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Does stress consistently favor habits over goal-directed behaviors?

Authors :
Tom Smeets
Stephanie M. Ashton
Simone J.A.A. Roelands
Conny W.E.M. Quaedflieg
Medical and Clinical Psychology
Section Psychopharmacology
RS: FPN NPPP I
Source :
Neurobiology of Stress, 23:100528. Elsevier BV
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Instrumental learning is controlled by two distinct parallel systems: goal-directed (action-outcome) and habitual (stimulus-response) processes. Seminal research by Schwabe and Wolf (2009, 2010) has demonstrated that stressrenders behavior more habitual by decreasing goal-directed control. More recent studies yielded equivocal evidence for a stress-induced shift towards habitual responding, yet these studies used different paradigms to evaluate instrumental learning or used different stressors. Here, we performed exact replications of the original studies by exposing participants to an acute stressor either before (cf. Schwabe and Wolf, 2009) or directly after (cf. Schwabe and Wolf, 2010) an instrumental learning phase in which they had learned that distinct actions ledto distinct, rewarding food outcomes (i.e., instrumental learning). Then, following an outcome devaluation phase in which one of the food outcomes was consumed until participants were satiated, action-outcome associations were tested in extinction. Despite successful instrumental learning and outcome devaluation and increased subjective and physiological stress levels following stress exposure, the stress and no-stress groups in both replication studies responded indifferently to valued and devalued outcomes. That is, non-stressed participants failed to demonstrate goal-directed behavioral control, thereby rendering the critical test of a shift from goaldirected to habitual control in the stress group inapt. Several reasons for these replication failures are discussed,including the rather indiscriminate devaluation of outcomes that may have contributed to indifferent responding during extinction, which emphasize the need to further our understanding of the boundary conditions in research aimed at demonstrating a stress-induced shift towards habitual control.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23522895
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurobiology of Stress
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....031cb94b9639393d8233d90514cb1436
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ynstr.2023.100528