38,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandkostenfrei*
Versandfertig in 6-10 Tagen
  • Broschiertes Buch

This exploratory study provides extends the body of knowledge associated with the nature of perceived invasiveness toward biometric technologies. This analysis of perceived invasiveness was conducted via consideration of factors which may influence an individual s willingness to use such technologies. Specifically, this research validated a proposed conceptual model and tested hypotheses which evaluated if the eye was viewed as a significantly more sensitive or invasive area of the person than the hand when subject to appraisal by biometric devices. The primary outcome of the study indicated…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This exploratory study provides extends the body of
knowledge associated with the nature of perceived
invasiveness toward biometric technologies. This
analysis of perceived invasiveness was conducted via
consideration of factors which may influence an
individual s willingness to use such technologies.
Specifically, this research validated a proposed
conceptual model and tested hypotheses which
evaluated if the eye was viewed as a significantly
more sensitive or invasive area of the person than
the hand when subject to appraisal by biometric
devices. The primary outcome of the study indicated
that, within the air travel security instance, the
factors of use context, preference, and proxemic
sensitivity are correlated with an individual s
perceived invasiveness toward eye-based biometric
technologies. The results also indicated that only
the factor of proxemic sensitivity was indicated to
be correlated with individual sentiment of perceived
invasiveness toward biometric technologies,
regardless of the class of biometric technology
under consideration.
Autorenporträt
Daryl R. Brydie, Ph.D is a member in good standing with ISC2 and
has held the Certified Information Systems Security Professional
credential since 2006. His interests lie in information
technology security, emerging technologies, technology
acceptance, free and open source technology proliferation, cloud
computing and virtualization.