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Risk Perception, Trust and Credibility

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Analyse security from a social sciences point of view rather than technical ... Political conservatism correlates positively with confidence in business and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Risk Perception, Trust and Credibility


1
Risk Perception, Trust and Credibility
  • Cmpe 471-03
  • fall 2001

2
SECURITY
  • SCOPE
  • Analyse security from a social sciences point of
    view rather than technical
  • Security is a cost that has to be justified
  • Perception of risks determine the level of
    security that needs to be implemented

3
SECURITY
  • debate on companies should understand how much
    security is needed before designing bulky
    security systems especially in internet
    applications
  • understand how risks are perceived by different
    stakeholders namely customers
  • understand the factors that contribute to forming
    and changing risk perception.

4
RISK
  • Possibility of suffering harm or loss, a factor,
    course or element involving uncertain danger

5
OPPORTUNITY THREAT
6
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
  • Important parameter in designing security systems
    is the COST
  • RISK ASSESSMENT
  • Risk perception
  • psychological theory of risk how the general
    public reacts to uncertainities of danger, and
    how this general reaction affects individual
    behaviour.
  • cultural theory of risk Risk perception differs
    depending on the social group belief system an
    individual belongs to (Douglas 1970)

7
Reacting to Threats
THREAT
RESPONSE
communication
RISK PERCEPTION
Passive Reaction
8
Reacting to Threats
RISK MANAGEMENT
External danger
RISK PERCEPTION
Organisation Structure
Shared Meaning and Trust
9
CULTURAL THEORY
  • When we try to think of the individual in a
    social context, we normally think of the
    corporate group or groups to which they belong.
  • Individuals also have constraining
    classifications within the group hierarchy,
    kinship, race, gender, age...

10
CULTURAL THEORY
Four types of social environment and cultural
biases (Douglas 1970)
Fatalists
Hierarchists
B
C
Grid (Individual)
Individualist
Egalitarians
A
D
Group (Social incorporation)
11
CULTURAL THEORY
  • A competitive, control people, autonomy see
    risks with opportunities
  • B no voluntary risk taking, but accept it as a
    given, no personal autonomy
  • C group is emphasised division of labour,
    specialisation, segregation of duties. Take risks
    iff it is approved by experts hierarchical
    authority
  • D members get their support from the group no
    formal delegation. The group dissolves in the
    absence of strong leadership

Fatalists
Hierarchists
B
C
individual
Individualist
Egalitarians
A
D
group
12
CULTURE AND RISK
  • Risk behaviour is a function of how human beings,
    individually and in groups, perceive their place
    in the world.
  • It is important to understand the role of culture
    in stakeholder interaction in order to understand
    cultural biases in risk perception.

13
STAKEHOLDER MODEL
  • Stakeholders
  • Users information user
  • Suppliers information provider and systems
    developer
  • Others systems manager
  • Each stakeholder group has a differing
    perceptions of same risk.
  • Stakeholders can be grouped within themselves
    depending on the social groups they belong to
    rather than roles they assume.

14
STAKEHOLDER MODEL
Links stakeholder model with the cultural theory
15
STAKEHOLDER MODEL
  • Individuals have different cultural biases and
    have different perceptions of risk
  • computer privacy and security rules are different
    in different countries
  • Singapore, Japan, US, Canada
  • Grouping stakeholders is not enough for designing
    IS.

16
RISK COMMUNICATION
  • It is important to know the cultural backgrounds
    of the stakeholders
  • how they perceive risks
  • how they communicate risks
  • risk communication theory
  • risk communication model

17
RISK COMMUNICATION
  • Past
  • risk communication as one way to general public
    from government
  • efforts to improve risk communication
  • to get the message across by describing the
    magnitude and balance of the attendant costs and
    benefits

18
RISK COMMUNICATION
  • The costs and benefits are equally distributed
    across a society
  • People do not agree about which events or actions
    do the most harm or which benefits are more worth
    seeking.

