Hard to Break, Russell A. Poldrack
Hard to Break, Russell A. Poldrack
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
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Hard to Break
Why Our Brains Make Habits Stick

Author: Russell A. Poldrack

Narrator: Tim Fannon

Unabridged: 7 hr 1 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 05/04/2021


Synopsis

The neuroscience of why bad habits are so hard to break—and how evidence-based strategies can help us change our behavior more effectively

We all have habits we’d like to break, but for many of us it can be nearly impossible to do so. There is a good reason for this: the brain is a habit-building machine. In Hard to Break, leading neuroscientist Russell Poldrack provides an engaging and authoritative account of the science of how habits are built in the brain, why they are so hard to break, and how evidence-based strategies may help us change unwanted behaviors.

Hard to Break offers a clear-eyed tour of what neuroscience tells us about habit change and debunks “easy fixes” that aren’t backed by science. It explains how dopamine is essential for building habits and how the battle between habits and intentional goaldirected behaviors reflects a competition between different brain systems. Along the way, we learn how cues trigger habits; why we should make rules, not decisions; how the stimuli of the modern world hijack the brain’s habit machinery and lead to drug abuse and other addictions; and how neuroscience may one day enable us to hack our habits. Shifting from the individual to society, the book also discusses the massive habit changes that will be needed to address the biggest challenges of our time.

Moving beyond the hype to offer a deeper understanding of the biology of habits in the brain, Hard to Break reveals how we might be able to make the changes we desire—and why we should have greater empathy with ourselves and others who struggle to do so.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Anna

A nice introduction to current scientific knowledge on habits (so I finally know what my colleagues are talking about in lab meetings). This is also the only book about habits I found that does not worship ego depletion, thank God. The author is wary of making any overly bold claims and it feels lik......more

Goodreads review by Hendrik

Decent review of neuroscientific and psychological literature regarding habits. Very skeptical and methodologically carefull in its approach. Could have been way longer tho. It offers a great deal of information, yet the representation would have benefited from being more "flashed out". Felt a little t......more

Goodreads review by DeWayne

My counseling degree was issued in 1968 and much has changed since that time in the therapy world; therefore, this read was an update for me. It also challenged me with a vast number of research projects, some good and some bad, all of which do not fully have the answers to questions that have exist......more

Goodreads review by Marco

Heavily scientific/neuroscientific (which I actually liked), but little practical application in everyday life......more