Publication | Open Access
Consequence-Based Approach-Avoidance Training: A New and Improved Method for Changing Behavior
104
Citations
26
References
2018
Year
Improved MethodBehaviorismBehavioral Decision MakingConsequence-based Approach-avoidance TrainingBehavior AnalysisImpulsivityChanging BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyBehavior ManagementBehavioral PsychologyUnhealthy EatingBehavior ModificationBehavioral PrincipleRepeated PerformancePublic HealthAdaptive BehaviorBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceAvoidance ActionsExperimental PsychologyExperimental Analysis Of BehaviorBehavior Change
The repeated performance of approach or avoidance actions in response to specific stimuli (e.g., alcoholic drinks) is often considered a most promising type of cognitive-bias modification that can reduce unwanted behavior (e.g., alcohol consumption). Unfortunately, approach-avoidance training sometimes fails to produce desired outcomes (e.g., in the context of unhealthy eating). We introduce a novel training task in which approach-avoidance actions are followed by affective consequences. Four experiments (total N = 1,547) found stronger changes in voluntary approach-avoidance behavior, implicit and explicit evaluations, and consumer choices for consequence-based approach-avoidance training in the food domain. Moreover, this novel type of training reduced self-reported unhealthy eating behavior after a 24-hr delay and unhealthy snacking in a taste test. Our results contrast with dominant (association-formation) accounts of the effects of approach-avoidance training and support an inferential explanation. They further suggest that consequence-based approach-avoidance training, and inference training more generally, holds promise for the treatment of clinical behavior.
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