At the same time, democracy seems to be broken. Facebook has been taken to task over its role in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which advanced statistical methods are believed to have been used to influence the results of both the US election and the Brexit referendum in 2016.
Cambridge Analytica stands accused of harvesting people’s clicks, likes and preferences to steer Facebook users towards a particular view through targeted advertising, as a cacophony of fake news left them incapable of sorting true from false.
These companies, and others like them, exploit the fact that our behaviours are shaped by those around us – what they do, what they say, what they think, and what they share on social media – which, taken together, form the science of “social influence”.
Yes, things are bleak. But in our new book, Social Butterflies, we argue that there is cause for hope.
At the same time as the ills of the world were being placed at the door of Facebook and Cambridge Analytica in 2018, the BBC was filming a documentary in one our old secondary schools in South Gloucestershire, charting the decline over time of the school’s budget and performance, and its effects on staff and students alike.
After the documentary aired, many former students took to social media, coming together not just to restore the morale of the school’s teachers, but to coordinate an effort to donate time and money to make a real difference to the school – something that could not have happened on this scale without coordination of people around the world over Facebook.
Social nudges
This shows that social influence – on social media or otherwise – can be a force for a good as well as ill, but it takes work. This is our main conclusion from the work we, and our former colleagues at the Behavioural Insights Team, a social purpose company which span out of the UK government in 2014 and is known as the world’s first “nudge” unit, have been carrying out. We’ve been applying behavioural science to make policy more effective, coupled with rigorous, scientific testing. And now we’re finding that a particular class of nudges – social nudges – are showing promise.
Since the early work of the Behavioural Insights Team it’s been obvious that we are responsive to others. For example, tax repayment rates are increased by telling people that nine out of ten people have already paid their taxes. Since then, we’ve learned more about social instincts, and how we can use them to build and boost social capital – the ties between us that help smooth our passage through life.
For example, one barrier to attending a selective university for young people from “non-traditional” backgrounds is that they don’t know anybody who went, and imagine the environment to be exclusive and exclusionary. Being unable to see ourselves, or anyone like us, in institutions like this is both a cause, and a consequence, of low social capital, and is one reason why young people with good grades from these backgrounds often don’t attend universities, or attend less prestigious universities than they could.