Chapter 6
A Transition in Modern Cognitivism: Hebb, Tolman, and the Gestaltists
Chapter Outline
Modified: 2015-11-05
- I. This Chapter
- II. Hebb's Theory: Higher Mental Processes: Or, thinking
- A. Higher Mental Processes: Between Stimulus and Response
- Processes that link stimuli and responses, often over long periods
- Known inferentially, not directly
- It might be scientifically useful to consider mental states
- Hebb's mediational constructs have a physiological basis
- B. The Physiology of Learning
- Pseudobehavioristic theory
- Mental processes intervene between stimulus and response
- C. Functioning of the Central Nervous System
- Neurons
- Nerves
- Neural transmission
- Neurotransmitters
- Synapses
- D. Hebb's Neurophysiological Assumptions
- Repeated transmission leads to permanent facilitation (e.g., definition of learning)
- Cell assemblies: groups of cells that fire together
- Phase sequences: collections of cell assemblies
- E. Neurological Changes Underlying Learning
- F. The Neurology of Reactivity and Plasticity
- Reactivity: react to external stimuli
- Plasticity: change with repeated stimulation (learning)
- Hebb Rule: long term potentiation and long term depression have a physiological basis
- G. Mediating Processes: Hypotheses and Assumptions
- 1. Basic Hypothesis: Thinking consists of cell assembly activity or phase sequence activity
- 2. Assumption 1
- Cell assemblies form with repetition
- 3. Assumption 2
- Cell assemblies firing at the same time will become associated (contiguity)
- 4. Assumption 3
- Active cell assemblies will form associations with active efferent pathways (Pavlovian conditioning)
- 5. Assumption 4
- Cell assemblies are linked to simple sensory inputs, large groups of cell assemblies working together explain perception
- H. Learning and Thinking in Hebb's Theory
- Mediation = Thinking
- Activated area of cortex determines thinking
- Learning = permanent facilitation of neural conduction
- Higher learning = combination of phase sequences
- I. Set and Attention
- Set: selectivity among responses
- Attention: selectivity among inputs
- J. Educational Applications of Hebb's Theory
- Arousal is related to set and attention
- Optimality and arousal
- K. Hebb's Theory: An Appraisal
- Transition from behaviorism to cognitivism
- Physiology of learning
- Arousal theory
- Sensory deprivation image
- Hebb Rule
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III. From Behaviorism to Cognitivism
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IV. Mechanistic Behaviorism
- V. Tolman's Purposive Behaviorism: S-S theory
Biography
- A. Do Rats Have Purpose?
- 1. The Blocked Path Study Tolman and Honzik (1930)
- Compare to Hull's habit family hierarchy
- 2. An Expectation Study (Tinklepaugh, 1928)
- Substitute lettuce for banana, monkey is upset
- 3. A Place Learning Study
- Tolman, Ritchie, and Kalish (1946)
- Direction of reinforcer, not of of original (and then blocked) response
- Macfarlane (1930)
- Rats wading then swimming and vice-versa
- 4. A Latent Learning Experiment
- Three groups: fed, not fed, switched from not fed to fed
- Graphic
- What happens?
- B. Educational Implications and Summary Principles of Tolman's System
- 1. Behavior is Purposive: goal directed
- 2. Behavior is Cognitive: expectations are cognitions
- 3. Reinforcement Establishes and confirms Expectancies: reinforcements only confirm expectations
- 4. A Theory of Purposive Behaviorism is Molar, not Reductionist: We learn bigger responses
- 5. Signs and Expectancies (back to the light switch)
- 6. Chaining-explains complex behaviors
- 7. Cognitive Maps and Isomorphism (from Gestalt Psychology)
- 8. Inferences-couples?
- C. Tolman's Purposive Behaviorism: An Appraisal
- "Grandfather" of cognitive psychology
- more of a critic than a provider of an alternative theory
- VI. Gestalt Psychology: Basic Beliefs

- Solution
- Constructivism-learner centered
- Direct teaching-teacher centered
- H. Gestalt Psychology: An Appraisal
- Vague theories but led to much research and application
- VII. Metaphors in Psychology
Conceptual Metaphor Home Page
- A. Metaphors in Behaviorism
- robots
- cognitive maps
- expectancies
- evolution
- B. Metaphors in Cognitivism
- operations
- memory
- networks
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VIII. Summary
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