Psychology 482 Home Page

Methods of Behaviour and Learning:

The "Rat Lab"

Winter 1997


The course is now over. Here are the grades.

Grades

Student IDTerm Mark (Percent)Grant Mark (Percent)Final Grade
22294269.9827
22399481.1888
23029191808
23043579.3798
25185165.6456
31791891.1949
32510585.3718
33273956.9425
33358687.4888
33682537.1203
33715694.7969
33796879.1667
3387237512IN

Instructor

Michael Snyder
Office: P-545 Biological Sciences Building
Phone: 492-5325 / 492-5175
E-mail: msnyder@psych.ualberta.ca
URL: http://web.psych.ualberta.ca/~msnyder/homepage.html
Office hours: By appointment

Course Description

This is a laboratory course on the methods used to study behaviour change in the laboratory. We will examine several different paradigms of learning and will discuss their conceptual foundations, their laboratory methodologies, and some of their statistical analysis. A special feature of this course is that students have the opportunity to work with laboratory animals and to conduct the kinds of experiments that form part of our knowledge of learning processes.

General Information


Experiments

Study 1

Study 2

Study 3

Study 4

Study 5

Study 6

Study 7

Study 8

Study 9

Study 10


Links and Things

This course teaches about learning and behaviour using live animals in a hands-on way. However, not everyone agrees that this is the best teaching solution. A number of groups have developed software designed to supplement or replace animals in teaching. The University of York's CTI Centre for Psychology Softward Directory reviews a number of these simulations. What do you think? Should we be looking more to simulations for teaching purposes?

Just in case you're wondering what possible practical use all the knowledge from this course could be, consider this web page that explains the use of operant conditioning in dog training. Here's a link on training animals at Sea World.

Thorndike's original puzzle boxes were made out of old packing crates he found in a back alley. Every wonder what a real, live, modern Skinner box looks like? Well, here's a picture of one, also known as an operant chamber.

In this course we're taking a largely traditional approach to learning and behaviour. A hot, growing field is cognitive neuroscience. Cognitive neuroscientists will study behaviours, but they are interested in the brain structure and neuronal interaction that produce the behaviours. For this reason, cognitive neuroscientists need to have a pretty good idea of what goes on inside the cranium. For a detailed look at a adult male Sprague-Dawley rat's brain, take a look at UCLA's Rat Atlas.


If you have questions or comments, click here to send me e-mail.
I would like to take this opportunity to acknowledge that much of the material contained in these web pages is largely derived from course material developed by Dr. C.D. Heth.
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