Choice architecture describes the way in which decisions may (and can) be influenced by how the choices are presented (in order to influence the outcome), and is a term used by Cass Sunstein and economist Richard Thaler in the 2008 book Nudge: Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness.
•
For example, nations that require citizens to opt-out of organ transplant donation have a significantly higher organ-donor rate than nations where the citizens must affirmatively choose to take part (opt-in).
architecture | Georgian architecture | Gothic architecture | Gothic Revival architecture | Romanesque architecture | Norman architecture | Victorian architecture | Colonial architecture | Neoclassical architecture | Baroque architecture | Romanesque Revival architecture | Architecture | Brutalist architecture | Beaux-Arts architecture | Italianate architecture | Federal architecture | Renaissance architecture | Tudor Revival architecture | Modern architecture | ARM architecture | Greek Revival architecture | Colonial Revival architecture | Tudor architecture | Jacobean architecture | Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne | Byzantine architecture | Aga Khan Award for Architecture | modern architecture | Mughal architecture | MIPS architecture |