Giesen Carina G, Schmidt James R, Rothermund Klaus
Department of Psychology, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany.
Department of Psychology, Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Dijon, France.
Front Psychol. 2020 Jan 15;10:2927. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02927. eCollection 2019.
A habit is a regularity in automatic responding to a specific situation. Classical learning psychology explains the emergence of habits by an extended learning history during which the response becomes associated to the situation (learning of stimulus-response associations) as a function of practice ("law of exercise") and/or reinforcement ("law of effect"). In this paper, we propose the "law of recency" as another route to habit acquisition that draws on episodic memory models of automatic response regulation. According to this account, habitual responding results from (a) storing stimulus-response episodes in memory, and (b) retrieving these episodes when encountering the stimulus again. This leads to a reactivation of the response that was bound to the stimulus (c) even in the absence of extended practice and reinforcement. As a measure of habit formation, we used a modified color-word contingency learning (CL) paradigm, in which irrelevant stimulus features (i.e., word meaning) were predictive of the to-be-executed color categorization response. The paradigm we developed allowed us to assess effects of global CL and of an instance-based episodic response retrieval simultaneously within the same experiment. Two experiments revealed robust CL as well as episodic response retrieval effects. Importantly, these effects were not independent: Controlling for response retrieval effects eliminated effects of CL, which supports the claim that habit formation can be mediated by episodic retrieval processes, and that short-term binding effects are not fundamentally separate from long-term learning processes. Our findings have theoretical and practical implications regarding (a) models of long-term learning, and (b) the emergence and change of habitual responding.
习惯是对特定情境的自动反应中的一种规律性。经典学习心理学通过长期的学习经历来解释习惯的形成,在此过程中,反应通过练习(“练习律”)和/或强化(“效果律”)与情境建立联系(刺激-反应关联的学习)。在本文中,我们提出“近因律”作为习惯习得的另一条途径,它借鉴了自动反应调节的情景记忆模型。根据这一观点,习惯性反应源于(a)在记忆中存储刺激-反应情节,以及(b)再次遇到刺激时检索这些情节。这导致即使在没有长期练习和强化的情况下,与刺激相关联的反应也会重新激活(c)。作为习惯形成的一种衡量方式,我们使用了一种经过修改的颜色-单词偶联学习(CL)范式,其中无关刺激特征(即单词含义)可预测即将执行的颜色分类反应。我们开发的范式使我们能够在同一实验中同时评估整体CL效应和基于实例的情景反应检索效应。两项实验揭示了显著的CL效应以及情景反应检索效应。重要的是,这些效应并非相互独立:控制反应检索效应会消除CL效应,这支持了习惯形成可由情景检索过程介导的观点,并且短期联结效应与长期学习过程在本质上并非完全分离。我们的研究结果在(a)长期学习模型以及(b)习惯性反应的出现和变化方面具有理论和实践意义。