The Bobo Beatdown: Crash Course Psychology #12
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- Опубліковано 9 лип 2024
- In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank talks about how we learn by observation... and how that can mean beating up an inanimate clown named Bobo.
Want more videos about psychology? Check out our sister channel SciShow Psych at / scishowpsych !
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Chapters:
Introduction: The Bobo Doll Experiment 00:00
Social Cognitive Learning 1:05
Limitations of Classical & Operant Conditioning 1:58
Learning Associations 2:38
Learning & Cognition 4:06
Latent Learning 4:58
Observational Learning, Modeling, & Imitation 5:36
Reward Pathways & Mirror Neurons 6:59
Observational Social Learning 7:58
Review & Credits 8:48
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Bobo was asking for it.
i find this offensive! No one ASKS to be a clown. lol
darknoe55 Don't even start. Being a clown is a DISGUSTING lifestyle choice. Nobody is born a clown!
Lev. 18:22 "You shall not lie with several men in a tiny car; it is an abomination"
William Williams Oh god, lmao
Fuck you and your clown-phobic Bible, I say.
William Williams
Nice Bible jokes and yes I agree being a clown is not only an odd career choice but also quite a humiliating one.
Well thx for making me laugh so hard! that's the last time I'll ever drink something while reading the comments
that moment when
you havent studied for the ap exam
that is tomorrow
and crash course is LIFE.
Jordana Hidalgo lol same here bud
Jordana Hidalgo hahahahaha that is me right now help
***** eh i got a 4 studied a couple of hours but i took it the semester before. i got beat to shit on the calculus one
***** i took BC only to get out of a final exam because i already knew i was going to take calc I in college
+Jordana Hidalgo
I have psychology mid tomorrow...I just started watching crash course
As a college student I really wish I that my classes actually taught more in a 2 1/2 hour class that crash course does in half the time. I'm literally learning more watching this than paying for a 40 hour course.
Metadragon we watched this in class
Ben 200 Why even have teachers amirite
ayyyy laughing man
I'm assuming you're in your first 2 years because this only teaches the very basic principles. This series will not supplant the modules of a credible degree.
This is recommended reading for my first year of my neuroscience major now. They learned.
We just discovered a bit of this by accident last week! Our five-month-old was being fussy in her car seat and since I couldn't pick her up for loves I started comforting one of her toys, a corduroy kitty. She loved it! I kissed, hugged and pet the toy then handed it to her and she mimicked the behavior. She was all smiles at the game till she dozed off.
My dog once choked on his food real bad. Next time we fed him he smelled his food and wouldn't eat it. We had to buy a new flavor of food for him so he could eat again. True story. :-P
+Casey C That's awesome :-) Thanks for sharing!
LMAO
That's an example of classical conditioning
x Broskee No. it's an example of operant conditioning. Classical conditioning means relating two unrelated things transitively.
Operant conditioning has more to do with cause and effect.
I may be wrong though.
This is more like avoidance learning. The dog did not learn a new behavior, so it cannot be operant conditioning. It's not classical either I think.
My mom always built me up and tried to give me a good self esteem but I grew up watching her treat herself like garbage. It was a while before I realized that to me seeing how she treated her self had a much more profound effect on the way I treated myself then all the things she told me. Do as I say and not as I do doesn't really work so be careful what you let little kids see. Next time you're dogging on yourself or saying you look fat yada yada yada look around and see if there are any children around and think about the next generation.
You can't discuss the Bobo experiments without also discussing their flaws. For one thing, the fact that children are affected by what's expected of them factors in. Famously, one kid was heard saying to its mother when brought to the experimentation facility "look mom, there's the doll we're supposed to beat." :P
Also, although social learning may have been a revolution in psychology at the time, these days the Bobo experiments are still being used to prove the effects on children of all kinds of quite unrelated things, like violent media inspiring violence in otherwise healthy kids. There's a big difference between mimicking someone punching a doll, and punching an actual person.
