weinreich bookmarks: - page: 2urn:uuid:{E54722D9-8B5F-AEA4-C67A-50B12D2D4756}2024-03-28T22:53:16ZEvaluation of California's Statewide Mental Health Campaigns | RAND14847152023-10-01T08:52:16ZZ167weinreichBehaviour change, the itchy spot of healthcare quality improvement: How can psychology theory and skills help to scratch the itch? - Charlotte Emma Hilton, 202314846722023-09-26T10:30:54Z2023-09-26T10:31:14Z167weinreichDitch “Statistical Significance” — But Keep Statistical Evidence | by Eric J. Daza, DrPH, MPS | Towards Data Science14844402023-09-10T20:24:10ZZ“significant” p-value ≠ “significant” finding: The significance of statistical evidence for the true X (i.e., statistical significance of the p-value for the estimate of the true X) says absolutely nothing about the practical/scientific significance of the true X. That is, significance of evidence is not evidence of significance. Increasing your sample size in no way increases the practical/scientific significance of your practical/scientific hypothesis.
“significant” p-value = “discernible” finding: The significance of statistical evidence for the true X does tell us how well the estimate can discern the true X. That is, significance of evidence is evidence of discernibility. Increasing your sample size does increase how well your finding can discern your practical/scientific hypothesis.167weinreichComparing Two Types of Online Survey Samples - Pew Research Center Methods | Pew Research Center14844392023-09-10T20:22:21ZZOpt-in samples are about half as accurate as probability-based panels167weinreichWhy Facts Don’t Change Our Minds | The New Yorker14844372023-09-10T17:43:12ZZMercier and Sperber prefer the term “myside bias.” Humans, they point out, aren’t randomly credulous. Presented with someone else’s argument, we’re quite adept at spotting the weaknesses. Almost invariably, the positions we’re blind about are our own.167weinreichHow to create simple infographics.14844222023-09-07T23:42:38ZZ167weinreichDecades of public messages about recycling in the US have crowded out more sustainable ways to manage waste14844212023-09-07T23:30:19Z2023-09-07T23:30:39ZOur results show that a decadeslong effort to educate the U.S. public about recycling has succeeded in some ways but failed in others. These efforts have made recycling an option that consumers see as important – but to the detriment of more sustainable options. And it has not made people more effective recyclers.167weinreichMaking sense of implementation theories, models and frameworks | Implementation Science | Full Text14844202023-09-07T23:28:40ZZ167weinreichBehavioral Design System (Community) – Figma14844192023-09-07T23:26:39ZZ167weinreichDecoding human behaviour An introduction to behavioural science methods and techniques14844182023-09-07T23:23:57ZZ167weinreichIs behavioural science using the wrong model?14844172023-09-07T23:19:08ZZ“We don’t have a hundred biases, we have the wrong model.”
So said Jason Collins in a recent blog, perhaps somewhat provocatively likening the use of biases as akin to the activity of ancient astronomers who were required to compile an exhaustive number of deviations to retain the broken model of the universe revolving around the earth. Collins challenge is whether the model at the heart of behavioural science is similarly broken.167weinreichTEDxNoosa 2013 | Sohail Inayatullah | Causal layered analysis - YouTube14844162023-09-07T23:18:11ZZCausal layered analysis, a theory and practice of organisational, social and civilisational change, seeks to transform the present and the future, through deconstructing and reconstructing reality at four levels. The levels are: the litany or day to day unquestioned views of reality, the systemic, the worldview/stakeholder perspective and the deepest, often unconscious, myths and metaphors. Problems are considered at all four levels and multiple worldviews and stakeholders are brought into to consider alternatives. By moving up and down layers and considering alternative perspectives, transformative policy and strategic solutions are created.167weinreichIllusory truth effect - The Decision Lab14844152023-09-07T23:16:59ZZWhy do we believe misinformation more easily when it’s repeated many times?167weinreichThe Impossible, the Unlikely, and the Probable Nudges: A Classification for the Design of Your Next Nudge14844142023-09-07T23:15:42ZZNudging provides a way to gently influence people to change behavior towards a desired goal, e.g., by moving towards a healthier or more environmentally friendly lifestyle. Personalized and context-aware digital nudging (named smart nudging) can be a powerful tool for efficient nudging by tailoring nudges to the current situation of each individual user. However, designing smart nudges is challenging, as different users may need different supports to improve their behavior. Determining the next nudge for a specific user must be done based on the user’s current situation, abilities, and potential for improvement. In this