Garantie de satisfaction à 100% Disponible immédiatement après paiement En ligne et en PDF Tu n'es attaché à rien 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Notes de cours

Behavioural Change | Notes

Note
-
Vendu
7
Pages
12
Publié le
25-01-2021
Écrit en
2020/2021

Notes per lecture & presentations of the papers; Tilburg University

Établissement
Cours









Oups ! Impossible de charger votre document. Réessayez ou contactez le support.

École, étude et sujet

Établissement
Cours
Cours

Infos sur le Document

Publié le
25 janvier 2021
Nombre de pages
12
Écrit en
2020/2021
Type
Notes de cours
Professeur(s)
Christoph kogler
Contient
Toutes les classes

Sujets

Aperçu du contenu

Behavioural Change
Lecture 2 (9-9-2020) – Nudging in Policy Making:

Behavioural Science and Public Policy: Enhance welfare by shaping behaviour

Traditional approaches rely on a limited set of tools: taxes, subsidies, mandates,
bans, information campaigns
- Based on assumptions from neo-classical economics: decision makers are rational,
profit-maximizing, consistent over time, consider all relevant information, mainly
motivated by monetary incentives

Alternative approach: nudging (influencing peoples choices unconsciously, giving
people a little push, without forcing)
- Social and behavioural sciences: more complete (and different) portrait of human
decision-making

Nudging: any aspect of the choice architecture that alters people’s behaviour in a
predictable way without forbidding any options or significantly changing their
economic incentives
- Prominent form of public policy interventions, informed by behavioural sciences
(behavioural economics, psychology)
- Beneficial or optimized decision for decision maker (internalities; emphasis on
changing behaviour to benefit those who are nudged, not to reduce the harms that
these behaviours may impose on others)
- No (changes to material) incentives (or at least just smaller incentives); not simply
about changing the incentive structure, the aim is to motivate people to change their
(self- and society harming) behaviour without imposing further regulations, penalties,
or bans.
- No limitations/restriction of freedom of choice: libertarian (belief in protection of
individual rights and freedom) paternalism (infringement on the personal freedom of
an individual with a beneficent or protective intent)  “free will preserving
infringement with a beneficent intent”
- Based on dual cognitive process theories (rely on system 1; unconscious, automatic,
parallel, rapid, large capacity, modular cognition, contextualized, evolutionarily old,
nonverbal (heuristics (rule of thumb in complex situation under time pressure) &
biases)  can be used to influence behaviour: social norms, gains/losses, likeability,
reciprocity, anchoring, status quo bias, defaults, emotions, disjunction effect
(immediate decisions prevented by an uncertain, but irrelevant, future event, that will
cause you to delay decisions you could/should make immediately)
 Choice architecture: reshape choice environment, so that automatic choices align
with optimal/preferred behaviour (relies on automatic decision making processes, is
liberty-preserving, does not use large financial incentives, is informed by behavioural
economics, targets internalities)

Complications:
- Long term effect: one-off behaviours, resilient shifts (created a behavioural pattern),
environmental changes, repeated exposure effects (habituation or reinforcement)
- problems with proxy measures: immediate and (considered reliable) proxy measures
don’t always have a causal relationship with each other

, - spill-overs and unintended consequences: interventions could have possible
unintended and unmeasured effects elsewhere (licensing effects)
- true universals and cultural variation: most research is done on western, educated,
industrialised, rich and developed people, which isn’t generalizable to all people
- reverse impact: government actions are altered and then the results are published in
peer-reviewed journals (impact comes first)
- replication crisis: if the replicated interventions (from lab studies & field experiments)
aren’t reliable, this could lead to wasted resources & damage trust in policy-makers




Lecture 3 (11-9-2020) – Nudging; Acceptance & Ethics:

BIT (Behavioural Insights Team): helping the government with policy making

Government strategies:
- Law/enforcement: fines/penalties
- Incentives/rewards: financial, social
- Information Campaigns: normative information & empirical information
- Nudging: default (opt out), framing (making a piece of information salient/attractive)

Scaling interventions: a specific opportunity for taking a behavioural approach to
government itself
- Behavioural science has often adopted a basic approach of ‘experiment and then
scale’: a trial is conducted on a sample (which nonetheless might be relatively large)
and the best-performing variant is adopted more widely

Social diffusion: use of social networks for behavioural change
- A public sector actor attempts to influence an individual, organisation or group
- Influence that exists between individuals, organisations or groups (associative
matching > random assignment)

Nudging organisations: instead of only individuals
- Many policy-relevant decisions are made by organisations

What is a good choice?
- Science: based on empirical evidence
- Society: reduce harm to others
- Environment: respect for nature and resources
€3,49
Accéder à l'intégralité du document:

Garantie de satisfaction à 100%
Disponible immédiatement après paiement
En ligne et en PDF
Tu n'es attaché à rien

Faites connaissance avec le vendeur

Seller avatar
Les scores de réputation sont basés sur le nombre de documents qu'un vendeur a vendus contre paiement ainsi que sur les avis qu'il a reçu pour ces documents. Il y a trois niveaux: Bronze, Argent et Or. Plus la réputation est bonne, plus vous pouvez faire confiance sur la qualité du travail des vendeurs.
lauravonk Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
S'abonner Vous devez être connecté afin de suivre les étudiants ou les cours
Vendu
59
Membre depuis
4 année
Nombre de followers
49
Documents
25
Dernière vente
1 mois de cela

3,9

7 revues

5
4
4
1
3
0
2
1
1
1

Récemment consulté par vous

Pourquoi les étudiants choisissent Stuvia

Créé par d'autres étudiants, vérifié par les avis

Une qualité sur laquelle compter : rédigé par des étudiants qui ont réussi et évalué par d'autres qui ont utilisé ce document.

Le document ne convient pas ? Choisis un autre document

Aucun souci ! Tu peux sélectionner directement un autre document qui correspond mieux à ce que tu cherches.

Paye comme tu veux, apprends aussitôt

Aucun abonnement, aucun engagement. Paye selon tes habitudes par carte de crédit et télécharge ton document PDF instantanément.

Student with book image

“Acheté, téléchargé et réussi. C'est aussi simple que ça.”

Alisha Student

Foire aux questions