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What Does the Brain Tell Us About Usable Security?

Offered By: USENIX Enigma Conference via YouTube

Tags

Neuroscience Courses User Experience Courses User Interface Design Courses Cognitive Biases Courses

Course Description

Overview

Explore the intersection of neuroscience and information security in this 19-minute conference talk from USENIX Enigma 2017. Delve into groundbreaking research that challenges the notion of users being inherently careless about security. Discover how the brain's natural functioning influences security behaviors and learn practical ways to improve security user interfaces. Examine findings from experiments combining functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) with traditional usability testing, conducted by the Neurosecurity Lab at Brigham Young University. Gain insights into mental biases, dual task interference, habituation, and generalization in the context of usable security. Uncover how these neurobiological factors significantly impact users' security decisions and behaviors.

Syllabus

Intro
Overview
Mental Bias
Dual Task Interference
Low Task Interference
Habituation
Generalization
Conclusion


Taught by

USENIX Enigma Conference

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