paper, we focus on the challenge of designing the next nudge by presenting a novel classification of nudges that distinguishes between (i) nudges that are impossible for the user to follow, (ii) nudges that are unlikely to be followed, and (iii) probable nudges that the user can follow. The classification is tailored to individual users based on user profiles, current situations, and knowledge of previous behaviors. This paper describes steps in the nudge design process and a novel set of principles for designing smart nudges.167weinreichHow many participants do we have to include in properly powered experiments? A tutorial of power analysis with reference tables - Journal of Cognition14844132023-09-07T23:14:49ZZ167weinreichExplore: Four simple ways to map and unpack behaviour | The Behavioural Insights Team14844122023-09-07T23:13:08ZZIf you have ever been tasked with influencing a behaviour, you will know that it is critical to understand that behaviour in context. You need to understand the issues faced by the people affected. At BIT, we refer to the process of understanding behaviour in context as Exploring. Exploring is about discovering what people do and crucially why.167weinreichWhy behavioural science also needs sociologists to address climate behaviours14844112023-09-07T23:11:59ZZIf we are to use behavioural science as a lens to understand behaviour, we need to make sure that our lens is not always ‘zoomed in’ on the individual and their immediate situation but that we also ‘zoom out,’ so that we can see the wider social, cultural, economic and political environment. When we do this, we can see more clearly how our responses and behaviours are not only the result of our individual psychology but are also socially, economically and historically situated. There is a nuanced balancing act between the individual and these wider ways in which our behaviour is shaped that will inevitably be a source of debate and disagreement.167weinreichExplaining Behavioral Science: How to Pitch Behavioral Science at a Dinner Party in 1 Minute or Less - Irrational Labs14844102023-09-07T23:10:39ZZBelow, I’ll break down the three key steps to creating a compelling pitch for behavioral science. A bonus: you can put it all together in one minute or less to make a short—and sweet—sell on our amazing field.167weinreichBest Practices for Developing and Validating Scales for Health, Social, and Behavioral Research: A Primer14844092023-09-07T23:02:37ZZ167weinreichHow to Design Emotional Products. JTBD + Emotions-To-Be-Felt. The famous… | by James Buckhouse | Medium14844082023-09-07T23:01:50ZZDraft your emotional Before/During/After for each moment. Challenge yourself to superforecast how you think people will feel at each moment. Design, adjust, re-adjust.167weinreichVisual thinking short course (Free!) - by Dave Gray14844072023-09-07T22:56:27ZZ167weinreichJTBD Canvas 2.014844062023-09-07T22:55:45ZZThe JTBD Canvas 2.0 is a tool to help you scope out your JTBD landscape prior to conducting field research. It frames your field of inquiry and scopes of your innovation effort.167weinreichImproving Government Forms Better Practice Guide14844052023-09-07T22:54:56ZZ167weinreichMisconceptions about the Practice of Behavioral Public Policy by Michael Hallsworth :: SSRN14844042023-09-07T22:54:06ZZIn 2022, Nick Chater and George Loewenstein published a pre-print called ‘The i-frame and the s-frame: How focusing on individual-level solutions has led behavioral public policy astray’. The paper argues that “behavioral scientists“ have focused too much on policy ideas that aim to shape individual behavior (the “i-frame“), rather than the systems in which people behave (the “s-frame“) and therefore they “may have unwittingly promoted the interests of the opponents of systemic change”. I greatly respect the authors of this article and agree with their ultimate goal of applying behavioral science to public policy more effectively. However, I find this paper to be deeply flawed and ultimately self-defeating. My concerns come in three categories.167weinreichthe Decision Stack14844032023-09-07T22:52:51ZZI hope this post gives some ideas to product leads on how to use the Decision Stack as a mental model in all sorts of conversations. The stack is a really powerful coaching tool.
It is a framework that helps you to discuss things like:
How to achieve alignment and directional clarity across the board. Use the Stack to connect the dots. Ask why things are the way they are and how the organization is planning to reach their goals.
Use it to discuss goals and where shared goals would be possible.
Use it to discuss team topologies, team empowerment, and mandate.167weinreichHow content design can serve international or mixed language groups14844022023-09-07T22:50:36ZZLinguistic accessibility is important because people in a group often speak more than one language with various degrees of confidence. People also use different varieties of the same language or create their own variety.