Well said. It was set up to encourage the children, who think differently than adults, to beat the doll.
What was even stranger was that they also imitated aggression of a cartoon animal beating up Bobo and were more likely to do so than live models. Our brains are we weird.
Watching this for my college degree =)
I hope you succeeded!
BUT PROTOOOOOO~
...I don't actually have anything to complain about. I just wanted to say that.
Ayy, didn't expect to see you here! Love your videos!
Me too haha
Dante's Disco Inferno me to
Crash Course Psychological was my favorite. Hank can you make a season two?
***** thanks. It must have auto-corrected. Cock.
This series goes along with the AP Psychology course layout.
So hug your children, share with your friends, and be kind to strangers.... good idea.
That pretty much explains why spanking/shouting at your children is really stupid.
Not only are you teaching them really inappropriate behaviour for any sort of social interaction. You've also deprived them of learning appropriate ways to resolve conflicts.
Hitting your child is also much worse than hitting your spouse from the moral standpoint.
Kelan Barr It's really interesting--Skinner himself vehemently disapproved of the use of punishment from both a moral and a pragmatic standpoint. Further studies have found ways of making punishment a more effective means of controlling behavior, but it has to be implemented very, very carefully to work well, and there are always ethical considerations.
It actually depends. The general rule is that rewards work better than punishment but there are times where it's better to lay down a woopin on dat ass.
As an adolescent who was spanked as a child, I would have to object to your position. I'm not saying that it's not bad, but as I grew I started to realize that it was just discipline. I am the kind of kid who found loopholes through my parent's punishments. I enjoy thinking to myself in my room thus making it not so much of punishment but more of a reward. If they made me do chores, I would do them as fast as possible so I wouldn't have to do more and I'd be back to being myself.
My parents would always give me a lecture before the spanking so I knew why they were gonna do it and how it's going to teach me a lesson. They told me that they spanked me, not because they enjoyed it or that it's what's gonna happen every time I do something wrong, but because they want me to behave myself in the future. I grew up never associating physical pain with doing something wrong. I personally believe I am more disciplined and well behaved because of the way they disciplined me. I know when to mess around and when to stop. I grew to have a moral standard (when most of society lacks such a thing).
So yeah...it depends.
I find if you have to instill fear in your children with physical violence to teach them a lesson something isn't working. Setting rules with kids and following through with them (VERY IMPORTANT. I have a younger sibling who gets away with a lot because my step-dad is strict well my mom is more laid back. So she'll act differently in front of them.) is much more effective. Telling them this is what's going to happen if you do this works 9/10 times. When I babysit them I follow this and it works usually (the one who gets away with stuff is the one who has trouble with it. My parents don't do this so it's like she's having different types of parenting styles). A good example I explained they each have three strikes. The first time-out they go for however old they are and with every strike, after that, they have another minute added to the time-out. After three strikes they go to bed. They didn't act out once (which is rare) and it was a good time.
People learn to acquire behaviors by observing others but also learn to avoid behaviors by observing others. When observing somebody doing something that results in an unpleasant consequence we learn to avoid doing what that person has done.
This was a good segment. Hank would have received an A in my course on this material.
My Psych AP uses your crash courses as an introduction to every unit, I laugh at your every pun and for the tests I only need to rewatch your videos, you're awesome Hank, you should keep making these videos .
So everyone here is just watching for exams? Not me, I'm watching for fun. The videos are interesting.
Same here🤘🏻
You just explained Bandura 10 times better than any of my psychology teachers. Which is pretty handy given my exam is in five weeks.
I'm taking AP Psychology, and my exam is in 7 days. No pressure XD Although the videos go relatively slow IMO from one topic to the next, Hank does explain each subject quite thoroughly.
Brandonboy97 oh dear good luck! Yeah it's slow but when it's something you need to know that's quite helpful.
