Dr Monica Whitty
Professor Monica Whitty is the Head of Department of Software Systems and Cybersecurity and is Professor of Human Factors in Cyber Security. She has been a member of the World Economic Forum Cyber Security Centre and was a member of the WEF Cyber Security Global Futures Committee. She values a diverse and inclusive environment.
Prof Whitty’s academic career began in Australia working at Macquarie University and the University of Western Sydney, before moving to the UK (2003) and then returning home to Australia (2018). In the UK she worked for universities in the Russell Group (Queen’s University, Belfast; University of Warwick), and The 1994 Group Universities (University of Leicester). In Australia, she previously worked at the University of Melbourne before commencing her post at UNSW in 2020. She was the founder and the Director of the UNSW Institute for Cyber Security (IFCYBER). Professor Whitty has worked in a GCHQ accredited Cyber Security Centre in the UK at the University of Warwick and has held an honorary post at the University of Oxford at the Oxford Martin School and the Oxford Internet Institute, and an honorary Professorship at the Institute of Royal Holloway, University of London.
Prof Whitty is the author of over 100 articles and 5 books. She is a leading expert on human factors in cybersecurity. She is well-known for her work on the prevention, disruption, and detection of cyber fraud, (esp. romance scams and investment scams), cyber security training, identities created in cyberspace, online security risks, behaviour in cyberspace, insider threat and mis/disinformation.
Monica’s work is highly impactful – contributing to policy and tools in the UK and Australia to improve cyber security behaviours, prevent and detection cyber fraud victimisation, insider attacks, and the spread of disinformation. She has been an expert witness on > 10 cases across the globe for cyber fraud victims wrongly accused of drug trafficking and money laundering, and sentencing. (From her academic page)
Research Papers and Books
01
Do you love me? Psychological characteristics of romance scam victims
2018, In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking. 21, 2, p. 105-109 5 p.
03
The geography of online dating fraud
2018-Edwards, M., Suaraz-Tangil, G., Peersman, C., Stringhini, G., Rashid, A. & Whitty, M.
04
The online romance scam: a serious cybercrime
2012-Whitty & Buchanan, T., 12 Mar In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking. 15, 3, p. 181-183 3 p.
05
Automatically dismantling online dating fraud
2019- Suarez-Tangil, G., Edwards, M., Peersman, C., Stringhini, G., Rashid, A. & Whitty, M. In: IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics and Security. 15, p. 1128-1137 10 p.
06
Online romance scams and victimhood
2019-Sorell, T. & Whitty, M. In: Security Journal. 32, 3, p. 342-361 20 p.
Further Research
07
The online dating romance scam: causes and consequences of victimhood
2014-Buchanan, T. & Whitty. In: Psychology, Crime and Law. 20, 3, p. 261-283 23 p
08
419 – It’s just a game: pathways to cyber-fraud criminality emanating from West Africa
2018, In: International Journal of Cyber Criminology. 12, 1, p. 97-114 18 p
09
The online dating romance scam: the psychological impact on victims – both financial and non-financial
2015- Whitty & Buchanan, T. In: Criminology and Criminal Justice. 16, 2, p. 176-194 19 p.
10
Who can spot an online romance scam?
Whitty, M. T., 1 Apr 2019, In: Journal of Financial Crime. 26, 2, p. 623-633 11 p
12
The scammers persuasive techniques model
2013-Whitty, M. T. In: British Journal of Criminology. 53, 4, p. 665-684 20 p