19
RISK COMMUNICATION
  • US National Research Counsil (1989)
  • Risk communication is an interactive process of
    exchange of information and opinion among
    individuals, groups and institutions. It involves
    multiple messages about the nature of the risk
    and other messages, not strictly about risk, that
    express concerns, opinions and reactions to risk
    messages or to legal and institutional
    arrangements for risk management.

Top-down definition of risk
20
RISK COMMUNICATION
  • Risk Communication
  • risks posed to stakeholders on the web are
    technological hazards
  • classical risk communication model
  • sources
  • transmitters
  • receivers

Certain aspects of risks are intensified or
attenuated
21
CULTURE
Risk Event
Transmitters Media Institutions/Agencies Inte
rest Groups Opinion Leaders
Two-way interaction
Sources Scientists Agencies Interest
Groups Eyewitnesses
Portrayal of Event with symbols, signals and
images by the Sources
Receivers General Public Affected
Organisations/Institutions Social
Groups Other target audience
feedback
22
Initial Information
HEAR
CULTURE SOCIAL FASHION PERSONAL VALUES RELATED
ATTITUDES INFLUENCES
Appeal
Do not Appeal
UNDERSTAND
BELIEVE
New Information
PERSONALIZE
RESPOND
23
Communication
  • The recipient hears the information and then
    screens it based on social fashion, personal
    values, attitudes under the influence from peer
    groups
  • cultural forces before understanding the message
  • Believing involves acceptance that the
    understanding is correct
  • the risk is real
  • Personalisation
  • the risk event will affect the receiver
  • Response
  • decision to take action for protection from risk

24
Communication
  • Credibility of information sources and
    transmitters is a key issue in risk communication

25
TRUST AND CONFIDENCE VS CREDIBILITY
  • Trust is an important ingredient in any trade
    transaction
  • Trust acts as the mitigating factor for the risks
    assumed by one party on the party in the trade
  • As trust increases the risks either reduce or
    become manageable by the trusting party
  • Existence of trust also reduces the transaction
    cost in a trade

26
TRUST
For effective communication of risks it is
critically important that receivers place trust
on the sources and transmitters (Lee 1986)
Five levels of trust analysis framework
27
INSTITUTIONAL CREDIBILITY
  • Confidence in business and economic organisations
    depends on the perceived quality of their
    services, but also on the employment situation,
    the perception of power monopolies in business,
    the observation of allegedly unethical behaviour
    and the confidence in other institutions
  • Confidence in political institutions depends on
    their performance record and openness, but in
    addition on the perception of a political crisis,
    the belief that the government is treating
    everyone fair and equally, the belief in
    functioning of checks and balances, the
    perception of hidden agendas, and the confidence
    in other institutions

28
INSTITUTIONAL CREDIBILITY
  • The more educated people are, the more they
    express confidence in the system, but the more
    they are also disappointed about the performance
    of the people representing the system
  • Political conservatism correlates positively with
    confidence in business and negatively with
    government and public service

29
INSTITUTIONAL CREDIBILITY
  • The social climate pre-sets the conditions under
    which an institution has to operate to gain and
    maintain trust
  • in a positive climate people invest more in trust
    institutions
  • in a negative climate people tend to caution and
    seek to have more control

30
Risk Perception, Trust and Credibility
  • Hypothesis
  • once trust and credibility exist in a
    relationship among the stakeholders during risk
    communication, stakeholders do not get involved
    in the analysis of risk factors individually, and
  • information systems security becomes less
    important to people when dealing with a
    trustworthy and credible institution.

31
Risk Perception, Trust and Credibility
  • Personality of the communicator with attributes
    of ability and integrity are also important in
    establishing trust.
  • Overall message, communicator, institution, and
    the social context are the major factors in
    establishing trust within an organisation.

32
Risk Perception, Trust and Credibility
  • Inferential analysis
  • inverse correlation between trust and security on
    the internet
  • the higher the trust placed on an organisation
    the lower was the security concern.
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