2. Amanda Rebar, Ryan Rhodes, Bas Verplanken - The Measurement of Habit
3. Henk Aarts, Ruud Custers, Hans Morien, - The Mechanisms of Habit
4. Barbara Mullen - Habit Mechanisms in Complex Behaviours
II. Habit Formation, Maintenance, and Change
5. Benjamin Gardner and Philippa Lally - Understanding Habit Formation: Progress and Pitfalls
6. Ryan Rhodes and Amanda Rebar - Forming a Physical Activity
7. Hairul Hashim - The Role of Visual Prompts in Habit Formation
8. Falko Sniehotta, Dominika Kwasnicka - The Role of Habit Formation in Behavior Change Maintenance Process: A Theoretical Perspective
9. Marieke Adriaanse, Aukje Verhoeven: Breaking Habits Using Monitoring and Implementation Intentions
10. Raymond Miltenberger - The Habit Reversal Procedure
11. Dominika Kwasnicka and Falko Sniehotta - The N-of-1 Method in Habit Formation and Change
12. Bas Verplanken and Deborah Roy - Habit Discontinuities
III. Mental Habits
13. Ed Watkins - Habitual Thinking in Clinical Settings
14. Aukje Verhoeven, Sanne de Wit - The Role of Habits in Maladaptive Behavior and Therapeutic Interventions
15. Inna Arnaudova - Habit and Psychopathology: A Transdiagnostic Approach
16. Claire Zedelius and Jonathan Schooler - Mind Wandering in the Lab and the Field
IV. Specific Areas of Habit
17. Lee Hogarth- Habit and Drug Dependence
18. Joseph Bayer and Robert LaRose - Online Media Habits: Progress and Prospects
19. Raphael Thomadson - The Role of Habit and Variety Seeking in Marketing
20. Justin Pressau and Falko Sniehotta - Creating and Breaking Habit in Healthcare Professional Behaviors to Improve Healthcare and Health
21. Conclusion - Sheila Orbell
Professor Bas Verplanken graduated and obtained his PhD at the University of Leiden, The Netherlands, where he worked as a Research Fellow and Lecturer from 1980-1990. From 1990-1998 he was a Lecturer and senior lecturer at the University of Nijmegen. From 1998 to 2006 he was a professor at the University of Tromsø, Norway. In 2006 he joined the University of Bath, where he was Head of Department of Psychology from 2010-2016. His research interests are in attitude-behaviour relations and change, applied in the domains of environmental, health, and consumer psychology. He has developed a special interest in habits. He published on a variety of topics, including risk perception, environmental concern, unhealthy eating, travel mode choice, values, self-esteem, body image, worrying, mindfulness, impulsive buying, behaviour change, and sustainable lifestyles. He served as an associate editor of the British Journal of Social Psychology and Psychology and Health.
This unique reference explores the processes and nuances of human habits through social psychology and behavioral lenses. It provides a robust definition and theoretical framework for habit as well as up-to-date information on habit measurement, addressing such questions as which mechanisms are involved in habitual action and whether people can report accurately on their own habits. Specialized chapters pay close attention to how habits can be modified, as well as widely varying manifestations of habitual thoughts and behaviors, including the mechanisms of drug addiction and recovery, the repetitive characteristics of autism, and the unwitting habits of health professionals that may impede patient care. And across these pages, contributors show the potential for using the processes of maladaptive habits to replace them with positive and health-promoting ones. Throughout this volume attention is also paid to the practice of conducting habit research.
Among the topics covered:
Habit mechanisms and behavioral complexity.
Complexities and controversies of physical activity habit.
Habit discontinuities as vehicles for behavior change.
Habits in depression: understanding and intervention.
A critical review of habit theory of drug dependence.
Questions about the automaticity of habitual behaviors.
The Psychology of Habit will interest psychologists across a wide spectrum of domains: habit researchers in broader areas of social and health psychology, professionals working in (sub)clinical areas, interested scholars in marketing, consumer research, communication, and education, and public policymakers dealing with questions of behavioral change in the areas of health, sustainability, and/or education.