
Open access
Date
2020-12Type
- Journal Article
Citations
Cited 13 times in
Web of Science
Cited 12 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics
Abstract
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon whereby humans underestimate exponential growth. In the context of infectious diseases, this bias may lead to a failure to understand the magnitude of the benefit of non-pharmaceutical interventions. Communicating the same scenario in different ways (framing) has been found to have a large impact on people’s evaluations and behavior in the contexts of social behavior, risk taking and health care. We find that framing matters for people’s assessment of the benefits of non-pharmaceutical interventions. In two commonly used frames, most subjects in our experiment drastically underestimate the number of cases avoided by adopting non-pharmaceutical interventions. Framing growth in terms of doubling times rather than growth rates reduces the bias. When the scenario is framed in terms of time gained rather than cases avoided, the median subject assesses the benefit of non-pharmaceutical interventions correctly. These findings suggest changes that could be adopted to better communicate the exponential spread of infectious diseases. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000458067Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
PLoS ONEVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Public Library of ScienceSubject
COVID-19; Sars-Cov-2; Public Health; Epidemiology; Infectious Diseases; Behavioral Economics; Cognitive Biases; Exponential Growth BiasOrganisational unit
03795 - Bechtold, Stefan / Bechtold, Stefan
Funding
176353 - Intellectual Property Law: A Behavioral Perspective (SNF)
Related publications and datasets
Is new version of: https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000421436
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Show all metadata
Citations
Cited 13 times in
Web of Science
Cited 12 times in
Scopus
ETH Bibliography
yes
Altmetrics