Changing Others’ Behaviour & Recent Trends

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📘 12.7 Changing Others’ Behaviour & Recent Trends

Understanding how and why people’s behaviour changes is at the core of applied psychology — relevant for governance, education, public health, marketing, and conflict resolution.


🔹 PART A: Behaviour Change – Strategies & Theories


✅ 1. Classical Conditioning (Pavlov)

Behavior can be changed by associating a neutral stimulus with an automatic response.

🧠 Application:

  • Political campaigns pairing leader’s image with patriotic music.
  • Using jingles in advertisements to create emotional recall.

✅ 2. Operant Conditioning (Skinner)

Behaviour is shaped by reinforcement (rewards) and punishment.

🧠 Application:

  • Government schemes using incentives (e.g., Ujjwala Yojana gas connections) to change fuel-use behavior.
  • Fines for littering = negative reinforcement.

✅ 3. Social Learning Theory (Bandura)

People learn by observing and imitating role models.

🧠 Example:

  • Influencers and celebrities promoting eco-friendly practices.
  • IAS officers acting as model leaders in rural development.

✅ 4. Persuasion Techniques

Change via influencing attitudes and beliefs.

Key Models:

  • Elaboration Likelihood Model (Petty & Cacioppo):
    • Central route: Logical argument (e.g., budget debate)
    • Peripheral route: Emotions, credibility, image (e.g., visual posters)

🧠 Use in India:

  • Swachh Bharat ads showing respected leaders promoting hygiene.

✅ 5. Cognitive Dissonance (Festinger)

When a person’s actions contradict beliefs, it causes tension → leads to change in either belief or behavior.

🧠 Example:
A smoker knows it’s harmful → either quits or justifies it (“It relaxes me”).


✅ 6. Foot-in-the-door Technique

Start with a small request → escalate to bigger one.

🧠 Use in NGOs:
Asking people to attend awareness sessions before requesting donations or volunteering.


✅ 7. Nudge Theory (Thaler & Sunstein)

Subtle policy changes that encourage better choices without forcing them.

🧠 Indian Examples:

  • Default pension enrollment
  • Organ donation opt-out systems
  • Changing placement of healthy food in school canteens

📊 Summary Table

Method Key Idea Real-Life Example
Classical Conditioning Association Patriotic songs in election campaigns
Operant Conditioning Rewards & Punishment LPG incentives for rural women
Social Learning Imitation of models Eco-actions by celebrities
Persuasion Logical/emotional appeal Road safety campaigns
Cognitive Dissonance Belief-action mismatch Smokers justifying or quitting
Foot-in-the-door Gradual commitment Volunteer → Donor in NGOs
Nudge Theory Choice architecture Healthy food placement in cafeterias

🔹 PART B: Recent Trends in Behaviour Change


📌 1. Digital Nudges

  • Using apps, push notifications, and gamification to encourage behavior.

E.g., Aarogya Setu app reminding users to stay safe.


📌 2. Behavioural Insights Units

  • Governments now have dedicated “nudge” or “behavioural economics” teams.

NITI Aayog partnered with the Behavioural Insights Team (BIT) from the UK.


📌 3. AI and Behaviour Prediction

  • Algorithms predict behaviour (e.g., creditworthiness, crime hotspots).
  • Raises ethical issues regarding consent and bias.

📌 4. Community-Led Behaviour Change

  • Programs like Total Sanitation Campaign rely on peer pressure, local role models.

📌 5. Cultural Tailoring

  • Behaviour change messages are now adapted to local language, symbols, festivals for deeper impact.

📌 6. Value-Based Behaviour Interventions

  • Instead of rules, targeting core beliefs (e.g., honesty, empathy).
  • Seen in ethics training for public servants.

🧠 Mnemonic: “SCOPED”

  • Social learning
  • Conditioning (classical & operant)
  • Opinion change (persuasion)
  • Policy nudges
  • Emotional conflict (dissonance)
  • Digital trends

✍️ UPSC Answer Writing Tips

  • Define behavior change with 1 line
  • Mention 3–5 core theories with practical Indian examples
  • Add 2–3 recent trends like digital nudges and behavioural units
  • Conclude with importance for governance, education, and public policy

 

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