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  • Hello. This is Six Minute

  • English from BBC Learning English.

  • I'm Neil. And I'm Beth.

  • Have you ever been sent a text reminding you about a doctor's appointment?

  • Or impulsively bought something on the internet

  • because there was 'only one left'?

  • If any of these have happened to you, then

  • you've been nudged. A nudge is a subtle way

  • of altering human behaviour.

  • It's a powerful way for governments, advertisers

  • and social media companies to encourage, or nudge, people

  • into making choices that benefit themselves

  • and society as a whole.

  • Imagine the Government want

  • people to eat better.

  • It might encourage supermarkets to put healthy snacks

  • in easy-to-reach shelves

  • near the check out and hide the chocolate bars out of sight

  • on the top shelf. Shoppers are being nudged to eat better.

  • Well, that's the idea anyway,

  • but often nudging is used less to benefit society and more to make money

  • for big business, and it happens more often than people realise.

  • So, in this programme, we'll be asking

  • whether the idea behind nudging, to influence human behaviour

  • for good, is still true today.

  • And, as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well.

  • But first,

  • I have a question for you, Beth.

  • Another example of nudging happened in Woolwich, an area of London,

  • which in 2011 had a problem with anti-social behaviour,

  • and particularly with shop windows being smashed.

  • The local authority decided to use nudging to fix the problem

  • by painting pictures on the shop windows.

  • But what did they paint? Was it: a) cute kittens,

  • b) babies' faces or c) barking dogs?

  • I guess barking dogs would keep the window breakers away.

  • OK, Beth. I'll reveal the correct answer later in the programme.

  • Nudging started in 2008 with the publication of a book

  • by Nobel Prize winning economist Professor Richard Thaler.

  • Professor Thaler's ideas about how to gently persuade people

  • into making good decisions became known as nudge

  • theory. Advertising executive Rory Sutherland introduced nudge theory

  • to his agency, Ogilvy.

  • Here's Rory explaining more to BBC

  • Radio 4 programme, Analysis. Let's say you make

  • the profitable option button green and highly attractive,

  • the less profitable option,

  • you make it kind of grey, and kind of manky looking, OK...

  • That would be an example of something which is, you know, a nudge

  • not necessarily used in the best interests

  • of the consumer. Advertisers

  • use colours to nudge customers towards the profitable option,

  • the one which is the most likely to make money.

  • These appear brightly coloured and attractive on the screen,

  • whereas less profitable options are made to look

  • manky, a slang word meaning dirty and unattractive.

  • Here, nudging isn't being used for the public good.

  • These 'dark nudges' are also called 'sludge',

  • make money for a company,

  • but are not always in the best interests of the consumer.

  • If something is in your best interests,

  • it's the most advantageous and beneficial thing for you to do.

  • Dark nudges have caused many to question

  • the morality of nudging,

  • including Neil Levy,

  • Professor of Ethics at Oxford University, speaking here to BBC

  • Radio 4 programme, Analysis:

  • The big one,

  • the one people have concentrated on,

  • is that it's paternalistic - that

  • is that nudge might be in our interests

  • but we want to make our own decisions.

  • People worry that nudges infantilize us, it's undermining our autonomy.

  • Critics of nudging call it paternalistic, meaning

  • it wants to make decisions

  • for people, rather than letting them take responsibility for themselves.

  • They also claim nudging infantilizes people.

  • It treats them like children and, as a result, people lose autonomy,

  • the ability to make your own decisions about what to do, rather

  • than being told by someone else.

  • I guess nudging itself is neither good nor bad,

  • it just depends how you use it.

  • Well, let's look on the positive side

  • by revealing the answer to your question, Neil.

  • Right. I asked you how authorities in Woolwich in South East London nudged

  • anti-social window breakers to behave nicely.

  • I guessed it was by painting pictures of scary

  • barking dogs on the windows... Which was the wrong answer

  • I'm afraid, Beth. In fact, Woolwich council hired graffiti artists

  • to paint pictures of local babies' faces onto the window shutters.

  • Not even the most hard-hearted criminal smashed those windows

  • and anti-social behaviour fell by 18% in one year.

  • OK, let's recap the vocabulary

  • we have learned in this programme about nudgingways

  • of gently persuading or encouraging someone to take decisions.

  • Something which is profitable makes a profit or is likely to make money.

  • Manky is slang for dirty and unattractive.

  • If something is in your best interests,

  • it's the most advantageous, beneficial thing for you to do.

  • A paternalistic person prefers making decisions for other people, rather

  • than letting them take responsibility for their own lives.

  • To infantilize someone means to treat them as if they were a child.

  • Finally, autonomy is the ability to make your own decisions

  • about what to do, rather than being told by someone else.

  • Once again our six minutes are up.

  • Remember to join us again next time

  • for more topical discussion and useful vocabulary here at Six Minute

  • English. Goodbye for now. Goodbye!

Hello. This is Six Minute

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Nudges: The secrets of persuasion ⏲️ 6 Minute English

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    英文探長J に公開 2024 年 05 月 08 日
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