The way a language develops in a multilingual group reflects what people need and want to communicate.167weinreichAgainst Copyediting: Is It Time to Abolish the Other Department of Corrections? ‹ Literary Hub14844012023-09-07T22:48:51ZZCould there be another way to practice copyediting—less attached to precedent, less perseverating, and more eagerly transgressive; a practice that, to distinguish itself from the quietly violent tradition from which it arises, might not be called “copyediting” at all; a practice that would not only “permit” but amplify the potential for linguistic invention and preservation in any written work?167weinreichTHE BASIC TOOLKIT: TOOLS AND ETHICS FOR APPLIED BEHAVIOURAL INSIGHTS (OECD)14844002023-09-07T22:45:40ZZThe toolkit presented here guides the policy maker through a
methodology that looks at Behaviours, Analysis, Strategies,
Interventions, and Change (abbreviated “BASIC”). It starts
with a BASIC guide that serves as an indispensable and
practical introduction to the BASIC manual.167weinreichPersonas and Behavioral Theories | Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems14843992023-09-07T22:43:45ZZPersonas are a widely used tool to keep real users in mind, while avoiding stereotypical thinking in the design process. Yet, creating personas can be challenging. Starting from Cooper's approach for constructing personas, this paper details how behavioral theory can contribute substantially to the development of personas. We describe a case study in which Self-Determination Theory (SDT) is used to develop five distinctive personas for the design of a digital coach for sustainable weight loss. We show how behavioral theories such as SDT can help to understand what genuinely drives and motivates users to sustainably change their behavior. In our study, we used SDT to prepare and analyze interviews with envisioned users of the coach and to create complex, yet engaging and highly realistic personas that make users' basic psychological needs explicit. The paper ends with a critical reflection on the use of behavioral theories to create personas, discussing both challenges and strengths.167weinreichGood Practice Principles For Ethical Behavioural Science In Public Policy Public Governance Policy Paper - OECD14843982023-09-07T22:42:19ZZ167weinreichWhat Does “GRWM“ Mean on TikTok? Why the Acronym Has Become So Common14843972023-09-07T22:41:05ZZAccording to Social Media Perth, the acronym stands for “get ready with me,“ which is a common form of video content found on platforms like YouTube and increasingly on TikTok as well. These videos are typically created by people in the beauty and fashion spaces, and they involve a thorough documentation of everything an influencer does during their morning or evening routines.167weinreichThe WISER framework of behavioural change interventions for mindful human flourishing14843962023-09-07T22:39:39ZZTo do so, we propose a framework, which rearranges
the 17 SDGs into five main categories to which concepts
from behavioural and social scientists can relate:
wellbeing, inclusivity, sufficiency, empowerment,
and resilience (WISER; panel). The WISER framework
can enable behavioural scientists to both design their
interventions in a way that encompasses several
SDGs, and to more clearly report and review how their
interventions contribute to behavioural change towards
SDGs, thus enhancing progress towards planetary health167weinreichA Guide to the “Nocebo Effect,“ and How It Impacts Your Wellness - InsideHook14843952023-09-07T22:37:33ZZBut this deluge of information — in which you are naturally very invested — can also prove overwhelming and unhelpful. We’re big fans of brands like WHOOP and Oura, and regularly encourage readers to dig through Apple’s Health app…but you need to be honest with yourself.
If fitness tracking is psychologically increasing your feelings of inadequacy and physically increasing your perception of pain, it’s not worth it. At the least, it’s going to torpedo your performance (at work, in workouts, etc.)167weinreichCogniss: The no-code platform for digital health14843942023-09-07T22:36:00ZZCreate powerful digital health apps. Without code.
Cogniss is a no-code ecosystem to develop sophisticated consumer and patient-facing digital health solutions (native iOS, native Android & Web) – digital therapeutics, real-world evidence tools, research apps & more.167weinreichBehavioral Science Papers, Research, & Data14843932023-09-07T22:34:04ZZ167weinreichLaying the foundations for success: co-creating sustainable marketing solutions: Journal of Strategic Marketing: Vol 31, No 114843922023-09-07T22:32:37ZZExtending from the existing seven-step co-design process, this paper outlines a first attempt explaining the formative research study that employed six SMBC to co-create a sustainable marketing program. Three studies were conducted, namely 1) Expert panel review (N = 24), 2) Segmentation study (N = 707), and 3) Co-design workshops (N = 77). As a result, a framework for Marketing Co-creation is proposed to assist practitioners to build programs for behaviour (ex)change. This research proposed a step-by-step process that can be applied by researchers/practitioners ensuring that marketing programs are built with consumers.167weinreichDeliberate ignorance—a barrier for information interventions targeting reduced meat consumption?: Psychology & Health: Vol 0, No 014843912023-09-07T22:30:50ZZDeliberate