JRC Data Catalogue
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Comparing transparent and covert nudges: A meta-analysis calling for more diversity in nudge transparency research

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Contributors

How to cite

Bruns, Hendrik; Fillon, Adrien; Maniadis, Zacharias; Paunov, Yavor (2026): Comparing transparent and covert nudges: A meta-analysis calling for more diversity in nudge transparency research. European Commission, Joint Research Centre [Dataset] doi: 10.2905/JRC.0KJZD5G PID: http://data.europa.eu/89h/6edbfe24-9a12-4c63-a654-2b6a7cf0c1c0

Keywords

Meta-analysisNudgeReviewTransparency

Data access

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Downloadable file

A downloadable file for the dataset.

Use conditions
European Commission reuse notice

According to the European Commission reuse notice, reuse is authorised, provided the source is acknowledged. The reuse policy of the European Commission is implemented by the Decision of 12 December 2011. The general principle of reuse can be subject to conditions which may be specified in individual copyright notices. Therefore users are advised to refer to the copyright notices of the individual websites maintained under Europa and of the individual documents. Reuse is not applicable to documents subject to intellectual property rights of third parties.

Access conditions
No limitations

Anybody can directly and anonymously access the data, without being required to register or authenticate.

Publications

Publication
BRUNS, H., FILLON, A., MANIADIS, Z. and PAUNOV, Y., Comparing transparent and covert nudges, JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL AND EXPERIMENTAL ECONOMICS, 116, 2025, p. 102350, ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, https://data.europa.eu/doi/10.1016/j.socec.2025.102350 (online), JRC127499.
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
  • Do transparent and non-transparent nudges have similar effects

    The question is central in recent research on behavioural public policy, as it leads to ethical and practical implications regarding policy-maker responsibility, citizen agency, and nudge design. We meta-analysed results from 23 publications designed to compare transparent to covert nudges including 117 effect sizes and found a positive effect of transparency on behavioural outcomes, but no effect on non-behavioural outcomes. The moderator analyses revealed that studies conducted online, manipulating the decision structure, and conducted in the domain ‘other’ tended to exhibit significantly positive transparency effects for behavioural outcomes. We note that all but two studies were conducted online or in the lab, and that there is an over-representation of research on default nudges (88% of total effects), severely limiting the generalizability of the findings. Thus, we call for an improvement of research conducted on transparent nudges and the inclusion of more nudge types, preferably in a field setting. We also stress the importance of defining the form of transparency that societies require for respecting their citizen’s autonomy.

Additional information

Published by
European Commission, Joint Research Centre
Contact email
JRC-CCBI (at) ec.europa.eu
Update frequency
unknown

The event occurs with unknown regularity.

Data theme(s)
Government and public sector

dataset theme covering the areas of government and the public sector, government being the system or group of individuals governing an organised community, usually a state, and the public sector comprising the segment of the economy involving public services and enterprises, which may be managed by central, regional or local authorities

Issued date
2025-03-19
Created date
19 Mar 2025 07:25
Modified date
19 Mar 2025 07:26
Dataset identifier
Other identifiers
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