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Are you willing to self-disclose for science? Effects of privacy awareness and trust in privacy on self-disclosure of personal and health data in online scientific studies - an experimental study

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peer-reviewed

Erstveröffentlichung
2021-12-24
Authors
Herbert, Cornelia
Marschin, Verena
Erb, Benjamin
Meißner, Dominik
Aufheimer, Maria
et al.
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel


Published in
Frontiers in Big Data ; 4 (2021). - Art.-Nr. 763196. - eISSN 2624-909X
Link to original publication
https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdata.2021.763196
Faculties
Fakultät für Ingenieurwissenschaften, Informatik und Psychologie
Institutions
Institut für Psychologie und Pädagogik
Institut für Verteilte Systeme
Document version
published version (publisher's PDF)
Abstract
Digital interactions via the internet have become the norm rather than the exception in our global society. Concerns have been raised about human-centered privacy and the often unreflected self-disclosure behavior of internet users. This study on human-centered privacy follows two major aims: first, investigate the willingness of university students (as digital natives) to disclose private data and information about their person, social and academic life, their mental health as well as their health behavior habits, when taking part as a volunteer in a scientific online survey. Second, examine to what extent the participants’ self-disclosure behavior can be modulated by experimental induction of privacy awareness (PA) or trust in privacy (TIP) or a combination of both (PA and TIP). In addition, the role of human factors such as personality traits, gender or mental health (e.g., self-reported depressive symptoms) on self-disclosure behavior was explored. Participants were randomly assigned to four experimental groups. In group A (n = 50, 7 males), privacy awareness (PA) was induced implicitly by the inclusion of privacy concern items. In group B (n = 43, 6 males), trust in privacy (TIP) was experimentally induced by buzzwords and by visual TIP primes promising safe data storage. Group C (n = 79, 12 males) received both, PA and TIP induction, while group D (n = 55, 9 males) served as control group. Participants had the choice to answer the survey items by agreeing to one of a number of possible answers including the options to refrain from self-disclosure by choosing the response options “don’t know” or “no answer.” Self-disclosure among participants was high irrespective of experimental group and irrespective of psychological domains of the information provided. The results of this study suggest that willingness of volunteers to self-disclose private data in a scientific online study cannot simply be overruled or changed by any of the chosen experimental privacy manipulations. The present results extend the previous literature on human-centered privacy and despite limitations can give important insights into self-disclosure behavior of young people and the privacy paradox.
Publication funding
Open-Access-Förderung durch die Universität Ulm
Subject headings
[GND]: Faktor Mensch | Datenschutz | Psychische Gesundheit | Selbstöffnung
[LCSH]: Self-disclosure | Mental health | College students | Data privacy
[Free subject headings]: Privacy paradox | Human-centered privacy | University students | Trust in privacy | Privacy awareness | Human factors | Privatheitsparadox
[DDC subject group]: DDC 150 / Psychology | DDC 300 / Social sciences
License
CC BY 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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DOI & citation

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-42893

Herbert, Cornelia et al. (2022): Are you willing to self-disclose for science? Effects of privacy awareness and trust in privacy on self-disclosure of personal and health data in online scientific studies - an experimental study. Open Access Repositorium der Universität Ulm und Technischen Hochschule Ulm. http://dx.doi.org/10.18725/OPARU-42893
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