Journal 5 9/28/ 2025

  1. Impulsivity
    Impulsivity ranks first because scammers often exploit urgency fabricating crises that push
    victims to act without reflection. Victims’ tendency to respond quickly and seek stimulating
    experiences makes this explanation both practical and strongly supported by the study’s findings.
  2. Addictive Disposition
    This motive makes strong sense because romance scams resemble gambling cycles, with victims
    experiencing “near win” effects. The addictive pull of ongoing emotional investment explains
    why victims struggle to disengage, even after red flags appear.
  3. Trust in Others
    Trust is central to romance scams. Victims must believe in the scammer’s sincerity for
    manipulation to work. While the study shows trust is a factor, it is less predictive than
    impulsivity or addiction, so it ranks third.
  4. Education Level
    Surprisingly, higher education was linked with greater vulnerability. This could be due to
    overconfidence in one’s ability to detect fraud or greater use of online dating platforms among
    educated individuals. This unexpected but evidence-backed finding makes education rank in the
    middle.
  5. Gender
    Women were shown to be more likely than men to fall victim, which aligns with broader fraud
    victimization reports. However, gender is more of a demographic correlation than a
    psychological motive, so it ranks lower than traits like impulsivity.
  6. Kindness
    Interestingly, victims were found to be less kind, which contradicts initial hypotheses. While
    kindness could play a role in some cases wanting to “help” the scammer, the data shows it’s not
    strongly predictive. That makes this motive less convincing.
  7. Locus of Control
    The study found little significant evidence that an external focus of control believing in fate or
    luck predicted victimization. While plausible in theory, it didn’t hold up empirically, so it ranks
    near the bottom.
  8. Greed
    This is the least convincing motive for romance scams. While greed might explain financial
    scams like lotteries, romance scams are more about emotional manipulation than promises of
    wealth. Victims often lose money for love, not profit, so greed ranks last

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *