Personality Traits and Resistance to Online Trust Exploitation

Vaishnavi Mahindra, Purdue University

Abstract

Social engineering attacks, especially trust exploitation, have become a focus of attention for cybercriminals attempting to manipulate or deceive users to take actions that further expose their vulnerabilities. This has also become a budding field for researchers as these interactions are based on complex social equations that are constantly taken advantage of. Identifying the "weakest link" is a popular method of identifying how these exploits take place, generally by observing when individuals fall for a social engineering attack. However, valuable insights may be used to harden security by observing patterns in users resistant or vigilant to these attacks. Primarily, this trend may be discovered in resistant users’ personality traits. This has been found to be a more accurate indicator of behavior than self-reported intentions. Survey responses (n=120) indicate correlations between high test scores in trust exploitation exercises and Conscientiousness in the Big 5 Personality Model (p<0.001). No significant correlation was seen between self-reported cybersecurity habits and actual security behavior.

Degree

M.S.

Advisors

Rogers, Purdue University.

Subject Area

Engineering|Computer science|Criminology|Organizational behavior|Personality psychology|Psychology

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