MESOP WATCH NEW : HOW CREATE POLICY MAKERS HUMAN BEHAVIOR IN PANDEMIC TIMES
2021 Dec;600(7889):478-483. doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-04128-4. Epub 2021 Dec 8. Megastudies improve the impact of applied behavioural science
Katherine L Milkman 1 , Dena Gromet 2 , Hung Ho 3 4 , Joseph S Kay 2 , Timothy W Lee 2 5 , Pepi Pandiloski 6 , Yeji Park 7 , Aneesh Rai 3 , Max Bazerman 8 , John Beshears 8 , Lauri Bonacorsi 9 , Colin Camerer 10 , Edward Chang 8 , Gretchen Chapman 11 , Robert Cialdini 12 , Hengchen Dai 13 , Lauren Eskreis-Winkler 14 , Ayelet Fishbach 14 , James J Gross 15 , Samantha Horn 11 , Alexa Hubbard 16 , Steven J Jones 17 , Dean Karlan 18 , Tim Kautz 19 , Erika Kirgios 3 , Joowon Klusowski 20 , Ariella Kristal 21 , Rahul Ladhania 22 , George Loewenstein 11 , Jens Ludwig 6 , Barbara Mellers 20 , Sendhil Mullainathan 14 , Silvia Saccardo 11 , Jann Spiess 23 , Gaurav Suri 24 , Joachim H Talloen 11 , Jamie Taxer 15 , Yaacov Trope 16 , Lyle Ungar 25 , Kevin G Volpp 26 , Ashley Whillans 8 , Jonathan Zinman 27 , Angela L Duckworth 28 29
Affiliations
- PMID: 34880497
- DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04128-4
Abstract
Policy-makers are increasingly turning to behavioural science for insights about how to improve citizens’ decisions and outcomes1. Typically, different scientists test different intervention ideas in different samples using different outcomes over different time intervals2. The lack of comparability of such individual investigations limits their potential to inform policy. Here, to address this limitation and accelerate the pace of discovery, we introduce the megastudy-a massive field experiment in which the effects of many different interventions are compared in the same population on the same objectively measured outcome for the same duration. In a megastudy targeting physical exercise among 61,293 members of an American fitness chain, 30 scientists from 15 different US universities worked in small independent teams to design a total of 54 different four-week digital programmes (or interventions) encouraging exercise. We show that 45% of these interventions significantly increased weekly gym visits by 9% to 27%; the top-performing intervention offered microrewards for returning to the gym after a missed workout. Only 8% of interventions induced behaviour change that was significant and measurable after the four-week intervention. Conditioning on the 45% of interventions that increased exercise during the intervention, we detected carry-over effects that were proportionally similar to those measured in previous research3-6. Forecasts by impartial judges failed to predict which interventions would be most effective, underscoring the value of testing many ideas at once and, therefore, the potential for megastudies to improve the evidentiary value of behavioural science.
© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
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