Data quality and due process in large interorganizational record systems
Communications of the ACM
Powers-of-ten information biases
MIS Quarterly
Data quality and systems theory
Communications of the ACM
Scenario-based training for deception detection
Proceedings of the 1st annual conference on Information security curriculum development
Consumer and Business Deception on the Internet: Content Analysis of Documentary Evidence
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Judging the Credibility of Information Gathered from Face-to-Face Interactions
Journal of Data and Information Quality (JDIQ)
Journal of Management Information Systems
Effects of Automated and Participative Decision Support in Computer-Aided Credibility Assessment
Journal of Management Information Systems
Cultural determinants of media choice for deception
Computers in Human Behavior
Journal of Data and Information Quality (JDIQ)
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data contained in computer-based systems, they become vulnerable to strategic information manipulation. That is, they become susceptible to situations where their decision-making behaviors can be influenced by others able to access and manipulate this data. This paper describes the results of a field experiment that examines the effects of alternative interventions aimed at inducing sensitivity to the possibility of manipulated data on professionals' task-related decision behaviors: deception detection, false alarms, and task accuracy. While traditional training had no effect on detection success or the issuance of false alarms, warnings about data quality resulted in better detection success. Warnings combined with just-in-time training resulted in better detection success but at the cost of an increased number of false alarms. Higher levels of detection success increased task accuracy and the time spent solving each problem. A higher number of false alarms was associated with lower levels of task accuracy.