“…We included experimental studies that induced materialism by (a) exposing participants to VS in the form of either advertisements of luxury products (e.g., Ashikali & Dittmar, 2012; Bauer et al, 2012; Jiang et al, 2014; Ku & Zaroff, 2014), visual descriptions of desirable material items and gadgets by peers (Ku et al, 2014), or TV advertisements for toys (Goldberg & Gorn, 1978); (b) having participants complete a scrambled‐sentence task with materialistic concepts embedded within it (e.g., Bauer et al, 2012; Liang et al, 2016); (c) asking participants to write about unfulfilled material desires (e.g., Maggaß, Hamm, & Ozimek, 2018), to describe a situation in which economic resources, social popularity, and appearance had a positive impact on their life (e.g., Moldes, 2018) or to write about the benefits of having money and possessing the trendiest toys (e.g., Ku et al, 2014); (d) framing a situation from a consumer perspective (e.g., Bauer et al, 2012); (e) having participants read materials from a fashion magazine (e.g., Ku & Zaroff, 2014) or a rags‐to‐riches story from a newspaper (e.g., Leyva, 2018); or, (f) using environmental cues such as luxury shop window displays or screensavers presented in the background (e.g., Lamy et al, 2016; Zhang & Zhang, 2016).…”