Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Jenny G Olson"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Consumer Research.
When a romantic relationship becomes serious, partners often confront a foundational decision about how to organize their personal finances: pool money together or keep things separate? In a six-wave longitudinal experiment, we investigated whether r
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Research in Marketing. 38:120-135
The current research extends past work on how consumers (as “observers”) view ethical choices made by others (“actors”). Using a person-centered approach to moral judgments, we show that consumers are judged differentially, based on their inc
Publikováno v:
Journal of Consumer Research. 47:1-24
Romantic relationships are built on trust, but partners are not always honest about their financial behavior—they may hide spending, debt, and savings from one another. This article introduces the construct of financial infidelity, defined as “en
Autor:
Jenny G. Olson, Scott Rick
Publikováno v:
Current opinion in psychology. 43
How people choose to spend money is often observable to others (e.g. based on their clothes, accessories, and social media pages), but there is a whole universe of financial decisions that are essentially unobservable (e.g. how people handle their de
Publikováno v:
Journal of Consumer Research. 42:879-896
This article examines perceptions of low-income consumers receiving government assistance and the choices they make, showing that this group is viewed differently than those with more resources, even when making identical choices. A series of five ex
Publikováno v:
Journal of Consumer Research. :ucx038
Feeling left out has been shown to trigger primal, automatic responses in an attempt to compensate for threats to social belongingness. Such responses typically involve reconnection with other human beings. However, four experiments provide evidence
Autor:
Jenny G. Olson, Scott Rick
Publikováno v:
SSRN Electronic Journal.
Romantic desire often stimulates conspicuous consumption, but we find that people who chronically save are viewed as more attractive than people who chronically spend. We first demonstrate, in a face-to-face, incentive-compatible study, that people c