{"title":"减少糖消费的行为推动的增量与饱和假说。","authors":"Anna Undarwati, Felix Yong Peng Why","doi":"10.1037/hea0001450","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Objective: </strong>This field experiment examined the efficacy of a behavioral nudge intervention towards lowering sugar intake in Indonesia. Specifically, two competing hypotheses were tested as to whether behavioral nudge played an additive role (i.e., the Incremental Hypothesis) or contributed to a ceiling effect (i.e., the Saturation Hypothesis) alongside social context and competition in a multimodal intervention program.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>This field experiment used a three-factorial mixed design involving 403 Indonesian participants based on power statistical analysis: 2 (sugar content nudge: lower sugar tea vs. regular sugar tea default) × 2 (social context: individual vs. group) × 2 (competition: absent vs. present).</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Nudging was the most powerful intervention in reducing sugar intake, but its effectiveness might be attenuated by social loafing even within Indonesia's collectivist culture. Competition did not work synergistically with nudging but was effective under the nonnudge condition.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Our results are consistent with those of previous research showing that behavioral nudging has a stronger impact on behavioral change than nonnudge strategies. Contrary to some previous research, people in collectivist Indonesia did engage in social loafing: achievement motivation is not necessarily enhanced in a team of people in a collectivist culture. The Nudge × Competition interaction supports the saturation hypothesis in favor of behavioral nudging: using more than one intervention, when a potent strategy such as nudging is present, might result in diminishing returns that could reduce the overall benefit-cost profile of such multimodal intervention programs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":55066,"journal":{"name":"Health Psychology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Incremental versus saturation hypotheses for behavioral nudge in reducing sugar consumption.\",\"authors\":\"Anna Undarwati, Felix Yong Peng Why\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/hea0001450\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Objective: </strong>This field experiment examined the efficacy of a behavioral nudge intervention towards lowering sugar intake in Indonesia. Specifically, two competing hypotheses were tested as to whether behavioral nudge played an additive role (i.e., the Incremental Hypothesis) or contributed to a ceiling effect (i.e., the Saturation Hypothesis) alongside social context and competition in a multimodal intervention program.</p><p><strong>Method: </strong>This field experiment used a three-factorial mixed design involving 403 Indonesian participants based on power statistical analysis: 2 (sugar content nudge: lower sugar tea vs. regular sugar tea default) × 2 (social context: individual vs. group) × 2 (competition: absent vs. present).</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Nudging was the most powerful intervention in reducing sugar intake, but its effectiveness might be attenuated by social loafing even within Indonesia's collectivist culture. Competition did not work synergistically with nudging but was effective under the nonnudge condition.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Our results are consistent with those of previous research showing that behavioral nudging has a stronger impact on behavioral change than nonnudge strategies. Contrary to some previous research, people in collectivist Indonesia did engage in social loafing: achievement motivation is not necessarily enhanced in a team of people in a collectivist culture. The Nudge × Competition interaction supports the saturation hypothesis in favor of behavioral nudging: using more than one intervention, when a potent strategy such as nudging is present, might result in diminishing returns that could reduce the overall benefit-cost profile of such multimodal intervention programs. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:本实验考察了印度尼西亚行为轻推干预对降低糖摄入量的效果。具体来说,我们测试了两个相互竞争的假设,即在多模式干预计划中,行为助推是否起到了附加作用(即增量假设),还是促成了天花板效应(即饱和假设),以及社会背景和竞争。方法:本实验采用三因子混合设计,涉及403名印度尼西亚参与者,基于功率统计分析:2(糖含量推动:低糖茶与常规糖茶默认)× 2(社会背景:个人与群体)× 2(竞争:缺席与在场)。结果:轻推是减少糖摄入量最有效的干预措施,但即使在印度尼西亚的集体主义文化中,其有效性也可能因社会懒惰而减弱。竞争与助推没有协同作用,但在非助推条件下是有效的。结论:我们的研究结果与先前的研究结果一致,表明行为推动比非推动策略对行为改变的影响更大。与之前的一些研究相反,印度尼西亚的集体主义国家的人确实会参与社会懒惰:在集体主义文化的团队中,成就动机不一定会增强。助推与竞争的相互作用支持饱和假说,支持行为助推:当存在助推等有效策略时,使用多个干预措施可能会导致收益递减,从而降低此类多模式干预计划的总体收益-成本比例。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,版权所有)。
Incremental versus saturation hypotheses for behavioral nudge in reducing sugar consumption.
Objective: This field experiment examined the efficacy of a behavioral nudge intervention towards lowering sugar intake in Indonesia. Specifically, two competing hypotheses were tested as to whether behavioral nudge played an additive role (i.e., the Incremental Hypothesis) or contributed to a ceiling effect (i.e., the Saturation Hypothesis) alongside social context and competition in a multimodal intervention program.
Method: This field experiment used a three-factorial mixed design involving 403 Indonesian participants based on power statistical analysis: 2 (sugar content nudge: lower sugar tea vs. regular sugar tea default) × 2 (social context: individual vs. group) × 2 (competition: absent vs. present).
Results: Nudging was the most powerful intervention in reducing sugar intake, but its effectiveness might be attenuated by social loafing even within Indonesia's collectivist culture. Competition did not work synergistically with nudging but was effective under the nonnudge condition.
Conclusion: Our results are consistent with those of previous research showing that behavioral nudging has a stronger impact on behavioral change than nonnudge strategies. Contrary to some previous research, people in collectivist Indonesia did engage in social loafing: achievement motivation is not necessarily enhanced in a team of people in a collectivist culture. The Nudge × Competition interaction supports the saturation hypothesis in favor of behavioral nudging: using more than one intervention, when a potent strategy such as nudging is present, might result in diminishing returns that could reduce the overall benefit-cost profile of such multimodal intervention programs. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Health Psychology publishes articles on psychological, biobehavioral, social, and environmental factors in physical health and medical illness, and other issues in health psychology.