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habit |
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habitIn psychology, any regularly repeated behaviour that requires little or no thought and is learned rather than innate. Some habits (e.g., tying a shoelace) may conserve higher mental processes for more demanding tasks, but others promote behavioral inflexibility or are unhealthy. Five methods are commonly used to break unwanted habits: replacing the old response with a new one, repeating the behaviour until it becomes unpleasant, separating the individual from the stimulus that prompts the response, habituation, and punishment. habit 1. Psychol a learned behavioural response that has become associated with a particular situation, esp one frequently repeated 2. Botany Zoology the method of growth, type of existence, behaviour, or general appearance of a plant or animal 3. Crystallog short for crystal habit habit [′habĀ·ət] (crystallography) (psychology) A repetitious behavior pattern. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| The problem is that we have not broken the habit of thinking of the United Nations as "them" rather than "us". Yet few of the tens of thousands of patch users have actually broken the habit (only about 10 percent to 15 percent succeed). |
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