Belief, awareness, and limited reasoning
Artificial Intelligence
Trust and deception in virtual societies
Trust and deception in virtual societies
Trust and deception in virtual societies
Social trust: a cognitive approach
Trust and deception in virtual societies
On the characterisation of a trusting agent - aspects of a formal approach
Trust and deception in virtual societies
Engendering trust in elctronic environments: roles for a trusted third party
Trust and deception in virtual societies
Cooperation in multi-agent bidding
Decision Support Systems - Special issue: Formal modeling and electronic commerce
Trust in Secure Communication Systems - The Concept, Representations, and Reasoning Techniques
AI '02 Proceedings of the 15th Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence: Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Empirical research in on-line trust: a review and critical assessment
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special issue: Trust and technology
Design and e-loyalty across cultures in electronic commerce
ICEC '04 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Electronic commerce
Perspectives of online trust and similar constructs: a conceptual clarification
ICEC '06 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Electronic commerce: The new e-commerce: innovations for conquering current barriers, obstacles and limitations to conducting successful business on the internet
A note on interpretations for federated languages and the use of disquotation
ICAIL '05 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Artificial intelligence and law
Investigating interactions of trust and interest similarity
Decision Support Systems
A support system for predicting eBay end prices
Decision Support Systems
The Journal of Strategic Information Systems
A multitheoretical approach for solving trust problems in B2C e-commerce
International Journal of Networking and Virtual Organisations
Modeling Dynamics of Relative Trust of Competitive Information Agents
CIA '08 Proceedings of the 12th international workshop on Cooperative Information Agents XII
In Justice We Trust: Predicting User Acceptance of E-Customer Services
Journal of Management Information Systems
From Binary Trust to Graded Trust in Information Sources: A Logical Perspective
Trust in Agent Societies
Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Bio-Inspired Models of Network, Information and Computing Sytems
Trust within the Context of Organizations: A Formal Approach
Formal Aspects in Security and Trust
Cognitive automata and the law: electronic contracting and the intentionality of software agents
Artificial Intelligence and Law
Transitivity and propagation of trust in information sources: an analysis in modal logic
CLIMA'11 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Computational logic in multi-agent systems
Trust Put to the Test: A Testcase for a Cognitive Trust Model
WI-IAT '11 Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conferences on Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology - Volume 02
Normative multiagent systems and trust dynamics
Trusting Agents for Trusting Electronic Societies
FAST'05 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Formal Aspects in Security and Trust
CLIMA'05 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Computational Logic in Multi-Agent Systems
Vertical trust/mistrust during information strategy formation
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
The dynamic nature of trust transfer: Measurement and the influence of reciprocity
Decision Support Systems
AI'12 Proceedings of the 25th Australasian joint conference on Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Agent-Based and population-based modeling of trust dynamics
Transactions on Computational Collective Intelligence IX
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Considerable diversity is exhibited by current definitions of the concept of trust. This paper argues that there may nevertheless be an identifiable core to the concept. On the basis of an analysis of five scenarios in which some agent x trusts some other agent y, it is suggested that two beliefs--here called the 'rule-belief' and the 'conformity-belief'--form the core of the trusting attitude. The informal account of trust presented here identifies the kinds of modalities that would figure in a modal-logical specification of the conditions under which one agent can be said to trust another.