An evidential model of distributed reputation management
Proceedings of the first international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems: part 1
A Social Mechanism of Reputation Management in Electronic Communities
CIA '00 Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Cooperative Information Agents IV, The Future of Information Agents in Cyberspace
A Computational Model of Trust and Reputation for E-businesses
HICSS '02 Proceedings of the 35th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS'02)-Volume 7 - Volume 7
Detecting deception in reputation management
AAMAS '03 Proceedings of the second international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
Review on Computational Trust and Reputation Models
Artificial Intelligence Review
The Knowledge Engineering Review
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
Coping with inaccurate reputation sources: experimental analysis of a probabilistic trust model
Proceedings of the fourth international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems
An integrated trust and reputation model for open multi-agent systems
Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
An adaptive probabilistic trust model and its evaluation
Proceedings of the 7th international joint conference on Autonomous agents and multiagent systems - Volume 3
On the Impact of Witness-Based Collusion in Agent Societies
PRIMA '09 Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Principles of Practice in Multi-Agent Systems
The impact of naive agents in heterogeneous trust-aware societies
MABS'09 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Multi-agent-based simulation
A distributed reputation and trust management scheme for mobile peer-to-peer networks
Computer Communications
DART: A Distributed Analysis Of Reputation And Trust Framework
Computational Intelligence
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Macau: a basis for evaluating reputation systems
IJCAI'13 Proceedings of the Twenty-Third international joint conference on Artificial Intelligence
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Artificial societies - distributed systems of autonomous agents - are becoming increasingly important in e-commerce. Agents base their decisions on trust and reputation in ways analogous to human societies. Many different definitions for trust and reputation have been proposed that incorporate many sources of information; however, system designs have tended to focus much of their attention on direct interactions. Furthermore, trust updating schemes for direct interactions have tended to uncouple updates for positive and negative feedback. Consequently, behaviour in which cycles of positive feedback followed by a single negative feedback results in untrustworthy agents remaining undetected. This con-man style of behaviour is formally described and desirable characteristics of con-resistant trust schemes proposed. A conresistant scheme is proposed and compared with FIRE, Regret and Yu and Singh's model [Yu and Singh, 2000]. Simulation experiments demonstrate the utility of the con-resistant scheme.