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Donald O. Hebb

Donald Olding Hebb FRS[1] (July 22, 1904 – August 20, 1985) was a Canadian psychologist who was influential in the area of neuropsychology, where he sought to understand how the function of neurons contributed to psychological processes such as learning. He is best known for his theory of Hebbian learning, which he introduced in his classic 1949 work The Organization of Behavior.[3] He has been described as the father of neuropsychology and neural networks.[4] A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Hebb as the 19th most cited psychologist of the 20th century.[5] His views on learning described behavior and thought in terms of brain function, explaining cognitive processes in terms of connections between neuron assemblies.

Donald Olding Hebb
Born(1904-07-22)July 22, 1904
DiedAugust 20, 1985(1985-08-20) (aged 81)
Chester, Nova Scotia, Canada
NationalityCanadian
Alma materDalhousie University (BA, 1925),
McGill University (MA, 1932),
Harvard University (PhD, 1936)
Known forCell assembly theory
AwardsFellow of the Royal Society[1]
Scientific career
FieldsPsychology
InstitutionsMontreal Neurological Institute,
Queen's University,
Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology,
McGill University[2]
ThesisThe innate organization of visual perception in the rat (1936)
Doctoral advisorKarl Spencer Lashley
Doctoral studentsBrenda Milner

Early life edit

Donald Hebb was born in Chester, Nova Scotia, the oldest of four children of Arthur M. and M. Clara (Olding) Hebb, and lived there until the age of 16, when his parents moved to Dartmouth, Nova Scotia.

Hebb's parents were both medical doctors. Donald's mother was heavily influenced by the ideas of Maria Montessori, and she home-schooled him until the age of 8. He performed so well in elementary school that he was promoted to the 7th grade at 10 years of age but, as a result of failing and then repeating the 11th grade in Chester, he graduated from the 12th grade at 16 years of age from Halifax County Academy. (Many or most of the single class of grade 9, 10 and 11 students at the Chester school failed the provincial examinations. Those in 9th and 10th grades were permitted to advance despite their failure but there was no 12th grade in Chester.) He entered Dalhousie University aiming to become a novelist. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1925. Afterward, he became a teacher, teaching at his old school in Chester. Later, he worked on a farm in Alberta and then traveled around, working as a laborer in Quebec.

Career edit

In 1928, he became a graduate student at McGill University. But, at the same time, he was appointed headmaster of Verdun High School in the suburbs of Montreal.[6] He worked with two colleagues from the university, Kellogg and Clarke, to improve the situation. He took a more innovative approach to education—for example, assigning more interesting schoolwork and sending anyone misbehaving outside (making schoolwork a privilege). He completed his master's degree in psychology at McGill in 1932 under the direction of the eminent psychologist Boris Babkin. Hebb's master's thesis, entitled Conditioned and Unconditioned Reflexes and Inhibition, tried to show that skeletal reflexes were due to cellular learning.[7]

By the beginning of 1934, Hebb's life was in a slump. His wife had died, following a car accident, on his twenty-ninth birthday (July 22, 1933). His work at the Montreal school was going badly. In his words, it was "defeated by the rigidity of the curriculum in Quebec's protestant schools." The focus of study at McGill was more in the direction of education and intelligence, and Hebb was now more interested in physiological psychology and was critical of the methodology of the experiments there.

He decided to leave Montreal and wrote to Robert Yerkes at Yale, where he was offered a position to study for a PhD. Babkin, however, convinced Hebb to study instead with Karl Lashley at the University of Chicago.

In July 1934, Hebb was accepted to study under Karl Lashley at the University of Chicago. His thesis was titled "The problem of spatial orientation and place learning". Hebb, along with two other students, followed Lashley to Harvard University in September 1935. Here, he had to change his thesis. At Harvard, he did his thesis research on the effects of early visual deprivation upon size and brightness perception in a rat. That is, he raised rats in the dark and some in the light and compared their brains. In 1936, he received his PhD from Harvard.[8] The following year he worked as a research assistant to Lashley and as a teaching assistant in introductory psychology for Edwin G. Boring at Radcliffe College. His Harvard thesis was soon published, and he finished the thesis he started at University of Chicago.

In 1937, Hebb married his second wife, Elizabeth Nichols Donovan. That same year, on a tip from his sister Catherine (herself a PhD student with Babkin at McGill University), he applied to work with Wilder Penfield at the Montreal Neurological Institute. Here he researched the effect of brain surgery and injury on human brain function. He saw that the brain of a child could regain partial or full function when a portion of it is removed but that similar damage in an adult could be far more damaging, even catastrophic. From this, he deduced the prominent role that external stimulation played in the thought processes of adults. In fact, the lack of this stimulation, he showed, caused diminished function and sometimes hallucinations.

He also became critical of the Stanford-Binet and Wechsler intelligence tests for use with brain surgery patients. These tests were designed to measure overall intelligence, whereas Hebb believed tests should be designed to measure more specific effects that surgery could have had on the patient. Together with N.W. Morton, he created the Adult Comprehension Test and the Picture Anomaly Test.

Putting the Picture Anomaly Test to use, he provided the first indication that the right temporal lobe was involved in visual recognition. He also showed that removal of large parts of the frontal lobe had little effect on intelligence. In fact, in one adult patient, who had a large portion of his frontal lobes removed in order to treat his epilepsy, he noted "a striking post-operative improvement in personality and intellectual capacity." From these sorts of results, he started to believe that the frontal lobes were instrumental in learning only early in life.

