Utilising EEG and eye-tracking in maritime GNSS spoofing incidents : a human factors perspective
Kurt, Yasin Burak and Farag, Yaser B.A. and Uflaz, Esma and Borghini, Gianluca and Akyuz, Emre and Arslan, Ozcan and Kurt, Rafet Emek and Turan, Osman (2026) Utilising EEG and eye-tracking in maritime GNSS spoofing incidents : a human factors perspective. Computers and Security, 166. 104908. ISSN 0167-4048 (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cose.2026.104908)
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Abstract
Cyber-attacks can compromise the reliability of onboard digital systems, navigation, sensing, control and decision support. An undetected attack may mislead bridge teams and increase the risk of collisions and groundings. Building maritime cyber resilience is therefore essential to the safety of navigation. In this study, 61 certificated seafarers participated in an experimental full-mission bridge simulator study replicating an Istanbul Strait transit. Participants were allocated to a test group or a control group and were exposed to a timed GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite) System spoofing event in a single continuous run. A multimodal dataset was acquired using physiological measures, including EEG and eye-tracking, together with objective and subjective instruments. Relative to the routine briefing, the cyber-situational awareness briefing produced statistically significant improvements across modalities. The test group exhibited higher EEG-derived vigilance (p = 0.027) and lower stress and workload than the control group. Participants’ self-reports indicated higher anomaly awareness, more frequent noticing of unusual device behaviour and greater suspicion (p = 0.006; p = 0.004). Eye-tracking metrics revealed more independent cross-verification, with reduced reliance on the primary electronic display. Objective performance, summarised by the composite performance index, was greater in the test group (p < 0.001), and the proportion of safe passages was higher. This study investigated whether a situational awareness intervention favourably shifts human factors, trust calibration, and performance under cyber-attacks, specifically GNSS spoofing. To our knowledge, this research provides the first empirical evidence from seafarers exposed to cyberattacks in a simulator environment and offers new insights into maritime human factors.
ORCID iDs
Kurt, Yasin Burak
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7782-5102, Farag, Yaser B.A.
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8883-9182, Uflaz, Esma, Borghini, Gianluca, Akyuz, Emre, Arslan, Ozcan, Kurt, Rafet Emek
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5923-0703 and Turan, Osman
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1877-8462;
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Item type: Article ID code: 95869 Dates: DateEvent1 July 2026Published24 March 2026Published Online24 March 2026AcceptedSubjects: Naval Science > Naval architecture. Shipbuilding. Marine engineering Department: Faculty of Engineering > Naval Architecture, Ocean & Marine Engineering Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 25 Mar 2026 11:47 Last modified: 08 May 2026 18:09 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/95869
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