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Inside Google's Efforts to Engineer Its Food for Healthiness | OneZero
Nudge FORGOOD | Behavioural Public Policy | Cambridge Core
Insights from the behavioural sciences are increasingly used by governments and other organizations worldwide to ‘nudge’ people to make better decisions. Furthermore, a large philosophical literature has emerged on the ethical considerations on nudging human behaviour that has presented key challenges for the area, but is regularly omitted from discussion of policy design and administration. We present and discuss FORGOOD, an ethics framework that synthesizes the debate on the ethics of nudging in a memorable mnemonic. It suggests that nudgers should consider seven core ethical dimensions: Fairness, Openness, Respect, Goals, Opinions, Options and Delegation. The framework is designed to capture the key considerations in the philosophical debate about nudging human behaviour, while also being accessible for use in a range of public policy settings, as well as training.
When worlds collide: lessons learned from the intersection of behavioral and human-centered design in humanitarian contexts
This example demonstrates how the IRC’s Airbel Impact Lab integrates behavioral science and human-centered design to develop scalable solutions to humanitarian problems. On their own, these approaches have been leveraged in a variety of contexts across the world — what is unique about the Airbel approach is bringing them together.
How Digital Design Drives User Behavior
A review of recent research provides clear evidence that many organizations are currently undervaluing the power of digital design and should invest more in behaviorally informed designs to help people make better choices. In many cases, even minor fixes can have a major impact, offering a return on investment that’s several times larger than the conventional use of financial incentives or marketing and education campaigns.
How behavioural sciences can help build a better chatbot experience?
Kick-Off/README.md at master · zzseba78/Kick-Off · GitHub
Behavioral Economics’ Latest Bias: Seeing Bias Wherever It Looks - Bloomberg
Giles Paley-Phillips on Twitter: “Incredibly creative road in Holland where the right speed produces the correct key https://t.co/F0LE2WQi8F“ / Twitter
DESIGN THINKING FOR COMMUNICATIONS PROFESSIONALS How Design Thinking processes can help you shape organizational stories that connect
Opinion | Lessons in behavioural change from railway track trespassers
500+ CSS Icons, Customizable, Retina Ready & API
Who Can Use
Tools and Ethics for Applied Behavioural Insights: The BASIC Toolkit - en - OECD
Declare and Dispose Campaign - YouTube
video case study - Phill Sherring
What’s next for psychology’s embattled field of social priming
How to Kick Off a Crash Course — Stanford d.school
Putting Some Emotion into Your Design – Plutchik’s Wheel of Emotions | Interaction Design Foundation
Healthy-Left, Unhealthy-Right: Can Displaying Healthy Items to the Left (versus Right) of Unhealthy Items Nudge Healthier Choices? | Journal of Consumer Research | Oxford Academic
Social and Behavior Change Buzz Words | LinkedIn
If You Want to Change the World, Design Your Data to do These Four Things
Words matter: Use them to nudge someone to change their behaviour | City Press
field of behavioral linguistics
Usability Testing 101
New Metaphors | Imaginaries Lab | Carnegie Mellon University
Through a series of workshops in 2017–18, we’ve been exploring a process for generating new kinds of metaphors, and then using those metaphors to inspire concepts for new kinds of interface design which could potentially help people understand things in different ways. The intention of the workshops is that the process might be something designers can use or adapt for idea generation, or to provoke new kinds of thinking about interface design. The extent to which the metaphors merely provide initial ‘seed’ inspiration, or actually form the basis of the resulting design, varies. Download the New Metaphors cards, v.0.3 (February 2018) — 129 MB PDF, 300 dpi Download a poster/leaflet from Interaction 18 including thumbnails of all the cards, and a shortened version of this article — 2 MB PDF Download templates / worksheets — 400 kB PDF
Marrying Empathy and Science to Spread Impact
Applying behavioral insights to Intimate Partner Violence | The Behavioural Insights Team
After Uber arrives, heavy drinking increases - Daily chart
Ride-hailing apps have allowed more binging—and increased demand for bartenders
Behavioral economics from nuts to ‘nudges’ | Chicago Booth Review
a historical perspective on the evolution of behavioral economics from Richard Thaler
