Papers

Accepted papers

  • Vincent Buskens, Werner Raub and Joris van der Veer. Embedded Trust: An Experiment on Learning and Control Effects
  • Eva van den Broek, Lucas Molleman and Martijn Egas. Direct and Indirect Reciprocity- an experiment
  • Riccardo Boero, Giangiacomo Bravo, Marco Castellani and Flaminio Squazzoni. Why Bother with What Others Tell You? An Experimental Data-Driven Agent-Based Model
  • Lucio Biggiero. Reputation networks within inter-firm networks
  • Florent F. Garcin, Boi Faltings and Radu Jurca. Aggregating Reputation Feedback
  • Riccardo Boero, Giangiacomo Bravo, Marco Castellani, Francesco Laganà and Flaminio Squazzoni. Third Party Reputation in Repeated Trust Games
  • Stefan König, Tina Balke, Walter Quattrociocchi, Mario Paolucci and Torsten Eymann. On the Effects of Reputation in the Internet of Services
  • Walter Quattrociocchi and Mario Paolucci. Reputation and Uncertainty. A fairly optimistic society when cheating is total
  • Christoph Niemann, Stefan König and Torsten Eymann. Minor Change Is Not Enough: Analysis of Ebay’s Reputation Model
  • Isaac Pinyol and Jordi Sabater Mir. Integrating Image and Reputation Information in BDI agents
  • Guido Boella, Marco Remondino and Gianluca Tornese. Simulating the Human Factor in Reputation Management Systems for P2P Networks
  • Yann Krupa, Jomi Fred Hubner and Laurent Vercouter. Extending the Comparison Efficiency of the ART Testbed
  • Chris Dellarocas, Ravi Bapna and Sarah Rice. The Impact of Seller Reputation on Simultaneous Auctions of Identical Goods: Theory and Experimental Evidence
  • John Debenham and Carles Sierra. Information-Based Reputation
  • Rense Corten and Karen Cook. Cooperation and Reputation in Dynamic Networks
  • Alona Labun, Rafael Wittek, Christian Steglich and Rudi Wielers. Where does reputational power in organizations come from?
  • Lea Ellwardt, Rafael Wittek and Rudi Wielers. Antecedences of Gossip about Managers: The Role of Trust in Management and Colleagues
  • Mark Kramer and Arnon Rosenthal. A Reputation System for Uncertain Assertions
  • Erika Rosas and Xavier Bonnaire. From Hazardous Behaviours to a Risk Metric for Reputation Systems in Peer to Peer Networks

Call for Papers

The first International Conference on Reputation: Theory and Technology aims to become a point of convergence in the multidisciplinary study of reputation.

The role of reputation as a social artefact and its practical applications are coming more and more clearly to the attention of the scientific community. The study of reputation and gossip is important in many fields of the social sciences, for example organization science, policy-making, (e-)governance, cultural evolution, social dilemmas, socio-dynamics and sociobiology. Interest in reputation is increasing in philosophy, psychology, social psychology, sociology and cognitive science; formal models appear in game theoretical, mathematical and physics journals; computational reputation systems are among the most studied subjects in multi-agent technology and social simulations.

All this attention is timely, since reputation is an old concept for answering a new challenge, the regulation of complex, global, networked societies. Innovation demands that the potential of old instruments are fully understood and exploited, in order to be incorporated into novel, intelligent technologies.

However, there is a number of ad hoc models, and little integration of instruments for the implementation, management and optimisation of reputation. On the one hand, entrepreneurs and policy makers deem it possible to manage corporate and firm reputation without accessing a solid, general and integrated body of scientific knowledge on the subject. On the other hand, researchers believe they can discuss, design and implement reputation systems without investigating what properties, requirements and dynamics of reputation in natural societies are, and why they evolved.

Reputation deserves a full role as a scientific topic, a focus on its specificities, i.e., its potential as preventive social knowledge and selective mechanism of transmission.

Topics

We invite papers from all scientific communities working on reputation, including multi-agent systems, social simulation, economics, organisation science and management, e-governance/learning/business, virtual societies and markets, social cognition, (evolutionary) game theory, social psychology, sociology, social and collective dilemmas, social dynamics, cultural evolution and business ethics.

Topics for ICORE 2009 include but are not limited to:

  • Theory of reputation
  • Simulation of reputation
  • Computational models of reputation
  • Agent reputation models
  • Ontologies of reputation
  • Logical formalization of reputation
  • Experimental evidence of reputation diffusion
  • Reputation-based e-government, e-learning, e-business
  • Reputation in p2p systems
  • Reputation in grid environments
  • Reputation for partner selection
  • Incentives in Reputation Mechanisms
  • Image and reputation
  • Reputation management and optimisation
  • Reputation and social networks
  • Reputation and norms
  • Reputation and altruism, reciprocity, and cooperation
  • Reputation and trust
  • Reputation for sabotage tolerance in large-scale applications
  • Reputation and exchange
  • Reputation and institutions
  • Reputation and social capital
  • Corporate and firm reputation
Submission instructions

Electronic submissions are managed through the EasyChair system: www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=icore09

Submission is in two stages: abstract first (one page), then full paper. See important dates below.

All submissions should be no longer than 15 pages, in pdf format. Authors are encouraged to use Springer LNCS format for proceedings.

Papers will be included into the Conference Proceedings, published electronically (with an ISSN/ISBN number, publisher: ISTC-CNR )

Extended versions of selected papers will be published as a Special Issue of a journal (to be announced later).

Review criteria

Papers should present novel ideas related to reputation, clearly motivated by problems from current practice or applied research.
We expect claims to be substantiated by theoretical or formal analysis, experimental evaluations, comparative studies, and so on. Authors are also encouraged to submit application papers. Application papers are expected to address an indication of the real world relevance of the problem that is solved, including a description of the deployment domain, and some form of evaluation of performance, usability, or superiority to alternative approaches.

Important dates
  • Abstract submission: September 26, 2008
  • Paper submission: October 10, 2008
  • Notification: November 15, 2008
  • Camera Ready Version of Accepted Papers: December 15, 2008
  • Conference: March 18-20, 2009
Sponsors

The conference is organized with the support of the eRep project under the 6th FP of the European Community.