Mental Models of Adversarial Machine Learning
This addresses the gap in knowledge about how developers perceive adversarial ML, which is incremental but important for improving security integration and communication in corporate settings.
The study investigated practitioners' understanding of security challenges in machine learning, revealing that they often confuse ML-specific threats with general ones and view security in the context of entire workflows rather than individual models.
Although machine learning is widely used in practice, little is known about practitioners' understanding of potential security challenges. In this work, we close this substantial gap and contribute a qualitative study focusing on developers' mental models of the machine learning pipeline and potentially vulnerable components. Similar studies have helped in other security fields to discover root causes or improve risk communication. Our study reveals two \facets of practitioners' mental models of machine learning security. Firstly, practitioners often confuse machine learning security with threats and defences that are not directly related to machine learning. Secondly, in contrast to most academic research, our participants perceive security of machine learning as not solely related to individual models, but rather in the context of entire workflows that consist of multiple components. Jointly with our additional findings, these two facets provide a foundation to substantiate mental models for machine learning security and have implications for the integration of adversarial machine learning into corporate workflows, \new{decreasing practitioners' reported uncertainty}, and appropriate regulatory frameworks for machine learning security.