer Look
142
The CR-UR Relationship
142
The Role of Awareness
143
Conditioning without awareness
144
Advertising
145
Causal Learning
146
Medical diagnosis
146
Implications
147
Summary
148
Glossary
149
Advanced Notes
150
Review Questions
152
Sniffy Pro Exercises
152
CHAPTERS Reinforcement
153
Thoemhke s Law of Effect
154
Are Animals Intelligent?
154
The Law of Effect
155
Some Controversial Issues
156
í
can t get no satisfaction
157
Reinforcement versus conditioning
159
TheReíkforcee
159
Primary Reinforcers
160
Иге
Premack principle
160
A efu Lfeft application
loi
CONTENTS ix
Secondary Reinforcers
162
Social
Reinforcers 163
Delay of Reinforcement
164
Delay of Reinforcement in Animals
164
Implications for Human Learning
167
Delay reduces incentive
167
Reinforcing homework
169
Schedule of Reinforcement
170
Ratio and Interval Schedules
171
The schedules
171
Patterns of responding
172
The partial reinforcement effect
174
Choosing
a
schedule
175
A Criminally Successful Application
176
Motivation
177
Contrast Effects
178
The Yerkes-Dodson Law
181
Stimulus Control
183
The Concept of Stimulus Control
183
Encouragmg Discrimination
186
Encouraging Generalization
187
A Preliminary Application
188
Summary
190
Glossary
191
Advanced Notes
192
Review Questions
193
Sniffy Pro Exercises
194
Chapter
6
Applications of
Reinforcement
196
Three Applications
197
Classroom Behavior
19?
The Token Economy
199
Autism
200
The Problem of Maintaining
Behavior
202
The Problem of Extinction
202
Tactics for Encouraging Maintenance
203
Partial reinforcement
203
Reinforcing in a variety of settings
203
Fading
204
Harmful Effects of Reinforcement
205
Moral Objections
206
Bribery
206
Greed
206
Undermining Intrinsic Motivation
207
Determinants of Undermining
208
Intrinsic or extrinsic?
208
Coercion
208
Competence
209
Evaluation
209
The principk of minimal force
209
Behavioral contracts
210
Self-Control
211
The Concept of Self-Control
212
Willpower
212
Reinforcement contingencies
213
A painful examph
214
Self-Control Techniques
214
Stimulus control
214
Self-reinforcement
215
Developing Self-Control
216
Improving Your Studying
218
Summary
219
Glossary
219
Review Questions
220
Chaffer? Punishment
221
Principles op Punishment
222
Methodological issues
222
Definitions
222
Observation versus experiment
222
Animals versus
kumam
223
χ
CONTENTS
Is Punishment Effective?
224
Bar pressing in rats
224
Self injurious behavior in humans
226
Principles
228
Intensity
228
Deky
229
Schedule
230
Stimulus control
230
Verbal exphnation
233
Side Effects of Punishment
234
Fear
234
Reduced interest
235
Impairment of attention
235
Learned helplessness
236
Aggression
238
Pain-elicited aggression
238
Modeling
238
Long-term effects
239
Conclusions
240
Application^ Children s
Misbehavior
242
Reinforcing Good Behavior
242
Using Minimal Force
244
Extinction
244
Time-out
246
Response cost
247
Summary
249
Glossary
250
Advanced Note
250
Review Questions
251
Chapter
8
Associative and Cognitive
Processes in Reinforcement
252
What Is Learned?
254
S-R Theory
254
Behaviorism
254
A cognitive view
256
Learning without responding
256
Neobehaviorism
258
Halft
view
253
Masochistic rats
260
Tolman s Expectations
261
Docility
262
Disruption
263
Reinforcer devaluation
263
The Two-System Hypothesis
265
Why Was the Issue So Difficult
to
Resolveľ
265
Convergence
265
Ambiguity
266
Two systems?
