Building the Behavior Change Toolkit: Designing and Testing a Nudge and a Boost
Changing behavior is challenging, so behavioral scientists and designers better have a large toolkit. Nudges—subtle changes to the choice environment that don’t remove options or offer a financial incentive—are perhaps the most widely used tool. But they’re not the only tool.
More recently, researchers have advocated a different type of behavioral intervention: boosting. In contrast to nudges, which aim to change behavior through changing the environment, boosts aim to empower individuals to better exert their own agency.
Source: Building the Behavior Change Toolkit: Designing and Testing a Nudge and a Boost
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