Loss Aversion: Difference between revisions

From Cognitive Attack Taxonomy
Created page with "== '''Loss Aversion ''' == '''Short Description:''' Value of a loss is weighed more heavily than the value of a gain. <br> '''CAT ID:''' CAT-2022-079 <br> '''Layer:''' 8 <br> '''Operational Scale:''' Tactical <br> '''Level of Maturity:''' Well-Established <br> '''Category:''' Vulnerability <br> '''Subcategory:''' <br> '''Also Known As:''' <br> == '''Description:''' == '''Brief Description:''' <br> '''Closely Related Concepts:''' <br> '''Mechanism:'''..."
 
 
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'''Category:'''  Vulnerability <br>
'''Category:'''  Vulnerability <br>


'''Subcategory:'''  <br>
'''Subcategory:'''  Cognitive Vulnerability <br>


'''Also Known As:''' <br>
'''Also Known As:''' Prospect Theory <br>


== '''Description:''' ==
== '''Description''' ==


'''Brief Description:''' <br>
'''Brief Description:''' Losses inflict greater significance <br>


'''Closely Related Concepts:''' <br>
'''Closely Related Concepts:''' Prospect Theory <br>


'''Mechanism:'''  <br>
'''Mechanisms:''' [[Scarcity]], [[Fear of Missing Out|Fear of Missing Out]], [[Endowment Effect|Endowment]] <br>


'''Multipliers:''' <br>
'''Multipliers:''' Urgency, Investment <br>


'''Detailed Description:''' The lost value of a thing (object, opportunity) is perceived to be greater than the gained value would be of that same thing. *Losing $20 hurts more than finding $20 feels good. <br>
'''Detailed Description:''' The lost value of a thing (object, opportunity) is perceived to be greater than the gained value would be of that same thing. *Losing $20 hurts more than finding $20 feels good. <br>


'''INTERACTIONS''' [VETs]:  <br>
== '''Examples''' ==


== '''Examples:''' ==
'''Use Case Example(s):''' An advertisement presents a "limited time offer" to induce loss aversion in the target who is averse to losing the opportunity. <br>


'''Use Case Example(s):''' <br>
'''Example(s) From The Wild:''' A phishing email threatens loss of access to an account unless the recipient immediately clicks on the enclosed link to reset the account credentials.<br>


'''Example(s) From The Wild:''' <br>
== '''Comments''' ==


== '''Comments:''' ==
== '''References''' ==


== '''References:''' ==
Kahneman, D., Knetsch, J. L., & Thaler, R. H. (1991). Anomalies: The endowment effect, loss aversion, and status quo bias. Journal of Economic perspectives, 5(1), 193-206.
 
McIntyre, D. L., & Frank, R. (2021). No Gambles with Information Security: The Victim Psychology of a Ransomware Attack. In Cybercrime in Context: The human factor in victimization, offending, and policing (pp. 43-60). Cham: Springer International Publishing.

Latest revision as of 16:12, 7 August 2024

Loss Aversion

Short Description: Value of a loss is weighed more heavily than the value of a gain.

CAT ID: CAT-2022-079

Layer: 8

Operational Scale: Tactical

Level of Maturity: Well-Established

Category: Vulnerability

Subcategory: Cognitive Vulnerability

Also Known As: Prospect Theory

Description

Brief Description: Losses inflict greater significance

Closely Related Concepts: Prospect Theory

Mechanisms: Scarcity, Fear of Missing Out, Endowment

Multipliers: Urgency, Investment

Detailed Description: The lost value of a thing (object, opportunity) is perceived to be greater than the gained value would be of that same thing. *Losing $20 hurts more than finding $20 feels good.

Examples

Use Case Example(s): An advertisement presents a "limited time offer" to induce loss aversion in the target who is averse to losing the opportunity.

Example(s) From The Wild: A phishing email threatens loss of access to an account unless the recipient immediately clicks on the enclosed link to reset the account credentials.

Comments

References

Kahneman, D., Knetsch, J. L., & Thaler, R. H. (1991). Anomalies: The endowment effect, loss aversion, and status quo bias. Journal of Economic perspectives, 5(1), 193-206.

McIntyre, D. L., & Frank, R. (2021). No Gambles with Information Security: The Victim Psychology of a Ransomware Attack. In Cybercrime in Context: The human factor in victimization, offending, and policing (pp. 43-60). Cham: Springer International Publishing.