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Why some people keep making the same bad decisions

For some people, everyday cues keep pulling the brain toward the same bad decisions.

Date:
December 26, 2025
Source:
Society for Neuroscience
Summary:
Everyday sights and sounds quietly shape the choices people make, often without them realizing it. New research suggests that some individuals become especially influenced by these environmental cues, relying on them heavily when deciding what to do. The problem arises when those cues start leading to worse outcomes. For certain people, the brain struggles to update these learned signals, causing them to repeat risky or harmful decisions over time.
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People constantly take in information from their surroundings, including visual details and background sounds. Over time, the brain learns to connect these cues with what usually happens next. For example, a familiar sign, sound, or setting can signal whether a choice is likely to lead to a reward or a negative outcome. This process is known as associative learning, which simply means learning through repeated connections between cues and results. In everyday life, this kind of learning helps people make faster and often better decisions.

However, this system does not work the same way for everyone. For people with compulsive disorders, addictions, or anxiety, these learned associations can become overly powerful. Instead of serving as helpful guides, cues may start to dominate decision making. Individuals may feel pulled toward certain sights or sounds or strongly driven to avoid them, even when doing so leads to poor outcomes.

Studying Biased Decision Making

To better understand how this happens, Giuseppe di Pellegrino of the University of Bologna led a study focused on how people learn from cues and how this learning can sometimes go wrong. The research examined maladaptive decision making, which refers to choices that continue to cause harm or disadvantage despite repeated negative consequences.

As described in their JNeurosci paper, the researchers found that people differ widely in how much they rely on environmental cues when making decisions. Some individuals depend heavily on surrounding visuals and sounds to guide their choices, while others rely on them far less.

Why Some People Struggle to Adapt

The study also revealed an important problem for those who are highly cue driven. When familiar cues start to signal riskier or less favorable outcomes, these individuals often struggle to adjust. They may have difficulty updating their beliefs about what those cues mean and unlearning old associations that no longer apply. In practical terms, this means the brain keeps responding as if nothing has changed, even when the situation clearly has.

As a result, disadvantageous decision making can persist over time. Instead of adapting to new information, people may repeat the same risky or harmful choices again and again.

Implications for Addiction and Anxiety

According to the researchers, these findings suggest that some people have stronger cue sensitivity than others, combined with a reduced ability to revise what they have learned about those cues. This combination may help explain why certain decision patterns are so hard to break.

The research team plans to continue studying associative learning in patient populations. Their goal is to better understand whether the harmful decision patterns -- which characterize addictions, compulsive disorders, and anxiety -- are more likely to occur in people who are especially sensitive to the sights and sounds that influence their choices.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Society for Neuroscience. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Luigi A.E. Degni, Lorenzo Mattioni, Claudio Danti, Valentina Bernardi, Gianluca Finotti, Marco Badioli, Francesca Starita, Alireza Soltani, Giuseppe di Pellegrino, Sara Garofalo. Reduced Pavlovian value updating alters decision-making in sign-trackers. The Journal of Neuroscience, 2025; e1465252025 DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1465-25.2025

Cite This Page:

Society for Neuroscience. "Why some people keep making the same bad decisions." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 26 December 2025. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251225031244.htm>.
Society for Neuroscience. (2025, December 26). Why some people keep making the same bad decisions. ScienceDaily. Retrieved January 16, 2026 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251225031244.htm
Society for Neuroscience. "Why some people keep making the same bad decisions." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251225031244.htm (accessed January 16, 2026).

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