In 1939, he was appointed to a teaching position at Queen's University. In order to test his theory of the changing role of the frontal lobes with age, he designed a variable path maze for rats with Kenneth Williams called the Hebb-Williams maze, a method for testing animal intelligence later used in countless studies. He used the maze to test the intelligence of rats blinded at different developmental stages, showing that "there is a lasting effect of infant experience on the problem-solving ability of the adult rat." This became one of the main principles of developmental psychology, later helping those arguing the importance of the proposed Head Start programs for preschool children in economically poor neighborhoods.

In 1942, he moved to Orange Park, Florida to once again work with Karl Lashley who had replaced Yerkes as the Director of the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center. Here, studying primate behavior, Hebb developed emotional tests for chimpanzees. The experiments were somewhat unsuccessful, however because chimpanzees turned out to be hard to teach. During the course of the work there, Hebb wrote The Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological Theory,[3] his groundbreaking book that set forth the theory that the only way to explain behavior was in terms of brain function.

Afterward, he returned to McGill University to become a professor of psychology in 1947 and was made chairman of the department in 1948. Here he once again worked with Penfield, but this time through his students, which included Mortimer Mishkin, Haldor Enger Rosvold, and Brenda Milner, all of whom extended his earlier work with Penfield on the human brain.

His wife Elizabeth died in 1962. In 1966, Hebb married his third wife, Margaret Doreen Wright (née Williamson), a widow.

Hebb remained at McGill until retirement in 1972. He remained at McGill after retirement for a few years, in the Department of Psychology as an emeritus professor, conducting a seminar course required of all department graduate students.

In 1977 Hebb retired to his birthplace in Nova Scotia, where he completed his last book, Essay on Mind. He was appointed an honorary professor of psychology at his alma mater, Dalhousie, and regularly participated in colloquia there until his death at 81, in 1985.[9] He was survived by two daughters (both by his second marriage), Mary Ellen Hebb and Jane Hebb Paul.

Honors and awards edit

Hebb was a member of both the Canadian Psychological Association (CPA) and the American Psychological Association (APA). He was elected President of the CPA in 1953 and of the APA in 1960. He won the APA Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award in 1961.

He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in March 1966.[1][10][11]

He received an honorary doctorate from 15 universities, including in 1961 from University of Chicago,[12] in 1965 from Dalhousie University[13] and in 1975 from Concordia University.[14]

The Donald O. Hebb Award, named in his honor, is awarded by the Canadian Psychological Association to distinguished Canadian psychologists. The award is presented yearly to a person who has made a significant contribution to promoting the discipline of psychology as a science by conducting research, by teaching and leadership, or as a spokesperson. The inaugural award was presented to Hebb in 1980.[15]

In 2011 he was posthumously inducted into the Halifax, Nova Scotia, Discovery Centre's Hall of Fame.[16] At a 2011 meeting of the executive council of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), Hebb was selected for inclusion in CSI's Pantheon of Skeptics, an award given to deceased fellows of CSI.[17]

His archives, including records relating to research and teaching activities, are held by the McGill University Archives, McGill University, in Montreal.[8]

Work edit

The Organization of Behavior (1949) edit

The Organization of Behavior is considered Hebb's most significant contribution to the field of neuroscience. A combination of his years of work in brain surgery mixed with his study of human behavior, it finally brought together the two realms of human perception that for a long time could not be connected properly, that is, it connected the biological function of the brain as an organ together with the higher function of the mind.[3]

In 1929, Hans Berger discovered that the brain exhibits continuous electrical activity and cast doubt on the Pavlovian model of perception and response because, now, there appeared to be something going on in the brain even without much stimulus.

At the same time, there were many mysteries. For example, if there was a method for the brain to recognize a circle, how does it recognize circles of various sizes or imperfect roundness? To accommodate every single possible circle that could exist, the brain would need a far greater capacity than it has.

Another theory, the Gestalt theory, stated that signals to the brain established a sort of field. The form of this field depended only on the pattern of the inputs, but it still could not explain how this field was understood by the mind.

The behaviorist theories at the time did well at explaining how the processing of patterns happened. However, they could not account for how these patterns made it into the mind.

Hebb combined up-to-date data about behavior and the brain into a single theory. And, while the understanding of the anatomy of the brain did not advance much since the development of the older theories on the operation of the brain, he was still able to piece together a theory that got a lot of the important functions of the brain right.

Hebb's theory became known as Hebbian theory and the models which follow this theory are said to exhibit "Hebbian learning." He proposed a neurophysiological account of learning and memory based in a simple principle:[18]

When an axon of cell A is near enough to excite cell B and repeatedly or persistently takes part in firing it, some growth process or metabolic change takes place in one or both cells such that A's efficiency, as one of the cells firing B, is increased.[3]

This is often paraphrased as "Neurons that fire together wire together."[19] It is commonly referred to as Hebb's Law.

The combination of neurons which could be grouped together as one processing unit, Hebb referred to as "cell-assemblies". And their combination of connections made up the ever-changing algorithm which dictated the brain's response to stimuli.

Not only did Hebb's model for the working of the mind influence how psychologists understood the processing of stimuli within the mind but also it opened up the way for the creation of computational machines that mimicked the biological processes of a living nervous system. And while the dominant form of synaptic transmission in the nervous system was later found to be chemical, modern artificial neural networks are still based on the transmission of signals via electrical impulses that Hebbian theory was first designed around.