So then are mirror neurons why it "hurts" when you see someone else get kicked in the nuts? Or also why you get that same feeling when watching a favorite sports team make big plays?
That sorta response is the general idea behind mirror neurons, yes. I personally think it's related to why we yawn when we see others yawn; it's all a empathic/sympathetic response. It makes sense for social animals, which includes chimps and humans.
could also explain when you see someone eat something you want it as well or why children fight over a toy when they see another play with one.
Ryuu Ainaki, what is the difference between empathic vs. sympathetic? Sounds interesting, but I can't seem to figuere it out right now.
i literally just learned about this in my psych class like this shit is gonna be on the final
And this episode is why I am subscribed to the vlogbrothers.
No pressure.
In this episode of CrashCourse Psychology, ***** talks about how we learn by observation... and how that can mean beating the tar out of an inanimate clown named Bobo.
The Bobo Beatdown - Crash Course Psychology #12
Bobo takes it on the chin for science and does so with a smile.
Do you have a video about people can surprise us by doing the opposite of what is typical, normal, and unexpected?
at furst I thought this was porn
CrashCourse thank you for this video it's help me for my psychology test
CrashCourse why can't you strangle bobo the clown for fun and to relieve stress and anger and frustration?
I suppose this is why people worry about violent games...
Jack Thompson is a living testament to the fact that people don't imitate violent video games and other media.
He's tried to ban several rap songs, most of the Grand Theft Auto series, Bully, Manhunt, and Mortal Kombat. He's also blamed several school shootings on games such as Doom, Wolfenstein, Quake, MechWarrior, and Resident Evil; including the Virginia Tech shooting before anything was even known about the shooter.
If people imitated violent video games, he'd have been the first person they all would have gone after. Yet, as of writing this, he still lives.
Yet people don't worry about violent movies for some reason. Could this be.....potentially fueled by a political agenda to blame videogames for violence so politicians can ignore inconvenient facts about socio-economic problems and (in the US) poor gun regulations?
I dunno, you be the judge.
Afro Samurai
Socio-economic problems, yes.
Poor gun regulations, no.
As with video games, there is no correlation between availability of guns and violent crime. Many of the nations with gun bans that have lower violent crime rates had similarly low rates before their gun bans were implemented, and the change was negligible. This only strengthens the argument that the vast difference between the violent crime rates in different nations is a result of socio-economic policies.
Ron Burgundy Actually there is a correlation between gun availability and violent crime, just not a strong correlation (it's pretty weak actually).
Anyway, I've seen plenty of NRA representatives and (republican) politicians point their fingers at videogames as the cause for violent crimes, because they know that the people overwhelmingly support gun regulations. Things like universal background checks are popular even amongst the members of the NRA. Sadly enough the gun manufacturers don't like the idea of selling less, so they lobby some corrupt politicians to do their biddings.
I'm not saying that guns are the main factor or even a major factor behind violent crimes. I'm saying that gun supporting politicians run with the anti-gaming rhetoric as a form of distraction.
***** That only works if people have the right guidance. A lot of parents are buying games for 12/13 year olds that are meant for people much older. And of course if they're irresponsible enough to do that I can't expect them to sit down and explain to their children that violence is wrong. I personally don't think violent games in general are a problem. But I think allowing people who are too young to fully understand them could be a problem. Then again, bad parenting is always going to be a problem.
Why are you always picking on Bernice?
Bernice is his Bobo
I absolutely love the animation in these videos
All of the animations made at crash course are crazy good
This may sound strange, but as this series goes on I like it more and more. It is getting into aspects of psychology that I had forgotten (I took my last class in the subject more than 10 years ago).
The freshness to the ideas warms my mind.
When you should be studying for your cognitive psychology exam but you're stuck on UA-cam watching videos... Oh, wait...
I feel you, exam of ''Psychology - history and application'' tomorrow. well I guess that related videos are better that just random ones haha. I hope your exam went well
Roosa Manson Thank you, I got an A, so I guess Crash Course did teach me something. Good luck with your exam.
