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Change Your Behavior with Adorable Rewards – and Pavlovian Shocks | Nichol Bradford


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

People often ask me what I think the limitations are for transformative technology. And I would say that I don’t think anything replaces sitting down one-on-one with someone that you love or care about. There’s nothing that replaces that.

But we don’t live in an only one thing world. I really believe in having a suite of tools that we use. And so when you can’t be one-on-one with your loved one and you are forced to be at distance, then to have things that support you in that.

And in terms of other limitations, I think a lot of the limitations are really our imagination because it’s out of our imaginations that we develop products. It isn’t really a coincidence that the first flip phones look like the communicators on Star Trek. Like that’s not a coincidence. It was sort of set, and then we worked to make it so.

And so I think with transformative technology, or any technology really, it’s being of the mindset that there won’t be one way and there shouldn’t be one input. So we should always prioritize real live interactions with other people. We should prioritize having healthy spaces and cities where people can connect and collide.

We should have spaces where people of different backgrounds and socioeconomic levels come together so we don’t have stratified experiences. Because part of growing up and becoming an adult is being exposed to a lot of different things. So we should have those too.

And then we should also have technology that helps us work on the things that we’re working on. There’s one device that I particularly love. I’m really interested in behavior change. I’m really interested in behavior change because it’s really quite hard, and there’ve been a couple of studies that have come out on human willpower.

And our willpower actually isn’t that strong. And so there are two products that work on behavior change that I’ve been tracking. One uses affirmation, and the other one uses cessation as a tool.

So the cessation one is called Pavlok, and it shocks you when you do something that you don’t want to do. So it’s a slight electrical shock, but it shocks you nonetheless. And you can sort of amp it up if you want to. Right now there are some things that it can tell that you’re doing, so you can put in a list of websites.

So if you have a Facebook addiction and you want to get off that, every time you go to Facebook, the wearable which you wear on your wrist can shock you. Or they’ve really been helping people with porn addictions because there’s basically like ten words that matter, and you can put all of those in the app, and every time you go to a website with those words in it, then you get shocked.

And they’re actually really helping people because if that’s a problem for you, it’s a real problem. And so people need to have things that help them change the behaviors that they want to.

The flip side of that is another device called Moti, which I just love. It’s this little ball that sits on your desk and it’s got a little face on it. And every time you do something that you want to do, you touch it, and it sort of – it blinks and vibrates and it coos.

And it sounds like a really silly thing. You’re like, why would you do that? But it turns out that our inner mind, our monkey mind, the lizard brain loves that. We just love it. And so every time you do something that you want to do, every time you go to bed early or you get up and go and exercise, you touch it, and it can track your – you tell it what you’re tracking and so you can accumulate rewards for your positive change.

But you get this sort of physical sound reinforcement that, oh, that was good. And in both cases, they’re finding that they’re helping people change behaviors that people thought they couldn’t change.

And so that’s a really great example of yes, there are limitations to technologies of any kind, but there are also so many great ways it can help people with private and personal goals that they have.

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