The Activation of Habits
- 1 October 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Psychological Reports
- Vol. 19 (2) , 527-550
- https://doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1966.19.2.527
Abstract
This paper presents data from three sets of experiments on simple runway and barpress performance by the rat. The results are interpreted as offering support for the hypothesis that the response-specific associative and activating components of motivated behavior are independently manipulable, and that it is essentially a decrement in the activating component which accounts for the decrement in performance typically shown in extinction. The implications of this view, especially for a reconceptualization of the habit construct, are outlined. Although the research here reported is concerned with extinction, where the separability of the two components is most readily demonstrated, the hypothesis also necessarily pertains to acquisition. It holds that during acquisition of an instrumental appetitive response an organism not only learns how to respond but also develops a motivation to respond. Research is now underway on the determinants of the acquisition of this activating component. Definitive statements are not yet feasible but it may be hoped that data on the acquisition process complementary to those reported for extinction will eventually provide a more satisfactory account of the learning-motivation interaction than is at present available in the orthodox learning theories.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Differential conditioning extinction, and secondary reinforcement.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1965
- Resistance to Extinction as a Function of Instrumental Training under Two Levels of Food Deprivation and a Shift in IncentivePsychological Reports, 1963
- Experimental Extinction in Learning and MemoryThe Journal of General Psychology, 1963
- Frustrative nonreward in partial reinforcement and discrimination learning: Some recent history and a theoretical extension.Psychological Review, 1962
- Resistance to extinction as a function of degree of reproduction of training conditions.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1960
- Reinforcers and reinforcement: Their relation to maze performance.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1960
- The role of frustrative nonreward in noncontinuous reward situations.Psychological Bulletin, 1958
- Resistance to extinction as a function of continuous or intermittent presentation of a training cue.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1958
- Operant conditioning, extinction, and periodic reinforcement in relation to concentration of sucrose used as reinforcing agent.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1953
- Running time as a function of amount of food deprivation.Journal of Experimental Psychology, 1953