53,010 research outputs found

    REPUTATION MANAGEMENT ALGORITHMS IN DISTRIBUTED APPLICATIONS

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    Nowadays, several distributed systems and applications rely on interactions between unknown agents that cooperate in order to exchange resources and services. The distributed nature of these systems, and the consequent lack of a single centralized point of control, let agents to adopt selfish and malicious behaviors in order to maximize their own utility. To address such issue, many applications rely on Reputation Management Systems (RMSs) to estimate the future behavior of unknown agents before establishing actual interactions. The relevance of these systems is even greater if the malicious or selfish behavior exhibited by a few agents may reduce the utility perceived by cooperative agents, leading to a damage to the whole community. RMSs allow to estimate the expected outcome of a given interaction, thus providing relevant information that can be exploited to take decisions about the convenience of interacting with a certain agent. Agents and their behavior are constantly evolving and becoming even more complex, so it is increasingly difficult to successfully develop the RMS, able to resist the threats presented. A possible solution to this problem is the use of agent-based simulation software designed to support researchers in evaluating distributed reputation management systems since the design phase. This dissertation presents the design and the development of a distributed simulation platform based on HPC technologies called DRESS. This solution allows researchers to assess the performance of a generic reputation management system and provides a comprehensive assessment of its ability to withstand security attacks. In the scientific literature, a tool that allows the comparison of distinct RMS and different design choices through a set of defined metrics, also supporting large-scale simulations, is still missing. The effectiveness of the proposed approach is demonstrated by the application scenario of user energy sharing systems within smart-grids and by considering user preferences differently from other work. The platform has proved to be useful for the development of an energy sharing system among users, which with the aim of maximizing the amount of energy transferred has exploited the reputation of users once learned their preferences

    Specifying and analysing reputation systems with coordination languages

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    Reputation systems are nowadays widely used to support decision making in networked systems. Parties in such systems rate each other and use shared ratings to compute reputation scores that drive their interactions. The existence of reputation systems with remarkable differences calls for formal approaches to their analysis. We present a verification methodology for reputation systems that is based on the use of the coordination language Klaim and related analysis tools. First, we define a parametric Klaim specification of a reputation system that can be instantiated with different reputation models. Then, we consider stochastic specification obtained by considering actions with random (exponentially distributed) duration. The resulting specification enables quantitative analysis of properties of the considered system. Feasibility and effectiveness of our proposal is demonstrated by reporting on the analysis of two reputation models

    Socio-Economic Mechanisms to Coordinate the Internet of Services: The Simulation Environment SimIS

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    Visions of 21st century information systems show highly specialized digital services and resources, which interact continuously and with a global reach. Especially with the emergence of technologies, such as the semantic web or software agents, intelligent services within these settings can be implemented, automatically communicating and negotiating over the Internet about digital resources without human intervention. Such environments will eventually realize the vision of an open and global Internet of Services (IoS). In this paper we present an agent-based simulation model and toolkit for the IoS: 'SimIS - Simulating an Internet of Services'. Employing SimIS, distributed management mechanisms and protocols can be investigated in a simulated IoS environment before their actual deployment.Multi-Agent Simulation, Internet, Simulation Tools

    Competing communities of users and developers of computer software: competition between open source software and commercial software

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    The open source movement is a group of volunteer programmers that has recently caused quite a stir in the software market. The volunteers of this group develop computer operating systems, programming languages, and other software. They work together in teams that communicate via the Internet. Their goal is to develop useful software that is available for free and that users can change at will. To enable users to change and improve the software, they distribute their software not only in compiled form (that a computer needs to actually run the software), but also in its source code (the lines of code that programmers write). This cooperation breaks through the usual barriers that separate corporate suppliers from their buyers. This may represent the first example where the Internet enables cooperation on a scale that changes market dynamics. This paper studies the interaction between the network dynamics of the open source movement and the dynamics of a commercial software supplier. It makes our first step in identifying conditions that support a successful development of open source software. We focus on one particular set of projects within the open source movement, namely the Linux computer operating system.management and organization theory ;

    Trust in Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communication

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    In traditional Pedestrian Automatic Emergency Braking (PAEB) system, vehicles equipped with onboard sensors such as radar, camera, and infrared detect pedestrians, alert the driver and/ or automatically take actions to prevent vehicle-pedestrian collision. In some situations, a vehicle may not be able to detect a pedestrian due to blind spots. Such a vehicle could benefit from the sensor data from neighboring vehicles in making such safety critical decisions. We propose a trust model for ensuring shared data are valid and trustworthy for use in making safety critical decisions. Simulation results of the proposed trust model show promise

    Network-aware Evaluation Environment for Reputation Systems

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    Parties of reputation systems rate each other and use ratings to compute reputation scores that drive their interactions. When deciding which reputation model to deploy in a network environment, it is important to find the most suitable model and to determine its right initial configuration. This calls for an engineering approach for describing, implementing and evaluating reputation systems while taking into account specific aspects of both the reputation systems and the networked environment where they will run. We present a software tool (NEVER) for network-aware evaluation of reputation systems and their rapid prototyping through experiments performed according to user-specified parameters. To demonstrate effectiveness of NEVER, we analyse reputation models based on the beta distribution and the maximum likelihood estimation

    Socionics: Sociological Concepts for Social Systems of Artificial (and Human) Agents

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    Socionics is an interdisciplinary approach with the objective to use sociological knowledge about the structures, mechanisms and processes of social interaction and social communication as a source of inspiration for the development of multi-agent systems, both for the purposes of engineering applications and of social theory construction and social simulation. The approach has been spelled out from 1998 on within the Socionics priority program funded by the German National research foundation. This special issue of the JASSS presents research results from five interdisciplinary projects of the Socionics program. The introduction gives an overview over the basic ideas of the Socionics approach and summarizes the work of these projects.Socionics, Sociology, Multi-Agent Systems, Artificial Social Systems, Hybrid Systems, Social Simulation
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