Article (Scientific journals)
4.2 Social Dynamics Metrics-Working Group Report
Benenson, Zinaida; Bleikertz, Sören; Foley, Simon N. et al.
2015In Socio-Technical Security Metrics, p. 17-19
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
4.2 Social Dynamics Metrics.pdf
Publisher postprint (10.04 MB)
Download

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Abstract :
[en] Individuals continually interact with security mechanisms when performing tasks in everyday life. These tasks may serve personal goals or work goals, be individual or shared. These interactions can be influenced by peers and superiors in the respective environments (workplace, home, public spaces), by personality traits of the users, as well as by contextual constraints such as available time, cognitive resources, and perceived available effort. All these influencing factors, we believe, should be considered in the design, implementation and maintenance of good socio-technical security mechanisms. Therefore, we need to observe reliable socio-technical data, and then transform them into meaningful and helpful metrics for user interactions and influencing factors. More precisely, there are three main questions that the group discussed: 1. What data do we need to observe and what of this data we actually can observe and measure? 2. How can we observe and measure? 3. What can we do with the results of the observations?
Disciplines :
Computer science
Author, co-author :
Benenson, Zinaida
Bleikertz, Sören
Foley, Simon N.
Harpes, Carlo
Kowalski, Stewart
Lenzini, Gabriele ;  University of Luxembourg > Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SNT)
Oliveira, Daniela
Parkin, Simon
Pfleeger, Shari Lawrence
Smith, Paul
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
4.2 Social Dynamics Metrics-Working Group Report
Publication date :
2015
Journal title :
Socio-Technical Security Metrics
Pages :
17-19
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Available on ORBilu :
since 10 March 2016

Statistics


Number of views
116 (3 by Unilu)
Number of downloads
54 (3 by Unilu)

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBilu