The habit of car
dependency, in particular, poses a major problem for sustainable cities. In short, we have very fixed travel habits.
Even for urban households with both a car and transit options, how
people get to work in the morning doesn't feel like a "choice."
Economists aside, few of us sit down and calculate the differential cost
of driving versus riding the bus or train. Most are lucky to have a few
minutes left over for family or Internet on their way out the door.
The habit of car
dependency, in particular, poses a major problem for sustainable cities.
As transportation experts push for
mobility "carrots" and "sticks" — making alternative modes more
attractive while making driving less attractive — they can't forget
they're also battling certain aspects of the human brain that nudge us
away from considering any changes to our lives at all.
A group of researchers led by Yavor Yalachkov turn to neuroscience to
help explain why so many people remain stuck in their mode choice in a
recent essay on science and society. Writing in Trends in Cognitive Science,
Yalachkov and company survey the latest evidence on habit development
in light of car dependency. Much of it comes as no surprise: habits are
triggered automatically by learning associations in our environment. We
wake up in the morning, we head to the car.
The greater insight recently drawn by cognitive scientists is that a
shift in brain activity occurs to facilitate our routines. Rather than
use the parts of our brain that evaluate a decision — in short, rather
than engage in a true "choice" — we rely in these habitual moments on
neural regions that perform an action without much concern for outcome.
Read more @ Atlantic Cities
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