Trust Theme

Trust is a fundamental human behavior. It is necessary for people to function in social groups, and it forms the foundation for many of our organizations and relationships. The conference solicits original papers on any topic related to the personal, social, and economic aspects of trust. Topics of interest in this theme include (but are not limited to):

  • trust models
  • components and dimensions of trust
  • game theory and trusting behaviors
  • trust and risk
  • trust, regret, and forgiveness
  • perceptions of trustworthiness
  • trust management
  • automating trust decisions
  • attacks on trust
  • trust influences on security and privacy
  • economic drivers for trustworthy systems
  • cross-cultural differences
  • computing about trust
  • applications of trust
  • trust and economics
  • trust in e-commerce
  • reputation systems

Technical Program Chairs

  • Christian Damsgaard Jensen (Denmark)
  • Jie Zhang (Singapore)

Committee

  • Anirban Basu (Tokai University, Japan)
  • Christiano Castelfranci (National Research Council, Italy)
  • Robin Cohen (University of Waterloo, Canada)
  • Mark Dibben (University of Tasmania, Australia)
  • Natasha Dwyer (Victoria University, Australia)
  • Babak Esfandiari (Carleton University, Canada)
  • Rino Falcone (National Research Council, Italy)
  • Jennifer Golbeck (University of Maryland, USA)
  • Chung-Wei Hang (North Carolina State University, USA)
  • Peter Herrmann (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway)
  • Christian Damsgaard Jensen (Danish Technical University, Denmark)
  • Audun Josang (University of Oslo, Norway)
  • Yuko Murayama (Iwate Prefectural University, Japan)
  • Karen Renaud (University of Glasgow, Scotland)
  • Jean-Marc Seigneur (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
  • Munidar P. Singh (North Carolina State University, USA)
  • Tim Storer (University of Glasgow, Scotland)
  • Julita Vasileva (University of Saskatchewan, Canada)
  • Jie Zhang (National Technical University, Singapore)
  • Steve Marsh (University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada)
  • Sasha Hauke (Center for Advanced Security Research Darmstadt, Germany)
  • Jan-Philipp Steghöfer (Augsburg University, Germany)
  • Stephen Naicken (University of sussex, UK)
  • Thomas Tran (University of Ottawa, Canada)
  • Qin Li (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)
  • Mehrdad Nojoumian (Southern Illinois University, USA)