Visible to the public Measuring Personality for Automatic Elicitation of Privacy Preferences

TitleMeasuring Personality for Automatic Elicitation of Privacy Preferences
Publication TypeConference Paper
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsMehrpouyan, H., Azpiazu, I. M., Pera, M. S.
Conference Name2017 IEEE Symposium on Privacy-Aware Computing (PAC)
Keywordsbig data privacy, Big-Five personality traits, Computer science, cultural differences, Data collection, data privacy, Electronic mail, human factors, intelligent privacy management systems, learning (artificial intelligence), machine learning, machine learning algorithms, Metrics, personality trait, policy, privacy, privacy preference, privacy protection, psychology, pubcrawl, Resiliency, Scalability, user connectivity, user personality traits, user privacy preferences, Web applications
Abstract

The increasing complexity and ubiquity in user connectivity, computing environments, information content, and software, mobile, and web applications transfers the responsibility of privacy management to the individuals. Hence, making it extremely difficult for users to maintain the intelligent and targeted level of privacy protection that they need and desire, while simultaneously maintaining their ability to optimally function. Thus, there is a critical need to develop intelligent, automated, and adaptable privacy management systems that can assist users in managing and protecting their sensitive data in the increasingly complex situations and environments that they find themselves in. This work is a first step in exploring the development of such a system, specifically how user personality traits and other characteristics can be used to help automate determination of user sharing preferences for a variety of user data and situations. The Big-Five personality traits of openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism are examined and used as inputs into several popular machine learning algorithms in order to assess their ability to elicit and predict user privacy preferences. Our results show that the Big-Five personality traits can be used to significantly improve the prediction of user privacy preferences in a number of contexts and situations, and so using machine learning approaches to automate the setting of user privacy preferences has the potential to greatly reduce the burden on users while simultaneously improving the accuracy of their privacy preferences and security.

URLhttp://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8166618/
DOI10.1109/PAC.2017.15
Citation Keymehrpouyan_measuring_2017