FINS faculty, Dr. Bonnie J. Dorr and Sonja M. Schmer-Galunder, are among the recipients of a new, large, multi-institutional award from the Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) agency – the research arm of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence- that delves into the psychology of cyber attackers.
Among others, such as SRI International – a non-profit scientific research institute established by Stanford University, UF Computer Engineering & Information Science (CISE) Dept. Professors Dorr and Schmer-Galunder will contribute to this recently announced initiative, entitled the Reimagining Security with Cyberpsychology-Informed Network Defenses (ReSCIND) program, by building a Cultural Natural Language Processing (NLP) system that applies tailored NLP methods to data from public platforms (e.g., Reddit, GitHub, and Discord) alongside experimental data from cross-cultural human subject research. Their research will focus on describing the identities of the members of distinct social groups, with an emphasis on cultural expressions of cognitive vulnerabilities, and the mapping between them (e.g. linguistic cues that can reveal cultural background and associated potential biases). Their work at UF will include analysis and group-specific use of jargon, language patterns, mental states such as “stance” or differences in social cognition (e.g. temporal and spatial orientation). The goal is to map cultural indicators to cognitive vulnerability profiles of malicious hackers, allowing for tailored defense strategies against cyber threats.