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  1. Feb 1, 2024 · Learn about Thorndike's theory of learning by consequences, his puzzle box experiment with cats, and his law of effect. Find out how his work influenced Skinner's operant conditioning and other psychologists.

  2. Sep 19, 2018 · Thorndike noticed that when he first put cats inside the puzzle box, their behavior seemed “erratic” or “chaotic”, but after successive trials the became more focused on finding the trigger to opening the door and engaged in fewer responses which did not align with the task.

  3. The essential idea is that behavior can be modified by its consequences, as Thorndike found in his famous experiments with hungry cats in puzzle boxes. The cat was placed in a box that could be opened if the cat pressed a lever or pulled a loop.

  4. Sep 28, 2023 · He was perhaps best known for his famous puzzle box experiments with cats, which led to the development of the law of effect. Thorndike's principle suggests that responses immediately followed by positive consequences are more likely to recur.

  5. …placing a cat inside a “puzzle box,” an apparatus from which the animal could escape and obtain food only by pressing a panel, opening a catch, or pulling on a loop of string. Thorndike measured the speed with which the cat gained its release from the box on successive trials.… Read More

  6. Nov 21, 2023 · Edward Thorndike formulated the Law of Effect in 1898 after his puzzle box experiments with cats. He learned that the cats would repeat certain behaviors that led to their release from the...

  7. Nov 6, 2023 · Thorndike would place a cat inside the puzzle box and then place a piece of meat outside the box. He would then observe the animal’s efforts to escape and obtain the food. He recorded how long each animal took to figure out how to free itself from the box.