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Habit, why we do what we do

A framework for understanding
how habits work and a guide to
experimenting with how they
might change.




                                        Summary of the book
                                “The Power of Habit”, by Charles Duhigg
                 This material was used during an oral presentation; it is not a complete record of the discussion.

                                                                                                                      1
Content


                    Habit, definition
                    The Habit Loop
                    Cravings
                    Framework for diagnosing and shaping habits




                                                                   The Power of Habit
                                                                   by Charles Duhigg


                                                                                   2
NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ
Habit, definition
          Something you do regularly, often without thinking.
          Habits, scientists say, emerge because the brain is constantly looking for ways
           to:
                                                                                   Habit is a choice that we
              save effort,                                                        deliberately make at
              to fully participate in decision making, and                        some point, and then stop
                                                                                   thinking about, but
              divert focus to other tasks.                                        continue doing, often
                                                                                      every day.

     Researchers from the MIT discovered a simple neurological
      loop at the core of every habit, a loop process within our brains, that
      consists of three parts:
                                                   2

                                                Routine


                               1   Cue                           Reward   3


                                                                                                       The Power of Habit
                                                                                                       by Charles Duhigg


                                                                                                                       3
NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ
The Habit Loop




                              Phase 1: Cue               Phase 2 : Routine    Phase 3: Reward
                           • First, there is a cue, a   • Then, there is a   • Finally, there is a
                             trigger that tells your      routine, a           reward, which
                             brain to go into             behavior or          helps your brain
                             automatic mode and           pattern, which       figure out if this
                             which habit to use           can be physical,     particular loop is
                                                          mental or            worth
                                                          emotional            remembering for
                                                                               the future


                                                                                                      The Power of Habit
                     Craving: The driving force of the loop, a strong desire that must be satisfied   by Charles Duhigg



NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ                                                                                                 4
Cravings

                                                           As we associate cues with certain rewards, a
                                                           subconscious craving (strong
                                                           desire), emerges in our brains that starts the
                                                           habit loop spinning.
                                                           Studies have shown that a cue and a
                                                           reward, on their own, aren’t enough for a
                                                           new habit to last. Only when your brain
                                                           starts expecting the reward – craving for
      The Cue, in addition to triggering a routine, must   distraction - will it become automatic to pick
      also trigger a craving for the reward to come.       up the phone and read the message, in
                                                           order to get the reward, the news.


                     rewards satisfy cravings                  cravings drive our behavior

              To overpower the habit, we must recognize which craving is driving the behavior
                                                                                                            The Power of Habit
                                                                                                            by Charles Duhigg


                                                                                                                            5
NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ
Diagnosing the habit loop of a particular behavior

                                             It’s the behavior you want to change
                     Identify
                       the                   List all the steps involved in the behavior
                     routine

                                                       At the moment of the urge, switch your
                                                        routine so it delivers a different reward
                                Experiment             As you test 4 or 5 different rewards, ask         Look for patterns
                                with other
                                 rewards                yourself, “Do I still feel the urge for …?”
     Identify the                                      Determine the reward you are craving
     components
     of your loop
                                                       Where are you?                          When the urge
                                                       What time is it?                        hits, write the
                                   Isolate                                                         answers.
                                  the cue              What is your emotional state?
                                                                                                  Look for patterns
                                                       Who else is around?
                                                       What action preceded the urge?


                     Have a                 Within psychology, these plans are known as “ implementation
                      plan                   intentions”
                                            Write a plan, a note, post –it, etc to make sure you remember to do              The Power of Habit
                                                                                                                              by Charles Duhigg
                                             this when the urge arises.

NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ                                                                                                                         6
Shaping the Behavior – The cookie in the afternoon habit.

