35 research outputs found

    A Model of Trust, Moods, and Emotions in Multiagent Systems and its Empirical Evaluation

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    Abstract We study the interplay of moods, emotions, and trust in decisionmaking contexts characterized by commitments among agents. We develop a general approach representing the relationships among these concepts via a Bayesian network model. Our approach incorporates insights from the literature and provides a computational methodology for identifying improved Bayesian models. Based on observations from an empirical study, we motivate a refined Bayesian model involving the above-mentioned concepts that goes beyond the relationships known in the literature. Our findings include (1) the violation of a commitment affects trust more than its satisfaction; (2) goal satisfaction affects mood and emotion more than commitment satisfaction, but the outcome of a commitment affects trust more than the outcome of a goal; and (3) an agent's prior mood and trust affect whether it satisfies its commitments

    Predicting Personality with Social Behavior

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    Abstract—In this paper, we examine to which degree behavioral measures can be used to predict personality. Personality is one factor that dictates people’s propensity to trust and their relationships with others. In previous work, we have shown that personality can be predicted relatively accurately by analyzing social media profiles. We demonstrated this using public data from facebook profiles and text from Twitter streams. As social situations are crucial in the formation of one’s personality, one’s social behavior could be a strong indicator of her personality. Given most users of social media sites typically have a large number of friends and followers, considering only these aspects may not provide an accurate picture of personality. To overcome this problem, we develop a set of measures based on one’s behavior towards her friends and followers. We introduce a number of measures that are based on the intensity and number of social interactions one has with friends along a number of dimensions such as reciprocity and priority. We analyze these features along with a set of features based on the textual analysis of the messages sent by the users. We show that behavioral features are very useful in determining personality and perform as well as textual features. I

    Mechanism Design for Multi-Type Housing Markets with Acceptable Bundles

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    We extend the Top-Trading-Cycles (TTC) mechanism to select strict core allocations for housing markets with multiple types of items, where each agent may be endowed and allocated with multiple items of each type. In doing so, we advance the state of the art in mechanism design for housing markets along two dimensions: First, our setting is more general than multi-type housing markets (Moulin 1995; Sikdar, Adali, and Xia 2017) and the setting of Fujita et al. (2015). Further, we introduce housing markets with acceptable bundles (HMABs) as a more general setting where each agent may have arbitrary sets of acceptable bundles. Second, our extension of TTC is strict core selecting under the weaker restriction on preferences of CMI-trees, which we introduce as a new domain restriction on preferences that generalizes commonly-studied languages in previous works
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