Mind, Behaviour and Health - a Randomised Experiment
Sammanfattning
Behavioural attitudes toward risk and time, as well as behavioural biases such as present bias, are thought to be important drivers of unhealthy lifestyle choices. This paper makes the first attempt to explore the possibility of training the mind to alter these attitudes and biases, in particular health-related behaviours, using a randomized controlled experiment. The training technique we consider is a well-known psychological technique called "mindfulness", which is believed to improve self-control and reduce stress. We conduct the experiment with 139 participants, half of whom receive a four-week mindfulness training, while the other half are asked to watch a four-week series of historical documentaries. We evaluate the impact of our interventions on risk-taking and inter-temporal decisions, as well as on a range of measures of health-related behaviours. We find evidence that mindfulness training reduces perceived stress, but only weak evidence of its impact on behavioural traits and health-related behaviours. Our findings have significant implications for a new domain of research on training the mind to alter behavioural traits and biases that play important roles in lifestyle.
Övrig beskrivning
JEL: C81, C91, D81, I10, I12
Samlingar
Fil(er)
Datum
2016-06Författare
Alem, Yonas
Behrendt, Hannah
Belot, Michele
Bíró, Aniko
Nyckelord
Health-related behaviours
Behavioural traits
Present Bias
Stress
Experiment
Publikationstyp
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers in Economics
663
Språk
eng