Cordes Christian, Henkel Joshua
University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 8;20(8):e0328434. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0328434. eCollection 2025.
This paper shows how to increase the effectiveness of "green nudging" as a policy measure to induce sustainable preferences. Evidence indicates that the behavioral impact of "green nudges" is subject to decay. To address this problem, we propose "enhanced green nudges", which incorporate learning biases as features of humans' capacity for culture. These provide information for the formation of enduring "green" preferences. Several biases in cultural transmission are considered, such as direct bias, norm-following behavior, conformity, self-similarity, and the influence of role models. Moreover, a prerequisite for "enhanced green nudges" to be effective is that learning environments resemble the ones biases evolved from in humans' evolutionary past. Based on a model of cultural evolution, several scenarios of preference acquisition through "green nudges" illustrate our arguments and indicate implications for policy.
本文展示了如何提高“绿色助推”作为一种诱导可持续偏好的政策措施的有效性。证据表明,“绿色助推”的行为影响会衰减。为解决这一问题,我们提出“强化绿色助推”,它将学习偏差纳入人类文化能力的特征之中。这些为持久的“绿色”偏好的形成提供信息。我们考虑了文化传播中的几种偏差,如直接偏差、规范遵循行为、从众、自我相似性以及榜样的影响。此外,“强化绿色助推”有效的一个前提是学习环境类似于人类进化历史中偏差所演变而来的环境。基于文化进化模型,通过“绿色助推”获取偏好的几种情形阐明了我们的观点,并指出了对政策的启示。