Physiological Measurement of Trust-Related Behavior in Trust-Neutral and Trust-Critical Situations - Trust Management V
Conference Papers Year : 2011

Physiological Measurement of Trust-Related Behavior in Trust-Neutral and Trust-Critical Situations

Karin Leichtenstern
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1013585
Nikolaus Bee
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1013586
Elisabeth André
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1013587
Johannes Wagner
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1013588

Abstract

In this paper we present results of a user study that we conducted with 21 subjects to investigate whether initial user trust is accompanied by unconscious bodily responses which enable more objective measurements than user reports. In particular, we recorded the user’s eye gaze and heart rate to evaluate whether users respond differently when interacting with a web page that is supposed to build initial trust as opposed to a web page that lacks this capability. Our results indicate that there are significantly different response patterns to trust-critical and trust-neutral situations during the interaction with a web page depending on whether the web page has helped users form initial trust or not. Knowledge of trust-related behavior can help to manage user trust at the runtime of the system since different usage phases can continuously be interpreted in order to detect situations which need to be considered to re-cover user trust.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
978-3-642-22200-9_14_Chapter.pdf (1.84 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origin Files produced by the author(s)
Loading...

Dates and versions

hal-01568678 , version 1 (25-07-2017)

Licence

Identifiers

Cite

Karin Leichtenstern, Nikolaus Bee, Elisabeth André, Ulrich Berkmüller, Johannes Wagner. Physiological Measurement of Trust-Related Behavior in Trust-Neutral and Trust-Critical Situations. 5th International Conference on Trust Management (TM), Jun 2011, Copenhagen, Denmark. pp.165-172, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-22200-9_14⟩. ⟨hal-01568678⟩
93 View
185 Download

Altmetric

Share

More