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Some of the oldest learning theories belong to the behaviorism as learning paradigm and date back from the beginning of the 20th century. The key component to this paradigm are stimulus-response (S-R) events resulting in observable behaviors which can be measured.
Behaviorists view learning as a visible change in ones behavior. Behaviorism assumes that the learner starts off as a clear state and simply responds to environmental stimuli. Those responses can be shaped through positive and negative reinforcement increasing or decreasing the probability of repeating the same behavior.
This learning paradigm can roughly be divided in two phases: behaviorism (1910 - 1930) and neobehaviorism (1930-1955). Neobehaviorism outgrew classical behaviorism by attempts to formalize the laws of behavior (sometimes in forms of mathematical equations) and beliefs that learning can also occur indirectly through observing. Neobehaviorists are sometimes considered a transitional group that shifted dominant learning perspective toward cognitivism.
Among below listed learning theories within behaviorist framework, connectionism presents an introduction to behaviorist learning and setting its frames. Classical and operand conditioning present true behaviorist learning perspectives, and sign learning finally forms a bridge from behaviorism to cognitivism which has replaced it in the second half of 20th century.
Drive Reduction Theory Discriminational Learning Contiguity Theory Stimulus Sampling Theory
Behaviorism today mostly lost its influence and let cognitivism take its place as the dominant paradigm. Critics of behaviorist learning usually argue that behaviorism:
Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy: Behaviorism.
Classical Conditioning - Introduction to Classical Conditioning.
Turner, M. B. Philosophy and the science of behavior. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1967.
Skinner, B. F. About Behaviorism. Paw Prints, 2008.
Baum, William M. Understanding behaviorism: science, behavior, and culture. Wiley-Blackwell, 1994.