TITLE:
Cognitive Perimeter Targeting: Behavioral Intelligence and SOCMINT in Multinational Cybersecurity Operations
AUTHORS:
Troy C. Troublefield
KEYWORDS:
Cyberpsychology, SOCMINT Epistemology, Cognitive Cybersecurity, Behavioral Intelligence, Multinational Cybersecurity, Social Engineering, Insider Threat, Cognitive Domain, AI-Enhanced Influence, Cross-Border Cyber Defense
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Information Security,
Vol.17 No.3,
June
29,
2026
ABSTRACT: Multinational organizations operating in shared cybersecurity environments face a compounding intelligence challenge: the behavioral dynamics that determine human susceptibility to social engineering, insider threat development, and coordinated disinformation campaigns are not captured by conventional technical security monitoring, yet available evidence consistently positions them as the dominant attack surface in contemporary advanced persistent threat (APT) and hybrid cyber-influence operations, with Verizon’s 2024 Data Breach Investigations Report attributing 68% of breaches to a non-technical human element, and establishing social engineering as structurally prior to technical exploitation in APT attack chains. This article develops and applies the Behavioral Intelligence in the Cognitive Domain (BICD) framework to multinational cybersecurity contexts, reconceptualizing Social Media Intelligence (SOCMINT) as an epistemologically distinct discipline from Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) grounded in behavioral rather than documentary epistemology, and arguing that this distinction has direct and underexplored consequences for multinational security operations centers (MSOCs), joint cyber defense coordination cells, and cross-border incident response teams. The BICD framework integrates five cyberpsychology mechanisms, online disinhibition, platform-conditioned identity performance, algorithmic belief environment formation, social proof manipulation, and digital cognitive bias amplification, into a structured analytical procedure for producing explanatory and predictive threat intelligence from human behavioral data in digital environments. The framework then specifies how BICD-derived intelligence products inform narrative-based countermeasure design, organizational resilience architecture, and cross-jurisdictional threat communication, creating a structured intelligence-to-defense pipeline applicable to the multinational cybersecurity operating environment. The article engages emerging scholarship in cognitive cybersecurity (2021-2025), AI-driven social engineering threats (2022-2025), and multinational cyber coordination frameworks to situate the BICD framework within current organizational and operational debates. Implications for multinational security governance, cross-border intelligence sharing, and practitioner training are addressed throughout.