51³Ô¹Ïapp

Dr Lis Ku

Job: Senior Lecturer in Psychology

Faculty: Health and Life Sciences

School/department: School of Applied Social Sciences

Address: De 51³Ô¹Ïapp University, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH

T: +44 (0)116-250-6337

E: lis.ku@dmu.ac.uk

 

Personal profile

I am a Senior Lecturer in Psychology at De 51³Ô¹Ïapp University. I completed my PhD in Psychology at the University of Sussex. After graudation, I worked in Hong Kong, then Macao, before returning to the UK and joining 51³Ô¹Ïapp in 2016. 

My research interests focus on how values and motivations influence behaviour and impact individual and societal well-being. Most recently, my research attention has turned to apparel consumption. Given the fashion industry's significant environmental impact, addressing consumer behaviour is urgent, yet research in this area remains limited. To bridge this gap, I am collaborating with experts in fashion design, marketing, and consumer studies, exploring how well-being factors affect consumption patterns and may be used to spearhead the sustainability agenda. This interdisciplinary approach opens new research avenues with global implications while, at the same time, yielding actionable insights for daily behaviours.

Publications and outputs

* Corresponding author

Sung, K.*, Ku, L., Yoon, J. & Kim, C. (2023). Predictors of upcycling in the highly-industrialised West: A survey across continents of Australia, Europe, and North America. Sustainability. 15 (2), 1461.

Ku, L.*, Bernardo, A. B., & Zaroff, C. (2022). Are higher-order life values antecedents of students’ learning engagement and adaptive learning outcomes? The case of materialistic vs. intrinsic life values. Current Psychology, 41, 3461-3471.  

Ku, L.*, Newby, C., Moldes, O., Zaroff, C. M., & Wu, A. M. S. (2022). The values you endorse set the body you see: The protective effect of intrinsic life goals on men’s body dissatisfaction. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 63, 393-404.  

Liu, A., Baines, E., & Ku, L.* (2022). Slow fashion is positively linked to consumers’ well-being: Evidence from an online questionnaire study in China. Sustainability, 14 (21), 13990.  

Moldes, O.*, Dineva, D., & Ku, L. (2022). Has the COVID-19 pandemic made us more materialistic? The effect of COVID-19 and lockdown restrictions on the endorsement of materialism. Psychology and Marketing, 39(5), 892-905.  

Moldes, O.*, & Ku, L. (2020). Materialistic cues make us miserable: A meta-analysis of the experimental evidence for the effects of materialism on individual and societal well-being. Psychology and Marketing, 37, 1396-1419.  

Zhang, M. X., Ku, L., Wu, A. M. S.*, Yu, S. M., Pesigan, I. J. A. (2020). Effects of social and outcome expectancies on hazardous drinking among Chinese university students: The mediating role of drinking motivations. Substance Use and Misuse, 55, 156-166.  

Nalipay, M. J. N.*, & Ku, L. (2019). Indirect effect of hopelessness on depression symptoms through perceived burdensomeness. Psychological Reports, 122, 1618-1631.  

Ku, L.*, Wu, A. M. S., Lao, K. P., & Lam, I. N. (2018). “We want the world and we want it now”: The effects of materialism and time perspectives on consumer (over)spending tendency among Chinese, International Journal of Psychology, 53, 356-364.  

Tong, T. S., Ku, L., & Zaroff, C. M.* (2016). Culture-specific variables as protective factors in adolescents at risk for juvenile delinquency. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 60, 535-554.  

Wu, Y., Ku, L., & Zaroff, C. M.* (2016). Sexual arousal and sexual fantasy: The influence of gender, and the measurement of antecedents and emotional consequences in Macau and the United States. International Journal of Sexual Health, 28, 55-69.  

Cheung, F.*, Lai, B. P. Y., Wu, A. M. S., & Ku, L.. (2015). Ethnic minority students’ education and career decision outcome expectation in Hong Kong, Journal of Early Adolescence, 35, 1092-1107.  

Ku, L.* (2015). Development of materialism in adolescence: The longitudinal role of subjective well-being among Chinese youths, Social Indicators Research, 124, 231-247.  

Ku, L.*, Dittmar, H., & Banerjee, R. (2014). To have or to learn? The effects of materialism on British and Chinese children’s learning, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 105, 803-821. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0036038 

Ku, L.*, & Zaroff, C. M. (2014). How far is your money from your mouth?: The effects of intrinsic relative to extrinsic values on willingness to pay and protect the environment, Journal of Environmental Psychology, 40, 472-483.  

Zaroff, C. M.*, Wong, H. L., Ku, L., & Van Schalkwyk, G. (2014). Interpersonal stress, not depression or hopelessness, predicts suicidality in university students in Macao. Australasian Psychiatry, 22, 127-131.  

Wu, A. M. S.*, Lei, L. M. L., & Ku, L.. (2013). Psychological needs, purpose in life, and problem video game playing among Chinese young adults, International Journal of Psychology, 48(4), 583-590.  

Wu, A. M. S.*, Cheung, V. I., Ku, L., & Hung, E. P. W. (2013). Psychological risk factors of addiction to social networking sites among Chinese smartphone users. Journal of Behavioral Addictions, 2(3). pp. 160-166.  

Ku, L.*, Dittmar, H., & Banerjee, R. (2012). Are materialistic teenagers less motivated to learn? Cross-sectional and longitudinal evidence from UK and Hong Kong, Journal of Educational Psychology, 104, 74-86  

Key research outputs

 The Social Happiness Lab

We are a group of academics whose research bridges across different domains of psychology and social scineces, from emotion, memory, mental processes of  thinking and decision making to intergroup relationships, individual attitudes and beliefs. The central theme that brings our diverse work together is socially grounded happiness.  We are interested in studying the underlying social and psychological processes that inform and shape behaviours, and that ultimately affect happiness and well-being. Apart from individual well-being, we also examine factors that may affect societal and ecological well-being.

Research interests/expertise

  • Materialistic values and goals
  • Sustainable consumption 
  • Clothing consumption and practices 
  • Well-being, happiness studies

Qualifications

  • PhD in Psychology, University of Sussex, UK

Courses taught

  • PSYC2095 Social Psychology (Module Leader)
  • PSYC3034 Conceptual Issues and Critical Debates in Psychology
Lis-Ku