Vladimir_Nesov comments on Cached Procrastination - Less Wrong
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I actually wrote part of another article about procrastination, before this one, following a theory much closer to yours. I ended up determining that it wasn't going anywhere, but I think what I do have clarifies your theory immensely. So at the risk of putting words into your mouth, here it is:
Where I got stuck was on trying to figure out just what does condition us to think more or less on a topic, and I don't think that can be answered accurately without much better instruments and experiments than are currently possible. Clearly, when people enter procrastination spirals there is some sort of conditioning going on, but negative affect alone can't be the cause; The Game seems like a strong refutation to that.
Punishment presumably doesn't work for thoughts, because it rewards the negative of the thought in the same movement. I expect that it's rather switching to procrastination that is rewarded, not continuing on the task that's punished. The behavior here is not static "thinking a thought", but rather a transition between possible thoughts.
The longer you try to concentrate on the task, the more willpower you apply to it, the more rewarding the behavior of switching the attention to procrastination becomes. And so, you learn to do it automatically, thinking of nothing else whenever you start thinking of getting the work done.