Theories of education edit

Hebb was instrumental in defining psychology as a biological science by identifying thought as the integrated activity of the brain.[20] His views on learning described behavior and thought in terms of brain function, explaining cognitive processes in terms of connections between neuron assemblies. These ideas played a large part in his views on education and learning.

Hebb viewed motivation and learning as related properties. He believed that everything in the brain was interrelated and worked together. His theory was that everything we experience in our environment fires a set of neurons called a cell assembly. This cell assembly is the brain's thoughts or ideas. These cell assemblies then work together to form phase sequences, which are streams of thoughts.[21] Once these cell assemblies and phase sequences are formed, they can be activated by stimulation from the environment. Therefore, the more stimulating and rich the environment, the more the cell assemblies grow and learn. This theory played into his beliefs in education. Hebb believed that the environment was very important to learning in children. Children learn by building up these cell assemblies and phase sequences. An enriched environment with varied opportunities for sensory and motor experiences contribute to children developing the cell assemblies and phase sequences necessary for continued learning in adulthood. To attempt to prove this, Hebb and his daughters raised pet rats at home. By raising them in an enriched environment, the rats showed improved maze learning in adulthood.[22] This research into environmental enrichment contributed to the development of the Head Start Program used today.

Head Start is a program for preschool children in low-income families. The aim of the program is to prepare children for success in school through an early learning program providing cognitively stimulating educational activities. According to the findings in a study on Head Start participation and school readiness, full-time Head Start participation was associated with higher academic skills in children of less-educated parents.[23]

Another long-term study by Hart and Risley tracked 42 children and their families over two years. The study focused on early language acquisition and the role of the home and family in the growth of word learning and language development. The results of their study showed that two of the most important aspects in language acquisition are the economic advantages of the children's homes and the frequency of language experiences. The study demonstrated that children of lower socioeconomic status homes, with fewer economic resources, learn fewer words and acquire vocabulary more slowly than children of professional parents with a higher socioeconomic status with access to more varied and enriched vocabulary experiences.[24]

Hebb believed that providing an enriched environment for childhood learning would benefit adult learning as well, since a second type of learning occurs as adults. This second type of learning is a more rapid and insightful learning because the cell assemblies and phase sequences have already been created and now can be rearranged in any number of ways.[25] The Hebbian theory of learning implies that every experience a person encounters becomes set into the network of brain cells. Then, each time a certain action or thought is repeated, the connection between neurons is strengthened, changing the brain and strengthening the learning. An individual is, in essence, training their brain. The more challenging new experiences a person has and practices, the more new connections are created in their brain.

Hebb as an educator edit

Throughout his life Hebb enjoyed teaching and was very successful as a teacher. Both in his early years as a teacher and a headmaster in a Montreal school and in his later years at McGill University, he proved to be a very effective educator and a great influence on the scientific thinking of his students.

As a professor at McGill, he believed that one could not teach motivation, but rather create the conditions necessary for students under which to do their study and research. One could train them to write, help them choose a problem to study, and even help keep them from being distracted, but the motivation and passion for research and study had to come from the students themselves. He believed that students should be evaluated on their ability to think and create rather than their ability to memorize and reprocess older ideas.

Hebb believed in a very objective study of the human mind, more as a study of a biological science. This attitude toward psychology and the way it is taught made McGill University a prominent center of psychological study.

Hebb also came up with the A/S ratio, a value that measures the brain complexity of an organism.

Controversial research edit

Hebb's name has often been invoked in discussions of the involvement of psychological researchers in interrogation techniques, including the use of sensory deprivation, because of his research into this field. Speaking at a Harvard symposium on sensory deprivation in June 1958, Hebb is quoted as remarking:

The work that we have done at McGill University began, actually, with the problem of brainwashing. We were not permitted to say so in the first publishing.... The chief impetus, of course, was the dismay at the kind of "confessions" being produced at the Russian Communist trials. "Brainwashing" was a term that came a little later, applied to Chinese procedures. We did not know what the Russian procedures were, but it seemed that they were producing some peculiar changes of attitude. How? One possible factor was perceptual isolation and we concentrated on that.[26]

Recent research has argued that Hebb's sensory deprivation research was funded by and coordinated with the CIA (with the CIA intending to use the research to develop new interrogation and torture techniques).[27] Some of this research was done in secret, and the results were initially shared only with United States authorities. Some of this research involved volunteers who spent hours in sensory deprivation conditions that some argue should be considered torture,[27][28] although the subjects in his studies were university student volunteers,[29] not patients, and were free to quit the experiment at any time.

Notable students edit

Selected publications edit

  • The Organization of Behaviour. 1949. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-36727-7
  • Essay on Mind. 1980. Lawrence Erlbaum. ISBN 978-0-89859-017-3.
  • The Conceptual Nervous System. 1982. Pergamon Press. ISBN 008-027418-8: a collection of 21 papers by Hebb, with a complete list of his publications, edited by Henry A. Buchtel.
  • Textbook of Psychology, Textbook of Psychology Students' Handbook (with Don C. Donderi). 1995. Kendall Hunt Pub Co. ISBN 978-0-7872-1103-5 archive.org

