Willpower likely won’t save you from your bad habits. Science explains why
Open in Clue About this video
Become a Big Think member to unlock expert classes, premium print issues, exclusive events and more: https://bigthink.com/membership/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=yt_desc We created this video in partnership with Unlikely Collaborators. Your brain makes habits stick. The good news? The same science shows how to replace the bad ones. Subscribe to Big Think on YouTube ► https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvQECJukTDE2i6aCoMnS-Vg?sub_confirmation=1 Why are bad habits so hard to break? Neuroscientist Carl Hart, PhD, journalist Charles Duhigg, and psychologist Adam Alter, PhD explain how your brain wires habits as cue-routine-reward loops that control nearly half of your daily life. They show why willpower alone rarely works, why technology fuels new forms of addiction, and why habits can only be replaced, not erased. Read more from this interview ► https://bigthink.com/perception-box/brain-briefs-addictions-and-habits-explained/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=youtube_description Explore the Perception Box series hub ► https://bigthink.com/perception-box/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=youtube_description ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Go Deeper with Big Think: ►Become a Big Think Member Get exclusive access to full interviews, early access to new releases, Big Think merch and more. https://members.bigthink.com/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=youtube_description ►Get Big Think+ for Business Guide, inspire and accelerate leaders at all levels of your company with the biggest minds in business. https://bigthink.com/plus/great-leaders-think-big/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=youtube_description ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- About Carl Hart, PhD: Dr. Hart is an Associate Professor of Psychology in both the Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology at Columbia University, and Director of the Residential Studies and Methamphetamine Research Laboratories at the New York State Psychiatric Institute. A major focus of Dr. Hart’s research is to understand complex interactions between drugs of abuse and the neurobiology and environmental factors that mediate human behavior and physiology. About Charles Duhigg: Charles Duhigg is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and the author of The Power of Habit, which spent over three years on bestseller lists and has been translated into 40 languages, and Smarter Faster Better, also a bestseller. Mr. Duhigg writes for The New Yorker magazine and is a graduate of Yale University and the Harvard Business School. He has been a frequent contributor to CNBC, This American Life, NPR, The Colbert Report, NewsHour, and Frontline. About Adam Alter, PhD: Adam Alter is an Associate Professor of Marketing at New York University’s Stern School of Business, with an affiliated appointment in the New York University Psychology Department.
Watch this video in English to learn English
Watching real YouTube videos in English with subtitles is one of the highest-density ways to absorb the language. Willpower likely won’t save you from your bad habits. Science explains why from Big Think gives you native pace, natural intonation, and vocabulary you'll actually meet in real conversations.
In the Clue app, every subtitle is tap-to-translate. No app-switching, no pausing the video, no dictionary. Just watch.
Videos to Learn English
Body language expert: 7 cues that make you instantly more likable | Full Interview
David Epstein: Discipline sets creativity free | Full Interview
The most profound questions in physics, with Hakeem Oluseyi | Full Interview
3 experts explain everything you need to know about loneliness
The productivity advice that will actually improve your life | Chris Bailey: Full Interview
Why humans need fiction, according to neuroscience
What Newton and Einstein agreed on that our society doesn’t | Sean Carroll
How music rewires and impacts the human body I Michael Spitzer: Full Interview
The dangerous and addictive fantasy of “unlimited potential” | Kate Bowler
The child who learned to disappear is still running your adult relationships | Nicole LePera
Keep your brain from declining after age 30
The biggest red herring in our search for alien life | Sara Seager