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Who, Where, What, and How to Nudge: A Systematic Review of Co-Designed Digital Nudges for Behavioral Interventions

  • Alaa Ziyud*
  • , Khaled Al-Thelaya
  • , Jens Schneider
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Hamad bin Khalifa University

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Digital nudges refer to subtle modifications in digital choice architectures that are increasingly applied across domains such as healthcare, human–computer interactions, and behavioral science. However, existing approaches often overlook users’ needs, contextual factors, and ethical considerations related to transparency and autonomy. This systematic literature review, guided by PRISMA 2020, examines the integration of co-design methodologies in digital nudging across four dimensions: participants, application domains, nudge forms, and development methods. The findings show that co-design is primarily driven by end-users, supported by domain experts and technology specialists. Applications are concentrated in health-related contexts, particularly chronic disease management and mental health. The effectiveness of priming varied across studies, with some reporting short-term benefits and others indicating user fatigue, suggesting context-dependent impact and limited long-term effectiveness.

Original languageEnglish
Article number43
JournalMultimodal Technologies and Interaction
Volume10
Issue number4
Early online dateApr 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2026

Keywords

  • behavioral interventions
  • co-design
  • digital nudge
  • human–technology interaction

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