The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study

The privacy paradox is a phenomenon whereby individuals continue to disclose their personal information, contrary to their claim of concerns for the privacy of their personal information. This study investigated the privacy paradox to better understand individuals' decisions to disclose or with...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mohammed, Zareef
Format: Others
Published: NSUWorks 2017
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/997
http://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2000&context=gscis_etd
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spelling ndltd-nova.edu-oai-nsuworks.nova.edu-gscis_etd-20002017-05-09T16:06:32Z The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study Mohammed, Zareef The privacy paradox is a phenomenon whereby individuals continue to disclose their personal information, contrary to their claim of concerns for the privacy of their personal information. This study investigated the privacy paradox to better understand individuals' decisions to disclose or withhold their personal information. The study argued that individuals’ decisions are based on a cognitive disposition, which involves both rational and emotional mental processes. While the extended privacy calculus model was used as the theoretical basis for the study, the findings of cognitive neuroscience was applied to it to address its limitation in assuming individuals are purely rational decision-makers. Three within-subjects experiments were conducted whereby each subject participated in all three experiments as if it were one. Experiment 1 captured the neural correlates of mental processes involved in privacy-related decisions, while experiment 2 and 3 were factorial-design experiments used for testing the relationship of neural correlates in predicting privacy concerns and personal information disclosure. The findings of this study indicated that at least one neural correlate of every mental process involved in privacy-related decisions significantly influenced personal information disclosure, except for uncertainty. However, there were no significant relationships between mental processes and privacy concerns, except Brodmann’s Area 13, a neural correlate of distrust. This relationship, however, had a positive relationship with privacy concerns, opposite to what was hypothesized. Furthermore, interaction effects indicated that individuals put more emphasis on negative perceptions in privacy-related situations. This study contributed to the information privacy field by supporting the argument that individuals’ privacy-related decisions are both rational and emotional. Specifically, the privacy paradox cannot be explained through solely rational cost-benefit analysis or through an examination of individuals’ emotions alone. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/997 http://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2000&context=gscis_etd CEC Theses and Dissertations NSUWorks Cognitive Neuroscience EEG Privacy Calculus Privacy Paradox sLORETA Computer Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cognitive Neuroscience
EEG
Privacy Calculus
Privacy Paradox
sLORETA
Computer Sciences
spellingShingle Cognitive Neuroscience
EEG
Privacy Calculus
Privacy Paradox
sLORETA
Computer Sciences
Mohammed, Zareef
The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study
description The privacy paradox is a phenomenon whereby individuals continue to disclose their personal information, contrary to their claim of concerns for the privacy of their personal information. This study investigated the privacy paradox to better understand individuals' decisions to disclose or withhold their personal information. The study argued that individuals’ decisions are based on a cognitive disposition, which involves both rational and emotional mental processes. While the extended privacy calculus model was used as the theoretical basis for the study, the findings of cognitive neuroscience was applied to it to address its limitation in assuming individuals are purely rational decision-makers. Three within-subjects experiments were conducted whereby each subject participated in all three experiments as if it were one. Experiment 1 captured the neural correlates of mental processes involved in privacy-related decisions, while experiment 2 and 3 were factorial-design experiments used for testing the relationship of neural correlates in predicting privacy concerns and personal information disclosure. The findings of this study indicated that at least one neural correlate of every mental process involved in privacy-related decisions significantly influenced personal information disclosure, except for uncertainty. However, there were no significant relationships between mental processes and privacy concerns, except Brodmann’s Area 13, a neural correlate of distrust. This relationship, however, had a positive relationship with privacy concerns, opposite to what was hypothesized. Furthermore, interaction effects indicated that individuals put more emphasis on negative perceptions in privacy-related situations. This study contributed to the information privacy field by supporting the argument that individuals’ privacy-related decisions are both rational and emotional. Specifically, the privacy paradox cannot be explained through solely rational cost-benefit analysis or through an examination of individuals’ emotions alone.
author Mohammed, Zareef
author_facet Mohammed, Zareef
author_sort Mohammed, Zareef
title The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study
title_short The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study
title_full The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study
title_fullStr The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Cognitive Disposition in Re-examining the Privacy Paradox: A Neuroscience Study
title_sort role of cognitive disposition in re-examining the privacy paradox: a neuroscience study
publisher NSUWorks
publishDate 2017
url http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/997
http://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2000&context=gscis_etd
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