Results 171 to 180 of about 5,842 (197)
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"Supertagger" behavior in building folksonomies
Proceedings of the 2014 ACM conference on Web science, 2014A folksonomy is ostensibly an information structure built up by the "wisdom of the crowds", but is the "crowd" really doing the work? Tagging is in fact a sharply skewed process in which a small minority of users generate an overwhelming majority of the annotations.
Lorince, Jared +3 more
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2010
Many popular web sites use folksonomies to let people label objects like images (Flickr), music (Last.fm), or URLs (Delicous) with schema-free tags. Folksonomies may reveal personal information. For example, tags can contain sensitive information, the set of tagged objects might disclose interests, etc.
Heidinger, C. +4 more
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Many popular web sites use folksonomies to let people label objects like images (Flickr), music (Last.fm), or URLs (Delicous) with schema-free tags. Folksonomies may reveal personal information. For example, tags can contain sensitive information, the set of tagged objects might disclose interests, etc.
Heidinger, C. +4 more
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Context-based ranking in folksonomies
Proceedings of the 20th ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia, 2009With the advent of Web 2.0 tagging became a popular feature. People tag diverse kinds of content, e.g. products at Amazon, music at Last.fm, images at Flickr, etc. Clicking on a tag enables the users to explore related content. In this paper we investigate how such tag-based queries, initialized by the clicking activity, can be enhanced with ...
F. ABEL +5 more
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Datenbank-Spektrum, 2010
Query logs provide a valuable resource for preference information in search. A user clicking on a specific resource after submitting a query indicates that the resource has some relevance with respect to the query. To leverage the information of query logs, one can relate submitted queries from specific users to their clicked resources and build a ...
Dominik Benz +4 more
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Query logs provide a valuable resource for preference information in search. A user clicking on a specific resource after submitting a query indicates that the resource has some relevance with respect to the query. To leverage the information of query logs, one can relate submitted queries from specific users to their clicked resources and build a ...
Dominik Benz +4 more
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MAKING FOLKSONOMY MACHINE-UNDERSTANDABLE
Challenges in Information Technology Management, 2008AbstractA recent surge of interest in social tagging, also known as folksonomy, challenges the formal and structured knowledge representation in the Semantic Web. Social tagging is attractive in its low barrier to entry and personal and community aspects.
PRABODH SHRESTHA, LEVA ZHOU
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Semantic Relatedness in Folksonomy
2009 International Conference on New Trends in Information and Service Science, 2009Social networking sites like Flickr , Youtube and Del.icio.us have been rapidly gaining popularity on the Internet, underscoring a transformation of the Web to a participatory medium in which users are actively creating, evaluating and distributing information.
Chao Wu, Bo Zhou
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International Journal on Semantic Web and Information Systems, 2007
Ontologies are enabling technology for the Semantic Web. They are a means for people to state what they mean by the terms used in data that they might generate, share, or consume. Folksonomies are an emergent phenomenon of the social Web. They arise from data about how people associate terms with content that they generate, share, or consume.
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Ontologies are enabling technology for the Semantic Web. They are a means for people to state what they mean by the terms used in data that they might generate, share, or consume. Folksonomies are an emergent phenomenon of the social Web. They arise from data about how people associate terms with content that they generate, share, or consume.
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KNOWLEDGE ORGANIZATION, 2010
Social tagging systems, known as ‘folksonomies’, represent an important part of web resource discovery as they enable free and unrestricted browsing through information space. Folksonomies consisting of subject designators (tags) assigned by users, however, have one important drawback: they do not express semantic relationships either hierarchical or ...
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Social tagging systems, known as ‘folksonomies’, represent an important part of web resource discovery as they enable free and unrestricted browsing through information space. Folksonomies consisting of subject designators (tags) assigned by users, however, have one important drawback: they do not express semantic relationships either hierarchical or ...
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Between ontology and folksonomy
Proceedings of the 13th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces, 2008We present our first user study of CRAFT, a semantic prototype for collaborative investigation and analysis, which allows users to extend the system's ontology to capture new concepts as they conduct their work. We devised a paradigm in which multiple series of ontologies evolve in different trajectories from the same initial point.
Jiahui Liu, Daniel M. Gruen
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Tag Similarity in Folksonomies
2013Folksonomies - collections of user-contributed tags, proved to be efficient in reducing the inherent semantic gap when retrieving web contents. To get best use of folksonomies, tag clustering was proposed to address the problems implied by free-style user tagging, such as lexical variations, tag split, multilingualism, etc.
Mousselly-Sergieh, Hatem +5 more
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