Results 31 to 40 of about 1,108,283 (319)
Nudge to nobesity I: Minor changes in accessibility decrease food intake [PDF]
Very small but cumulated decreases in food intake may be sufficient to erase obesity over a period of years. We examine the effect of slight changes in the accessibility of different foods in a pay-by-weight-of-food salad bar in a cafeteria serving ...
Paul Rozin +5 more
doaj +2 more sources
Choice architecture promotes sustainable choices in online food-delivery apps. [PDF]
Abstract Greenhouse gas emissions from the food system constitute about one-third of the global total, hence mitigation in this sphere of human activity is a vital goal for research and policy. This study empirically tests the effectiveness of different interventions to reduce the carbon footprint of food choices made on food-delivery ...
Lohmann PM +4 more
europepmc +4 more sources
Using real options to select stable Middleware-induced software architectures [PDF]
The requirements that force decisions towards building distributed system architectures are usually of a non-functional nature. Scalability, openness, heterogeneity, and fault-tolerance are examples of such non-functional requirements.
Bahsoon, R., Emmerich, W., Macke, J.
core +1 more source
The Effects of Nudges: One-Shot Only? Exploring the Temporal Spillover Effects of a Default Nudge
Nudges, such as defaults, are generally found to be effective in guiding immediate behavioural decisions. However, little is known about whether the effect of a nudge can be lasting, meaning that it spills over to subsequent similar choices without the ...
Merije Van Rookhuijzen +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Nudging folks towards stronger password choices:providing certainty is the key [PDF]
Persuading people to choose strong passwords is challenging. One way to influence password strength, as and when people are making the choice, is to tweak the choice architecture to encourage stronger choice.
Renaud, Karen, Zimmerman, Vera
core +4 more sources
Commercial Online Choice Architecture
Many people spend considerable amounts of time in online environments that are designed with the specific purpose of selling products or making money. In this chapter, we analyze whether and when such commercial online choice architectures (which we will dub COCAs) are manipulative, and what is potentially morally problematic about them. In our attempt
Thomas Nys, Bart Engelen
openaire +3 more sources
Attention and empirical studies of grammar [PDF]
How is the generation of a grammatical sentence implemented by the human brain? A starting place for such an inquiry lies in linguistic theory. Unfortunately, linguistic theories illuminate only abstract knowledge representations and do not indicate how ...
Myachykov, Andriy +2 more
core +1 more source
Set Size and Donation Behavior
Choice overload is the phenomenon that increasing the number of options in an assortment makes choosing between options more difficult, sometimes leading to avoidance of making a choice. In this pre-registered online experiment (N = 501), choice overload
Amanda M. Lindkvist +2 more
doaj +1 more source
A Bibliometric Analysis and Review of Nudge Research Using VOSviewer
With growing demands of decision making in the current era, the impact of the drivers behind individuals’ preferences and institutional strategies becomes prominent.
Chenjin Jia, Hasrina Mustafa
doaj +1 more source
Show Me More! The Influence of Visibility on Sustainable Food Choices
Visual cues are omnipresent in an in-store environment and can enhance the visibility of a product. By using these visual cues, policy makers can design a choice environment to nudge consumers towards more sustainable consumer behavior. In this study, we
Nicky Coucke +3 more
doaj +1 more source

