7,018 research outputs found
Semantic modelling of user interests based on cross-folksonomy analysis
The continued increase in Web usage, in particular participation in folksonomies, reveals a trend towards a more dynamic and interactive Web where individuals can organise and share resources. Tagging has emerged as the de-facto standard for the organisation of such resources, providing a versatile and reactive knowledge management mechanism that users find easy to use and understand. It is common nowadays for users to have multiple profiles in various folksonomies, thus distributing their tagging activities. In this paper, we present a method for the automatic consolidation of user profiles across two popular social networking sites, and subsequent semantic modelling of their interests utilising Wikipedia as a multi-domain model. We evaluate how much can be learned from such sites, and in which domains the knowledge acquired is focussed. Results show that far richer interest profiles can be generated for users when multiple tag-clouds are combine
Extracting tag hierarchies
Tagging items with descriptive annotations or keywords is a very natural way
to compress and highlight information about the properties of the given entity.
Over the years several methods have been proposed for extracting a hierarchy
between the tags for systems with a "flat", egalitarian organization of the
tags, which is very common when the tags correspond to free words given by
numerous independent people. Here we present a complete framework for automated
tag hierarchy extraction based on tag occurrence statistics. Along with
proposing new algorithms, we are also introducing different quality measures
enabling the detailed comparison of competing approaches from different
aspects. Furthermore, we set up a synthetic, computer generated benchmark
providing a versatile tool for testing, with a couple of tunable parameters
capable of generating a wide range of test beds. Beside the computer generated
input we also use real data in our studies, including a biological example with
a pre-defined hierarchy between the tags. The encouraging similarity between
the pre-defined and reconstructed hierarchy, as well as the seemingly
meaningful hierarchies obtained for other real systems indicate that tag
hierarchy extraction is a very promising direction for further research with a
great potential for practical applications.Comment: 25 pages with 21 pages of supporting information, 25 figure
Beyond the hybrid library : libraries in a Web 2.0 world
Considers the development of social networking and the concept of Web 2.0. Looks at the implications for libraries and how traditional competences remain relevant. Explores what libraries are doing and must do to remain relevan
The Shortest Path to Happiness: Recommending Beautiful, Quiet, and Happy Routes in the City
When providing directions to a place, web and mobile mapping services are all
able to suggest the shortest route. The goal of this work is to automatically
suggest routes that are not only short but also emotionally pleasant. To
quantify the extent to which urban locations are pleasant, we use data from a
crowd-sourcing platform that shows two street scenes in London (out of
hundreds), and a user votes on which one looks more beautiful, quiet, and
happy. We consider votes from more than 3.3K individuals and translate them
into quantitative measures of location perceptions. We arrange those locations
into a graph upon which we learn pleasant routes. Based on a quantitative
validation, we find that, compared to the shortest routes, the recommended ones
add just a few extra walking minutes and are indeed perceived to be more
beautiful, quiet, and happy. To test the generality of our approach, we
consider Flickr metadata of more than 3.7M pictures in London and 1.3M in
Boston, compute proxies for the crowdsourced beauty dimension (the one for
which we have collected the most votes), and evaluate those proxies with 30
participants in London and 54 in Boston. These participants have not only rated
our recommendations but have also carefully motivated their choices, providing
insights for future work.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, Proceedings of ACM Hypertext 201
- …