Interdisciplinary Workshop on Security and Human Behaviour (SHB 2008)
Working papers
As we prepare for the workshop, I'll be adding to each attendee's name one or
two links to papers that they might like others to look at in advance. Email me
your contributions!
Ross.Anderson@cl.cam.ac.uk
Alessandro
Acquisti, CMU: What
Can Behavioral Economics Teach Us About Privacy?; Privacy
in Electronic Commerce and the Economics of Immediate Gratification
Andrew
Adams, Reading: Regulating
CCTV
John Adams, UCL: Three
Framing Devices for Managing Risk
Ross Anderson, Cambridge: Information
Security Economics - and Beyond; The Memorability
and Security of Passwords -- Some Empirical Results; book chapters on psychology and terror
Matt Blaze, UPenn; Toward a broader view of security protocols.
Bill Burns,
Decision Research: The
Diffusion of Fear: Modeling Community Response to a Terrorist Strike
Jon Callas, PGP:
Improving
Message Security With a Self-Assembling PKI
Jean Camp, Indiana: Experimental Evaluation
of Expert and Non-expert Computer Users' Mental Models of Security Risks
Ralph
Chatham, fornerly DARPA: Frank-Ekman
Experiments Summary; Games for Training -
the Good Bad and Ugly; Training Superiority
and Training Surprise
Luke Church, Cambridge: End
User Security: The democratisation of security usability
Dave
Clark, MIT: A social
embedding of network security - Trust, constraint, power and control
Dick Clarke,
former terrorism adviser to President Clinton and President Bush
Ron
Clarke, Rutgers: Situational
Crime Prevention
Lorrie Cranor, CMU: A Framework for Reasoning
About the Human in the Loop
Paul Ekman, UCSF: Darwin, Deception, and Facial
Expression
Ed Felten,
Princeton
Mark Frank, Buffalo;
Human Behaviour and
Deception Detection
Frank Furedi,
Kent: The
Market in Fear; The only thing we
have to fear is the `culture of fear' itself; Thou shalt not hug
Nicholas Humphrey, LSE: papers
from 1982 and 1998
Markus
Jakobsson, Indiana: Social
Phishing; Love and
Authentication; Quantifying the
Security of Preference-Based Authentication
Richard John, USC
Eric
Johnson, Dartmouth: Information Security Field Study
George
Loewenstein, CMU: Searching for
Privacy in all the Wrong Places: A behavioural economics perspective on
individual concern for privacy
Tyler Moore, Cambridge: Information
Security Economics - and Beyond; How brain type influences online safety
Carey Morewedge, CMU:
The Least Likely
of Times - How Remembering the Past Biases Forecasts of the Future
John
Mueller, Ohio State: Reacting
to Terrorism: Probabilities, Consequences, and the Persistence of Fear
Peter Neumann, SRI: Holistic systems; Risks
Bashar Nuseibeh, Open
University: Keeping Ubiquitous
Computing to Yourself, Security
Requirements Engineering
Andrew Odlyzko, University
of Minnesota: Economics,
psychology, and sociology of security
Charles Perrow,
Yale: Software Failures,
Security and Cyberterrorism
Tom
Pyszczynski, University of Colorado: Scared
to death
James Randi, James Randi
Educational Foundation
Mike Roe, Microsoft
Sasha Romanosky, Carnegie Mellon
University: Do
Data Breach Disclosure Laws Reduce Identity Theft?
Angela Sasse, UCL: Human
Vulnerabilities in Security Systems, Transforming the 'weakest
link'
Stuart Schechter,
Microsoft: The Emperor's New
Security Indicators
Bruce Schneier, Counterpane: The Psychology of Security; The Evolutionary Brain Glitch That Makes Terrorism Fail
Paul
Shambroom, photographer
Uri Simonsohn, U Penn: Friends of
Victims: Personal Experience and Prosocial Behavior
David Livingstone Smith,
University of New England: Why
War?
Frank Stajano, Cambridge: Usability of Security Management: Defining the Permissions of Guests
Brad
Stone, New York Times
Cass
Sunstein, Chicago: The
Polarization of Extremes
Doug Tygar, Berleley: Why
Johnny can't encrypt: A usability evaluation of PGP 5.0
Hal Varian, Google
and UC Berkeley: Who Signed
Up for the Do-Not-Call List?
Alma Whitten, Google: Why
Johnny can't encrypt: A usability evaluation of PGP 5.0
Henry
Willis, Rand: Using Probabilistic
Terrorism Risk Modeling For Regulatory Benefit-Cost Analysis
Richard
Zeckhauser, Harvard: Paltering, The
World of Transnational Threats