Marketing

Faculty

HUANG Liang

Department of Marketing    Assistant Professor

Phone:(86) (10) 62795839

E-mail:huangliang@sem.tsinghua.edu.cn

Office:B401 Lihua Building

Office Hours:By Appointment

Educational Background

Dr. Liang Huang received her bachelor's degree in Business Administration from Tsinghua University in 2015, and Ph.D in Marketing from University of Arizona in 2021.

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Research Areas

Her research interests include Judgment and Decision Making, Innovations in Financial Services, Financial Decision Making, Payment Methods, and Mental Accounting.

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Publications

  • Huang, Liang, Rafay A. Siddiqui, and Anastasiya P. Ghosh, "More of the Same: Painful Payment Methods Decrease Variety Seeking", accepted, Marketing Letters

  • Huang, Liang, and Jennifer Savary (2023), "When Payments Go Social: The Use of Person-to-Person Payment Methods Attenuates the Endowment Effect", Journal of Marketing Research, 60 (3), 585-601

  • Guo, Xunhua, Yuejun Wang, Liang Huang, and Jichen Li (2022), "Assimilation and Contrast: The Two-sided Anchoring Effects of Recommender Systems", Journal of Systems Science and Systems Engineering, 31 (4), 395-413

  • Huang, Liang, Anastasiya P. Ghosh, Ruoou Li, and Elise Ince (2020), "Pay Me with Venmo: Effect of Service Providers Decisions to Adopt P2P Payment Methods on Consumer Evaluations," Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, 5(3), 271-281.

  • 沙思廷,黄靓,史迈. 捐赠周期如何影响慈善捐赠--来自一项调查实验的证据. 《中国软科学》,已接收。

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Honors

Lincoln Financial Best Paper Award, 2021

Consumer Financial Well-Being (CFWB) Emerging Scholar Award, 2021

AMA-Sheth Doctoral Consortium Fellow, 2020

Lisle & Roslyn Payne Outstanding Doctoral Student Award, 2020

Philip and Susan Hagenah Award for Excellence in Marketing, 2020

Best Session Paper Award, China Marketing International Conference, 2019

Best Student Poster Award, Honorable Mention, Society for Judgement and Decision Making, 2018

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Other Information

Media Coverage


FinTech and Finance News: "Why Budgeting Apps Lead to Overspending". https://ffnews.com/newsarticle/why-budgeting-apps-lead-to-overspending/

Think Forward Initiative: "Dynamic Budget Monitoring: When Access to Budget Feedback Leads to Increase in Spending". https://www.thinkforwardinitiative.com/research/budget-apps-might-they-actually-make-you-spend-more

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