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Auteurs principaux: Naghizade, Elham, Ji, Kaixin, Tag, Benjamin, Salim, Flora
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2024
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.11805
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author Naghizade, Elham
Ji, Kaixin
Tag, Benjamin
Salim, Flora
author_facet Naghizade, Elham
Ji, Kaixin
Tag, Benjamin
Salim, Flora
contents Privacy is dynamic, sensitive, and contextual, much like our emotions. Previous studies have explored the interplay between privacy and context, privacy and emotion, and emotion and context. However, there remains a significant gap in understanding the interplay of these aspects simultaneously. In this paper, we present a preliminary study investigating the role of emotions in driving individuals' information sharing behaviour, particularly in relation to urban locations and social ties. We adopt a novel methodology that integrates context (location and time), emotion, and personal information sharing behaviour, providing a comprehensive analysis of how contextual emotions affect privacy. The emotions are assessed with both self-reporting and electrodermal activity (EDA). Our findings reveal that self-reported emotions influence personal information-sharing behaviour with distant social groups, while neutral emotions lead individuals to share less precise information with close social circles, a pattern is potentially detectable with wrist-worn EDA. Our study helps lay the foundation for personalised emotion-aware strategies to mitigate oversharing risks and enhance user privacy in the digital age.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_11805
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Inside Out or Not: Privacy Implications of Emotional Disclosure
Naghizade, Elham
Ji, Kaixin
Tag, Benjamin
Salim, Flora
Computers and Society
Privacy is dynamic, sensitive, and contextual, much like our emotions. Previous studies have explored the interplay between privacy and context, privacy and emotion, and emotion and context. However, there remains a significant gap in understanding the interplay of these aspects simultaneously. In this paper, we present a preliminary study investigating the role of emotions in driving individuals' information sharing behaviour, particularly in relation to urban locations and social ties. We adopt a novel methodology that integrates context (location and time), emotion, and personal information sharing behaviour, providing a comprehensive analysis of how contextual emotions affect privacy. The emotions are assessed with both self-reporting and electrodermal activity (EDA). Our findings reveal that self-reported emotions influence personal information-sharing behaviour with distant social groups, while neutral emotions lead individuals to share less precise information with close social circles, a pattern is potentially detectable with wrist-worn EDA. Our study helps lay the foundation for personalised emotion-aware strategies to mitigate oversharing risks and enhance user privacy in the digital age.
title Inside Out or Not: Privacy Implications of Emotional Disclosure
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.11805