267
Controlled versus Automatic Processing
268
Automatic: Reinforcement Without
Awareness
269
Thumb twitches
269
The double agent
270
Controlled: Testing Hypotheses
271
Concept learning
272
The Fl scallop
273
Conclusions
275
Animal Cognition
276
Cognitive Maps
276
Counting
278
Language
281
Early signs
281
Washoe
282
Kann 283
The Paradox of Avoidance
284
Two-Factor Theory
284
The Response Problem
287
The problem
287
Bollen
SSĐR
solution
287
The Fearlessness Problem
288
Nonchalant dogs
289
A cognitive account
289
Evaluation
291
Summary
291
Glossary
292
Advanced
Notes
294
Review Questions
295
CONTENTS xi
Part Two
Memory
297
Chapter
9
An Introduction
to Memory
299
Ebbinghaus s Memory
301
A Lot of Nonsense
301
Learning
302
Forgetting
303
Practice Makes Perfect
303
The spacing effect
304
Remembering high school
304
From Association to Cognition
306
An Associative Analysis
306
Mediation in Paired-Associate Learning
306
Mediation
307
Implications
307
Organization in Free Recall
308
Clustering
308
Hierarchical organization
309
Implications
310
Grammar in Sentences
311
Chomsky s deep structure
311
Memory for meaning
312
Summary
313
An Information-Processing
Framework
314
The Computer Analogy
315
Computers
315
Sequential processing
316
Terminology
316
Two Clues to a Model of Memory
317
Rapid forgetting
317
Memory span
319
A Preliminärt Modbl
319
The Atkimon-Shiifrin. Model
320
STS
and
LTS
320
Control processes
320
Implications
321
Rapta
forgetting
321
Memory span
322
Primacy and recency
322
Application to Studying
324
Practice
325
Amount of practice
325
Spacing of practice
326
Think!
327
Understanding aids memory
327
SQ3R
328
Review
329
Summary
330
Glossary
331
Advanced Note
332
Review Questions
332
CogLab Exercises
333
Chapter
10
Sensory and Working
Memory
334
Sensory Memory
335
From Features to Grandmothers
335
Top Down Processing
337
Storing the Evidence
340
Short-Term Memory?
342
Two Stores or One!
342
The issue
342
Evidence from amnesia
343
STM as Activated LTM
345
Working Memory
347
The Mental Workbench
347
Three Components
348
The phonobffcd bop
349
The
wsuu Spatíd
sfaicfcjwJ
350
TL·
central executive
353
xii CONTENTS
From
STM
to ĽIM
354
Leveis
of Processing
354
Rehearsal revisited
354
Depth
355
Ehbomtian
355
Consolidation
356
Attention
359
Selective Attention
360
The cocktail party
360
Filter theories
360
Capacity themes
362
Attention as
a spoăight
364
Automatic Processing
367
Controlled
verst«
automatic processes
367
Automatization
367
Applications
369
Summaey
371
Glossary
372
Review Questions
374
CogLab Exercises
375
Chapter
łl Łong-Term
Memory
376
Memory Systems
377
Episodic and Semantic Memory
377
Two systems
378
Are they really afferent?
379
Unconscious Memories
381
Procedural memory
382
Perceptual memory
383
The role of tL· unconscious
386
Practical Implications
386
Unccmschus prejudice
387
Familiarity breeds attraction
388
Procedúrái
Issues
388
Process purity
389
Converging operations 39Q
Theories of Semantic Memory
Semantic Networks
393
A hierarchical
matki
393
Spreading
acüvation
398
392
Propositions
399
An abstract proposition
399
Ants eat jelly
401
Schemas 404
The importance of understanding 4Q4
Scripts
406
Application: Mnemonics
407
The Method of Loci
408
Why Is It Effective?
408
Organization
408
The generation effect
410
imagery
410
Summary
411
Glossary
412
Review Questions
413
CogLab Exercises
414
Chapter
12
Retrieval
415
Why Do We Forget?
416
Decay
416
Long-term memory
416
Short-term memory
419
Interference
421
Retroactive interference
421
Proactive interference
421
Erasure
425
Unavailable or inaccessible!
425
The tip-of the-tongue effect
426
Recall versus recognition
427
Savings
428
Summary
429
Retrieval Processes
429
Memory as a Warehouse
430
Storage
430
Retrieval
430
Retrieval Cues
431
Contextual cms
43
1
State-depemhtt memory
432
Encoding specificity
434
CONTENTS xiii
A Model of Retrieval; SAM
436
SAM s Assumptions
436
Coding
436
Retrieval cues
436
Cue overload
438
SAM s Predictions
438
Organization
438
Interference
440
Quantitative predictions
440
Memory as Reconstruction
442
Reconstructing the Past
442
The War of the Ghosts
442
Hindsight Has
443
Source Confusion
444
A memorable rape
444
Stopl
444
Lost at the
mdl
446
Reality Monitoring
447
Real or imagined?
