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    TRUST 2016 - 18th International Workshop on Trust in Agent Societies

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    Website https://sites.google.com/site/trustworkshop/trust2016 | Want to Edit it Edit Freely

    Category trust; agent; multi-agent systems

    Deadline: February 15, 2016 | Date: May 09, 2016

    Venue/Country: Singapore, Singapore

    Updated: 2015-12-18 20:20:20 (GMT+9)

    Call For Papers - CFP

    18th International Workshop on Trust in Agent Societies

    Co-located with AAMAS 2016 (http://sis.smu.edu.sg/aamas2016)

    May 9-13, 2016, Singapore

    (Workshop will be held either May 9 or May 10)

    Description

    Trust is important in many kinds of interactions, including direct or computer-mediated human interaction, human-computer interaction and among social agents; it characterizes those elements that are essential in social reliability. It also informs the selection of partners for successful multiagent coordination (for example, in robotics applications). Trust is more than communication that is robust against repudiation or interference. The reliability of information about the status of a trade partner, for example, is only partly dependent on secure communication.

    With the growing prevalance of social interaction through electronic means, trust, reputation, privacy and identity become more and more important. Trust is not just a simple, monolithic concept; it is multi-faceted, operating at many levels of interaction, and playing many roles. Another growing trend is the use of reputation mechanisms, and in particular the interesting link between trust and reputation. Many computational and theoretical models and approaches to reputation have been developed in recent years (for ecommerce, social networks, blogs, etc.). Further, identity and associated trustworthiness must be ascertained for reliable interactions and transactions. Trust is foundational for the notion of agency and for its defining relation of acting "on behalf of". It is also critical for modeling and supporting groups and teams, for both organization and coordination, with the related trade-off between individual utility and collective interest. The electronic medium seems to weaken the usual bonds of social control and the disposition to cheat grows stronger: this is yet another context where trust modeling is critical.

    The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers (ideally from different disciplines) who can contribute to a better understanding of trust and reputation in agent societies. We welcome submissions of high-quality research addressing issues that are clearly relevant to trust, deception, privacy, reputation, security and control in agent-based systems, from theoretical, applied and interdisciplinary perspectives. Submitted contributions should be original and not submitted elsewhere. Papers accepted for presentation must be relevant to the workshop, and to demonstrate clear exposition, offering new ideas in suitable depth and detail.

    The scope of the workshop includes (but is not limited to):

    Trust and risk-aware decision making

    Game-theoretic models of trust

    Deception and fraud, and its detection and prevention

    Intrusion resilience in trusted computing

    Reputation mechanisms

    Trust in the socio-technical system

    Trust in partners and in authorities

    Trust during coordination and negotiation of agents

    Privacy and access control in multi-agent systems

    Trust and information provenance

    Detecting and preventing collusion

    Trust in human-agent interaction

    Trust and identity

    Trust within organizations

    Trust, security and privacy in social networks

    Trustworthy infrastructures and services

    Trust modeling for real-world applications

    Submission

    o Submission deadline: February 15, 2016

    o Notification: March 5, 2016

    o Camera-ready deadline: March 10, 2016

    Authors should submit original papers (maximum length 12 single-columned pages) in PDF through the Easychair system:

    https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=trust2016

    Formal proceedings of the workshop will be published through CEUR-WS.org. CEUR.org is a green open-access publisher. Authors of papers published in the proceedings retain copyright of their material. To enable us to produce this publication, authors are expected to use the LaTeX template provided on the workshop website.

    https://sites.google.com/site/trustworkshop/trust2016/publication

    Organising Committee

    o Jie Zhang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

    o Robin Cohen, University of Waterloo, Canada

    o Murat Sensoy, Ozyegin University, Turkey

    Steering Committee

    o Rino Falcone, ISTC-CNR, Roma, Italy (Chair)

    o Robin Cohen, University of Waterloo, Canada

    o Timothy Norman, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK

    o Munindar Singh, North Carolina State University, USA (Emeriti)

    o Suzanne Barber, University of Texas, USA (Emeriti)

    Programme Committee

    o Suzanne Barber, University of Texas, USA

    o Cristiano Castelfranchi, ISTC-CNR, Roma, Italy

    o Robert Demolombe, IRIT, Toulouse, France

    o Rino Falcone, ISTC-CNR, Roma, Italy

    o Hui Fang, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, China

    o Siwei Jiang, Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology, Singapore

    o Catholijn Jonker, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands

    o Audun Jøsang, University of Oslo, Norway

    o Yung-Ming Li, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan

    o Churn-Jung Liau, Academia Sinica, Taiwan

    o Xin Liu, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore

    o Emiliano Lorini, IRIT, Toulouse, France

    o Tony T. Luo, Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore

    o Stephen Marsh, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada

    o Tim Muller, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

    o Yuko Murayama, Iwate Prefectural University, Japan

    o Nir Oren, University of Aberdeen, Scotland, UK

    o Jordi Sabater-Mir, IIIA-CSIC, Barcelona, Spain

    o Sandip Sen, University of Tulsa, USA

    o Chris Snijders, Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands

    o Thomas Tran, University of Ottawa, Canada

    Invited Talk

    Title: Computational Trust with Subjective Logic

    Speaker: Professor Audun Jøsang, University of Oslo, Norway

    He is co-author of one of the first trust modeling systems, BRS.

    The most "visionary paper" will be published by Springer in a book under the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI) - Hot Topics series. The book will be a compilation of the most visionary papers of the AAMAS-2016 Workshops, where one paper will be selected from each AAMAS-2016 workshop. Additionally, the "best paper" will be published by Springer in a book under the Communications in Computer and Information Science (CCIS) series. The book will be a compilation of the best papers of the AAMAS-2016 Workshops, where one paper will be selected from each AAMAS-2016 workshop. Authors of the selected most visionary paper and the best paper are expected to provide their latex files promptly upon request.

    We also plan to invite some of the best papers from our workshop to be extended for a special issue in Journal of Trust Management


    Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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