C. Brock Kirwan
Orcid: 0000-0003-0768-1446
According to our database1,
C. Brock Kirwan
authored at least 21 papers
between 2014 and 2024.
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Bibliography
2024
An fMRI Investigation of the Neurocognitive Processing of Measures and Strategic Objectives.
Manag. Sci., 2024
2023
What makes a Tweet so sweet: The neurocognitive effects of hedonic information consumption.
Inf. Manag., November, 2023
Embracing brain and behaviour: Designing programs of complementary neurophysiological and behavioural studies.
Inf. Syst. J., March, 2023
2022
Information Filtering in Electronic Networks of Practice: An fMRI Investigation of Expectation (Dis)confirmation.
J. Assoc. Inf. Syst., 2022
2019
MIS Q., 2019
Proceedings of the Fifteenth Symposium on Usable Privacy and Security, 2019
2018
A direct comparison between ERP and fMRI measurements of food-related inhibitory control: Implications for BMI status and dietary intake.
NeuroImage, 2018
Tuning Out Security Warnings: A Longitudinal Examination of Habituation Through fMRI, Eye Tracking, and Field Experiments.
MIS Q., 2018
Proceedings of the 24th Americas Conference on Information Systems, 2018
Improving Security Message Adherence through Improved Comprehension: Neural and Behavioral Insights.
Proceedings of the 24th Americas Conference on Information Systems, 2018
2017
What Do We Really Know about How Habituation to Warnings Occurs Over Time?: A Longitudinal fMRI Study of Habituation and Polymorphic Warnings.
Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2017
2016
From Warning to Wallpaper: Why the Brain Habituates to Security Warnings and What Can Be Done About It.
J. Manag. Inf. Syst., 2016
Inf. Syst. Res., 2016
How users perceive and respond to security messages: a NeuroIS research agenda and empirical study.
Eur. J. Inf. Syst., 2016
Your memory is working against you: How eye tracking and memory explain habituation to security warnings.
Decis. Support Syst., 2016
Proceedings of the 22nd Americas Conference on Information Systems, 2016
2015
Neural correlates of gender differences and color in distinguishing security warnings and legitimate websites: a neurosecurity study.
J. Cybersecur., 2015
How Polymorphic Warnings Reduce Habituation in the Brain: Insights from an fMRI Study.
Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2015
The Impact of Technostress on Users' Responses to Security Warnings: A NeuroIS Study.
Proceedings of the 21st Americas Conference on Information Systems, 2015
2014
Using Measures of Risk Perception to Predict Information Security Behavior: Insights from Electroencephalography (EEG).
J. Assoc. Inf. Syst., 2014
Users Aren't (Necessarily) Lazy: Using NeuroIS to Explain Habituation to Security Warnings.
Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Systems, 2014