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Milner, P. M.; Milner, B. (1996). "Donald Olding Hebb. 22 July 1904-20 August 1985". Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society. 42: 192–204. doi:10.1098/rsbm.1996.0012. PMID 11619332. S2CID 20555128.
  2. ^ Biographies of Donald Olding Hebb November 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c d Hebb, D. O. (1949). The Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological Theory. New York: Wiley and Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-36727-7.
  4. ^ Jean-Pierre Didier, Emmanuel Bigand. Rethinking Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine: New Technologies Induce New Learning Strategies. Springer, 2010. ISBN 978-2-8178-0033-2. He was also part of the now revealed secret agency that tested volunteered solitary confinement prisoners, Putting them through tests that can cause madness and delusion that makes humans love inanimate objects and imagining fake objects/scenarios.
  5. ^ Haggbloom, Steven J.; Warnick, Renee; Warnick, Jason E.; Jones, Vinessa K.; Yarbrough, Gary L.; Russell, Tenea M.; Borecky, Chris M.; McGahhey, Reagan; et al. (2002). "The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century". Review of General Psychology. 6 (2): 139–152. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.586.1913. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.6.2.139. S2CID 145668721.
  6. ^ Milner, Peter M. (August 1986). "Donald Oldlng Hebb (1904-1985)" (PDF). Trends in Neurosciences. 9: 347–351. doi:10.1016/0166-2236(86)90107-4. S2CID 53204563. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
  7. ^ "Theses from Notable Alumni, 1931-1960". Highlights from McGill Theses and Dissertations. McGill University Library. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  8. ^ a b "Donald Olding Hebb Fonds, MG1045". McGill Archival Collections Catalogue. McGill University Archives. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  9. ^ Milner, Peter (January 1993). "Scientific American". The Mind and Donald O. Hebb. 268 (1): 124–129. JSTOR 24941344.
  10. ^ . Royal Society. Archived from the original on 2011-04-29. Retrieved 17 November 2010.
  11. ^ "About D.O. Hebb". McGill University. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
  12. ^ "Past Honorary Degree Recipients | Convocation | the University of Chicago".
  13. ^ https://www.dal.ca/academics/convocation/history_traditions/honorary_degree_recipients/hon_degree_1892_1999.html 2019-04-01 at the Wayback Machine (Dalhousie University website)
  14. ^ . archives.concordia.ca. Archived from the original on 2015-10-02. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  15. ^ "Canadian Psychological Association > CPA Award Descriptions and Past Recipients - www.cpa.ca". www.cpa.ca. Retrieved 2015-06-24.
  16. ^ http://thediscoverycentre.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Discovery-Awards-Backgrounder-2018.pdf (Discovery Centre website)
  17. ^ "The Pantheon of Skeptics". CSI. Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. from the original on 31 January 2017. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  18. ^ Keysers, Christian; Gazzola, Valeria (June 5, 2014). "Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences". Hebbian Learning and Predictive Mirror Neurons for Actions, Sensations and Emotions. 369 (1644): 1–11. JSTOR 24500757.
  19. ^ Shackleton-Jones, Nick (2019-05-03). How people learn: designing effective training to improve employee performance. London, United Kingdom. ISBN 978-0-7494-8471-2. OCLC 1098213554.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. ^ Brown, R.M.; Milner, P.M. (2003). "The Legacy of Donald O. Hebb: More than the Hebb Synapse". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 4 (12): 1013–1019. doi:10.1038/nrn1257. PMID 14682362. S2CID 205499831.
  21. ^ Hebb, D.O. (1949). The Organization of Behavior: A Neuropsychological Theory. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons.
  22. ^ Brown, R.E. (2006). "The Life and Work of Donald Olding Hebb". Acta Neuroligica Taiwanica. 15 (2): 127–142. PMID 16871901.
  23. ^ RaeHyuck, L.; Fuhua, Z. (2014). "Head Start Participation and School Readiness: Evidence from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort". Developmental Psychology. 50 (1): 202–215. doi:10.1037/a0032280. PMC 4050643. PMID 23527496.
  24. ^ Hart, B.; Risley, T.R. (1995). Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children. Baltimore, MD: Brookes Publishing Co.
  25. ^ Olson, H.H.; Hergenhahn, B.R. (2013). An Introduction to Theories of Learning. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.
  26. ^ Solomon, P., Kubzansky, Philip E., Leiderman, P. Herbert, Mendelson, Jack H., Trumbull, Richard, & Wexler, Donald, Eds. (1961). Sensory Deprivation: A Symposium Held at Harvard Medical School. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press.
  27. ^ a b McCoy, Alfred W. (2006). A question of torture: CIA interrogation, from the Cold War to the War on Terror (First Holt paperback ed.). New York. ISBN 0-8050-8248-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ Engelhardt, Tom (8 June 2009). "Pioneers of Torture". antiwar.com.
  29. ^ Heron, W. (1957). "The Pathology of Boredom". Scientific American. 196 (1): 52–56. Bibcode:1957SciAm.196a..52H. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0157-52.

Further reading edit

  • Klein, R. M. (1999). "The Hebb legacy". Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology. 53: 1–3. doi:10.1037/h0087295. S2CID 145251164.
  • "Hebb, Donald O. (1904-1985)". Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology (2 ed.). 2001.
  • "Donald Hebb Biography". Great Canadian Psychology Website. Retrieved 2006-03-09.
  • "Did he or didn't he? The Canadian accused of inventing CIA torture". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2016-01-08.
  • Richard E. Brown; Peter M. Milner (December 2003). "The Legacy Of Donald O. Hebb: More Than The Hebb Synapse". Nature Reviews Neuroscience. 4 (12): 1013–1019. doi:10.1038/nrn1257. PMID 14682362. S2CID 205499831.
  • "Donald Hebb (1904 - 1985)". Harnad E-Print Archive and Psycoloquy and BBS Journal Archives. Retrieved 2006-03-18.
  • Alfred W. McCoy (2007). "Science in Dachau's Shadow: Hebb, Beecher, and the Development of CIA Psychological Torture and Modern Medical Ethics". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 43 (4): 401–417. doi:10.1002/jhbs.20271. PMID 17912716.

