Location
Grand Wailea, Hawaii
Event Website
https://hicss.hawaii.edu/
Start Date
8-1-2019 12:00 AM
End Date
11-1-2019 12:00 AM
Description
Societal acceptance of biometric technology is complex and highly dependent on trust. The limited work on trust in biometric s is mostly anecdotal with correlational patterns associated with familiarity and confidence in different types of biometric s [26]. To develop a comprehensive understanding of people’s trust perceptions toward biometric s, we employed existing theories to develop a systematic measure of trust in biometric s from a consumer perspective. We 1) gathered prior trust measures in the context of interpersonal interaction, technology adoption, information system and automated technology, 2) identified common trust dimensions across these contexts, 3) modified the items for the context of biometric technology, and 4) conducted a survey study to determine sub-factors and reliability of this new measure. Our data generated seven new factors associated with consumer trust in biometric technology. We discuss implications of the current work and suggest future directions.
Development of Trust Measure in Biometric Technology
Grand Wailea, Hawaii
Societal acceptance of biometric technology is complex and highly dependent on trust. The limited work on trust in biometric s is mostly anecdotal with correlational patterns associated with familiarity and confidence in different types of biometric s [26]. To develop a comprehensive understanding of people’s trust perceptions toward biometric s, we employed existing theories to develop a systematic measure of trust in biometric s from a consumer perspective. We 1) gathered prior trust measures in the context of interpersonal interaction, technology adoption, information system and automated technology, 2) identified common trust dimensions across these contexts, 3) modified the items for the context of biometric technology, and 4) conducted a survey study to determine sub-factors and reliability of this new measure. Our data generated seven new factors associated with consumer trust in biometric technology. We discuss implications of the current work and suggest future directions.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/hicss-52/os/trust_in_technology-mediated_environments/5