ignorance is a potential barrier for information interventions aiming to reduce meat consumption and needs to be considered in future interventions and research. Self-efficacy exercises are a promising approach to reduce deliberate ignorance and should be further explored.167weinreichDeveloping Behaviourally Informed Communications - World Health Organization Collaborating Centre On Investment for Health and Well-being14843892023-09-07T22:28:39ZZAn interactive tool to help you take a behaviourally informed approach when designing your communications167weinreichHow systems thinking compliments behavioural approaches in solving complex social problems | LinkedIn14843882023-09-07T22:27:48ZZIn this short follow up post we explain how and why we combine systems thinking and behavioural approaches. We start by introducing the concepts of ‘systems’ and ‘systems thinking’ before explaining why Systems thinking is useful to combine with a behavioural approach.167weinreichThe Systems that Keep Behavioural Science from Progressing - a Reply to BIT's Manifesto14843872023-09-07T22:26:18ZZ167weinreichRevolutionising transmedia through AI – Simon Staffans // Evolving Media14843862023-09-07T22:25:01ZZNow though, venturing into the world of AI-assisted transmedia storytelling, we are presented with what could be an exciting opportunity to overcome challenges such as the ones above and perhaps finally see the emergence of “true” transmedia storytelling. Looking at the rapid advancements in AI over the past year and months (and weeks and days!) it quickly becomes clear that these technologies are offering creators a wealth of opportunities to push the boundaries of narrative experiences.167weinreichOvercoming the Unknown: 6 Behavioural Insights to Help Manage Uncertainty | The Research Agency14843852023-09-07T22:23:13ZZThere are ways that we can overcome the unknown, the uncertain, and the ambiguous to help people feel more confident. The following behavioural insights are all practical examples of how to follow the four guiding stars of navigating uncertainty.
Transparency
Consistency
Managing expectations
Social proof167weinreichHow To White-Label A Custom ChatGPT Chatbot For Your Clients - CustomGPT14843842023-09-07T22:22:22ZZ167weinreich“Health is Social: Leveraging the Metaverse to Improve Public Health” conference | UConn Center for mHealth and Social Media14843832023-09-07T22:19:59ZZThe theme of the 2023 annual virtual CHASM conference is “Health is Social: Leveraging the Metaverse to Improve Public Health.” A theme throughout the conference will be the role of social connectedness in health and ways we can leverage the metaverse to strengthen social ties, social support, and tilt social norms toward healthy choices, healthy lifestyles, and healthy communities. This conference will feature keynote speakers and panelists who are studying and innovating tools of the metaverse, including social media, virtual reality, and digital technologies to help us connect in ways that solve health problems.167weinreichBehav Behaviour Change Sprints, Tools & Training14843822023-09-07T22:17:31ZZBehav has everything you’ll need to understand people and change what they do so you can create reliable behaviours, faster.
Behavior change patterns, behavior research patterns decks.167weinreichSocial Media and Youth Mental Health - US Surgeon General's report14843812023-09-07T22:14:16ZZ167weinreichWheel of Progress (R) | JTBD | Customer Progress | Customer Centric Solutions LLC | CX Strategy and Experience Design14843802023-09-07T22:13:26ZZThe Wheel of Progress® is a framework created by Eckhart Boehme and Peter Rochel leveraging jobs-to-be-done principles and methods to evaluate why customers “hire“ a given product or service to accomplish a Customer Job.
It provides a canvas to be used when conducting consumer research to evaluate the journey a customer takes from first thought to use of the solution (consumption/job satisfaction). In addition, it enables one to evaluate the four forces of progress at play (push, pull, habits, anxieties) in regards to 'switching behavior'. Finally, one is able to evaluate constraints (internal, external, time-based) that impact the customer journey.167weinreichHow I Built a Chat Simulation in 2 Hours - Experiencing eLearning14843792023-09-07T22:12:07ZZSee how I built a simple chat simulation in a few hours. I used Twine and the Trialogue story format to create a forced choice chat.167weinreichColor Psychology videos - Brian Cugelman - YouTube14843782023-09-07T22:11:16ZZ167weinreichHow to use a new generation data collection and analysis tool? - The Cynefin Co14843772023-09-07T22:09:43ZZThis is SenseMaker in its most simple form, usually structured to have an open (non-hypothesis) question (commonly referred to as a ‘prompting question’) to collect a micro-narrative at the start. This is then followed by a range of triads (triangles), dyads (sliders), stones canvases, free text questions and multiple choice questions.
The reason or value for using Sensemaker: Open free text questions are used at the beginning as a way of scanning for diversity of narratives and experiences. This is a way to remain open to ‘unknown unknowns’. The narrative is then followed by signifier questions that allow the respondent to add layers of meaning and codification to the narrative (or experience) in order to allow for mixed methods analysis, to map and explore patterns.167weinreich