Thursday, 26 September 2019

Effect of Mental State and Personality on Password Selection Among Mobile Phone Users: A Case Study of IBB University Lapai Students

Volume 5 Issue 2 July - December 2018

Review Paper

Effect of Mental State and Personality on Password Selection Among Mobile Phone Users: A Case Study of IBB University Lapai Students

Abdullahi Abubakar Kawu*, Idris Muhammad**, Aisha Awal***, Muhammad Bashir Abdullahi****
*,*** Lecturer, Department of Computer Science, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University, Lapai, Nigeria.
** Undergraduate Student, Computer Science, Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida University, Lapai, Nigeria.
**** Lectures, Department of Computer Science, Federal University of Technology, Minna.
Kawu, A. A., Muhammad, I., Awal, A., & Abdullahi, M. B. (2018). Effect of Mental State and Personality on Password Selection Among Mobile Phone Users: A Case Study of IBB University Lapai Students. i-manager’s Journal on Mobile Applications and Technologies, 5(2), 29-36. https://doi.org/10.26634/jmt.5.2.15630

Abstract

There is a paucity of research that examine the psychological state of mobile phone users while creating passwords, and how it affects the choice of strong and weak passwords. In this paper, we examine how a user’s mental state and personality affects choice of user’s password. Therefore, we use two groups: experimental and control, each of 16 subjects, who were asked to generate a password. At the beginning, all participants used the BMIS and the BFI tools to self-report their mental state of mind and personality, respectively. Then, we exert mental fatigue on participants in the experimental group while those of other group were not. At the end of the experiment, we measure and compare password strength across groups. Our findings reveal that the effect of the different mental states on password over our limited sample size is not so different, although more mentally fatigued users tend to create weaker passwords than others do. Further, we demonstrate that a relationship exists, nonetheless, as indicated by our regression model. We also investigated personality and its implication on password strength, the study reveals that participants who report as agreeable are more likely to create better passwords than conscientious participants or extraverts.

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