Abstract

Habits are commonly conceptualized as learned associations whereby a stimulus triggers an associated response1-3. We propose that habits may be better understood as a process whereby a stimulus triggers only the preparation of a response, without necessarily triggering its initiation. Critically, this would allow a habit to exist without ever being overtly expressed, if the prepared habitual response is replaced by a goal-directed alternative before it can be initiated. Consistent with this hypothesis, we show that limiting the time available for response preparation4,5 can unmask latent habits. Participants practiced a visuomotor association for 4 days, after which the association was remapped. Participants easily learned the new association but habitually expressed the original association when forced to respond rapidly (~300-600 ms). More extensive practice reduced the latency at which habitual responses were prepared, in turn increasing the likelihood of their being expressed. The time-course of habit expression was captured by a computational model in which habitual responses are automatically prepared at short latency but subsequently replaced by goal-directed responses. Our results illustrate robust habit formation in humans and show that practice affects habitual behaviour in two distinct ways: by promoting habit formation and by modulating the likelihood of habit expression.

Highlights

  • Converging evidence indicates that separate goal-directed and habitual systems compete to control behavior[1]

  • We propose that a major reason why habit formation has been difficult to observe in humans is that habits exist, but are masked by goal-directed processes

  • We examined whether limiting response preparation time would unmask habitual preparation of the initially practiced response

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Summary

Introduction

Converging evidence indicates that separate goal-directed and habitual systems compete to control behavior[1]. In the 4-Day Practice condition, participants first trained on a previously unseen stimulus-response mapping, completing 4,000 reaction-time-based trials (100 trials × 10 blocks × 4 days) in which they responded as quickly as possible to visual stimuli presented in rapid succession (Figure 1d).

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