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IAS seminar - Jason Nurse: Using Information Trustworthiness Advice in Decision-Making
CS007

In a society at the brink of information overload, using a measurement of trustworthiness to focus attention and ultimately reduce risks faced by individuals is an increasingly attractive option in supporting well-conceived decisions. As such, this research seeks to advance discussions on trustworthiness and decision-making research by critically investigating individual's ability to cognitively combine trustworthiness measures and the information content that they relate to, to make decisions. This is an often assumed reality but one that is lacking focused analysis in the socio-technical field. In our experiments, as we present trustworthiness information using visualisations on a computer screen, we also conduct a secondary assessment of a range of visualisation techniques to determine whether there are any better or generally preferred approaches to support decisions. Findings from both evaluations are relatively positive and insightful, and amongst other aspects, reaffirm humans as optimal assessors and identify a particularly strong dependence on trustworthiness levels in influencing to decision-making. This talk is based on a paper that will be presented at the 2012 Workshop on Socio-Technical Aspects in Security and Trust. Broadly, this is research is part of the EPSRC and TSB-funded project, TEASE (Trust Enabling Augmented-Reality Support for Information-Environments).

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