External links edit

donald, hebb, donald, olding, hebb, july, 1904, august, 1985, canadian, psychologist, influential, area, neuropsychology, where, sought, understand, function, neurons, contributed, psychological, processes, such, learning, best, known, theory, hebbian, learnin. Donald Olding Hebb FRS 1 July 22 1904 August 20 1985 was a Canadian psychologist who was influential in the area of neuropsychology where he sought to understand how the function of neurons contributed to psychological processes such as learning He is best known for his theory of Hebbian learning which he introduced in his classic 1949 work The Organization of Behavior 3 He has been described as the father of neuropsychology and neural networks 4 A Review of General Psychology survey published in 2002 ranked Hebb as the 19th most cited psychologist of the 20th century 5 His views on learning described behavior and thought in terms of brain function explaining cognitive processes in terms of connections between neuron assemblies Donald Olding HebbBorn 1904 07 22 July 22 1904Chester Nova Scotia CanadaDiedAugust 20 1985 1985 08 20 aged 81 Chester Nova Scotia CanadaNationalityCanadianAlma materDalhousie University BA 1925 McGill University MA 1932 Harvard University PhD 1936 Known forCell assembly theoryAwardsFellow of the Royal Society 1 Scientific careerFieldsPsychologyInstitutionsMontreal Neurological Institute Queen s University Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology McGill University 2 ThesisThe innate organization of visual perception in the rat 1936 Doctoral advisorKarl Spencer LashleyDoctoral studentsBrenda Milner Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Honors and awards 4 Work 4 1 The Organization of Behavior 1949 5 Theories of education 5 1 Hebb as an educator 5 2 Controversial research 6 Notable students 7 Selected publications 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editDonald Hebb was born in Chester Nova Scotia the oldest of four children of Arthur M and M Clara Olding Hebb and lived there until the age of 16 when his parents moved to Dartmouth Nova Scotia Hebb s parents were both medical doctors Donald s mother was heavily influenced by the ideas of Maria Montessori and she home schooled him until the age of 8 He performed so well in elementary school that he was promoted to the 7th grade at 10 years of age but as a result of failing and then repeating the 11th grade in Chester he graduated from the 12th grade at 16 years of age from Halifax County Academy Many or most of the single class of grade 9 10 and 11 students at the Chester school failed the provincial examinations Those in 9th and 10th grades were permitted to advance despite their failure but there was no 12th grade in Chester He entered Dalhousie University aiming to become a novelist He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1925 Afterward he became a teacher teaching at his old school in Chester Later he worked on a farm in Alberta and then traveled around working as a laborer in Quebec Career editIn 1928 he became a graduate student at McGill University But at the same time he was appointed headmaster of Verdun High School in the suburbs of Montreal 6 He worked with two colleagues from the university Kellogg and Clarke to improve the situation He took a more innovative approach to education for example assigning more interesting schoolwork and sending anyone misbehaving outside making schoolwork a privilege He completed his master s degree in psychology at McGill in 1932 under the direction of the eminent psychologist Boris Babkin Hebb s master s thesis entitled Conditioned and Unconditioned Reflexes and Inhibition tried to show that skeletal reflexes were due to cellular learning 7 By the beginning of 1934 Hebb s life was in a slump His wife had died following a car accident on his twenty ninth birthday July 22 1933 His work at the Montreal school was going badly In his words it was defeated by the rigidity of the curriculum in Quebec s protestant schools The focus of study at McGill was more in the direction of education and intelligence and Hebb was now more interested in physiological psychology and was critical of the methodology of the experiments there He decided to leave Montreal and wrote to Robert Yerkes at Yale where he was offered a position to study for a PhD Babkin however convinced Hebb to study instead with Karl Lashley at the University of Chicago In July 1934 Hebb was accepted to study under Karl Lashley at the University of Chicago His thesis was titled The problem of spatial orientation and place learning Hebb along with two other students followed Lashley to Harvard University in September 1935 Here he had to change his thesis At Harvard he did his thesis research on the effects of early visual deprivation upon size and brightness perception in a rat That is he raised rats in the dark and some in the light and compared their brains In 1936 he received his PhD from Harvard 8 The following year he worked as a research assistant to Lashley and as a teaching assistant in introductory psychology for Edwin G Boring at Radcliffe College His Harvard thesis was soon published and he finished the thesis he started at University of Chicago In 1937 Hebb married his second wife Elizabeth Nichols Donovan That same year on a tip from his sister Catherine herself a PhD student with Babkin at McGill University he applied to work with Wilder Penfield at the Montreal Neurological Institute Here he researched the effect of brain surgery and injury on human brain function He saw that the brain of a child could regain partial or full function when a portion of it is removed but that similar damage in an adult could be far more damaging even catastrophic From this he deduced the prominent role that external stimulation played in the thought processes of adults In fact the lack of this stimulation he showed caused diminished function and sometimes hallucinations He also became critical of the Stanford Binet and Wechsler intelligence tests for use with brain surgery patients These tests were designed to measure overall intelligence whereas Hebb believed tests should be designed to measure more specific effects that surgery could have had on the patient Together with N W Morton he created the Adult Comprehension Test and the Picture Anomaly Test Putting the Picture Anomaly Test to use he provided the first indication that the right temporal lobe was involved in visual recognition He also showed that removal of large parts of the frontal lobe had little effect on intelligence In fact in one adult patient who had a large portion of his frontal lobes removed in order to treat his epilepsy he noted a striking post