                           Get up from your desk in the afternoon, walk to the
  Identify the              cafeteria, buy a chocolate chip cookie, and eat it while
    routine                 chatting with friends

                                                       Figure out which cravings are driving a
                             Experiment                 particular habit
                             with others               Adjust your routine several times so it
                              rewards                   delivers a different reward
        Habit:
   Eat a cookie                                        After 15 minutes at your desk, having
      every day.                                        tested different hypotheses, you find it
   It has caused                                        easy to get back to work
    to gain a few
       pounds
                                         Testing different hypotheses                                           Things that comes to your mind
                     1.   Go outside, walk around the block, go back to desk without eating anything      No    Still feels the urge to get up
                     2.   Go to cafeteria, buy a donut and eat it at your desk                            No    Still feels the urge to get up
                     3.   Go to cafeteria, buy an apple, eat it there while chatting with friends         Yes   Relaxed, ready to work
                     4.   Go to vending machine, buy a coffee, drink it there alone                       No    Still feels the urge to get up
                     5.   Walk over to your friend’s office and chat for a few minutes, go back to desk   Yes   Relaxed, ready to work


                           Real reward: Temporary distraction and socialization that your habit sought to satisfy                           The Power of Habit
                                                                                                                                            by Charles Duhigg



NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ                                                                                                                                       7
Shaping the Behavior – The cookie in the afternoon habit.

                                                                            Day 1         Day 2             Day 3
                                         Where are you ?                   At my desk    Logistics         Conference room
                        Isolate          What time is it ?                 3.36 pm       3.18 pm           3.41 pm
                       the cue           What is your emotional state ?    Bored         Happy             Tired for the project
                                         Who else is around ?              No one        Jim from HR       Guys from the meeting
                                         What action preceded the urge ?   Reply email   Left an invoice   Sat down at the meeting room
           Habit:
       Eat a cookie
         every day.
      It has caused
       to gain a few
          pounds


                                                      I wrote a plan : At 3.30 pm every day, I will walk to a
                            Have a plan                friend’s desk and talk for ten minutes
                                                      To make sure I remember to do this, I set the alarm on
                                                       my watch for 3.30 pm.


                                                                                                                                   The Power of Habit
                                                                                                                                   by Charles Duhigg



NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ                                                                                                                              8
The Runner’s Habit Loop
                                                  16 km. before breakfast

                           Driving Force                                   Habit Loop




                           Craving                      Cue                  Routine               Reward


                     The runner knows that        The runner’s alarm       The runner gets        After his run, the
                     he will feel great after a   goes off at 5.10 am, a   dressed, fueled and    runner enjoys a cup of
                     workout, so he anticipates   signal for him to get    reaches the road for   coffee, feels less
                     the reward - craving the     up and get outside.      his running practice   stressed, or a sense
                     endorphins, or sense of                                                      of accomplishment
                     accomplishment, etc.                                                         with his distance.

                                         Rewards are powerful because they satisfy cravings
                                                                                                                           The Power of Habit
                                                                                                                           by Charles Duhigg



NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ                                                                                                                      9
Thanks




                                Summary of the book
                        “The Power of Habit”, by Charles Duhigg
         This material was used during an oral presentation; it is not a complete record of the discussion.

