id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt web-archive-org-5698 Working Paper 96-04 .html text/html 15845 1236 60 Our six trust construct model addresses the more common and important types of trust in use and provides a manageable way to understand trust-related phenomena for both theoretical, empirical, and practical purposes. "Efforts to measure trust...are so variegated that the results of any two or more studies are not necessarily comparable." (Golembiewski & McConkie, 1975: 132) In order for researchers to make sense of the empirical and theoretical literature on trust, ways of categorizing each type of empirical and theoretical trust construct should be developed. Not only do trust definitions vary significantly in terms of type of construct (Table 1), but they also vary in terms of the attributes of the person trusted--the belief or expectancy referent (Table 2). Following what Table 1 showed about the importance of certain construct types, we include both cognitive and affective components in Trusting Beliefs, Trusting Intention, and Trusting Behavior. Trust Type -Specific Situational Specific Personal Structural Dispos'l Feeling Belief Intention Behavior ./cache/web-archive-org-5698.html ./txt/web-archive-org-5698.txt