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Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article and Best Reviewer Awards
Journal of Consumer Affairs ( IF 2.603 ) Pub Date : 2023-06-05 , DOI: 10.1111/joca.12547
Brenda J. Cude 1
Affiliation  

2023 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award (co-winners)

Either you control social media or social media controls you: Understanding the impact of self-control on excessive social media use from the dual-system perspective

Kseniia Zahrai, Ekant Veer, Paul William Ballantine, Huibert Peter de Vries, Girish Prayag

Volume 56, Issue 2

Drawing on dual-system theories, this study shows that excessive social media users demonstrate a psychological imbalance between the impulsive and reflective systems in their minds. We provide empirical evidence of an inconsistency between conscious attitudes and the actual behavior toward social media. The findings show that excessive users are driven more by their implicit attitudes rather than explicit beliefs in consuming social media. Although a high level of self-control indicates healthy social media use, the findings suggest that self-control has no significant influence on excessive users with a positive implicit attitude and high impulsive social media use. This duality of self-control dispels beliefs about its ability to regulate excessive online behaviors. Therefore, this study (1) theorizes what constitutes excessive social media use, (2) outlines how implicit measurements are incorporated in consumer research, and (3) offers practical implications for managing unhealthy online behaviors.

Financial capability and wellbeing of vulnerable consumers

Jing Jian Xiao, Nilton Porto

Volume 56, Issue 2

Consumer financial capability can be defined variously by different researchers. In this study, financial capability is assumed to have three components, financial knowledge, financial behavior, and financial skills. This study examines relative contributions of financial capability components to financial wellbeing among vulnerable consumers. With data from the National Financial Wellbeing Survey commissioned by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), results show that among financial capability components, financial behavior contributes the most to financial wellbeing of the whole sample, followed by financial skill and financial knowledge. In addition, group differences surface when subsamples in terms of age, poverty status, confidence, and fraud victim status are examined. Results suggest that for low-income consumers, encouraging them to engage in desirable financial behaviors is more important than teaching them financial knowledge and skills. Findings have implications for financial educators, practitioners, and policymakers to help them recognize the proper financial education or program to be delivered based on consumer vulnerability and components of financial capability.

2022 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

When taking action means accepting responsibility: Omission bias predicts parents' reluctance to vaccinate due to greater anticipated culpability for negative side effects

Gary D. Sherman, Beth Vallen, Stacey R. Finkelstein, Paul M. Connell, Wendy Attaya Boland, Kristen Feemster

Volume 55, Issue 4

2021 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Mass incarceration and consumer financial harm: Critique of rent-seeking by the carceral state

Casey Carder Rockwell, David Crockett, Lenita Davis

Volume 54, Issue 3

2020 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Encouraging tax-time savings with a low-touch, large-scale intervention: Evidence from the refund to savings experiment

Stephen P. Roll, Blair D. Russell, Dana C. Perantie, Michal Grinstein-Weiss

Volume 53, Issue 1

2019 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Development of a value co-creation wellness model: The role of physicians and digital information seeking on health behaviors and health outcomes

Andrew J. Dahl, James (Jimmy) W. Peltier, Ph.D., George R. Milne, Ph.D.

Volume 52, Issue 3

2018 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

The relationship between the school breakfast program and food insecurity

Jason M. Fletcher and David E. Frisvold

Volume 51, Issue 3

2017 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

The cause cue effect: Cause-related marketing and consumer health perceptions

Elizabeth A. Minton and T. Bettina Cornwell

Volume 52, Issue 3

2016 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Shopping while nonwhite: Racial discrimination among minority consumers

Aronte' Marie Bennett, Ronald Paul Hill, and Kara Daddario

Volume 49, Issue 2

2015 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Addressing the texting and driving epidemic: Mortality salience priming effects on attitudes and behavioral intentions

Ioannis Kareklas, Darrel D. Muehling

Volume 48, Issue 2

2014 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Understanding the impact of health reform on the states: Expansion of coverage through Medicaid and exchanges

Lilliard E. Richardson, Tansel Yilmazer

Volume 47, Issue 2

2013 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

A critical review of the literature on nutritional labeling

Sophie Hieke, Charles R. Taylor

Volume 46, Issue 1

2012 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Measuring financial literacy

Sandra J. Huston

Volume 44, Issue 2

2011 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Weighing in on fast food consumption: The effects of meal and calorie disclosures on consumer fast food evaluation

Andrea Heintz Tangari, Scot Burton, Elizabeth Howlett, Yoon-Na Cho and Anastasia Thyroff

Volume 44, Issue 3

2010 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Disentangling the differences between abusive and predatory lending: Professionals' perspectives

Lucy M. Delgadillo, Luke V. Erickson and Kathleen W. Piercy

Volume 42, Issue 3

2009 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Is ignorance bliss? Consumer accuracy in judgments about credit ratings

Vanessa Gail Perry

Volume 42, Issue 2

2008 Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Article Award

Consumer credit risk and pricing

Darryl E. Getter

Volume 40, Issue 1

Thomas M. Brooks Journal of Consumer Affairs Best Reviewer Awards

2023: Sommer Kapitan, Auckland University of Technology

2022: Jing Jian Xiao, University of Rhode Island

2021: Herbert (Herb) J. Rotfeld, Auburn University

2020: Melissa Bublitz, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh

2019: Dee Warmath, University of Georgia



中文翻译:

