Introduction to computing with social trust / Jennifer Golbeck -- Examining trust, forgiveness and regret as computational concepts / Stephen Marsh and Pamela Briggs -- A non-reductionist approach to trust / Cristiano Castelfranchi, Rino Falcone, and Emiliano Lorini -- Social trust of virtual identities / Jean-Marc Seigneur -- Attack-resistant trust metrics / Raph Levien -- On propagating interpersonal trust in social networks / Cai-Nicolas Ziegler -- The ripple effect : change in trust and its impact over a social network / Jennifer Golbeck and Ugur Kuter -- Eliciting informative feedback : the peer-prediction method / Nolan Miller, Paul Resnick, and Richard Zeckhauser -- Capturing trust in social web applications / John O'Donovan -- Trust metrics in recommender systems / Paolo Massa and Paolo Avesani -- Trust and online reputation systems / Ming Kwan and Deepak Ramachandran -- Internet-based community networks : finding the social in social networks / K. Faith Lawrence
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Trust' is used in a variety of ways in computing literature, and social trust is emerging as an important computational problem. In open, distributed systems, like the web, people and organizations can be anonymous and trust and reputation become important. Researchers from many subfields of computer science have produced results in this space, with applications such as security, recommender systems, and knowledge management. However, this wide interest also means that research is published in diverse venues, and thus results published in one area can go unnoticed by researchers in a different