Drew Hanks
Associate Professor, Department of Human Sciences
Program Area: Consumer Sciences
(614) 688-1787
hanks.46@osu.edu
Biography
Drew Hanks is an associate professor of Consumer Sciences in the Department of Human Sciences. He studies the ways in which the economic and contextual environments drive health-related behaviors and affect education decisions and associated market outcomes. Specifically, Dr. Hanks focuses on research related to federal nutrition assistance policies and post-secondary educational policies.
Dr. Hanks publishes his research in high-quality academic journals such as American Psychologist, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, Pediatrics, Obesity, and Public Library of Science-One. His work has also been featured on NPR, New York Times, Inside Higher Ed, The Atlantic, ABC News, and others.
Before joining the faculty in 2014, Dr. Hanks completed a three-year postdoctoral research position as the research director for the Cornell Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs and lead analyst at the Cornell University Food and Brand Lab. He completed his PhD in Economics and MS in Statistics in 2011 at Washington State University in Pullman, WA.
Education
- PhD, Economics, Washington State University, 2011
- MS, Statistics, Washington State University, 2011
- BS, Economics and History, Brigham Young University, 2006
Research Interests
- Behavioral Aspects of Health
- Behavioral determinants of food choice and intake
- Behavioral Economics
- Federal and state nutrition policies
- Consumer Economics
- Family financial behaviors
- Government food and educaiton policy and consumer welfare
- Public Policy
- Dietetics and Nutrition
- Family and Consumer Sciences
- Household and individual food and educational decisions
- Foods, Nutrition, and Wellness Studies
- Food choice and intake
- Food environments
- Human Nutrition
- Workforce Development and Education
- Institutional and federal policies
- Post-secondary education
Research Summary
Dr. Hanks is interested in better understanding the ways in which economic and contextual environments drive health-related behaviors and affect education decisions and associated market outcomes. His overarching objective is to use economic theories and methods to study past public policies, understand and evaluate current policy, and inform the design of future policy.
In the areas of health economics and health behaviors, he uses applied economics methods to study ways in which federal nutrition policy affects food selection and intake. He also use the framework of behavioral economics to study whether and how nudges affect food decisions. To support his research in this area, he has received $104,953.
In the area of labor economics, Dr. Hanks currently focus on graduate education and associated market outcomes such as salary, salary growth, publications, grant success, and job satisfaction. His current research focuses on the career outcomes for PhD recipients who choose to pursue interdisciplinary research programs. To support his research in this area, he has received $477,224 as co-PI from the National Science Foundation. He will continue to pursue funding in both research areas.
A distinguishing characteristic of Dr. Hanks’ approach is to seek out data researchers have either ignored or not fully exploited. He currently has transaction level data from a grocery chain in Ohio to study the impact the transition to Electronic Benefits Transfers has on shopping behavior of participants in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children. He is also currently working with the Ohio Department of Health and Census Bureau to acquire WIC administrative data and link these data to Census Bureau surveys such as the American Community Survey, Current Population Survey, and Survey of Income and Program Participation. Lastly, Dr. Hanks is currently working with the National Science Foundation, Census Bureau, and Institute for Research on Innovation & Science to link components of various data products, housed separately by each institution, to generate a rich set of data to continue his work with doctorate degree holders.
Selected Grants
2018-21: $477,224 National Science Foundation: Education and Human Resources Core Research (Co-PI): Collaborative Research:
Who are Interdisciplinary STEM Doctoral Graduates? Exploring and Assessing Antecedents and Economic Consequences.
2018-19: $27,500 Ohio State University Connect and Collaborate Grants Program (PI): Establishing Partnerships between Academia,
State Agencies, and Private Business to Deliver Nutrition Assistance to Low-Income Families
2018-19: $34,708 Ohio State University Initiative for Food and Agricultural Transformation Competitive Grant Program (PI): Food Insecurity
and WIC: Identifying Factors Related to and Redemption Decisions of WIC Eligible Households
2016-17: $32,745 Cornell Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs Small Grant Award (PI): Measuring the Long-Term Impact
of Behavioral Interventions in School Cafeterias.
Selected Publications
Kniffin, Kevin M. and Andrew S. Hanks. “The Trade-offs of Teamwork Among STEM Doctoral Graduates.” American Psychologist. 2018; 72(4): 420-432.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/amp0000288.
Gabrielyan, Gnel, Kathryn I. Hoy, Andrew S. Hanks, David R. Just, and Brian Wansink. “Who’s Adopting the Smarter Lunchroom Approach? Individual Characteristics of Innovative Food Service Directors.” Evaluation and Program Planning. 2017; 60: 72-80. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.evalprogplan.2016.08.023.
Kniffin, Kevin M. and Andrew S. Hanks. “Antecedents and Near-Term Consequences for Interdisciplinary Dissertators.” Scientometrics. 2017; 111: 1225-1250.
Laroche, Helena H., Kate Anderson, Christine Hradek, Andrew S. Hanks, Katherine I. Hoy, David R. Just, and Brian Wansink. “Healthy Concessions: High School Student’s Responses to Healthy Concession Stand Changes.” Journal of School Health. 2017; 87(2): 98-105. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/josh.12472. Accepted for publication June 2016.
