# Framing as a mechanism to overcome the temptation of bad habits

**Authors:** Shuning Wang, John Monterosso

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2025.1683756 · Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience · 2025-10-29

## TL;DR

The paper explores how framing can help overcome bad habits by shifting focus from immediate rewards to long-term benefits.

## Contribution

It introduces framing as a novel mechanism to counter temptation in habitual behaviors.

## Key findings

- Bad habits are driven by immediate outcomes despite long-term costs.
- Framing can alter motivation by emphasizing delayed outcomes over immediate rewards.
- Neural substrates mediate shifts in outcome value perception through framing.

## Abstract

Behavioral neuroscience generally conceives of habits as under stimulus-response control, and distinguishes habits from goal-directed behavior based on their insensitivity to outcome value (features of automaticity). However, the everyday meaning of “bad habits” is applied primarily to behaviors that are compelling, in part, because of their anticipated outcome value. In particular, commonly identified bad habits (e.g., overuse of social media, overeating, smoking) are repeated behaviors that yield appealing immediate outcomes, but at a greater longer term cost (“temptations”). We begin by evaluating the role of both automaticity and temptation in the maintenance of bad habits. Next we focus on how framing effects can be used to shift the balance of motivation away from immediate and/or toward delayed outcome value, including a partial summary of what is known about the neural substrates that mediate such shifts. We pay particular attention to the way frames can promote replacing bad habits with good habits through emphasizing the connection between specific choices and general policy preferences.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** problem gambling (MESH:D005715), smoker (MESH:C000719328), amnesic (MESH:D000647), drug craving (MESH:D000081015), cancer (MESH:D009369), addiction (MESH:D019966), psychiatric (MESH:D001523), craving (MESH:C564883), nicotine dependence (MESH:D014029), alcoholism (MESH:D000437), obesity (MESH:D009765), smoking addiction (MESH:D015208), CLT (MESH:C564133)
- **Chemicals:** nicotine (MESH:D009538), heroin (MESH:D003932), lithium chloride (MESH:D018021)
- **Species:** Rattus norvegicus (brown rat, species) [taxon 10116], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Rodentia (rodent, order) [taxon 9989], Helianthus annuus (common sunflower, species) [taxon 4232], Malus domestica (apple, species) [taxon 3750]

## Full text

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## References

171 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12605160/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12605160