447
Confabulation
448
Revisiting the Warehouse
448
Application: Memory and the Law
449
Eyewitness Testimony
450
Flashbulb memories!
450
Errors during coding
452
Errors during retrieval
452
Improving Testimony
453
řřyfmosis?
454
The cognitive interview
454
Improving lineups
455
Recovered Memories
456
Recovered memories can be real
456
Recovered memories can be fake
457
Evaluation
459
Summary
459
Glossary
460
Advanced Notes
462
Review Questions
462
CogLab Exercises
463
CHAPTER
13
Concepts, Learning,
and Memory
464
Concept Learning
466
Hypothesis Theory
467
АП ОГ Попе
learning
468
Limitations of the rfieory
469
Fuzzy Concepts
470
Prototype theory
470
Exemphr theory
472
Evaluation
472
A Neural Network Model
476
Brains and Computers
477
Neural Networks
478
Trie delta rule
479
The Rescana-Wagner model
481
Explaining Concept Learning
482
Computer simulation
482
The concept of dog
483
Cats, dogs, and bagels
486
Explaining Everything: Learning,
Memory, Language
... 487
Conditioning
487
Memory
488
Remembering Rover
488
Birds have feathers
488
Catastrophic interference
490
Language
491
A Preliminary Evaluation
492
Learning and Memory
493
Summary
496
Glossary
496
Advanced Note
497
Review Questions
498
CogLab Exercises
498
References
499
Credits
536
Name Index
538
Subject Index
547
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Lieberman, David A. |
author_facet | Lieberman, David A. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Lieberman, David A. |
author_variant | d a l da dal |
building | Verbundindex |
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callnumber-subject | BF - Psychology |
classification_rvk | CP 5000 CX 3000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)56590966 (DE-599)BVBBV035746743 |
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dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 370 - Education |
dewey-raw | 370.1523 |
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dewey-sort | 3370.1523 |
dewey-tens | 370 - Education |
discipline | Pädagogik Psychologie |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Einführung |
id | DE-604.BV035746743 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T22:03:32Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0534619746 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-018606852 |
oclc_num | 56590966 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG |
physical | XXVI, 552 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2004 |
publishDateSearch | 2004 |
publishDateSort | 2004 |
publisher | Thomson Wadsworth |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Lieberman, David A. Verfasser aut Learning and memory an integrative approach David A. Lieberman Belmont, CA [u.a.] Thomson Wadsworth c2004 XXVI, 552 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Conditionering (psychologie) gtt Geheugen gtt Leren gtt Learning, Psychology of Textbooks Memory Textbooks Psychologie (DE-588)4047704-6 gnd rswk-swf Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 gnd rswk-swf Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4151278-9 Einführung gnd-content Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 s DE-604 Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 s Psychologie (DE-588)4047704-6 s Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018606852&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Lieberman, David A. Learning and memory an integrative approach Conditionering (psychologie) gtt Geheugen gtt Leren gtt Learning, Psychology of Textbooks Memory Textbooks Psychologie (DE-588)4047704-6 gnd Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 gnd Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4047704-6 (DE-588)4019614-8 (DE-588)4074166-7 (DE-588)4151278-9 |
title | Learning and memory an integrative approach |
title_auth | Learning and memory an integrative approach |
title_exact_search | Learning and memory an integrative approach |
title_full | Learning and memory an integrative approach David A. Lieberman |
title_fullStr | Learning and memory an integrative approach David A. Lieberman |
title_full_unstemmed | Learning and memory an integrative approach David A. Lieberman |
title_short | Learning and memory |
title_sort | learning and memory an integrative approach |
title_sub | an integrative approach |
topic | Conditionering (psychologie) gtt Geheugen gtt Leren gtt Learning, Psychology of Textbooks Memory Textbooks Psychologie (DE-588)4047704-6 gnd Gedächtnis (DE-588)4019614-8 gnd Lernpsychologie (DE-588)4074166-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Conditionering (psychologie) Geheugen Leren Learning, Psychology of Textbooks Memory Textbooks Psychologie Gedächtnis Lernpsychologie Einführung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018606852&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT liebermandavida learningandmemoryanintegrativeapproach |