| Literature DB >> 33769157 |
Genia Kostka1, Léa Steinacker2, Miriam Meckel2.
Abstract
How does the public perceive facial recognition technology and how much do they accept facial recognition technology in different political contexts? Based on online surveys resembling the Internet-connected population in China, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States, our study finds that facial recognition technology enjoys generally highest acceptance among respondents in China, while acceptance is lowest in Germany, and the United Kingdom and the United States are in between. A closer examination through the lens of an integrated technology acceptance model reveals interesting variations in the selected four countries based, among other factors, on socio-demographic factors as well as perceived consequences, usefulness, and reliability of facial recognition technology. While previous research has pointed out that facial recognition technology is an instrument for state surveillance and control, this study shows that surveillance and control are not foremost on the minds of citizens in China, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States, but rather notions of convenience and improved security.Entities:
Keywords: acceptance; facial recognition technology; privacy; public opinion; security
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33769157 PMCID: PMC8314996 DOI: 10.1177/09636625211001555
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Underst Sci ISSN: 0963-6625
Measurements and hypotheses.
| Category | Measurement | Hypothesis |
|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographic factors | ||
| Age |
| H1.1: FRT acceptance is higher among older citizens |
| Gender |
| H1.2: FRT acceptance is higher among female citizens |
| Income | H1.3: FRT acceptance is higher among citizens with higher income | |
| Education | H1.4: FRT acceptance is higher among citizens with more education | |
| Ethnic Group | H1.5: FRT acceptance is higher among ethnic majority | |
| Living in rural or urban area |
| H1.6: FRT acceptance is higher among citizens living in urban areas |
| Experience | ||
| Exposure to FRT | H2.1 FRT acceptance is higher among citizens who have been exposed to many instances of FRT | |
| Frequency of FRT use | H2.2: FRT acceptance is higher among citizens who have used FRT privately at higher frequencies | |
| Perceptions | ||
| Consequences |
| FRT acceptance is higher among citizens who think FRT will enhance convenience (H3.1), efficiency (H3.2), and security (H3.3). |
| Usefulness |
| H3.7: FRT acceptance is higher when citizens perceive the technology to be useful in one or several of the areas/occasions |
| Reliability | H3.8: FRT acceptance is higher among citizens who think FRT is more reliable than other identification technologies | |
FRT: facial recognition technology.
Figure 1.Conceptual framework.
Acceptance model integrating priors and perceptions.
Figure 2.Social acceptance of FRT by country and region.
Total N = 6099; distributions vary for regions: in China Central: N = 601, East: N = 686, West: N = 341; in Germany, East Germany: N = 172, West Germany: N = 1228, Berlin: N = 139; in the UK, Scotland: N = 207, Northern Ireland: N = 96, Wales: N = 37, England (London excluded): N = 1082, Greater London: N = 102; in the United States, Northeast: N = 269, South: N = 556, Midwest: N = 317, West: N = 268. For the United States, we use Census Data (US Census Bureau, 1995) to divide the states into four regions.
Figure 3.Ordered logistic regression: acceptance of general use of FRT.
*p < .10, **p < .05, ***p < .01.
Figure 4.Perceived consequences of FRT by country (N = 6099).