incentivisation
incentivisation — 名詞
1. the practice of using rewards — such as bonuses, tax breaks, or recognition — to
誘因激勵
用獎勵驅使人或組織採取行動的做法
the practice of using rewards — such as bonuses, tax breaks, or recognition — to push people or organisations to act in a particular way.
Ilan argued that the incentivisation of recycling worked better than fines in his neighbourhood.
Ilan 主張在他社區裡,回收的誘因激勵比罰款更有效。
the incentivisation of [activity] — typical noun-of-X pattern
Government incentivisation of solar panels helped Sofia install rooftop ones in Taipei.
政府對太陽能板的獎勵促進,幫助 Sofia 在台北裝設了屋頂太陽能。
[modifier] incentivisation of [target] — common policy framing
The bank used cash bonuses as a tool for the incentivisation of new account openings.
銀行用現金紅利作為刺激新帳戶開立的獎勵促進工具。
Critics worry that the incentivisation of test scores pushes teachers to drill rather than teach.
批評者擔心,以考試分數為核心的誘因激勵,會讓老師偏向應試操練而非真正教學。
Hiro studied how workplace incentivisation can backfire when targets feel unfair.
Hiro 研究職場上的誘因激勵如何在目標被視為不公時反而失靈。
- incentivization
American spelling of the same word.
- motivation
broader; covers internal drive too, while 'incentivisation' specifically means using external rewards.
- encouragement
softer and more general; does not imply a structured reward system.
- disincentivisation
using penalties or removed rewards to discourage a behaviour.
- deterrence
discouragement through fear of punishment rather than removal of reward.
文法句型
the incentivisation of [people/activity]
incentivisation through [reward type]
用法筆記
Almost always uncountable and abstract; refers to the systemic practice of building reward structures, not to a single offer. Subjects are typically institutions (governments, employers, schools), and the object is the behaviour being encouraged.