The society of mind
Sociology and Social Theory in Agent Based Social Simulation: A Symposium
Computational & Mathematical Organization Theory
Agent-Based Simulation in the Study of Social Dilemmas
Artificial Intelligence Review
Simulating Emergence and Downward Causation in Small Groups
MABS '00 Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Multi-Agent-Based Simulation-Revised and Additional Papers
International Conference Logic at Work on Knowledge Representation and Reasoning Under Uncertainty, Logic at Work
Non-Rigid Matching Using Demons
CVPR '96 Proceedings of the 1996 Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR '96)
Review on Computational Trust and Reputation Models
Artificial Intelligence Review
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Computational Models of Ethical Reasoning: Challenges, Initial Steps, and Future Directions
IEEE Intelligent Systems
An Approach to Computing Ethics
IEEE Intelligent Systems
Intelligent agents, simulation, and gaming
Simulation and Gaming
Handbook of Research on Nature-inspired Computing for Economics and Management
Handbook of Research on Nature-inspired Computing for Economics and Management
A survey of trust and reputation systems for online service provision
Decision Support Systems
Decision support for ethical problem solving: A multi-agent approach
Decision Support Systems
Generative Social Science: Studies in Agent-Based Computational Modeling (Princeton Studies in Complexity)
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Bio-Inspired Models of Network, Information and Computing Sytems
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The understanding of the micro-macro link is an urgent need in the study of social systems. The complex adaptive nature of social systems adds to the challenges of understanding social interactions and system feedback and presents substantial scope and potential for extending the frontiers of computer-based research tools such as simulations and agent-based technologies. In this project, we seek to understand key research questions concerning the interplay of ethical trust at the individual level and the development of collective social moral norms as representative sample of the bigger micro-macro link of social systems. We outline our Computational Model of Ethical Trust (CMET) informed by research findings from trust, machine ethics and neural science. Guided by the CMET architecture, we discuss key implementation ideas for the simulations of ethical trust and social moral norms.