                                                                                                              10

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The power of habits

  • 1. Habit, why we do what we do A framework for understanding how habits work and a guide to experimenting with how they might change. Summary of the book “The Power of Habit”, by Charles Duhigg This material was used during an oral presentation; it is not a complete record of the discussion. 1
  • 2. Content  Habit, definition  The Habit Loop  Cravings  Framework for diagnosing and shaping habits The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg 2 NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ
  • 3. Habit, definition  Something you do regularly, often without thinking.  Habits, scientists say, emerge because the brain is constantly looking for ways to: Habit is a choice that we  save effort, deliberately make at  to fully participate in decision making, and some point, and then stop thinking about, but  divert focus to other tasks. continue doing, often every day.  Researchers from the MIT discovered a simple neurological loop at the core of every habit, a loop process within our brains, that consists of three parts: 2 Routine 1 Cue Reward 3 The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg 3 NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ
  • 4. The Habit Loop Phase 1: Cue Phase 2 : Routine Phase 3: Reward • First, there is a cue, a • Then, there is a • Finally, there is a trigger that tells your routine, a reward, which brain to go into behavior or helps your brain automatic mode and pattern, which figure out if this which habit to use can be physical, particular loop is mental or worth emotional remembering for the future The Power of Habit Craving: The driving force of the loop, a strong desire that must be satisfied by Charles Duhigg NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ 4
  • 5. Cravings As we associate cues with certain rewards, a subconscious craving (strong desire), emerges in our brains that starts the habit loop spinning. Studies have shown that a cue and a reward, on their own, aren’t enough for a new habit to last. Only when your brain starts expecting the reward – craving for The Cue, in addition to triggering a routine, must distraction - will it become automatic to pick also trigger a craving for the reward to come. up the phone and read the message, in order to get the reward, the news. rewards satisfy cravings cravings drive our behavior To overpower the habit, we must recognize which craving is driving the behavior The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg 5 NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ
  • 6. Diagnosing the habit loop of a particular behavior  It’s the behavior you want to change Identify the  List all the steps involved in the behavior routine  At the moment of the urge, switch your routine so it delivers a different reward Experiment  As you test 4 or 5 different rewards, ask Look for patterns with other rewards yourself, “Do I still feel the urge for …?” Identify the  Determine the reward you are craving components of your loop  Where are you? When the urge  What time is it? hits, write the Isolate answers. the cue  What is your emotional state? Look for patterns  Who else is around?  What action preceded the urge? Have a  Within psychology, these plans are known as “ implementation plan intentions”  Write a plan, a note, post –it, etc to make sure you remember to do The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg this when the urge arises. NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ 6
  • 7. Shaping the Behavior – The cookie in the afternoon habit.  Get up from your desk in the afternoon, walk to the Identify the cafeteria, buy a chocolate chip cookie, and eat it while routine chatting with friends  Figure out which cravings are driving a Experiment particular habit with others  Adjust your routine several times so it rewards delivers a different reward Habit: Eat a cookie  After 15 minutes at your desk, having every day. tested different hypotheses, you find it It has caused easy to get back to work to gain a few pounds Testing different hypotheses Things that comes to your mind 1. Go outside, walk around the block, go back to desk without eating anything No Still feels the urge to get up 2. Go to cafeteria, buy a donut and eat it at your desk No Still feels the urge to get up 3. Go to cafeteria, buy an apple, eat it there while chatting with friends Yes Relaxed, ready to work 4. Go to vending machine, buy a coffee, drink it there alone No Still feels the urge to get up 5. Walk over to your friend’s office and chat for a few minutes, go back to desk Yes Relaxed, ready to work Real reward: Temporary distraction and socialization that your habit sought to satisfy The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ 7
  • 8. Shaping the Behavior – The cookie in the afternoon habit. Day 1 Day 2 Day 3  Where are you ? At my desk Logistics Conference room Isolate  What time is it ? 3.36 pm 3.18 pm 3.41 pm the cue  What is your emotional state ? Bored Happy Tired for the project  Who else is around ? No one Jim from HR Guys from the meeting  What action preceded the urge ? Reply email Left an invoice Sat down at the meeting room Habit: Eat a cookie every day. It has caused to gain a few pounds  I wrote a plan : At 3.30 pm every day, I will walk to a Have a plan friend’s desk and talk for ten minutes  To make sure I remember to do this, I set the alarm on my watch for 3.30 pm. The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ 8
  • 9. The Runner’s Habit Loop 16 km. before breakfast Driving Force Habit Loop Craving Cue Routine Reward The runner knows that The runner’s alarm The runner gets After his run, the he will feel great after a goes off at 5.10 am, a dressed, fueled and runner enjoys a cup of workout, so he anticipates signal for him to get reaches the road for coffee, feels less the reward - craving the up and get outside. his running practice stressed, or a sense endorphins, or sense of of accomplishment accomplishment, etc. with his distance. Rewards are powerful because they satisfy cravings The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg NXB- FT- 2013 - JZ 9
  • 10. Thanks Summary of the book “The Power of Habit”, by Charles Duhigg This material was used during an oral presentation; it is not a complete record of the discussion. 10