operative improvement in personality and intellectual capacity From these sorts of results he started to believe that the frontal lobes were instrumental in learning only early in life In 1939 he was appointed to a teaching position at Queen s University In order to test his theory of the changing role of the frontal lobes with age he designed a variable path maze for rats with Kenneth Williams called the Hebb Williams maze a method for testing animal intelligence later used in countless studies He used the maze to test the intelligence of rats blinded at different developmental stages showing that there is a lasting effect of infant experience on the problem solving ability of the adult rat This became one of the main principles of developmental psychology later helping those arguing the importance of the proposed Head Start programs for preschool children in economically poor neighborhoods In 1942 he moved to Orange Park Florida to once again work with Karl Lashley who had replaced Yerkes as the Director of the Yerkes Laboratories of Primate Biology at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center Here studying primate behavior Hebb developed emotional tests for chimpanzees The experiments were somewhat unsuccessful however because chimpanzees turned out to be hard to teach During the course of the work there Hebb wrote The Organization of Behavior A Neuropsychological Theory 3 his groundbreaking book that set forth the theory that the only way to explain behavior was in terms of brain function Afterward he returned to McGill University to become a professor of psychology in 1947 and was made chairman of the department in 1948 Here he once again worked with Penfield but this time through his students which included Mortimer Mishkin Haldor Enger Rosvold and Brenda Milner all of whom extended his earlier work with Penfield on the human brain His wife Elizabeth died in 1962 In 1966 Hebb married his third wife Margaret Doreen Wright nee Williamson a widow Hebb remained at McGill until retirement in 1972 He remained at McGill after retirement for a few years in the Department of Psychology as an emeritus professor conducting a seminar course required of all department graduate students In 1977 Hebb retired to his birthplace in Nova Scotia where he completed his last book Essay on Mind He was appointed an honorary professor of psychology at his alma mater Dalhousie and regularly participated in colloquia there until his death at 81 in 1985 9 He was survived by two daughters both by his second marriage Mary Ellen Hebb and Jane Hebb Paul Honors and awards editHebb was a member of both the Canadian Psychological Association CPA and the American Psychological Association APA He was elected President of the CPA in 1953 and of the APA in 1960 He won the APA Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award in 1961 He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and a Fellow of the Royal Society of London in March 1966 1 10 11 He received an honorary doctorate from 15 universities including in 1961 from University of Chicago 12 in 1965 from Dalhousie University 13 and in 1975 from Concordia University 14 The Donald O Hebb Award named in his honor is awarded by the Canadian Psychological Association to distinguished Canadian psychologists The award is presented yearly to a person who has made a significant contribution to promoting the discipline of psychology as a science by conducting research by teaching and leadership or as a spokesperson The inaugural award was presented to Hebb in 1980 15 In 2011 he was posthumously inducted into the Halifax Nova Scotia Discovery Centre s Hall of Fame 16 At a 2011 meeting of the executive council of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry CSI Hebb was selected for inclusion in CSI s Pantheon of Skeptics an award given to deceased fellows of CSI 17 His archives including records relating to research and teaching activities are held by the McGill University Archives McGill University in Montreal 8 Work editThe Organization of Behavior 1949 edit Main article The Organization of Behavior The Organization of Behavior is considered Hebb s most significant contribution to the field of neuroscience A combination of his years of work in brain surgery mixed with his study of human behavior it finally brought together the two realms of human perception that for a long time could not be connected properly that is it connected the biological function of the brain as an organ together with the higher function of the mind 3 In 1929 Hans Berger discovered that the brain exhibits continuous electrical activity and cast doubt on the Pavlovian model of perception and response because now there appeared to be something going on in the brain even without much stimulus At the same time there were many mysteries For example if there was a method for the brain to recognize a circle how does it recognize circles of various sizes or imperfect roundness To accommodate every single possible circle that could exist the brain would need a far greater capacity than it has Another theory the Gestalt theory stated that signals to the brain established a sort of field The form of this field depended only on the pattern of the inputs but it still could not explain how this field was understood by the mind The behaviorist theories at the time did well at explaining how the processing of patterns happened However they could not account for how these patterns made it into the mind Hebb combined up to date data about behavior and the brain into a single theory And while the understanding of the anatomy of the brain did not advance much since the development of the older theories on the operation of the brain he was still able to piece together a theory that got a lot of the important functions of the brain right Hebb s theory became known as Hebbian theory and the models which follow this theory are said to exhibit Hebbian learning He proposed a neurophysiological account of learning and memory based in a simple principle 18 When an axon of cell A is near enough to excite cell B and repeatedly or persistently takes part in firing it some growth process or metabolic change takes place in one or both cells such that A s efficiency as one of the cells firing B is increased 3 This is often paraphrased as Neurons that fire together wire together 19 It is commonly referred to as Hebb s Law The combination of neurons which could be grouped together as one processing unit Hebb referred to as cell assemblies And their combination of connections made up the ever changing algorithm which dictated the brain s response to stimuli Not only did Hebb s model for the working of the mind influence how