HCJul 16, 2020

Investigation of the Effect of Incidental Fear Privacy Behavioral Intention (Technical Report)

arXiv:2007.08604v1
AI Analysis

This research addresses how emotions influence privacy decisions for online users, offering a systematic analysis that is incremental in refining understanding of emotional impacts.

The study investigated how incidental emotions (fear and happiness) affect privacy behavioral intentions, finding statistically significant differences in intentions between neutral and emotional conditions but no significant change between fear and happiness conditions.

Background. Incidental emotions users feel during their online activities may alter their privacy behavioral intentions. Aim. We investigate the effect of incidental affect (fear and happiness) on privacy behavioral intention. Method. We recruited $330$ participants for a within-subjects experiment in three random-controlled user studies. The participants were exposed to three conditions \textsf{neutral}, \textsf{fear}, \textsf{happiness} with standardised stimuli videos for incidental affect induction. Fear and happiness were assigned in random order. The participants' privacy behavioural intentions (PBI) were measured followed by a Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS-X) manipulation check on self-reported affect. The PBI and PANAS-X were compared across treatment conditions. Results. We observed a statistically significant difference in PBI and Protection Intention in neutral-fear and neutral-happy comparisons. However across fear and happy conditions, we did not observe any statistically significant change in PBI scores. Conclusions. We offer the first systematic analysis of the impact of incidental affects on Privacy Behavioral Intention (PBI) and its sub-constructs. We are the first to offer a fine-grained analysis of neutral-affect comparisons and interactions offering insights in hitherto unexplained phenomena reported in the field.

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