pjeby comments on A Crash Course in the Neuroscience of Human Motivation - Less Wrong
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This is a language problem: I'm using "expect" in the prospect theory sense here, not the probabilistic one. It's about emotional investment in the outcome, not anticipating probability of occurrence.
You could say that it's a distinction between "should" expectations and "is" expectations. Prospect theory -- or at the very least this application of it -- is about "should" expectations, as it's the basis for establishing a decision frame , which includes a notion of investment/cost as well as expected utility.
The hack I'm experimenting with is setting a perceptual frame where not doing the desired action is perceived as zero loss, and doing the action is perceived as a cheap gain. (In contrast to having an expectation that the default should be that I do the action, in which case doing it is perceive as zero-gain, and failing to do it is a loss.)
I don't have any long-term experience with the reinforcement aspect yet, but my early results so far (1 behavior, 3 instances in two days) is that the framing is fun. It feels like "You mean I get points just for doing that little thing? Cool!"
(The trickiest part was that I had to first mind-hack away the mental blocks that made it seem low-status to me to think this way.)