I so far have a 100% failure rate in establishing habits that involve writing things down or in other ways externalize memory.
This is true for me as well. Which is why I try to rely on programs that prompt me to reply at random intervals through computer popups or sms, rather than habit.
I highly doubt you have zero control over effort. Akrasia limits your ability to act on willpower, it doesn’t negate willpower entirely. Reward yourself for those 30 second googling bursts if nothing else.
I’m serious, have a jar of mini chocolate chips by your desk and pop one in your mouth every time you google an interesting question on scholar or wikipedia.
have a jar of mini chocolate chips by your desk and pop one in your mouth every time you google an interesting question on scholar or wikipedia.
Disagree. The target of your advice has reported serious health problems (and his akrasia would probably be a lot easier to overcome if it weren’t for the health problems, according to my models (which are based only on what he has posted to LW and on information not specific to him)) so I would advise him not to choose what to eat for its reward value.
To help him decide what weight to give my advice, I will add that I have had serious health problems for the last 40 years.
Moreover, I have serious doubts about the usefulness of setting up blatantly artificial (i.e., self-imposed for the purpose of conditioning oneself) cause-and_effect relationships between desired changes in behavior and rewards even when the rewards have no expected negative effect on health.
You’re right. This was very poorly considered advice. I’m ashamed to admit I kind of recognized that as I was writing it, but posted it anyways for reasonable-sounding justifications that now suspiciously elude memory.
I’m serious, have a jar of mini chocolate chips by your desk and pop one in your mouth every time you google an interesting question on scholar or wikipedia.
maaaan i have to condition myself NOT to google interesting questions else i can’t get any work done for my job. But i see what you mean, that may work for conditioning oneself to work.
(A caution: I’ve found that naive implementations of the “reward oneself with candy” method for overcoming akrasia don’t work because it becomes too tempting to just eat the candy for no reason. It has been suggested to me that it might help to explicitly write down beforehand exactly what actions justify a reward, but I haven’t gotten around to testing this yet. Individual results may vary; further research is needed.)
This is true for me as well. Which is why I try to rely on programs that prompt me to reply at random intervals through computer popups or sms, rather than habit.
I highly doubt you have zero control over effort. Akrasia limits your ability to act on willpower, it doesn’t negate willpower entirely. Reward yourself for those 30 second googling bursts if nothing else.
I’m serious, have a jar of mini chocolate chips by your desk and pop one in your mouth every time you google an interesting question on scholar or wikipedia.
Is there any evidence this works? 1) Does the brain treat these discretionary pleasures as reinforcement? 2) If it does, do attribution effects undermine the efficacy? Research in attribution effects show that extrinsic rewards sometimes undermine intrinsic interest, i.e., curiosity. “Negative effects are found on high-interest tasks when the rewards are tangible, expected (offered beforehand), and loosely tied to level of performance.”
Disagree. The target of your advice has reported serious health problems (and his akrasia would probably be a lot easier to overcome if it weren’t for the health problems, according to my models (which are based only on what he has posted to LW and on information not specific to him)) so I would advise him not to choose what to eat for its reward value.
To help him decide what weight to give my advice, I will add that I have had serious health problems for the last 40 years.
Moreover, I have serious doubts about the usefulness of setting up blatantly artificial (i.e., self-imposed for the purpose of conditioning oneself) cause-and_effect relationships between desired changes in behavior and rewards even when the rewards have no expected negative effect on health.
You’re right. This was very poorly considered advice. I’m ashamed to admit I kind of recognized that as I was writing it, but posted it anyways for reasonable-sounding justifications that now suspiciously elude memory.
I know the feeling (from times I have given advice).
maaaan i have to condition myself NOT to google interesting questions else i can’t get any work done for my job. But i see what you mean, that may work for conditioning oneself to work.
(A caution: I’ve found that naive implementations of the “reward oneself with candy” method for overcoming akrasia don’t work because it becomes too tempting to just eat the candy for no reason. It has been suggested to me that it might help to explicitly write down beforehand exactly what actions justify a reward, but I haven’t gotten around to testing this yet. Individual results may vary; further research is needed.)