Results 211 to 220 of about 60,758 (254)
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Money profiles: the love of money, attitudes, and needs

Personnel Review, 2005
Purpose – To develop money profiles based on money attitudes and investigate differences in work‐related attitudes across money profiles.Design/methodology/approach – Data from 564 university students in the USA were collected and four money profiles based on the Love of Money Scale (LOMS) were identified using cluster analysis.Findings – Achieving ...
Thomas Li-Ping Tang   +1 more
exaly   +2 more sources

A New Money Attitudes Questionnaire

European Journal of Psychological Assessment, 2019
Abstract. This study reports on the development and validation of a new questionnaire to measure money attitudes and beliefs. In all, 268 participants from diverse backgrounds, who were recruited online, completed a 30-item questionnaire. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses verified a five-factor model.
Alixe Lay, Adrian Furnham
exaly   +2 more sources

The love of money and work‐related attitudes

Journal of Managerial Psychology, 2004
This study examines the love of money and work‐related attitudes and identifies four money profiles based on a sample of citizens in the Republic of Macedonia. Achieving Money Worshipers (the highest scores on Factors Success, Motivator, and Budget and the lowest on Evil) had the highest active involvement in work activities.
Thomas Li-Ping Tang   +1 more
exaly   +2 more sources

Furnham's Money Attitude Scale

Psychological Reports, 2002
An item-analysis of responses from 186 undergraduates to the Money Attitude Scale developed by Furnham did not replicate the factor pattern which he derived.
Bijou, Yang, David, Lester
openaire   +3 more sources

Money Attitudes and Personality

Psychological Reports, 2005
In a sample of 67 students, neuroticism scores were associated with money attitude scores. The higher the neuroticism score the higher the impulsivity and the lower the motivational drive, organization, and planning scores.
Marcello, Spinella, David, Lester
openaire   +2 more sources

The Development of a Money Attitude Scale

Journal of Personality Assessment, 1982
On the basis of the clinical and theoretical literature, 62 items in the domains of security, retention, and power-prestige were generated. Factor analysis yielded five factors: power-prestige, retention-time, distrust, quality, and anxiety. A 29-item Money Attitude Scale (MAS) was developed on the basis of four of these factors.
K T, Yamauchi, D J, Templer
openaire   +2 more sources

Money Attitudes Among Iranians: A Test of Yamauchi and Templer’s Money Attitudes Scale

Unity, Diversity and Culture, 2016
The factor structure of Yamauchi and Templer’s (1982) attitudes toward money scale was explored in Iran. While some items loaded on the same factors as found in western contexts, some unique factors were also found, reflecting particular cultural and economic impacts on money attitudes in Iran. Both etic and emic factors emerged.
Talaei, Amirreza, Kwantes, Catherine T
openaire   +2 more sources

Psychological consequences of money and money attitudes in dictator game

Polish Psychological Bulletin, 2012
Psychological consequences of money and money attitudes in dictator game According to the research conducted by Vohs, Mead, and Goode (2006, 2008), reminders of money cause people to behave self-sufficiently, and especially to reveal a reduced tendency to charitable behaviour.
Agata Gąsiorowska, Anna Hełka
openaire   +1 more source

Demographics and money attitudes: a test of Yamauchi and Templers (1982) money attitude scale in Mexico

Personality and Individual Differences, 1999
Abstract Despite the central role money attitudes play in our lives, little is known about the factors which shape these attitudes. This is particularly true when discussing consumer behavior in Mexico. Mexicos emergence as a major economic force and member of the worldwide consumer culture Roberts and Martinez, 1997 .
James A Roberts, Cesar J Sepulveda M
openaire   +1 more source

Money Attitudes and Emotional Intelligence

Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 2006
As the notion of money tends to be imbued with salient emotions, it is plausible that emotional intelligence (EI) has a bearing on the efficacy to cope with emotion‐eliciting issues involving money. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the extent to which money attitudes relate to EI.
Elisabeth Engelberg, Lennart Sjöberg
openaire   +1 more source

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