1,051 research outputs found
Organization and Usage of Learning Objects within Personal Computers
Research report of the ProLearn Network of Excellence (IST 507310), Deliverable 7.6To promote the integration of Desktop related Knowledge Management and Technology Enhanced Learning this deliverable aims at increasing the awareness of Desktop research within the Professional Learning community and at familiarizing the e-Learning researchers with the state-of-the-art in the relevant areas of Personal Information Management (PIM), as well as with the currently on-going activities and some of the regular PIM publication venues
Building and exploiting context on the web
[no abstract
Social and Semantic Contexts in Tourist Mobile Applications
The ongoing growth of the World Wide Web along with the increase possibility of access information through a variety of devices in mobility, has defi nitely changed the way users acquire, create, and personalize information, pushing innovative strategies for annotating and organizing it.
In this scenario, Social Annotation Systems have quickly gained a huge popularity, introducing millions of metadata on di fferent Web resources following a bottom-up approach, generating free and democratic mechanisms of classi cation, namely folksonomies. Moving away from hierarchical classi cation schemas, folksonomies represent also a meaningful mean for identifying similarities among users, resources and tags. At any rate, they suff er from several limitations, such as the lack of specialized tools devoted to manage, modify, customize and visualize them as well as the lack of an explicit semantic, making di fficult for users to bene fit from them eff ectively. Despite appealing promises of Semantic Web technologies, which were intended to explicitly formalize the knowledge within a particular domain in a top-down manner, in order to perform intelligent integration and reasoning on it, they are still far from reach their objectives, due to di fficulties in knowledge acquisition and annotation bottleneck.
The main contribution of this dissertation consists in modeling a novel conceptual framework that exploits both social and semantic contextual dimensions, focusing on the domain of tourism and cultural heritage. The primary aim of our assessment is to evaluate the overall user satisfaction and the perceived quality in use thanks to two concrete case studies. Firstly, we concentrate our attention on contextual information and navigation, and on authoring tool; secondly, we provide a semantic mapping of tags of the system folksonomy, contrasted and compared to the expert users' classi cation, allowing a bridge between social and semantic knowledge according to its constantly mutual growth.
The performed user evaluations analyses results are promising, reporting a high level of agreement on the perceived quality in use of both the applications and of the speci c analyzed features, demonstrating that a social-semantic contextual model improves the general users' satisfactio
Stigmergic hyperlink's contributes to web search
Stigmergic hyperlinks are hyperlinks with a "heart beat": if used they stay healthy and online; if
neglected, they fade, eventually getting replaced. Their life attribute is a relative usage measure that
regular hyperlinks do not provide, hence PageRank-like measures have historically been well
informed about the structure of webs of documents, but unaware of what users effectively do with
the links.
This paper elaborates on how to input the users’ perspective into Google’s original, structure centric,
PageRank metric. The discussion then bridges to the Deep Web, some search challenges, and how
stigmergic hyperlinks could help decentralize the search experience, facilitating user generated
search solutions and supporting new related business models.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
A Survey on Linked Data and the Social Web as facilitators for TEL recommender systems
Personalisation, adaptation and recommendation are central features
of TEL environments. In this context, information retrieval techniques are applied
as part of TEL recommender systems to filter and recommend learning resources
or peer learners according to user preferences and requirements. However,
the suitability and scope of possible recommendations is fundamentally
dependent on the quality and quantity of available data, for instance, metadata
about TEL resources as well as users. On the other hand, throughout the last
years, the Linked Data (LD) movement has succeeded to provide a vast body of
well-interlinked and publicly accessible Web data. This in particular includes
Linked Data of explicit or implicit educational nature. The potential of LD to
facilitate TEL recommender systems research and practice is discussed in this
paper. In particular, an overview of most relevant LD sources and techniques is
provided, together with a discussion of their potential for the TEL domain in
general and TEL recommender systems in particular. Results from highly related
European projects are presented and discussed together with an analysis of
prevailing challenges and preliminary solutions.LinkedU
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