The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices

This study seeks to explore the sufficiency of protection motivation theory (PMT) in predicting behavioural intention and the actual behaviour of setting complex passwords while taking in account the online user’s perception of the type of important information that the website contains (value of th...

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Main Author: Ng, Isabel Su Min
Other Authors: Ho Moon-Ho Ringo
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66619
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-666192019-12-10T13:41:37Z The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices Ng, Isabel Su Min Ho Moon-Ho Ringo School of Humanities and Social Sciences Majeed Khader DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Motivation This study seeks to explore the sufficiency of protection motivation theory (PMT) in predicting behavioural intention and the actual behaviour of setting complex passwords while taking in account the online user’s perception of the type of important information that the website contains (value of the websites). There were two conditions for this study: high-value website condition which refers to websites that contain high-importance personal information and low-value website condition which refers to websites that contain low-importance personal information. 98 university students were recruited for the study (low-value website condition: 48 participants; high-value website condition: 50 participants) and completed a survey while thinking of a website that contains high-importance or low-importance information. The multiple regression analysis results showed that fear arousal (p=.02), response cost (p=.003) and self-efficacy (p=.02) significantly predicted behavioural intention for low-value websites while self-efficacy (p=.002) significantly predicted behavioural intention for high value websites. When taken as a whole model, this study showed that PMT significantly predicted actual behaviour for the low-value websites (p=.004) but not for the high-value ones (p=.23). No PMT factors were significant individual predictors for actual behaviour and behavioural intention did not mediate the relationship, indicating a intention-behaviour gap. No interaction effect was found for the value of the websites and PMT factors, thus suggesting that the value of websites is not sufficient to motivate users to set complex passwords. Possible factors that may have contributed to the differences in the results were discussed. More research is recommended to confirm the findings. Bachelor of Arts 2016-04-19T03:17:12Z 2016-04-19T03:17:12Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66619 en Nanyang Technological University 66 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Motivation
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology::Motivation
Ng, Isabel Su Min
The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
description This study seeks to explore the sufficiency of protection motivation theory (PMT) in predicting behavioural intention and the actual behaviour of setting complex passwords while taking in account the online user’s perception of the type of important information that the website contains (value of the websites). There were two conditions for this study: high-value website condition which refers to websites that contain high-importance personal information and low-value website condition which refers to websites that contain low-importance personal information. 98 university students were recruited for the study (low-value website condition: 48 participants; high-value website condition: 50 participants) and completed a survey while thinking of a website that contains high-importance or low-importance information. The multiple regression analysis results showed that fear arousal (p=.02), response cost (p=.003) and self-efficacy (p=.02) significantly predicted behavioural intention for low-value websites while self-efficacy (p=.002) significantly predicted behavioural intention for high value websites. When taken as a whole model, this study showed that PMT significantly predicted actual behaviour for the low-value websites (p=.004) but not for the high-value ones (p=.23). No PMT factors were significant individual predictors for actual behaviour and behavioural intention did not mediate the relationship, indicating a intention-behaviour gap. No interaction effect was found for the value of the websites and PMT factors, thus suggesting that the value of websites is not sufficient to motivate users to set complex passwords. Possible factors that may have contributed to the differences in the results were discussed. More research is recommended to confirm the findings.
author2 Ho Moon-Ho Ringo
author_facet Ho Moon-Ho Ringo
Ng, Isabel Su Min
format Final Year Project
author Ng, Isabel Su Min
author_sort Ng, Isabel Su Min
title The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
title_short The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
title_full The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
title_fullStr The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
title_full_unstemmed The influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
title_sort influence of protection motivation factors and the value of websites on online users’ password practices
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66619
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