Social trust: a cognitive approach
Trust and deception in virtual societies
Reputation in Artificial Societies: Social Beliefs for Social Order
Reputation in Artificial Societies: Social Beliefs for Social Order
Simulating Multi-Agent Interdependencies. A Two-Way Approach to the Micro-Macro Link
Social Science Microsimulation [Dagstuhl Seminar, May, 1995]
Principles of Trust for MAS: Cognitive Anatomy, Social Importance, and Quantification
ICMAS '98 Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Multi Agent Systems
Social Viewpoints on Multiagent Systems
AAMAS '04 Proceedings of the Third International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems - Volume 3
Operators for propagating trust and their evaluation in social networks
Proceedings of The 8th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems - Volume 2
Communication and organizational social networks: a simulation model
Computational & Mathematical Organization Theory
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Trust can be viewed at the same time as an instrument both for an agent selecting the right partners in order to achieve its own goals, and for an agent of being selected from other potential partners in order to establish with them a cooperation/collaboration and to take advantage from the accumulated trust. In this paper we will analyze trust as the agents' relational capital. Starting from the classical dependence network with potential partners, we introduce the analysis of what it means for an agent to be trusted and how this condition could be strategically used from it for achieving its own goals, that is, why it represents a form of power. The idea of taking another agent's point of view is especially important if we consider the amount of studies in social science that connect trust with social capital related issues. Although there is a big interest in literature about `social capital' and its powerful effects on the wellbeing of both societies and individuals, often it is not clear enough what is it the object under analysis. Individual trust capital (relational capital) and collective trust capital not only should be disentangled, but their relations are quite complicated and even conflicting. To overcome this gap, we propose a study that first attempts to understand what trust is as capital of individuals. In which sense "trust" is a capital. How this capital is built, managed and saved. In particular, how this capital is the result of the others' beliefs and goals. Then we aim to analytically study the cognitive dynamics of this object.