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dc.contributor.authorChang, Elizabeth
dc.contributor.authorHussain, Farookh
dc.contributor.authorDillon, Tharam S.
dc.date.accessioned2017-01-30T14:38:43Z
dc.date.available2017-01-30T14:38:43Z
dc.date.created2008-11-12T23:21:52Z
dc.date.issued2005
dc.identifier.citationChang, Elizabeth and Hussain, Farookh and Dillon, Tharam. 2005. : Reputation ontology for reputation systems, in Herrero, P. and Meersman, R. and Tari, Z. (ed), First IFIP/WG2.12 and WG12.4 International Workshop on Web Semantics (SWWS), Nov 01 2005, pp. 957-966. Agia Napa, Cyprus: Springer-Verlag.
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/39987
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/11575863_117
dc.description.abstract

The growing development of web-based reputation systems in the 21st century will have a powerful social and economic impact on both business entities and individual customers, because it makes transparent quality assessment on products and services to achieve customer assurance in the distributed web-based Reputation Systems. The web-based reputation systems will be the foundation for web intelligence in the future. Trust and Reputation help capture business intelligence through establishing customer trust relationships, learning consumer behaviour, capturing market reaction on products and services, disseminating customer feedback, buyers? opinions and end-user recommendations. It also reveals dishonest services, unfair trading, biased assessment, discriminatory actions, fraudulent behaviours, and un-true advertising. The continuing development of these technologies will help in the improvement of professional business behaviour, sales, reputation of sellers, providers, products and services. Given the importance of reputation in this paper, we propose ontology for reputation. In the business world we can consider the reputation of a product or the reputation of a service or the reputation of an agent. In this paper we propose ontology for these entities that can help us unravel the components and conceptualize the components of reputation of each of the entities.

dc.publisherSpringer-Verlag
dc.subjectP2P
dc.subjecttrust
dc.subjectreputation
dc.subjectinformation systems
dc.subjectreputation ontology
dc.subjectpeer-to-peer
dc.subjectsemantic web
dc.titleReputation ontology for reputation systems
dc.typeConference Paper
dcterms.source.startPage957
dcterms.source.endPage966
dcterms.source.titleLecture Notes in Computer Science: On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems 2005: OTM Workshops: OTM Confederated International Workshops and Posters, AWeSOMe, CAMS, GADA, MIOS+INTEROP, ORM, PhDS, SeBGIS, SWWS, and WOSE 2005
dcterms.source.seriesLecture Notes in Computer Science: On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems 2005: OTM Workshops: OTM Confederated International Workshops and Posters, AWeSOMe, CAMS, GADA, MIOS+INTEROP, ORM, PhDS, SeBGIS, SWWS, and WOSE 2005
dcterms.source.conferenceFirst IFIP/WG2.12 and WG12.4 International Workshop on Web Semantics (SWWS)
dcterms.source.conference-start-dateNov 01 2005
dcterms.source.conferencelocationAgia Napa, Cyprus
dcterms.source.placeBelgium
curtin.note

The original publication is available at http://www.springerlink.com

curtin.note

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11575863_117

curtin.departmentCentre for Extended Enterprises and Business Intelligence
curtin.identifierEPR-633
curtin.accessStatusOpen access
curtin.facultyCurtin Business School
curtin.facultySchool of Information Systems


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