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Open AccessDOI

A Comparison of SONA and MTurk for Cybersecurity Surveys

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined if there is a link between personality type and password security among a variety of participants in two groups of participants: SONA and MTurk.
Abstract
For almost every online account, people are required to create a password to protect their information online. Since many people have many accounts, they tend to create insecure passwords and re-use passwords. These insecure passwords are often easy to guess, which can lead to compromised data. It is well-known that every person has a different personality type, which can be determined using personality models such as Big Five and True Colors. This research examines if there is a link between personality type and password security among a variety of participants in two groups of participants: SONA and MTurk. Each participant in both surveys answered questions based on password security and their personality type. Our results show that participants in the MTurk survey were more likely to choose a strong password and to exhibit better security behaviors and knowledge than participants in the SONA survey. This is mostly attributed to the age difference. However, the distribution of the results was similar for both MTurk and SONA. Future surveys on cybersecurity should include both types of demographics for a more generalizable result.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparing Online Surveys for Cybersecurity: SONA and MTurk

TL;DR: Participants in the MTurk survey were more likely to choose a strong password and to exhibit better security behaviors and knowledge than participants in the SONA survey, and the second part of the study found that security behaviors actually went down.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Individual differences and Information Security Awareness

TL;DR: It was found that conscientiousness, agreeableness, emotional stability and risk-taking propensity significantly explained variance in individuals ISA, while age and gender did not.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlating human traits and cyber security behavior intentions

TL;DR: A comprehensive study that examines how risk-taking preferences, decision-making styles, demographics, and personality traits influence the security behavior intentions of device securement, password generation, proactive awareness, and updating and found that individual differences accounted for 5%–23% of the variance in cyber security behaviors.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A pilot study of cyber security and privacy related behavior and personality traits

TL;DR: This research shows that when using a prize phishing email, neuroticism is the factor most correlated to responding to this email, in addition to a gender-based difference in the response, which suggests susceptibility to phishing is not due to lack of awareness of the phishing risks and that real-time response tophishing is hard to predict in advance by online users.
Journal ArticleDOI

Collecting Online Survey Data: A Comparison of Data Quality among a Commercial Panel & MTurk

TL;DR: Comparing data collected from Amazon’s Mechanical Turk and a professional panel to assess aspects of data quality and respondent features shows that MTurk may produce better data quality based on completion rate and success in passing manipulation checks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparing In-Person, Sona, and Mechanical Turk Measurements of Three Prejudice-Relevant Constructs

TL;DR: This paper investigated the equivalency of in-person and online administrations of the right-wing Authoritarianism, Social Dominance Orientation, and Modern Racism scales across three modalities (administration in person, online through Sona Systems, and online through Mechanical Turk).