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History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
Lesson
20
NEO-BEHAVIOURISTS
Neo-Behaviourists
are psychologists who adopted the
line of thinking and
methodology of Watson,
but
were born or worked after
Watson. Watsonian behaviourism gave a
new direction to the science
of
psychology.
The old method of
introspection and speculation as a
means of information for
psychology was
rejected
and a more scientific outlook
was adopted. Only concrete
facts were considered which
were
observable.
Therefore, behaviourism became very much as the
heart of psychological thought.
Neo-
behaviourists
followed the Watsonian line of
thinking although they were
born after Watson.
Clark
Hull
The
first neo-behaviourist was Clark Hull
who was born in 1884
and died in 1952. He was
an
engineer
and a mathematician but later
turned into a psychologist. He taught at
the University of Wisconsin.
Hull
attended Koffka's lecture on Gestalt
psychology at Wisconsin University
and was impressed with
the
Gestalt
School. He had also read
Pavlov's English translation of
"Conditioned Reflexes," and
liked it very
much.
His explanation of human behaviour
therefore reflects both the Gestalt and
the Pavlovian points of
view.
Since
Clark Hull was basically a
mathematician, he aimed at expressing
his views in
mathematical
terms
very precisely. He gave a mathematical
equation which explained his view
point. The equation is as
follows:
SER=
D
x V x K x SHR
Where:
SER,
is
behaviour
D,
is drive, our need
within
V,
is Valence or stimulus intensity
K,
is incentive, motivation
SHR
is
habit
Therefore,
according to Hull, behaviour is dependent
upon drive, valance, incentive
and habit.
Since
Hull was a behaviourist he tried to
simplify behaviour and
according to him, as a person
acts in a
certain
manner or behaves in a certain
manner, the driving forces
behind it are D, V, K and
SHR. Drive
according
to Hull is the need inside a
person. A person may want to
achieve a certain goal,
reach a target or
perhaps
want to have some possession
for him. All these things
constitute the drive inside the person
are
expressed
as D in Hull's equation.
V
is the intensity of the stimulus that
governs certain behaviour. In
other words, it is how
strongly
the
stimulus is registered by the sense
organs of the body.
K
is the incentive or the motivation. It is the target
or the reward that the individual or the
subject
aims
at. It serves as the incentive for the
subject to behave in a certain
manner which would allow
him to
reach
the reward.
The
last component of Hull's equation of
behaviour is SHR, which is
the habit that a
person
develops.
Behaviourists had given the explanations
for why habits are
developed. Hull carried
forward their
ideas
and said that habits
also serve in determining how a
person behaves.
46
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
In
simple terms behaviour is the result of
many factors that include D:
drive, V: attraction or
repulsion,
K: motivation and habit. As it
can be seen, his theory
rests mainly on looking at performance,
on
observing
overall overt behaviour and
that is why he is classified as a
behaviourist.
Edward
Tolman
Edward
Tolman was another American, who
was born in 1886 and died in
1961. He studied at
Harvard
and was impressed by William
James and Watson. Tolman
believed that psychology is a science
of
behaviour
and psychologists should concentrate on
the study of behaviour only
and in addition to it he
said
that
behaviour has a "purpose."
That is why he is also
called a "purposive
behaviourist."
He
defined behaviour in a precise equation
that is:
B=
f (S, A)
Where:
B
is behaviour
f
is the function of
S
is situation variables
A
is antecedent variables
This
means that behaviour is a
function of situational variables and
antecedent variables.
A
situational variable is any variable that is a
part of the situation/environment that
affects a subject's
behaviour
in a way, for example the
hot or cold weather.
An
antecedent variable is a variable that is a
part of the subject such as
age, gender etc. and it
impacts its
behaviour.
Therefore, his explanation of behaviour
was very precise. Because of
his theory of explanation of
behaviour,
Tolman is classified as a
neo-behaviourist.
Edwin
Gutherie
Edwin
Gutherie was also a
prominent neo-behaviourist who was
born in 1886 and died in
1960.
Unlike
his contemporary psychologists, Gutherie
was less an experimentalist and
more an observer.
Based
upon his observations, he
put forward the view that
behaviour can be predicted and
controlled by the
"law
of recency," given by Thorndike, which
states that "the last
act is most likely to be
repeated."
Therefore,
behaviourism to Gutherie is repetition of the
"last act." Thorndike proposed
his law of recency
based
on experiments that he conducted on
cats. Therefore, the basis of Gutherie's thoughts
resides in
experimentalism.
Gutherie
had also read Freud and
was impressed by his method
of treatment of mental disorders.
Based
upon his behaviourist outlook,
Gutherie developed a theory of neurosis
in his book "The
Psychology
of
Human Conflict" and because
of this he may be regarded as one of the
first behaviourist
psychotherapists.
He explained neurosis to be caused due to
conflict of responses.
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