Daniel G. Goldstein’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Do Defaults Save Lives?
  • Chapter

August 2006

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58 Reads

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244 Citations

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Daniel G. Goldstein

One of the main themes that has emerged from behavioral decision research during the past three decades is the view that people's preferences are often constructed in the process of elicitation. This idea is derived from studies demonstrating that normatively equivalent methods of elicitation (e.g., choice and pricing) give rise to systematically different responses. These preference reversals violate the principle of procedure invariance that is fundamental to all theories of rational choice. If different elicitation procedures produce different orderings of options, how can preferences be defined and in what sense do they exist? This book shows not only the historical roots of preference construction but also the blossoming of the concept within psychology, law, marketing, philosophy, environmental policy, and economics. Decision making is now understood to be a highly contingent form of information processing, sensitive to task complexity, time pressure, response mode, framing, reference points, and other contextual factors.

Citations (1)


... In countries deploying this default nudge, more than 95% of the population are registered as organ donors. By contrast, in countries where people have to actively opt in to become organ donors, that percentage is only about 15% (Johnson and Goldstein, 2003). This example illustrates that default nudges can have a large effect on people's decisions without restricting their freedom of choice (but see Jachimowicz et al., 2019;Maier et al., 2022). ...

Reference:

The Rational Use of Cognitive Resources
Do Defaults Save Lives?
  • Citing Chapter
  • August 2006