Composite and Staged Trust Evaluation for Multi-Hop Collaborator Selection
Botao Zhu, Xianbin Wang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel composite and staged trust evaluation mechanism for multi-hop collaborator selection, combining stable historical data and dynamic resource assessment to improve trustworthiness in distributed networks.
Contribution
It proposes a new trust evaluation framework that separately assesses stable and dynamic factors, then integrates them for more accurate multi-hop collaborator selection.
Findings
CSTE outperforms existing algorithms in trust path identification.
The method effectively combines historical and dynamic trust factors.
Experimental results show improved trustworthiness of selected paths.
Abstract
Multi-hop collaboration offers new perspectives for enhancing task execution efficiency by increasing available distributed collaborators for resource sharing. Consequently, selecting trustworthy collaborators becomes critical for realizing effective multi-hop collaboration. However, evaluating device trust requires the consideration of multiple factors, including relatively stable factors, such as historical interaction data, and dynamic factors, such as varying resources and network conditions. This differentiation makes it challenging to achieve the accurate evaluation of composite trust factors using one identical evaluation approach. To address this challenge, this paper proposes a composite and staged trust evaluation (CSTE) mechanism, where stable and dynamic factors are separately evaluated at different stages and then integrated for a final trust decision. First, a device…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAccess Control and Trust · Software-Defined Networks and 5G · IoT and Edge/Fog Computing
