Taxing working memory shifts the balance from goals to stimulus-response habits

Publication date

2022-08-05

Authors

van Timmeren, TimORCID 0000-0003-0282-8269ISNI 0000000491725313
Watson, P.
van de Vijver, IreneISNI 0000000507748975
de Wit, S.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/workingpaper/preprint
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Despite our familiarity with the concept of habits, eliciting and measuring habits experimentally in humans has proven to be difficult. A possible explanation is that participants in psychological experiments actively recruit goal-directed control and therefore make few habitual slips-of-action in the presence of stimuli signalling devalued outcomes. In the current experiment we used the symmetrical outcome-revaluation task in combination with a working memory load in an attempt to tip the balance from goal-directed control to stimulus-response habit. During the instrumental learning phase, participants learned to make a Go response to stimuli signalling valuable outcomes (and points) while not responding (NoGo) to stimuli signalling not-valuable outcomes. During the subsequent test phase, the outcomes signalled by the stimuli were either value-congruent with training (still-valuable and still-not-valuable), or value-incongruent (devalued and upvalued). Participants had to flexibly adjust their behaviour on value-incongruent trials where the stimulus-response association learned during training was no longer appropriate. For half the participants, a concurrent working memory load was imposed during the test phase. In line with our preregistered hypotheses, participants showed evidence for habitual slips-of-action but those under working memory load showed increased habit tendencies (specifically failures to inhibit prepotent Go responses in the presence of stimuli signalling devalued outcomes). This central finding suggests that a working memory load can be used to reveal habits in humans.

Keywords

habit, goal-directed control, outcome devaluation, working-memory load, cognitive control

Citation

van Timmeren, T, Watson, P, van de Vijver, I & de Wit, S 2022 'Taxing working memory shifts the balance from goals to stimulus-response habits' PsyArXiv, pp. 1-44. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/zm9s6