@@EstherTheNicey i reccomend crashcourse ro many ppl very clear and informative. tends to give u more knowledge in less time than competing videos.
just had a thought. create a bunch of mazes with 10 male mice outside and 5 female mice in heat in the middle of the maze. The mice that make it to the center of the maze first have a higher chance at reproducing, which will lead to children with better cognitive mapping skills. perhaps this could lead to mice that could travel through very unknown terrain and help help people get out of lost locations such as cave ins
You'd have to train an animal bigger than a mouse for that, but I get your point. Maybe a dog?
or maybe an octopus? in an underwater environment? octopi are already capable of learning like humans
Sebastian Ferguson Interesting!
And many many generations later we will have super mice who will first fight for the Pentagon and then will enslave the human population and finally will conquer the galaxy.
Sebastian Ferguson
I saw some kind of documentary/show about that. Apparently octopi are very good at completing mazes(after a few tries)
It's interesting, that I have learned the exact contents of almost all episodes so far in a socialization class. That just shows how interdisciplinary most sciences are. Good job, it refreshes my memory.
this episode reminds me of my favourite evil parenting technique:
putting ipecac in junk food the first time your kid eats it. after they throw up they won't want that junk food anymore. having taken ipecac after eating toadstools as a kid has made me never want to eat mushrooms again.
don't actually do this btw. it's incredibly cruel and may lead to terrible side effects.
Yeah, I can see that very easily leading to eating disorders later in life.
This in unrelated to the video, but I was just talking about the greek philosopher Plato, and I accidentally called him "Platato". My brother laughed so hard.
Really top work on these videos, Hank. Psychology is your best series yet!
0:57 that uppercut though
This is my favorite crash course episode of all of the series. Great video Hank.
okay, this is briliant i spend 2 and half hours in a class and they only get through maybe a quarter of what hank talked about jeeeeez i love this
I've been a long time Vlogbrother's fan and have loved the success of crashcourse! I am quite excited that I've finally been instructed to watch some crashcourse as part of an assignment for grad school :) Watching this as prep for our unit on Social Cognitive Theory in Public Health Promotion! Thanks Hank!
Studying this at school currently, so this was very helpful! :)
I love that you have an episode on this because I have a presentation to do for psych involving aggression
Keep these coming! These are awesome! I love it!
watched this this morning just before my psychology exam and it came up! perfect last minute revision.
This might be the first time I really want to comment something about a channel. Damn boy! this is my favorite channel, it has videos about everything! biology, history, psychology... EVERYTHING! I even have the app on my phone. :) thanks for making these videos!
I'm really digging these Psychology related crash course videos
What a wonderful teaching resource! Thank you CrashCourse
I choose to spend my time watching you, Hank!
This entire crash course series is absolutley amazing. I'm taking an introductory psychology course and I keep returning to this series to reinforce and better explain concepts from the textbook.
These vids are great, I'm currently sitting my A level in psychology and resitting my AS, since it's been a year since I looked at anything for my AS exams, this really sums up a lot in a short period of time. Great recap of what I did last year, and great revision material :)
Great review for introductory pyschology students! Thanks CrashCourse
This was hilarious! Very educational, thank you!
After every chapter I read I watch you and you help me to understand it a little better.
Thanks Hank, I learnt about the Bobo Doll experiment in Sociology at school but it was great to go deeper into the psychology of it :-)
What I learned today is about beating a bobodoll through uppercut as the finisher 😂😂
thanks for making psychology so much easier to understand
This video is very helpful as I was studying for a test in my psychology class based on this it made my learning easier and more vivid
Great content! Keep on the good work.
When you find out crash course is a life saver! damn from bio to psychology okay I SEE you working!
Thanks crash course for helping me study! I also use your videos for papers and in presentations!
Oh my gosh, this is so much more interesting than my textbook! Thank youuuu!
