Neuroscience of Habits: Cues, Cravings, and the Basal Ganglia
Picture your morning: alarm chimes, coffee brews, phone unlocks. The cue (alarm) sparks craving (alertness), which triggers response (coffee) and delivers reward (energy). Map your own loop today and comment which cue surprised you most.
Neuroscience of Habits: Cues, Cravings, and the Basal Ganglia
Dopamine spikes when predictions meet or beat expectation, reinforcing patterns to repeat. Use small, consistent rewards after desired behaviors to train your brain. Tell us which reward—stickers, streaks, music—actually keeps you coming back.
Neuroscience of Habits: Cues, Cravings, and the Basal Ganglia
New habits start with deliberate control in the prefrontal cortex, then migrate to basal ganglia for automaticity. Protect early repetitions with tight cues and tiny steps. Share a moment when repetition finally felt effortless.
