scholarly journals The whole pie: Using behavioural insights to communicate about add-on insurance

Author(s):  
BETA Team Registration
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2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viknesh Sounderajah ◽  
Hutan Ashrafian ◽  
Sheraz Markar ◽  
Ara Darzi

UNSTRUCTURED If health systems are to effectively employ social distancing measures to in response to further COVID-19 peaks, they must adopt new behavioural metrics that can supplement traditional downstream measures, such as incidence and mortality. Access to mobile digital innovations may dynamically quantify compliance to social distancing (e.g. web mapping software) as well as establish personalised real-time contact tracing of viral spread (e.g. mobile operating system infrastructure through Google-Apple partnership). In particular, text data from social networking platforms can be mined for unique behavioural insights, such as symptom tracking and perception monitoring. Platforms, such as Twitter, have shown significant promise in tracking communicable pandemics. As such, it is critical that social networking companies collaborate with each other in order to (1) enrich the data that is available for analysis, (2) promote the creation of open access datasets for researchers and (3) cultivate relationships with governments in order to affect positive change.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 198-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
OLIVIA M. MAYNARD ◽  
MARCUS R. MUNAFÒ

AbstractThere are inherent differences in the priorities of academics and policy-makers. These pose unique challenges for teams such as the Behavioural Insights Team (BIT), which has positioned itself as an organisation conducting academically rigorous behavioural science research in policy settings. Here we outline the threats to research transparency and reproducibility that stem from working with policy-makers and other non-academic stakeholders. These threats affect how we perform, communicate, verify and evaluate research. Solutions that increase research transparency include pre-registering study protocols, making data open and publishing summaries of results. We suggest an incentive structure (a simple ‘nudge’) that rewards BIT's non-academic partners for engaging in these practices.


Author(s):  
Julio Ponce Solé ◽  
Estrella Montolío Durán ◽  
José Andrés Rozás Valdés
Keyword(s):  

El objetivo del presente estudio es considerar los conocimientos sobre el comportamiento (behavioural insights), que han conducido al llamado Derecho conductual (behavioural law) y a los acicates (nudges), desde una perspectiva jurídica, imprescindible en su necesario análisis inter/transdisciplinario. Partiendo de esa relevancia jurídica de los acicates, se analizan cuestiones referentes a su incidencia en los ciudadanos desde la perspectiva de un Estado Social y Democrático de Derecho como el español.


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