psychologists understood the processing of stimuli within the mind but also it opened up the way for the creation of computational machines that mimicked the biological processes of a living nervous system And while the dominant form of synaptic transmission in the nervous system was later found to be chemical modern artificial neural networks are still based on the transmission of signals via electrical impulses that Hebbian theory was first designed around Theories of education editHebb was instrumental in defining psychology as a biological science by identifying thought as the integrated activity of the brain 20 His views on learning described behavior and thought in terms of brain function explaining cognitive processes in terms of connections between neuron assemblies These ideas played a large part in his views on education and learning Hebb viewed motivation and learning as related properties He believed that everything in the brain was interrelated and worked together His theory was that everything we experience in our environment fires a set of neurons called a cell assembly This cell assembly is the brain s thoughts or ideas These cell assemblies then work together to form phase sequences which are streams of thoughts 21 Once these cell assemblies and phase sequences are formed they can be activated by stimulation from the environment Therefore the more stimulating and rich the environment the more the cell assemblies grow and learn This theory played into his beliefs in education Hebb believed that the environment was very important to learning in children Children learn by building up these cell assemblies and phase sequences An enriched environment with varied opportunities for sensory and motor experiences contribute to children developing the cell assemblies and phase sequences necessary for continued learning in adulthood To attempt to prove this Hebb and his daughters raised pet rats at home By raising them in an enriched environment the rats showed improved maze learning in adulthood 22 This research into environmental enrichment contributed to the development of the Head Start Program used today Head Start is a program for preschool children in low income families The aim of the program is to prepare children for success in school through an early learning program providing cognitively stimulating educational activities According to the findings in a study on Head Start participation and school readiness full time Head Start participation was associated with higher academic skills in children of less educated parents 23 Another long term study by Hart and Risley tracked 42 children and their families over two years The study focused on early language acquisition and the role of the home and family in the growth of word learning and language development The results of their study showed that two of the most important aspects in language acquisition are the economic advantages of the children s homes and the frequency of language experiences The study demonstrated that children of lower socioeconomic status homes with fewer economic resources learn fewer words and acquire vocabulary more slowly than children of professional parents with a higher socioeconomic status with access to more varied and enriched vocabulary experiences 24 Hebb believed that providing an enriched environment for childhood learning would benefit adult learning as well since a second type of learning occurs as adults This second type of learning is a more rapid and insightful learning because the cell assemblies and phase sequences have already been created and now can be rearranged in any number of ways 25 The Hebbian theory of learning implies that every experience a person encounters becomes set into the network of brain cells Then each time a certain action or thought is repeated the connection between neurons is strengthened changing the brain and strengthening the learning An individual is in essence training their brain The more challenging new experiences a person has and practices the more new connections are created in their brain Hebb as an educator edit Throughout his life Hebb enjoyed teaching and was very successful as a teacher Both in his early years as a teacher and a headmaster in a Montreal school and in his later years at McGill University he proved to be a very effective educator and a great influence on the scientific thinking of his students As a professor at McGill he believed that one could not teach motivation but rather create the conditions necessary for students under which to do their study and research One could train them to write help them choose a problem to study and even help keep them from being distracted but the motivation and passion for research and study had to come from the students themselves He believed that students should be evaluated on their ability to think and create rather than their ability to memorize and reprocess older ideas Hebb believed in a very objective study of the human mind more as a study of a biological science This attitude toward psychology and the way it is taught made McGill University a prominent center of psychological study Hebb also came up with the A S ratio a value that measures the brain complexity of an organism Controversial research edit Hebb s name has often been invoked in discussions of the involvement of psychological researchers in interrogation techniques including the use of sensory deprivation because of his research into this field Speaking at a Harvard symposium on sensory deprivation in June 1958 Hebb is quoted as remarking The work that we have done at McGill University began actually with the problem of brainwashing We were not permitted to say so in the first publishing The chief impetus of course was the dismay at the kind of confessions being produced at the Russian Communist trials Brainwashing was a term that came a little later applied to Chinese procedures We did not know what the Russian procedures were but it seemed that they were producing some peculiar changes of attitude How One possible factor was perceptual isolation and we concentrated on that 26 Recent research has argued that Hebb s sensory deprivation research was funded by and coordinated with the CIA with the CIA intending to use the research to develop new interrogation and torture techniques 27 Some of this research was done in secret and the results were initially shared only with United States authorities Some of this research involved volunteers who spent hours in sensory deprivation conditions that some argue should be considered torture 27 28 although the subjects in his studies were university student volunteers 29 not patients and were free to quit the experiment