Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology Oklahoma State University Stillwater OK USA
2. Department of Psychology University of California Los Angeles California USA
3. Department of Psychology and Marshall School of Business University of Southern California Los Angeles California USA
Abstract
AbstractPeople achieve important life outcomes of health, financial security, and productivity by repeating operant behavior. To identify whether such operants reflect goal pursuit or habit, the present research introduces a new paradigm that yields objective measures of learning and controls for the motivations of goal pursuit. In two experiments, participants practiced a sequential task of making sushi and then completed a test of the strength of cue–response (habit) associations in memory. Finally, they repeated the sushi task without instructions while under cognitive load (designed to impede deliberation about goals). As predicted, greater task practice yielded stronger cue–response associations, which in turn promoted task success. Practice did not improve performance by enhancing goal intentions or other task motivations. We conclude that repetition facilitates performance by creating mental associations that automatically activate practiced, habitual responses upon perception of recurring context cues.
Subject
Behavioral Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
5 articles.
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