WATCH
Series
July
19, 2012 12:00 PM to
July
19, 2012 1:00 PM
NSF,
Room 110
Abstract
Deception is one of the most significant
and pervasive social phenomena of our age, but the psychology of deception is
poorly understood in the context of cybersecurity. We know little about
important questions, including: How does
communication technology change the ways and reasons we deceive others? Can
people detect if they are being lied to in online contexts any better (or
worse) than offline? And can computer programs identify patterns on the
Internet that reveal whether someone is lying or not that can exceed
human-detection? In this talk we will examine these questions and recent
research that may shed some light on the answers, focusing on the motivations
for deception, a review of the state-of-the-art in deception detection
research, and a sense of what the future holds for the way we lie.
Speaker
Jeff Hancock is an Associate Professor
in the Departments of Communication and Information Science. He is currently
the Chair of the Information Science Department and the co-Director of
Cognitive Science at Cornell University.
He is also Associate Editor of Discourse Processes. His work is
concerned with how social media affect psychological and interpersonal
processes, with a particular emphasis on understanding how language can reveal
psychological and social dynamics, such as deception and credibility, emotional
contagion, intimacy and relationships, and social support. Funding from the
National Science Foundation and the Department of Defense supports his
research, which has been frequently featured in the popular media, including
the New York Times, CNN, NPR, and the BBC. Dr. Hancock earned his PhD in
psychology at Dalhousie University, Canada, and joined Cornell in 2002.
Meeting
Type
Lecture
Contacts
Keith Marzullo, (703) 292-8950
kmarzull@nsf.gov
NSF
Related Organizations
Directorate for Computer & Information
Science & Engineering
No comments:
Post a Comment