at any time Notable students editMichael C Corballis Leo Goldberger Stevan Harnad Doreen Kimura Ronald Melzack Brenda Milner Mortimer Mishkin Lynn Nadel James Olds Michael Posner Case VanderwolfSelected publications editThe Organization of Behaviour 1949 John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 36727 7 Essay on Mind 1980 Lawrence Erlbaum ISBN 978 0 89859 017 3 The Conceptual Nervous System 1982 Pergamon Press ISBN 008 027418 8 a collection of 21 papers by Hebb with a complete list of his publications edited by Henry A Buchtel Textbook of Psychology Textbook of Psychology Students Handbook with Don C Donderi 1995 Kendall Hunt Pub Co ISBN 978 0 7872 1103 5 archive orgReferences edit a b c Milner P M Milner B 1996 Donald Olding Hebb 22 July 1904 20 August 1985 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society 42 192 204 doi 10 1098 rsbm 1996 0012 PMID 11619332 S2CID 20555128 Biographies of Donald Olding Hebb Archived November 25 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Hebb D O 1949 The Organization of Behavior A Neuropsychological Theory New York Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 0 471 36727 7 Jean Pierre Didier Emmanuel Bigand Rethinking Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine New Technologies Induce New Learning Strategies Springer 2010 ISBN 978 2 8178 0033 2 He was also part of the now revealed secret agency that tested volunteered solitary confinement prisoners Putting them through tests that can cause madness and delusion that makes humans love inanimate objects and imagining fake objects scenarios Haggbloom Steven J Warnick Renee Warnick Jason E Jones Vinessa K Yarbrough Gary L Russell Tenea M Borecky Chris M McGahhey Reagan et al 2002 The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century Review of General Psychology 6 2 139 152 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 586 1913 doi 10 1037 1089 2680 6 2 139 S2CID 145668721 Milner Peter M August 1986 Donald Oldlng Hebb 1904 1985 PDF Trends in Neurosciences 9 347 351 doi 10 1016 0166 2236 86 90107 4 S2CID 53204563 Retrieved 23 July 2020 Theses from Notable Alumni 1931 1960 Highlights from McGill Theses and Dissertations McGill University Library Retrieved 17 January 2019 a b Donald Olding Hebb Fonds MG1045 McGill Archival Collections Catalogue McGill University Archives Retrieved 17 January 2019 Milner Peter January 1993 Scientific American The Mind and Donald O Hebb 268 1 124 129 JSTOR 24941344 Library and Archive Catalogue Royal Society Archived from the original on 2011 04 29 Retrieved 17 November 2010 About D O Hebb McGill University Retrieved 28 August 2020 Past Honorary Degree Recipients Convocation the University of Chicago https www dal ca academics convocation history traditions honorary degree recipients hon degree 1892 1999 html Archived 2019 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Dalhousie University website Honorary Degree Citation Donald Olding Hebb Concordia University Archives archives concordia ca Archived from the original on 2015 10 02 Retrieved 2016 04 07 Canadian Psychological Association gt CPA Award Descriptions and Past Recipients www cpa ca www cpa ca Retrieved 2015 06 24 http thediscoverycentre ca wp content uploads 2019 05 Discovery Awards Backgrounder 2018 pdf Discovery Centre website The Pantheon of Skeptics CSI Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Archived from the original on 31 January 2017 Retrieved 30 April 2017 Keysers Christian Gazzola Valeria June 5 2014 Philosophical Transactions Biological Sciences Hebbian Learning and Predictive Mirror Neurons for Actions Sensations and Emotions 369 1644 1 11 JSTOR 24500757 Shackleton Jones Nick 2019 05 03 How people learn designing effective training to improve employee performance London United Kingdom ISBN 978 0 7494 8471 2 OCLC 1098213554 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Brown R M Milner P M 2003 The Legacy of Donald O Hebb More than the Hebb Synapse Nature Reviews Neuroscience 4 12 1013 1019 doi 10 1038 nrn1257 PMID 14682362 S2CID 205499831 Hebb D O 1949 The Organization of Behavior A Neuropsychological Theory New York NY John Wiley amp Sons Brown R E 2006 The Life and Work of Donald Olding Hebb Acta Neuroligica Taiwanica 15 2 127 142 PMID 16871901 RaeHyuck L Fuhua Z 2014 Head Start Participation and School Readiness Evidence from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study Birth Cohort Developmental Psychology 50 1 202 215 doi 10 1037 a0032280 PMC 4050643 PMID 23527496 Hart B Risley T R 1995 Meaningful Differences in the Everyday Experience of Young American Children Baltimore MD Brookes Publishing Co Olson H H Hergenhahn B R 2013 An Introduction to Theories of Learning Upper Saddle River NJ Pearson Solomon P Kubzansky Philip E Leiderman P Herbert Mendelson Jack H Trumbull Richard amp Wexler Donald Eds 1961 Sensory Deprivation A Symposium Held at Harvard Medical School Cambridge MA Harvard University Press a b McCoy Alfred W 2006 A question of torture CIA interrogation from the Cold War to the War on Terror First Holt paperback ed New York ISBN 0 8050 8248 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Engelhardt Tom 8 June 2009 Pioneers of Torture antiwar com Heron W 1957 The Pathology of Boredom Scientific American 196 1 52 56 Bibcode 1957SciAm 196a 52H doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0157 52 Further reading editLibrary resources about Donald O Hebb Resources in your library Resources in other libraries By Donald O Hebb Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Klein R M 1999 The Hebb legacy Canadian Journal of Experimental Psychology 53 1 3 doi 10 1037 h0087295 S2CID 145251164 Hebb Donald O 1904 1985 Gale Encyclopedia of Psychology 2 ed 2001 Donald Hebb Biography Great Canadian Psychology Website Retrieved 2006 03 09 Did he or didn t he The Canadian accused of inventing CIA torture The Globe and Mail Retrieved 2016 01 08 Richard E Brown Peter M Milner December 2003 The Legacy Of Donald O Hebb More Than The Hebb Synapse Nature Reviews Neuroscience 4 12 1013 1019 doi 10 1038 nrn1257 PMID 14682362 S2CID 205499831 Donald Hebb 1904 1985 Harnad E Print Archive and Psycoloquy and BBS Journal Archives Retrieved 2006 03 18 Alfred W McCoy 2007 Science in Dachau s Shadow Hebb Beecher and the Development of CIA Psychological Torture and Modern Medical Ethics Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 43 4 401 417 doi 10 1002 jhbs 20271 PMID 17912716 External links editWorks by or about Donald O Hebb at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Donald O Hebb amp oldid 1221579764, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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