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  2. Instinctive drift, alternately known as instinctual drift, is the tendency of an animal to revert to unconscious and automatic behaviour that interferes with learned behaviour from operant conditioning. [1] [2] Instinctive drift was coined by Keller and Marian Breland, former students of B.F. Skinner at the University of Minnesota, describing ...

  3. Apr 19, 2018 · instinctive drift. the tendency of learned, reinforced behavior to gradually return to a more innate behavior. For example, raccoons trained to drop coins into a container will eventually begin to dip the coins into the container, pull them back out, rub them together, and dip them in again.

  4. Feb 28, 2024 · Instinctive drift in psychology refers to the tendency for trained behaviors to be replaced or disrupted by innate, instinctual behaviors. It is a phenomenon that occurs in both animals and humans. How is instinctive drift related to operant conditioning?

  5. Instinctive drift refers to the inherent tendency of animals to revert to their natural instinctual behaviors, even when they have been conditioned to perform a different behavior through operant conditioning. This phenomenon was first observed and studied by psychologists Keller and Marian Breland in the 1960s.

  6. Instinctual Drift. Although humans, animals, etc., can learn to perform different behaviors, there are times when they stop performing those behaviors in the way they learned and start reverting back to their more instinctual behaviors - this is the basic premise of Instinctual Drift.

  7. Instinctive drift is the tendency for conditioning to be hindered by natural instincts. Two psychologists, Keller and Marian Breland, were the first to describe instinctive drift. The Brelands found that through operant conditioning, they could teach raccoons to put a coin in a box by using food as a reinforcer.

  8. Apr 2, 2024 · Instinctive drift is a concept in psychology that refers to the tendency for human behavior to revert to more primitive, instinctual patterns under certain conditions, such as stress or trauma. This concept was first proposed by ethologist Konrad Lorenz in the 1930s, and has since been studied extensively by psychologists and other researchers.

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