Investigating habits in humans with a symmetrical outcome-revaluation task.

Behav Res Methods

The Habit Lab, Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study introduces a new outcome-revaluation task designed to explore how humans develop and adjust habits based on the value of outcomes, using a symmetrical approach where half of the outcomes are valuable and the other half are not.
  • Participants learned to respond to stimuli in ways that collected valuable outcomes while avoiding non-valuable ones, with varying training durations affecting their recognition of outcome values.
  • The findings reveal that despite longer training leading to increased feelings of automaticity with stimulus-response associations, this did not enhance behavioral flexibility; in fact, more automatic responses were linked to greater mistakes when the outcomes changed in value after training.

Article Abstract

The translation of the outcome-devaluation paradigm to study habit in humans has yielded interesting insights but proven to be challenging. We present a novel, outcome-revaluation task with a symmetrical design, in the sense that half of the available outcomes are always valuable and the other half not-valuable. In the present studies, during the instrumental learning phase, participants learned to respond (Go) to certain stimuli to collect valuable outcomes (and points) while refraining to respond (NoGo) to stimuli signaling not-valuable outcomes. Half of the stimuli were short-trained, while the other half were long-trained. Subsequently, in the test phase, the signaled outcomes were either value-congruent with training (still-valuable and still-not-valuable), or value-incongruent (devalued and upvalued). The change in outcome value on value-incongruent trials meant that participants had to flexibly adjust their behavior. At the end of the training phase, participants completed the self-report behavioral automaticity index - providing an automaticity score for each stimulus-response association. We conducted two experiments using this task, that both provided evidence for stimulus-driven habits as reflected in poorer performance on devalued and upvalued trials relative to still-not-valuable trials and still-valuable trials, respectively. While self-reported automaticity increased with longer training, behavioral flexibility was not affected. After extended training (Experiment 2), higher levels of self-reported automaticity when responding to stimuli signaling valuable outcomes were related to more 'slips of action' when the associated outcome was subsequently devalued. We conclude that the symmetrical outcome-revaluation task provides a promising paradigm for the experimental investigation of habits in humans.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10439083PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13428-022-01922-4DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

outcome-revaluation task
12
habits humans
8
symmetrical outcome-revaluation
8
phase participants
8
valuable outcomes
8
stimuli signaling
8
devalued upvalued
8
self-reported automaticity
8
outcomes
5
investigating habits
4

Similar Publications

Stimuli associated with rewards can acquire the ability to capture our attention independently of our goals and intentions. Here, we examined whether attentional prioritisation of reward-related cues is sensitive to changes in the value of the reward itself. To this end, we incorporated an instructed outcome devaluation (Experiment 1a), "super-valuation" (Experiment 1b), or value switch (Experiment 2) into a visual search task, using eye-tracking to examine attentional prioritisation of stimuli signalling high- and low-value rewards.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Instant habits versus flexible tenacity: Do implementation intentions accelerate habit formation?

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)

November 2023

Habit Lab, Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Implementation intentions (strategic "if-then" plans) have been shown to support behaviour change. This may be achieved by mentally forming stimulus-response associations, thereby promoting habit formation. Does this deliberate attempt to instal "strategic automaticity" only offer advantages, or does it also come at the cost of reduced flexibility that characterises learnt habits? To investigate this, we tested healthy, young participants on a computerised instrumental learning task.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Investigating habits in humans with a symmetrical outcome-revaluation task.

Behav Res Methods

August 2023

The Habit Lab, Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Article Synopsis
  • This study introduces a new outcome-revaluation task designed to explore how humans develop and adjust habits based on the value of outcomes, using a symmetrical approach where half of the outcomes are valuable and the other half are not.
  • Participants learned to respond to stimuli in ways that collected valuable outcomes while avoiding non-valuable ones, with varying training durations affecting their recognition of outcome values.
  • The findings reveal that despite longer training leading to increased feelings of automaticity with stimulus-response associations, this did not enhance behavioral flexibility; in fact, more automatic responses were linked to greater mistakes when the outcomes changed in value after training.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!