Watching these at time two speed is fun!
CrashCourse is amazing! I wish more people had the creativity and inspiration (and strength to start from the bottom and work their way up) produce such fenomenal edu videos. Wish I had this as a help while in high school... The people that help you financially on subbable really are doing more good then they can imagine :D
This is my life saver for AP Psychology!!!!
That moment when the Bible confirmed observational learning, when it said "train the way a child should live and he will not depart from it" and "evil communications corrupt good manners."
Both are Proverbs.
Periodically through out a conversation, I'll nod and say small words to assure the person that I'm listening. During a conversation where my mom and I listened to the same person speak, without realizing it, we both began to nod and murmur in the same pattern. It was kind of hilarious since we probably looked like bobble heads, and this was the first time I ever noticed.
Thanks for these videos.. I'm a psychology student and I find them very helpful :D
the crash course is awesome, helped me study for a 4 chapter test in 2 days.
Thanks very much for uploading - I'm studying cross - culture business psychology and your videos are such a great revision for my upcoming exams!
haha same here, ginger, cross cultural psy, exams , crash course ..
Fun fact about the Bobo doll study: it was criticized for not being representative of real-life situations because people figured kids probably wouldn't treat a real person like that, so Bandura did another version of the study using a real clown and some of the kids tried to beat him up too. The more you know.
Thank you guyz this is awesome !
Amazing!!! Learned a lot!
Thanks for this informative video.
I have a behavioral science exam tomorrow and these videos are saving my life!
Watching this for Praxis II 5624 review. Outstanding!
Very nice video I watch and show to my class.
This is my favorite psychology episode.
I'm a 60's child and had a bobo. I loved my bobo. This is so interesting. Thank you.
LOVED IT!
Excellent. And I hope John watches and remembers this before he does another futbol game simulcast with Henry in the room to observe...
This man has saved me in filling in the gaps in my knowledge for class.
0:55 SHOOOOOORYUKEN
very good summary of contents
I do modelling and imitating all the time since i was a kid...i started it cause it felt good to imitate arrow or batman... And now i started to think that i was crazy but now i know.. That's the reason i started making good deductions after watching sherlock, having perfect form while shadow boxing etc.
Brilliant video, thank you
Got directed to this video and it is just the right video for these learning procedures. B Connors
great vid before Psych exam. thx
every parent should watch this!
Love Hank. He is too funny
Sometimes, to give meaning to my empty life, I watch his lips move really fast as he talks and it makes everything okay again.
hope youre doing better LMAO
Can definitely verify the bit about modeling. The 5 people you spend the most time around are a huge impact on your life.
I love your stuffed animal fish! I couldn't stop looking at it! It's cute haha!
Excellent..thank you
Crash Course is awesome!
I have my APA exam on Monday. This you tube program is better than my text-book
Beating up clowns seems oddly relevant.
lmao my Sports professor just linked this in the lecture and im studying for it right now.
So happy to see a familiar face :)
Very helpful
Love tha show and love leraning :)
omg we learned this in my anthro/psych/socio class the other day!
Love it!
Thank you!!
I recently read about a study where they would have a teacher play a game either generously or selfishly, and then would either preach that the children should play generously or not. The children were then asked to play the game themselves and observed, this was repeated 3 months later. The children who observed the teacher being generous, no surprise here, behaved generously whether or not the teacher preached to be generous, and were not generous when the teacher was not generous. The real interesting thing was that when they came back again a period later then group of children who continued to be the most generous were the group that had watched the teacher be generous, but NOT heard the teacher tell them to be generous. So I guess the conclusion from that study is that children "do what you do, but not what you say"
thank you so much for teaching me how to beat up a bobo doll! :P
Not watching for any test. Watching because I like psychology and Hank. :)
These videos are essential for midterm exams 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻 they are covering every single topic even tho you study on the other side of the earth😂🙌🏻
Thank you!