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- A User Trust System for Online Games: Part IPublication . Cardoso, Rui Costa; Freire, Mario; Gomes, AbelIn virtual worlds (including computer games), users develop trust relationships from their in-world interactions with others. However, these trust relationships end up not being represented in the data structures (or databases) of such virtual worlds, though they sometimes appear associated with reputation and recommendation systems. In addition, as far as we know, the user is not provided with a personal trust tool to sustain his/her decision-making while he/she interacts with other users in the virtual or game world. In order to come up with a computational formal representation of these personal trust relationships, we need to succeed in converting in-world interactions into reliable sources of trust-related data. In this paper, we develop the required formalisms to gather and represent in-world interactions-which are based on the activity theory-as well as a method to convert in-world interactions into trust networks. In the companion paper, we use these trust networks to produce a computational trust decision based on subjective logic. This solution aims at supporting in-world user (or avatar) decisions about others in the game world.
- A User Trust System for Online Games: Part IIPublication . Cardoso, Rui Costa; Freire, Mario; Gomes, AbelRepresenting, manipulating, and inferring trust from the user point of view certainly is a grand challenge in virtual worlds, including online games. When someone meets an unknown individual, the question is “Can I trust him/her or not?” This requires the user to have access to a representation of trust about others, as well as a set of operators to undertake inference about the trustability of other users/players. In this paper, we employ a trust representation generated from in-world data in order to feed individual trust decisions. To achieve that purpose, we assume that such a representation of trust already exists; in fact, it was proposed in another paper of ours. Thus, the focus here is on the trust mechanisms required to infer trustability of other users/players. More specifically, we use an individual trust representation deployed as a trust network as base to the inference mechanism that employs two subjective logic operators (consensus and discount) to automatically derive trust decisions. The proposed trust inference system has been validated through OpenSimulator scenarios, which has led to a 5% increase on trustability of avatars in relation to the reference scenario (without trust).