Trust has been discussed in many social sciences including economics, psychology, and sociology. However, there is no widely accepted definition of trust. Inparticular, there is no definition that can be used for economic analysis. This paper regards trust as expectation and defines it using expected utility theory together with concepts such as betrayal premium. In doing so, it rejects the widely accepted black-and-white view that (un) trustworthy people are always (un)trustworthy. This paper also discusses various determinants and properties of trust on the basis of the idea that trust is not simply a matter of intention
In this paper, we examine two definitions of trust commonly found in the management literature; one ...
An economic experiment involving 24 small, tightly knit communities allows us to distinguish between...
The paper analyzes the question of whether trust is an essential condition for the functioning of so...
The study of trust has occupied scholars from a number of disciplines, who have made limited attempt...
Attempts to conceptualise trust has led to a confusing array of definitions across the social scienc...
Trust is a kind of risky reliance on another person. Social scientists have offered two basic accoun...
Trust is inherently related to risk, but for trust assessment to be integrated with the management o...
Recent economic conceptualizing of trust focuses of two distinct aspects of the notion. On the one s...
Trust is understood in terms of a) acceptance of dependency in b) the absence of information about t...
In recent years, many social scientists have claimed that trust plays an important role in economic ...
Scholarly research largely converges on the argument that trust is of paramount importance to drive ...
Philosophical conceptions of the relationship between risk and trust may be divided into three main ...
Poster Presentation, Summer Institute on Bounded Rationality, Poster Presentation of the Max Plank S...
Trust, whether it is interpersonal trust, organizational trust, or trust in exchange relationships, ...
Trust is analyzed as a concept with two components, trustfulness and trustworthiness. This approach ...
In this paper, we examine two definitions of trust commonly found in the management literature; one ...
An economic experiment involving 24 small, tightly knit communities allows us to distinguish between...
The paper analyzes the question of whether trust is an essential condition for the functioning of so...
The study of trust has occupied scholars from a number of disciplines, who have made limited attempt...
Attempts to conceptualise trust has led to a confusing array of definitions across the social scienc...
Trust is a kind of risky reliance on another person. Social scientists have offered two basic accoun...
Trust is inherently related to risk, but for trust assessment to be integrated with the management o...
Recent economic conceptualizing of trust focuses of two distinct aspects of the notion. On the one s...
Trust is understood in terms of a) acceptance of dependency in b) the absence of information about t...
In recent years, many social scientists have claimed that trust plays an important role in economic ...
Scholarly research largely converges on the argument that trust is of paramount importance to drive ...
Philosophical conceptions of the relationship between risk and trust may be divided into three main ...
Poster Presentation, Summer Institute on Bounded Rationality, Poster Presentation of the Max Plank S...
Trust, whether it is interpersonal trust, organizational trust, or trust in exchange relationships, ...
Trust is analyzed as a concept with two components, trustfulness and trustworthiness. This approach ...
In this paper, we examine two definitions of trust commonly found in the management literature; one ...
An economic experiment involving 24 small, tightly knit communities allows us to distinguish between...
The paper analyzes the question of whether trust is an essential condition for the functioning of so...