Habits are behaviors wired so deeply in our brains that we perform them automatically. This allows you to follow the same route to work every day without thinking about it,
liberating1 your brain to
ponder(考虑,沉思) other things, such as what to make for dinner. However, the brain's executive command center does not completely
relinquish2(放弃) control of
habitual3 behavior. A new study from MIT neuroscientists has found that a small region of the brain's prefrontal cortex, where most thought and planning occurs, is responsible for moment-by-moment control of which habits are switched on at a given time.
"We've always thought -- and I still do -- that the value of a habit is you don't have to think about it. It frees up your brain to do other things," says Institute Professor Ann Graybiel, a member of the McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT. "However, it doesn't free up all of it. There's some piece of your cortex that's still
devoted4 to that control."
The new study offers hope for those trying to kick bad habits, says Graybiel, senior author of the new study, which appears this week in the
Proceedings5 of the National Academy of Sciences. It shows that though habits may be deeply ingrained, the brain's planning centers can shut them off. It also raises the possibility of intervening in that brain region to treat people who suffer from
disorders7 involving overly habitual behavior, such as obsessive-compulsive
disorder6.
Lead author of the paper is Kyle Smith, a McGovern Institute research scientist. Other authors are recent MIT graduate Arti Virkud and Karl Deisseroth, a professor of
psychiatry8 and behavioral sciences at Stanford University.