消费者事务杂志最佳文章和最佳评论家奖

2023 年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖(共同获奖)

要么你控制社交媒体,要么社交媒体控制你:从双系统视角理解自我控制对社交媒体过度使用的影响

Kseniia Zahrai、Ekant Veer、Paul William Ballantine、Huibert Peter de Vries、Girish Prayag

第56卷第2期

这项研究利用双系统理论表明,过度使用社交媒体会导致他们的冲动系统和反思系统之间出现心理失衡。我们提供了经验证据,证明对社交媒体的意识态度与实际行为之间存在不一致。研究结果表明,过度使用社交媒体的用户更多地是受到他们隐含态度的驱动,而不是消费社交媒体的明确信念。尽管高水平的自控力表明健康的社交媒体使用,但研究结果表明,自控力对过度使用积极内隐态度和高度冲动的社交媒体使用没有显着影响。这种自我控制的双重性消除了对其调节过度在线行为能力的信念。因此,本研究 (1) 对过度使用社交媒体的构成进行了理论分析,

弱势消费者的财务能力和福祉

肖靖建, 尼尔顿·波尔图

第56卷第2期

不同的研究者对消费者金融能力有不同的定义。在本研究中,财务能力被认为由三个组成部分组成:财务知识、财务行为和财务技能。本研究探讨了财务能力组成部分对弱势消费者财务福祉的相对贡献。消费者金融保护局委托开展的全国金融健康状况调查数据显示,在金融能力构成要素中,金融行为对整个样本的金融健康状况贡献最大,其次是金融技能和金融知识。此外,当检查年龄、贫困状况、信心和欺诈受害者状况的子样本时,群体差异就会显现出来。结果表明,对于低收入消费者来说,鼓励他们从事理想的金融行为比教他们金融知识和技能更重要。研究结果对金融教育者、从业者和政策制定者具有重要意义,可以帮助他们认识到根据消费者脆弱性和金融能力的组成部分提供适当的金融教育或计划。

2022 年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

采取行动意味着接受责任:遗漏偏差预测父母不愿意接种疫苗,因为预期会对负面副作用承担更大的责任

加里·D·谢尔曼、贝丝·瓦伦、史黛西·R·芬克尔斯坦、保罗·M·康奈尔、温迪·阿塔亚·博兰、克里斯汀·费姆斯特

第55卷第4期

2021 年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

大规模监禁和消费者财务损害:对监禁国家寻租的批评

凯西·卡德·洛克威尔、大卫·克罗克特、莱尼塔·戴维斯

第54卷第3期

2020年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

通过低接触、大规模干预来鼓励节省纳税时间:从退税到节省实验的证据

斯蒂芬·P·罗尔、布莱尔·D·拉塞尔、达纳·C·佩兰蒂、米哈尔·格林斯坦-韦斯

第53卷第1期

2019年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

价值共创健康模型的开发:医生的作用和数字信息寻求对健康行为和健康结果的影响

Andrew J. Dahl、James (Jimmy) W. Peltier 博士、George R. Milne 博士

第52卷第3期

2018年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

学校早餐计划与粮食不安全之间的关系

贾森·M·弗莱彻和大卫·E·弗里斯沃尔德

第51卷第3期

2017年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

因果线索效应:因果相关的营销和消费者健康认知

伊丽莎白·A·明顿和 T·贝蒂娜·康威尔

第52卷第3期

2016年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

非白人购物:少数族裔消费者的种族歧视

阿龙特·玛丽·贝内特、罗纳德·保罗·希尔和卡拉·达达里奥

第49卷第2期

2015年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

解决短信和驾驶流行病:死亡率显着性对态度和行为意图的启动效应

扬尼斯·卡雷克拉斯、达雷尔·D·穆林

第48卷第2期

2014年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

了解医疗改革对各州的影响:通过医疗补助和交流扩大覆盖范围

利利亚德·E·理查森、坦塞尔·耶尔马泽

第47卷第2期

2013年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

对营养标签文献的批判性回顾

索菲·希克,查尔斯·R·泰勒

第46卷第1期

2012年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

衡量金融素养

桑德拉·休斯顿

第44卷第2期

2011年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

权衡快餐消费:膳食和卡路里披露对消费者快餐评价的影响

安德里亚·海因茨·坦加里、斯科特·伯顿、伊丽莎白·豪利特、赵允娜和阿纳斯塔西娅·瑟罗夫

第44卷第3期

2010年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

理清滥用贷款和掠夺性贷款之间的差异:专业人士的观点

露西·M·德尔加迪略、卢克·V·埃里克森和凯瑟琳·W·皮尔西

第42卷第3期

2009年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

无知是福吗?消费者对信用评级判断的准确性

凡妮莎·盖尔·佩里

第42卷第2期

2008年《消费者事务杂志》最佳文章奖

消费者信用风险和定价

达里尔·E·盖特

第 40 卷第 1 期

托马斯·M·布鲁克斯《消费者事务杂志》最佳审稿人奖

2023 年:索默·卡皮坦 (Sommer Kapitan),奥克兰理工大学

2022:肖靖建,罗德岛大学

2021:赫伯特·J·罗特菲尔德,奥本大学

2020 年:Melissa Bublitz,威斯康星大学奥什科什分校

2019:Dee Warmath,佐治亚大学

更新日期:2023-06-05
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