Sunday, August 27, 2023

Banerjee and John (2021) on Nudge Plus

Sanchayan Banerjee and Peter John, “Nudge Plus: Incorporating Reflection into Behavioral Public Policy.Behavioural Public Policy, 1-16, 2021, available at https://doi.org/10.1017/bpp.2021.6.
  • Should we embed a prod for people “to reflect” into System 1 nudges? Such a prod is the “plus.” [The authors themselves seem to equate nudges (or perhaps "classic nudges" with System 1 nudges; the "plus" activates a System 2 element in conjunction with a System 1 nudge.]
  • Bundling a nudge with a plus makes nudges more salient.
  • People need actual reflection, not just “the potential for reflection [p. 2].”
  • Thaler and Sunstein consider that a legitimate nudge must be one that would receive wide assent if everyone were informed about its aim and operation. This restriction would rule out manipulating people in ways that harm them. Nonetheless, such a legitimate nudge might, when it is affecting choice, remain hidden, invoking an automatic, System 1 response.
  • Nudge plus wants to extend the transparency, so that just about everyone understands what is going on in the choice moment. Actors maintain their autonomy, though without being required to pay extremely close attention or to engage in strenuous cognitive processing. 
  • Commitment devices are a nudge plus, because the need to consider whether to sign up for the device spurs the requisite reflection; likewise with cooling-off periods.
  • People often choose not to use GPS on familiar routes – they are thinking, they are not being “tricked into using the device heuristically once again [p. 7].” For them, GPS is a nudge plus.
  • Adding a regular prompt to set a future fitness goal turns an otherwise ordinary fitness tracker into a nudge plus.
  • But… do people really desire this “experiential learning environment [p. 10],” this near necessity to reflect regularly, at least to some extent?

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