“…Collaborations among diverse scholars who are invested in exploring similar phenomena—yet have traditionally been separated by paradigms, method orientations, target journals, and scholarly networks—may advance novel insights into resource scarcity in all its forms. As seen within exemplars of multi‐method work (e.g., Bone et al, 2014; Whitley et al, 2021), diverse collaborations can offer insights about important, but under‐investigated restrictions on resource access to generate causal inferences for cross‐comparison (Table 3, Access). Furthermore, as seen within exemplars of work at the intersection of scarcity and poverty (e.g., Amir et al, 2018; Griskevicius et al, 2013; Jacob et al, 2022; Mullainathan & Shafir, 2013), diverse populations can offer insights about the converging effects of scarcity, such as caloric (vs. money or time) scarcity and attention to trade‐offs (Shah et al, 2015) or shorter‐ versus longer‐term scarcity and cognitive function (Mani et al, 2013).…”