ONTrust: A Reference Ontology of Trust
Glenda Amaral, Tiago Prince Sales, Riccardo Baratella, Daniele Porello, Renata Guizzardi, Giancarlo Guizzardi

TL;DR
This paper introduces ONTrust, a comprehensive reference ontology for trust, aiming to standardize and formalize trust concepts to support trustworthy AI, decentralized systems, and information interoperability.
Contribution
It presents a foundational ontology of trust, grounded in the Unified Foundational Ontology and specified in OntoUML, for diverse applications including AI, enterprise architecture, and trust management.
Findings
Ontology characterizes different trust types and influencing factors.
Models risk emergence from trust relations.
Applied successfully to two case studies from literature.
Abstract
Trust has stood out more than ever in the light of recent innovations. Some examples are advances in artificial intelligence that make machines more and more humanlike, and the introduction of decentralized technologies (e.g. blockchains), which creates new forms of (decentralized) trust. These new developments have the potential to improve the provision of products and services, as well as to contribute to individual and collective well-being. However, their adoption depends largely on trust. In order to build trustworthy systems, along with defining laws, regulations and proper governance models for new forms of trust, it is necessary to properly conceptualize trust, so that it can be understood both by humans and machines. This paper is the culmination of a long-term research program of providing a solid ontological foundation on trust, by creating reference conceptual models to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAccess Control and Trust · Human-Automation Interaction and Safety · Semantic Web and Ontologies
