IIC Journal of Innovation 9th Edition | Page 35

Trustworthiness Model Representation Figure 1: Trust Model Spider Chart of all the sensors involved and the observations made by the system can be trusted. We propose a model that allows for inclusion of the relevant contributing factors, while enabling the user to selectively emphasize important factors and deprecate those of less importance. This model can then be used to represent the overall solution trustworthiness as a cumulative single score. The proposed model does not mandate using just the single cumulative score: Users can still visualize individual Trust Scores using a ‘radar’ or ‘spider’ diagram. We will demonstrate such a model in the following section. Trust in the food industry may involve monitoring a different set of parameters. It may require trusting the production, shipping and storage process. For example, a consumer can trust a food product provided the source of the ingredients, the production process, the packaging, transportation and storage can be trusted and verified. Thus, each application may require a different set of parameters to establish trust. Trustworthiness of a solution requires measuring the Trust Score of each component or entity involved in delivering that solution. The overall trustworthiness of a solution can then be a weighted combination of the Trust Score of each element of the solution. T HE M ODEL As noted earlier, trust may mean different things in different applications. Trust in a home security system may require all components involved in monitoring the perimeter of a house to be trustworthy. Home security system trust would involve ensuring all security system hardware and software components are trustworthy. Additionally, the solution requires that the security system configuration, the location Components of Trustworthiness Trust provides a measure of confidence. As discussed above, each application may involve a different set of parameters or - 31 - IIC Journal of Innovation