Exercise Clinical Trial
Official title:
Increasing, Decreasing, and Stable Incentives in a Health App Aggregator Website
This study will be a three-arm randomized, controlled trial that the investigators will run
in 2014 with approximately 4,000 users of an app called Achievemint. AchieveMint rewards
users with points (which can be redeemed for prizes) for every step they take. The
investigators will be testing three different point-based programs designed to encourage
users to build exercise habits over the course of a month: stable incentives, increasing
incentives, and decreasing incentives. After the investigators' month-long intervention
period, the investigators will observe users' step counts during a month-long follow-up
period to test which of the investigators' habit-building programs leaves users with the
best exercise habits (or the highest step counts) after they conclude.
The time frame of observation will be 8 months.
Past research has shown that paying people to exercise repeatedly can create exercise habits
that last long after cash incentives are removed (Charness and Gneezy, 2009; Acland and
Levy, 2013). the investigators' research will examine what kind of incentive programs build
long-lasting habits most effectively. Specifically, the investigators will compare the
long-term effects (based on step counts in the one month after the conclusion of the
investigators' intervention) of three different interventions: (1) incentives for taking
steps that remain stable over the course of a month (stable incentives); (2) incentives (of
equal net value) for taking steps that start low and grow larger over the course of the
month (increasing incentives); and (3) incentives (of equal net value) for taking steps that
start high and decrease over the course of the month (decreasing incentives). For example,
during the month-long intervention, users in group (1) will receive 6x their usual points
every day for each step they take; users in group (2) will receive 2x the usual points for
several days, then 3x the usual points, and so on up to 10x the usual number of points;
finally, group (3) will have the same incentive schedule as group (2) but in reverse -
starting with a 10x multiplier and declining. The question is this: Is it better to ease
people into exercise when trying to help them form a lasting habit, to start them off
intensively and then ease up the pressure, or to maintain steady, constant incentives to
exercise? By examining the steps taken by members of the investigators' three experimental
groups in the month following the investigators' intervention, the investigators will be
able to assess whether increasing, decreasing, or stable incentives are ideal for creating
lasting habits after incentives are removed. The anticipated output of this project is a
published research paper.
The time frame of observation will be 8 months.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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