Neave, Nick
(2019).
Digital hoarding survey 2017.
[Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex:
UK Data Service.
10.5255/UKDA-SN-853948
Hoarding behaviours associated with the accumulation of physical objects is the subject of a newly-diagnosed psychiatric disorder. Studies in clinical groups and community samples have begun to clarify the demographic, social, and psychological characteristics of individuals who hoard physical items. Recently, focus has turned to the potential problems associated with digital hoarding – the accumulation of digital material such as emails, photographs, files and apps. Studies of email storage within individuals and organisations have shown that some individuals do not delete emails, and many store them in an unsecure manner. There are cybersecurity risks associated with such hoarding behaviour, as the stored material could be mined for social engineering attacks, or used by disgruntled employees who have at their disposal a repository of confidential or possibly embarrassing material that may date back several years. In short, hoarding can create cybersecurity vulnerabilities within a company and could potentially lead to the release of classified or commercially-sensitive data.
In a series of quantitative surveys, we will explore the psychological characteristics of individuals who engage in digital hoarding. A key aspect will be the initial development and validation of a digital hoarding questionnaire using a large sample. In addition, we can explore how staff think about and relate to the digital information that they have access to, and how they decide on whether or not to save it or delete it. The findings will enable organisations to develop and refine their data storage and data protection policies, digital security policies, and preserve their commercial integrity.
Data description (abstract)
We collected data from 203 individuals who were currently in work and regularly used computers as part of their job. We asked them to complete the digital hoarding questionnaire so that we could assess its psychometric properties, and also to examine possible relationships between job role, data protection responsibility and extent of digital hoarding behaviours.
Data creators: |
Creator Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Neave Nick |
Northumbria University |
|
|
Sponsors: |
Economic and Social Research Council
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Grant reference: |
ES/N009614/1
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Topic classification: |
Psychology
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Keywords: |
cybersecurity, computers, employment, human behaviour, data, responsibility, adults
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Project title: |
The cybersecurity risks of digital hoarding
|
Grant holders: |
Paul Taylor, Cerwyn Moore, Becky Milne, Adam Joinson, Darren Lawrence, Kim Knott, Nicholas James Ryder, Paul Iganski, Lorraine Hope, Awais Rashid, Nick Neave, Pam Briggs, Elizabeth Sillence
|
Project dates: |
From | To |
---|
1 August 2017 | 31 July 2018 |
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Date published: |
30 Sep 2019 15:18
|
Last modified: |
30 Sep 2019 15:18
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Collection period: |
Date from: | Date to: |
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2 October 2017 | 31 December 2017 |
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Country: |
United Kingdom |
Data collection method: |
A Qualtrics survey was distributed via a market research company to their membership base. We specified that the survey be distributed only to adults currently working and who use computers as a regular part of their job. |
Observation unit: |
Individual |
Kind of data: |
Numeric |
Type of data: |
UK survey data |
Resource language: |
English |
|
Data sourcing, processing and preparation: |
The data was held on Qualtrics. The raw data was screened for missing data and anonymised.
|
Rights owners: |
Name |
Affiliation |
ORCID (as URL) |
Neave Nick |
Northumbria University |
|
|
Contact: |
Name | Email | Affiliation | ORCID (as URL) |
---|
Neave, Nick | nick.neave@northumbria.ac.uk | University of Northumbria | Unspecified |
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Notes on access: |
The Data Collection is available to any user without the requirement for registration for download/access.
|
Publisher: |
UK Data Service
|
Last modified: |
30 Sep 2019 15:18
|
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