Reinforcement: Types and Schedules

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๐Ÿ“˜ 6.4 Reinforcement: Types and Schedules


๐Ÿ“Œ I. What is Reinforcement?

Reinforcement refers to any stimulus or event that increases the likelihood of a behaviour being repeated. It is central to Operant Conditioning, as proposed by B.F. Skinner.


๐Ÿงพ II. Types of Reinforcement


1๏ธโƒฃ Positive Reinforcement

  • Definition: Adding a pleasant stimulus after a behaviour to increase its occurrence.
  • โœ… Encourages repetition of desired behaviour.

Example:

  • Praising a child for completing homework.
  • Giving incentives to government employees for timely report submissions.

2๏ธโƒฃ Negative Reinforcement

  • Definition: Removing an unpleasant stimulus to increase the occurrence of behaviour.
  • ๐Ÿšซ Itโ€™s not punishment โ€” it is the removal of something unpleasant.

Example:

  • Cancelling surprise tests if students submit assignments on time.
  • Turning off a loud alarm when a seatbelt is buckled.

3๏ธโƒฃ Punishment (Contrast)

  • Purpose: Decreases the likelihood of behaviour.
  • Two types:
    • Positive punishment: Adding an unpleasant stimulus (e.g., fine for littering).
    • Negative punishment: Removing a pleasant stimulus (e.g., revoking driving privileges).

Important Distinction:
Reinforcement = Increases behaviour
Punishment = Decreases behaviour


โฒ๏ธ III. Schedules of Reinforcement

Reinforcement doesnโ€™t always happen every time. Schedules determine when and how often reinforcement is delivered.


๐Ÿ“ A. Continuous Reinforcement

  • Reinforcement occurs every time the desired behaviour happens.
  • Leads to fast learning, but also fast extinction.

Example:

  • Giving a chocolate every time a child finishes a meal.

๐Ÿ“ B. Partial (Intermittent) Reinforcement

Reinforcement given occasionally. More resistant to extinction.

1. Fixed Ratio (FR)

  • Reinforcement after a fixed number of responses.

Example: Bonus for every 10 items produced.

2. Variable Ratio (VR)

  • Reinforcement after a random number of responses.

Example: Slot machines (unpredictable wins keep the user engaged).

3. Fixed Interval (FI)

  • Reinforcement after a fixed time interval.

Example: Monthly salary.

4. Variable Interval (VI)

  • Reinforcement after varying time intervals.

Example: Surprise quizzes in class.


๐Ÿ” Comparison Table

Schedule Type Based On Predictability Example Effectiveness
Continuous Every time High Praise after every right answer Quick learning
Fixed Ratio Responses High Bonus after 5 sales Steady work
Variable Ratio Responses Low Lottery tickets Very resistant to extinction
Fixed Interval Time High Monthly paycheck Scalloped response pattern
Variable Interval Time Low Pop quizzes Steady, moderate response

๐ŸŽ“ UPSC and Administrative Applications

  • Behavioral change campaigns:
    • “Swachh Bharat” success partly due to positive reinforcement through recognition.
    • Variable reinforcement (random inspections, spot rewards) sustains momentum.
  • Workplace Motivation:
    • Fixed ratio bonuses for bureaucrats or frontline workers can incentivize performance.
    • Variable interval reviews may improve consistent productivity.
  • Discipline in governance:
    • Combining negative reinforcement (removing stressors) with positive reinforcement builds trust and productivity.

โœ… Summary

  • Positive reinforcement adds a pleasant stimulus to increase behaviour.
  • Negative reinforcement removes an unpleasant stimulus to increase behaviour.
  • Reinforcement schedules affect how strongly and consistently behaviours are learned.
  • Variable ratio schedules are most resistant to extinction.

โœ๏ธ Answer Writing Strategy

  • Introduction: Define reinforcement, mention Skinner.
  • Body: Explain types with examples โ†’ explain schedules โ†’ comparison table.
  • Conclusion: Link to educational systems, work performance, and governance efficiency.

 

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