Abstract

Habits are repetitive behaviors that become ingrained with practice, routine, and repetition. The more we repeat an action, the stronger our habits become. Behavioral and clinical neuroscientists have become increasingly interested in this topic because habits may contribute to aspects of maladaptive human behavior, such as compulsive behavior in psychiatry. Numerous studies have demonstrated that habits can be induced in otherwise healthy rats by simply overtraining stimulus–response behaviors. However, despite growing interest in this topic and its application to psychiatry, a similar body of work in humans is absent. Only a single study has been published in humans that shows the effect of extensive training on habit expression. Here, we report five failed attempts to demonstrate that overtraining instrumental behavior leads to the development of inflexible habits in humans, using variants of four previously published outcome devaluation paradigms. Extensive training did not lead to greater habits in two versions of an avoidance learning task, in an appetitive slips-of-action task, or in two independent attempts to replicate the original demonstration. The finding that these outcome devaluation procedures may be insensitive to duration of stimulus-response training in humans has implications for prior work in psychiatric populations. Specifically, it converges with the suggestion that the failures in outcome devaluation in compulsive individuals reflect dysfunction in goal-directed control, rather than overactive habit learning. We discuss why habits are difficult to experimentally induce in healthy humans, and the implications of this for future research in healthy and disordered populations.

Highlights

  • Data were statistically analyzed using SPSS 24.0 and R (IBM Corp., 2015; R Core Team, 2013)

  • To address the issues raised by Experiment 1A, we designed a second study with three levels of training duration (4, 48, 96 trials per stimulus) to test whether extending the duration of training further might reveal a pattern of increasing reliance on habits

  • In contrast to Experiment 1A, here we used an unpleasant sound as the aversive outcome

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Data were statistically analyzed using SPSS 24.0 and R (IBM Corp., 2015; R Core Team, 2013). To test whether there were differences in avoidance performance following different training durations, we averaged the final four trials of each stimulus (left, right) from the training stage and compared this across groups using a one-way ANOVA. A repeated-measures ANOVA was used to test if extended training produced stronger habits in our sample. As in Experiment 1A, the dependent measure was the change in the proportion of (correct) avoidance responses made at end of training to the extinction (habit) test. We used a repeated-measures ANOVA to examine changes in discomfort as a function of training duration, with time (preexperiment, postexperiment) as a within-participants variable and training group (1-day brief, 1-day extended, 2-day) as the between-participants variable. Frequentists statistics were complement with Bayes factors, where appropriate

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call