Authors
Michael Curry, Byron Marshall, John Correia, Robert E Crossler
Publication date
2019/9/1
Journal
Journal of Information Systems
Volume
33
Issue
3
Pages
201-225
Publisher
American Accounting Association
Description
The possibility of noncompliant behavior is a challenge for cybersecurity professionals and their auditors as they try to estimate residual control risk. Building on the recently proposed InfoSec Process Action Model (IPAM), this work explores how nontechnical assessments and interventions can indicate and reduce the likelihood of risky individual behavior. The multi-stage approach seeks to bridge the well-known gap between intent and action. In a strong password creation experiment involving 229 participants, IPAM constructs resulted in a marked increase in R2 for initiating compliance behavior with control expectations from 47 percent to 60 percent. Importantly, the model constructs offer measurable indications despite practical limitations on organizations' ability to assess problematic individual password behavior. A threefold increase in one measure of strong password behavior suggested the process …
Total citations
20192020202120222023202413553
Scholar articles
M Curry, B Marshall, J Correia, RE Crossler - Journal of Information Systems, 2019