The 10 Advertising Strategies That Work [The Advertising Effect – Speed Summary] | DigitalWellbeing.org
Basically, it’s Nudge for advertisers. Outlining ten evidence-based effective advertising strategies, each with a scientific underpinning, Adam Ferrier (psychologist and founder of Naked) is up there with fellow Antipodean Byron Sharp in terms of must-reads for marketers. Ferrier is a fan of ‘Action Advertising’ – influencing people by influencing actions rather than perceptions. Drawing on the evidence that advertising is notoriously poor at direct persuasion, Ferrier outlines 10 ways to influence actions instead. The underlying logic is that the easiest way to persuade someone is to allow them to persuade themselves – and this will happen quite naturally if you prompt (nudge, spur) people to act in a way consistent with a desired behaviour. Why? Because we tend to align our perceptions with our actions to avoid the mental discomfort of cognitive dissonance. In other words, if you influence action, you influence perception. Moreover, because perception-change is only a means to an end, the end being behaviour-change (buy, buy more, buy for more) – Action Advertising orientates advertising to what really matters, actioning behaviour change. For Ferrier, advertising is and must be about behaviour change; ultimately if no behaviour is changed as a result of advertising, advertising is valueless.
How to Save the World - Free Chapter - Visualization
Free PDF chapter of my book! ⬇️ The theory and neuroscience of applying vision, optimism, imagination, and creativity to solving big environmental and social problems.
VLSI Questions
VLSI Concepts
Ogilvy - The Annual 2018-19 - BI case studies
100 Books to Become a Behavioral Designer — Part 4 - Behavioral Design Hub - Medium
EAST for Health & Safety | The Behavioural Insights Team
A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words: Using Behavioural Insights In Visual Communication | Institute for Public Relations
Behavioral Design: The scientific approach to designing for behavior change for product managers, designers, & researchers
how-to guide - excellent explanation
Applying Behavioral Economics to the Streamlining and Reduction of Regulation
How governments ‘nudge’ you to regulate your economic behavior - Economy & Finance - Haaretz.com
How to Influence Choice Through Default Effect - UX Planet
Dad follows kid's sandwich instructions very literally
the importance of clear instructions
Show, Don’t Tell | MDRC
Sunstein and Thaler used the example of a high school cafeteria layout to demonstrate how small changes in our environment can influence our behavior, and we’ve discussed how a well-laid out office space can improve program participation rates. The example and our observations inspired MDRC’s Center for Behavioral Science (CABS) to create an interactive training session on the power of physical space to provide nudges. We asked training participants — staff at workforce development programs that help people find and keep employment — to try organizing their space with different goals in mind by designing a hypothetical high school cafeteria. Workshop participants received paper cut-out icons for all the essential materials — salads, hot food, snacks, desserts, beverages, cash registers, tables — and were asked to organize a logical cafeteria environment. But the directions had a catch. Each group received a unique goal: arrange the materials to maximize either: Healthy eating, Profits, or Efficiency.
DeepChip.com Synopsys Cadence Mentor TSMC GlobalFoundries SNPS CDNS MENT
Katie Patrick on Twitter: “I wanted to share the behavior-mapping template I use for any new project. I spend 2 - 8 hrs going through the steps in painstaking detail to develop the skeleton of what makes action happen. Follow each of the steps for your pr
Inspiration UI - Find design inspiration from real live projects
Inspiration UI — here you can find what UI design works well in a showcase inspiration gallery. All designs are organized by patterns such as 404 pages, hovers or testimonials.
SaaS Pages
A collection of the best landing pages with a focus on copywriting and design.
Mobile Patterns - UI UX Inspirational Gallery for iOS and Android
Mobile Patterns — one more design inspirational library worth bookmarking: a large collection of mobile UI/UX patterns, categorized and tagged just look at screenshot examples & learn how to do a great design like the pros.
UX Archive
UX Archive — collected the most interesting user flows that can help you analyze previous products and learn from others about what works and what doesn't. Examine tasks such as booking, logging in, onboarding, purchasing, searching, and more.