Thi TranBinghamton University | SUNY Binghamton · School of Management
Thi Tran
Doctor of Philosophy
Cyber Security Research, Crisis Misinformation Harms, Data Breach, Privacy, Behavioral Research, Machine Learning
About
15
Publications
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Introduction
Research interest: Cyber Security research in misinformation, phishing emails, fake social network accounts, scammed investment programs.
Methodologies: surveys, behavioral experiments, data analytics, neuroscience IS - EEG, design science.
Publications
Publications (15)
During humanitarian crises, a large amount of information is circulated in a short period of time, either to withstand or respond to such crises. Such crises also give rise to misinformation that spreads within and outside the affected community. Such misinformation may result in information harms that can generate serious short term or long-term c...
bold xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">Research problem:
During humanitarian crises, communities of people face various types of dangers. To counter the dangers, they need information in a short period. Such need creates the opportunity for misinformation. Such misinformation can result in in...
The current COVID-19 pandemic has generated ideal conditions for widespread harmful misinformation on social media. To contribute to the efforts of social media networks and public health agencies to build community resilience and to effectively counter health misinformation, this research investigates the role of uncertainty and answers the questi...
During a large scale and severe health crisis, such as the current COVID-19 pandemic, social media is infected with widespread misinformation that can cause harms to individuals and communities. For instance, in the context of the recent vaccination campaigns, widespread misinformation has caused vaccine hesitancy which in turn has caused harm to m...
During humanitarian crises, there is a need for a large amount of information in a short period. Such need creates the base for misinformation such as rumors or hoaxes to spread within and outside the affected community. This may result in misinformation harms that can generate serious short term or long-term consequences. In such situations, there...
Course Project from Advance R Programming Project, with tested hypotheses, presented at UTSA, San Antonio, Texas.
During humanitarian crises, misinformation can be widespread and cause serious consequences or harms. Research related to misinformation harms are scarce. Our study examines different types of perceived misinformation harms and 3V scores of three specific scenarios that are tied to a recent and well-known humanitarian crises, the Black Lives Matter...
Misinformation can cause severe consequences to
individuals and organizations. During humanitarian crises,
communities are vulnerable to misinformation. Considering the
interaction of human and machine factors, we propose a
conceptual framework based on two activity systems:
generation and mitigation of misinformation. Such framework
helps enrich t...
During humanitarian crises, people face dangers and need a large amount of information in a short period of time. Such need creates the base for misinformation such as rumors, fake news or hoaxes to spread within and outside the affected community. It could be unintended misinformation with unconfirmed details, or intentional disinformation created...
During humanitarian crises, people face dangers and need a large amount of information in a short period of time. Such need creates the base for misinformation such as rumors, fake news or hoaxes to spread within and outside the affected community. It could be unintended misinformation with unconfirmed details, or intentional disinformation created...