Metric and Scale Design as Choice Architecture Tools

被引:54
|
作者
Camilleri, Adrian R. [1 ]
Larrick, Richard P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ, Fuqua Sch Business, Durham, NC 27706 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
choice; choice architecture; scale expansion; fuel economy; labeling metrics; ENERGY-EFFICIENCY; REFERENCE INFORMATION; ECOLOGICAL PARADIGM; COST INFORMATION; COMPREHENSION; DECISIONS; ECONOMICS; INCREASE; REWARDS; LABELS;
D O I
10.1509/jppm.12.151
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Interest is increasing in using behavioral decision insights to design better product labels. A specific policy target is the fuel economy label, which policy makers can use to encourage reduction in carbon dioxide emissions from transport-related fossil-fuel combustion. In two online experiments, the authors examine whether vehicle preferences can be shifted toward more fuel-efficient vehicles by manipulating the metric (consumption of gas vs. cost of gas) and scale (100 miles vs. 15,000 miles vs. 100,000 miles) on which fuel economy information is expressed. They find that preference for fuel-efficient vehicles is highest when fuel economy is expressed in terms of the cost of gas over 100,000 miles, regardless of whether the vehicle pays for its higher price in gas savings. The authors discuss the underlying psychological mechanisms for this finding, including compatibility, anchoring, and familiarity effects, and conclude that policy makers should initiate programs that communicate fuel-efficiency information in terms of costs over an expanded, lifetime scale.
引用
收藏
页码:108 / 125
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Beyond nudges: Tools of a choice architecture
    Johnson, Eric J.
    Shu, Suzanne B.
    Dellaert, Benedict G. C.
    Fox, Craig
    Goldstein, Daniel G.
    Haeubl, Gerald
    Larrick, Richard P.
    Payne, John W.
    Peters, Ellen
    Schkade, David
    Wansink, Brian
    Weber, Elke U.
    MARKETING LETTERS, 2012, 23 (02) : 487 - 504
  • [2] Beyond nudges: Tools of a choice architecture
    Eric J. Johnson
    Suzanne B. Shu
    Benedict G. C. Dellaert
    Craig Fox
    Daniel G. Goldstein
    Gerald Häubl
    Richard P. Larrick
    John W. Payne
    Ellen Peters
    David Schkade
    Brian Wansink
    Elke U. Weber
    Marketing Letters, 2012, 23 : 487 - 504
  • [3] Rapid design and manufacture tools in architecture
    Ryder, G
    Ion, B
    Green, G
    Harrison, D
    Wood, B
    AUTOMATION IN CONSTRUCTION, 2002, 11 (03) : 279 - 290
  • [4] GRAPHICAL TOOLS IN CLIMATIC DESIGN OF ARCHITECTURE
    IZARD, JL
    ENERGY AND BUILDINGS, 1982, 4 (04) : 255 - 262
  • [5] SOME TOOLS FOR DESIGN IN SOLAR ARCHITECTURE
    CHAULIAGUET, C
    ARCHITECTURE D AUJOURD HUI, 1980, 209 (JUN): : 17 - 18
  • [6] COMPUTERS IN ARCHITECTURE - TOOLS FOR DESIGN - PENZ,FA
    MAVER, T
    ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING B-PLANNING & DESIGN, 1994, 21 (02): : 252 - 253
  • [7] SCALE DESIGN OF METRIC RULES AND SLIDE RULES
    STOCKBRIDGE, HCW
    MILES, RJ
    APPLIED ERGONOMICS, 1970, 1 (04) : 198 - 201
  • [8] Tools to Ease the Choice and Design of Protein Crystallisation Experiments
    Rosa, Nicholas
    Ristic, Marko
    Thorburn, Luke
    Abrahams, Gabriel J.
    Marshall, Bevan
    Watkins, Christopher J.
    Kruger, Alex
    Khassapov, Alex
    Newman, Janet
    CRYSTALS, 2020, 10 (02):
  • [9] Using Blogs As Communication Tools For The Architecture Design Studio
    Baldea, Maja
    Maier, Alexandra
    Simionescu, Oana A.
    Proceedings of 6th World Conference on Educational Sciences, 2015, 191 : 2763 - 2768
  • [10] A layered software architecture for quantum computing design tools
    Svore, KM
    Aho, AV
    Cross, AW
    Chuang, I
    Markov, IL
    COMPUTER, 2006, 39 (01) : 74 - +