ABSTRACT

This new volume, edited by industrial and organizational psychologists, will look at the important topic of cyber security work in the US and around the world. With contributions from experts in the fields of industrial and organizational psychology, human factors, computer science, economics, and applied anthropology, the book takes the position that employees in cyber security professions must maintain attention over long periods of time, must make decisions with imperfect information with the potential to exceed their cognitive capacity, may often need to contend with stress and fatigue, and must frequently interact with others in team settings and multiteam systems. Consequently, psychosocial dynamics become a critical driver of cyber security effectiveness.

Chapters in the book reflect a multilevel perspective (individuals, teams, multiteam systems) and describe cognitive, affective and behavioral inputs, processes and outcomes that operate at each level. The book chapters also include contributions from both research scientists and cyber security policy-makers/professionals to promote a strong scientist-practitioner dynamic. The intent of the book editors is to inform both theory and practice regarding the psychosocial dynamics of cyber security work.

chapter 4|18 pages

Escalation

An Understudied Team Decision-Making Structure

chapter 5|19 pages

Insider Threat in Cyber Security

What the Organizational Psychology Literature on Counterproductive Work Behavior Can and Cannot (Yet) Tell Us

chapter 8|27 pages

Requisite Attributes for Cyber Security Personnel and Teams

Cyber Risk Mitigation through Talent Management