Defaults are not a panacea: distinguishing between default effects on choices and on outcomes
Recently, defaults have become celebrated as a low-cost and easy-to-implement nudge for promoting positive outcomes, both at an individual and societal level. In the present research, we conducted a large-scale field experiment ( N = 32,508) in an educational context to test the effectiveness of a d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioural Public Policy 2022-08, p.1-16 |
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creator | Kalkstein, David A. De Lima, Fabiana Brady, Shannon T. Rozek, Christopher S. Johnson, Eric J. Walton, Gregory M. |
description | Recently, defaults have become celebrated as a low-cost and easy-to-implement nudge for promoting positive outcomes, both at an individual and societal level. In the present research, we conducted a large-scale field experiment (
N
= 32,508) in an educational context to test the effectiveness of a default intervention in promoting participation in a potentially beneficial achievement test. We found that a default manipulation increased the rate at which high school students registered to take the test but failed to produce a significant change in students’ actual rate of test-taking. These results join past literature documenting robust effects of default framings on initial choice but marked variability in the extent to which those choices ultimately translate to real-world outcomes. We suggest that this variability is attributable to differences in
choice-to-outcome pathways
– the extent to which the initial choice is causally determinative of the outcome. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/bpp.2022.24 |
format | Article |
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N
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choice-to-outcome pathways
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choice-to-outcome pathways
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choice-to-outcome pathways
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title | Defaults are not a panacea: distinguishing between default effects on choices and on outcomes |
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