Key study one: Watson & Rayner (1920)
Aim:
- To induce a specific phobia in a child via the mechanisms of classical conditioning
- To investigate the extent to which the specific phobia could be generalised to similar phobic stimuli
Participant:
- An 8-month-old child who was the son of a nurse that worked in the campus hospital of John Hopkins University where John Watson worked as a professor (Rosalie Rayner was his graduate student)
- Albert appeared to be a contented, unemotional child (according to Watson prior to the research process) who showed little fear generally and no specific fear of rats
- Watson tested Albert’s reactions to loud, unpleasant noises before the research officially began by hitting a steel bar with a hammer in Albert’s presence (to which Albert, unsurprisingly, reacted to with fear and distress)
- The baseline for Albert’s fear response was thus established prior to the onset of the procedure: the unconditioned stimulus was the loud, unpleasant noise and Albert’s distress/fear was the unconditioned response
Procedure:
- The procedure (which began when Albert was 11 months old) involved the use of controlled conditions in a lab setting and was conducted as follows:
- A white rat was introduced into the experimental space and when Albert reached out to touch it the steel bar was struck behind his head, making a loud, jarring noise
- Albert fell forward but did not cry; the next time he reached out for the rat the bar was struck again; Albert whimpered but did not cry
- A week later the same procedure was carried out and repeated several times until Albert started to show more signs of fear
- The next few times the rat was presented to Albert he cried and tried to crawl away
- The next week, when the rat was presented to him, Albert whimpered and turned away; he also did this when a rabbit was introduced into the space
- Varying degrees of fear and aversion were shown by Albert when the researchers brought a dog, a seal-skin coat, human hair and a Santa Claus mask into the space
- Five days later, Albert was showing signs that his fear of the rat was abating so the researchers hit the steel bar again which then produced the same fear response
- The testing of the fear response (hitting the bar behind Albert’s head) was repeated on and off over the next five days
Results: The results are as outlined in the above procedure: Albert’s continued fear response to the phobic stimuli.
Conclusion:
- It is possible to turn a neutral stimulus (e.g. a rat) into a conditioned stimulus (e.g. rat plus steel bar) which produces a conditioned response (e.g. fear) via the process of classical conditioning
- A specific conditioned phobic response (the rat) can become generalised to include phobia of fur-covered creatures or objects in general
Evaluation: Watson and Rayner (1920)
Strengths
- The use of controlled conditions and a standardised procedure within a lab setting mean that this study could be replicated to test for reliability
- The study provides insight into how a specific phobia may become generalised to include a range of phobic stimuli which could be useful information for deconditioning a phobia
Weaknesses
- The (horrendous) treatment of Albert means that this study could never (and should never!) be replicated e.g. the harm inflicted on Albert (which was not undone via deconditioning); no right to withdraw; no anonymity (Albert became one of the most famous - or infamous - people in the history of psychological research)
- The use of only one participant means that this case study cannot be generalised beyond its lone subject
The Little Albert study reads more like a horror film than a piece of research.