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Barbara O'Neill

Researcher at Central Queensland University

Publications -  121
Citations -  2623

Barbara O'Neill is an academic researcher from Central Queensland University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Financial literacy & Consumer education. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 115 publications receiving 2146 citations. Previous affiliations of Barbara O'Neill include Alberta Health Services & University of Connecticut.

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Incharge Financial Distress/Financial Well-Being Scale: Development, Administration, and Score Interpretation

TL;DR: The Incharge Financial Distress/Financial Well-being Scale as discussed by the authors measures responses to one's financial state on a continuum, ranging from overwhelming financial distress/lowest level of financial well-being to no financial distress /highest level of monetary wellbeing.
Journal Article

InCharge Financial Distress/Financial Well-Being Scale: Development, Administration, and Score Interpretation

TL;DR: The Incharge Financial Distress/Financial Well-being Scale as discussed by the authors measures responses to one's financial state on a continuum, ranging from overwhelming financial distress/lowest level of financial well-being to no financial distress /highest level of monetary wellbeing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Consumer financial education and financial capability

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the potential effects of financial education on the financial capability of American consumers and found that respondents who ever received financial education had higher scores in all financial capability indicators.
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Financially Distressed Consumers: Their Financial Practices, Financial Well-Being, and Health

TL;DR: This article examined relationships among the financial practices, financial well-being, and health of a sample of 3,121 financially distressed consumers who were new clients participating in the debt management program of a large national non-profit credit counseling organization.
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Projection Bias and Financial Risk Tolerance

TL;DR: This paper explored how projection bias, as explained by regret theory, may shape financial risk tolerance attitudes and found that gender, income, and stock market price changes, as measured by the NASDAQ, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and the Standard & Poor's 500 indexes, help explain risk attitudes.