2022: PT: Online Consumer Fraud Victimization and Reporting: A Quantitative Study of the Predictors and Motives
2023: US: How are financial institutions enabling online fraud? A developmental online financial fraud policy review
2023: AU: Why do fraud victims get blamed? Lerner’s Belief in a Just World and its application to victims of online fraud
2020: UK: Contextualised Cyber Security Awareness Approach for Online Romance Fraud
2018: UK: Do You Love Me? Psychological Characteristics of Romance Scam Victims
2022: US: Financial fragility and scam susceptibility in community dwelling older adults
2014: US: Correlates of Susceptibility to Scams in Older Adults Without Dementia
2008: US: The Effects of Loneliness on Telemarketing Fraud Vulnerability Among Older Adults
2015: US: Psychological and Functional Vulnerability Predicts Fraud Cases in Older Adults: Results of a Longitudinal Study
2013: US: Is Psychological Vulnerability Related to the Experience of Fraud in Older Adults?
2019: CN: Why are older adults victims of fraud? Current knowledge and prospects regarding older adults’ vulnerability to fraud
2022: AU: “If U Don’t Pay they will Share the Pics”: Exploring Sextortion in the Context of Romance Fraud
2023: US: What Money Can Do: Examining the Effects of Rewards on Online Romance Fraudsters’ Deceptive Strategies
2022: CN: Persuasive Schemes for Financial Exploitation in Online Romance Scam: An Anatomy on Sha Zhu Pan (杀猪盘) in China
2022: AU: How Frauds in Times of Crisis Target People
2012: UK: The Online Romance Scam: A Serious Cybercrime
2015: AU: No laughing matter: Blaming the victim of online fraud
2020: IT: Lovextortion: Persuasion strategies in romance cybercrime
2021: SA: Hello Pretty, Hello Handsome!: Exploring the Menace of Online Dating and Romance Scam in Africa
2023: UK: Drug mule for love