Rose, Angela M., Ilana Nurko., Julie A. Kennel, Andrew S. Hanks, and Carolyn Gunther. “Short-Term Campus-Based Dairy Campaign is Effective in Promoting Awareness of Importance of Calcium Intake in College Students.” Accepted for publication at Forum for Family and Consumer Issues. 2017.
Rose, Angela M., Rachel A. Williams, Andrew S. Hanks, Julie A. Kennel, and Carolyn Gunther. “Milk vending does not improve college students’ milk and calcium intakes.” Health Promotion and Practice. 2018, 19(2): 295-302. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1524839917717227.
Hanks, Andrew S, David R. Just, and Adam Brumberg. “Marketing Vegetables in Elementary School Cafeterias to Increase Uptake.” Pediatrics. 2016;138(2):e20151720. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2015-1720.
Kniffin, Kevin M. and Andrew S. Hanks. “Revisiting Gladwell’s Hockey Players: Influence of Relative Age Effects Upon Earning the PhD.” Cornell Higher Education Research Institute (CHERI) Working Paper 157. Contemporary Economic Policy. 2016; 34(1): 21-36. DOI: 10.1111/coep.12114.
Wansink, Brian, Andrew S. Hanks, and Kirsikka Kaipainen. Slim by Design: Kitchen Counter Correlates of Obesity. Health Education and Behavior. 2016; 43(5): 552-558. DOI: 10.1177/1090198115610571.
Just, David R. and Andrew S. Hanks. “The Hidden Costs of Regulation: Emotional Responses to Command and Control.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics. 2015; 97(5): 1385-1399. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/ajae/aav016.
Laroche, Helena H., Christopher Ford, Kate Anderson, Xueya Cai, David R. Just, Andrew S. Hanks, and Brian Wansink (2015). “Concession Stand Makeovers: A Field Study of Serving Healthy Foods at High School Concession Stands.” Journal of Public Health. 2015; 37(1): 116-124. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdu015.
Wansink, Brian, David R. Just, and Andrew S. Hanks. “A Plant to Plate Pilot: A Cold-Climate High School Garden Increased Vegetable Selection but also Waste.” Acta Paediatrica. 2015; 104: 823-826. DOI:10.1111/apa.13028.
Hanks, Andrew S., David R. Just, and Brian Wansink. “Chocolate Milk Consequences: A Pilot Study Evaluating the Consequences of Banning Chocolate Milk in School Cafeterias.” PLoS One. 2014; 9(4): e91022. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0091022. Published April 2014.
Hanks, Andrew S. and Kevin M. Kniffin. “Early Career PhD Salaries. The Industry Premium and Interdisciplinary Debate.” Applied Economics Letters. 2014; 21(18):1277-1282. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13504851.2014.922664. Published online in 2014.
Hanks, Andrew S., Brian Wansink, and David R. Just. “Reliability and Accuracy of Real-Time Visualization Techniques for Measuring School Cafeteria Tray Waste: Validating the Quarter-Waste Method.” Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. 2014; 114(3):470-474. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jand.2013.08.013. Available online in 2013.
Just, David R., Brian Wansink, Andrew S. Hanks. “Chefs Move to Schools. A Pilot Examination of How Chef-Created Dishes Can Increased School Lunch Participation and Fruit and Vegetable Intake.” Appetite. 2014; 83(1):242-247. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2014.08.033.
Pope, Elizabeth, Andrew S. Hanks, David R. Just, and Brian Wansink. “New Year’s Res-Illusions: Non-Compensating Cycles of Holiday Grocery Shopping. PLoS One. 2014; 9(12): e110561. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110561.
Wansink, Brian and Andrew S. Hanks. “Calorie Reductions and Within-meal Calorie Compensation in Children’s Meal Combos.” Obesity. 2014; 22(3): 630-632. DOI: 10.1002/oby.20668. Published online in 2013.
Selected Presentations
“From Paper to Plastic: Understanding the Impact of EBT on WIC Recipient Behavior”
University of Alabama, Department of Consumer Sciences Research seminar.
“You can have my chips: Potentially resolving the Tragedy of the Commons in Food Settings”
Agricultural and Applied Economic Association Annual Conference, Research presentation.
“Manipulation or Motivation? Leveraging Choice Architecture to Encourage Personal Change”
Midwestern University, College of Osteopathic Medicine Research seminar, Glendale, AZ.
“Decommodifying School Lunches: How Students Respond when Cafeteria Foods are Converted into Relational Goods.”
Agricultural and Applied Economic Association Annual Conference, Research presentation.
“Examining the Change in Food Consumption and Waste in School Cafeterias from 2012-2014.”
Agricultural and Applied Economic Association Annual Conference, Research presentation.
“How the Change to EBT for WIC Affects Food Choices for Participants.”
Agricultural and Applied Economic Association Annual Conference, Research presentation.
“Boundary Spanning in Academia: Antecedents and Near-Term Consequences of Academic Entrepreneurialism.”
American Economic Association Annual Conference, Poster presentation.
“WIC Recipient Behavior in the Transition to the Electronic Benefit Transfer System.”
American Economic Association Annual Conference, Research presentation.
“WIC Recipient Behavior in the Transition to the Electronic Benefit Transfer System”
NBER Summer Institute for Health Economics, Research presentation.