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Chapter Summary Of Opening Skinner's Box

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In chapter 1, Opening Skinner’s Box, Slater talks about a psychologist named B. F. Skinner. Skinner shows us how easily operant conditioning can be done. He believed that you have a better outcome if you study observable behavior instead of studying mental events. Skinner’s work focused on operant conditioning. People and animals were the subjects of his studies. They were subjected to gears or buttons and scheduled reinforcement. The experiment in this chapter deals with a box of rats he receives from one of his colleagues. He wanted to see if he could use those rats to see if he could train them using positive reinforcement. He wanted to see if hungry rats placed in a box could learn to press a lever if they were rewarded with food. The box had a lever on the side that the rats would eventually find and accidentally knock or …show more content…

Once it was knocked a pellets immediately came into the box. Each time the rats would knock the lever pellets would come down. The rats learned quickly. After Skinner learned that the rats could be trained using operant conditioning, he decided to further his experiment. He removed the pellets as a reinforced and found that the rats would eventually stop pressing the lever. He also decided to reward the rats intermittently. He found that irregularly rewarded behavior was the hardest to eradicate. He was then able to explain why we do dumb things even when we are not consistently rewarded. Skinner’s experiments were amazing and disturbing at the same time. His discoveries were significant but they also illuminated human stupidity. It’s amazing how relevant operant conditioning is to this day. I find it amazing how easy it is to condition or train someone to do something you want them

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