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Little_Albert_experiment_(1920).webm (WebM audio/video file, VP8, length 3 min 21 s, 322 × 242 pixels, 345 kbps overall, file size: 8.27 MB) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Little Albert experiment was an unethical study that mid-20th century psychologists interpret as evidence of classical conditioning in humans. The study is also claimed to be an example of stimulus generalization although reading the research report demonstrates that fear did not generalize by color or tactile qualities. [ 1 ]
It has become immortalized in introductory psychology textbooks as the Little Albert experiment. The goal of the experiment was to show how principles of, at the time recently discovered, classical conditioning could be applied to condition fear of a white rat into "Little Albert", a 9-month-old boy. Watson and Rayner conditioned "Little Albert ...
Rosalie Alberta Rayner (September 25, 1898 – June 18, 1935) was an undergraduate psychology student, then research assistant (and later wife) of Johns Hopkins University psychology professor John B. Watson, with whom she carried out the study of a baby later known as "Little Albert." In the 1920s, she published essays and co-authored articles ...
While attending a speech by leading behavioral psychologist, John B. Watson, Cover Jones became interested in his most famous study, the "Little Albert experiment". In this experiment, an infant was classically conditioned to express a fearful response when a white rat was presented along with a loud noise that shocked the child. Cover Jones ...
In 1920 John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner demonstrated such fear conditioning in the Little Albert experiment.They started with a 9-month boy called "Albert", who was unemotional but was made to cry by the loud noise (unconditioned stimulus) of a hammer striking a steel bar.
The study seems to have occurred in both 1919 and 1920. If Beck et al. (2009) are right that Little Albert was Douglas Merritte, then Watson and Rayner obtained their baseline assessment of Little Albert on or around December 5, 1919 (aged 8 months 26 days) and finished it around April 1920 (aged 1 year 21 days).
John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner conduct the Little Albert experiment showing evidence of classical conditioning (1920) The Asch conformity experiments shows how group pressure can persuade an individual to conform to an obviously wrong opinion (1951) B. F. Skinner's demonstrations of operant conditioning (1930s–1960s)