Trust Decision-Making in Multi-Agent Systems Chris Burnett Timothy J. Norman Katia Sycara
Abstract
Trust is crucial in dynamic multi-agent systems, where agents may frequently join and leave, and the structure of the society may often change. In these environments, it may be dif?cult for agents to form stable trust relationships necessary for con?dent interactions. Societies may break down when trust between agents is too low to motivate interactions. In such settings, agents should make decisions about who to interact with, given their degree of trust in the available partners. We propose a decision-theoretic model of trust decision making allows controls to be used, as well as trust, to increase con?dence in initial interactions. We consider explicit incentives, monitoring and reputation as examples of such controls. We evaluate our approach within a simulated, highly-dynamic multiagent environment, and show how this model supports the making of delegation decisions when trust is low.