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Habit formation and behaviour change

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posted on 2020-07-02, 00:00 authored by B Gardner, Amanda RebarAmanda Rebar
Within psychology, the term habit refers to a process whereby contexts prompt action automatically, through activation of mental context–action associations learned through prior performances. Habitual behavior is regulated by an impulsive process, and so can be elicited with minimal cognitive effort, awareness, control, or intention. When an initially goal-directed behavior becomes habitual, action initiation transfers from conscious motivational processes to context-cued impulse-driven mechanisms. Regulation of action becomes detached from motivational or volitional control. Upon encountering the associated context, the urge to enact the habitual behavior is spontaneously triggered and alternative behavioral responses become less cognitively accessible.

History

Editor

Dunn D

Start Page

1

End Page

31

Number of Pages

31

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Place of Publication

New York, NY

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • No

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