66 research outputs found
#Socialtagging: Defining its Role in the Academic Library
The information environment is rapidly changing, affecting the ways in which information is organized and accessed. User needs and expectations have also changed due to the overwhelming influence of Web 2.0 tools. Conventional information systems no longer support evolving user needs. Based on current research, we explore a method that integrates the structure of controlled languages with the flexibility and adaptability of social tagging. This article discusses the current research and usage of social tagging and Web 2.0 applications within the academic library. Types of tags, the semiotics of tagging and its influence on indexing are covered
Friendship prediction and homophily in social media
International audienceSocial media have attracted considerable attention because their open-ended nature allows users to create lightweight semantic scaffolding to organize and share content. To date, the interplay of the social and topical components of social media has been only partially explored. Here, we study the presence of homophily in three systems that combine tagging social media with online social networks. We find a substantial level of topical similarity among users who are close to each other in the social network. We introduce a null model that preserves user activity while removing local correlations, allowing us to disentangle the actual local similarity between users from statistical effects due to the assortative mixing of user activity and centrality in the social network. This analysis suggests that users with similar interests are more likely to be friends, and therefore topical similarity measures among users based solely on their annotation metadata should be predictive of social links. We test this hypothesis on several datasets, confirming that social networks constructed from topical similarity capture actual friendship accurately. When combined with topological features, topical similarity achieves a link prediction accuracy of about 92%
A new measure for community structures through indirect social connections
Based on an expert systems approach, the issue of community detection can be
conceptualized as a clustering model for networks. Building upon this further,
community structure can be measured through a clustering coefficient, which is
generated from the number of existing triangles around the nodes over the
number of triangles that can be hypothetically constructed. This paper provides
a new definition of the clustering coefficient for weighted networks under a
generalized definition of triangles. Specifically, a novel concept of triangles
is introduced, based on the assumption that, should the aggregate weight of two
arcs be strong enough, a link between the uncommon nodes can be induced. Beyond
the intuitive meaning of such generalized triangles in the social context, we
also explore the usefulness of them for gaining insights into the topological
structure of the underlying network. Empirical experiments on the standard
networks of 500 commercial US airports and on the nervous system of the
Caenorhabditis elegans support the theoretical framework and allow a comparison
between our proposal and the standard definition of clustering coefficient
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Reusing Ontologies to Enrich Semantically User Content in Web2.0: A Case Study on Folksonomies
Semantic Web and Web2.0 emerged during the past decade promising to achieve new frontiers for the Web. On the one hand, the Semantic Web is an interlinked web of data, supported by ontological semantics and allowing for intelligent applications such as semantic search and integration of heterogeneous content across systems and applications. On the other hand, Web2.0 represents the new technologies and paradigms that revolutionised the user engagement in content creation and introduced novel means towards social interaction. Bridging the gap between Web2.0 and the Semantic Web has been proposed as a means to better manage and interact with the large amounts of user contributed content, which is a new challenge for Web2.0. This thesis focuses on a popular paradigm of Web2.0, folksonomies. In particular, we investigate the semantic enrichment of folksonomy tagspaces by reusing ontologies available in the Semantic Web. We identify the need for methods that automatically apply semantic descriptions to user generated content without requiring user intervention or alteration of the current tagging paradigm. We use an iterative approach in order to identify the characteristics of folksonomies and the attributes of knowledge sources that influence the semantic enrichment of tagspaces. We build on the results of our experimental studies to implement a folksonomy enrichment algorithm, that given an input tagspace, automatically creates a semantic structure that describes the meaning and relations of tags. We introduce measures for the evaluation of enriched tagspaces and finally, we propose a search algorithm that exploits the semantic structures to improve folksonomy search
Analysing the factors that influence tag choice based on semiotic analysis and activity theory
Social tagging has become very popular around the Internet as well as in research. The main idea behind tagging is to allow users to provide metadata to the web content from their perspective to facilitate categorization and retrieval. There are many factors that influence users' tag choice. Many studies have been conducted to reveal these factors by analysing tagging data. This paper uses two theories to identify these factors, namely the semiotics theory and activity theory. The former treats tags as signs and the latter treats tagging as an activity. The paper uses both theories to analyse tagging behaviour by explaining all aspects of a tagging system, including tags, tagging system components and the tagging activity. The theoretical analysis produced a framework that was used to identify a number of factors. These factors can be considered as categories that can be consulted to redirect user tagging choice in order to support particular tagging behaviour, such as cross-lingual tagging
Semantic Social Network Analysis: A Concrete Case
In this chapter we present our approach to analyzing such semantic social networks and capturing collective intelligence from collaborative interactions to challenge requirements of Enterprise 2.0. Our tools and models have been tested on an anonymized dataset from Ipernity.com, one of the biggest French social web sites centered on multimedia sharing. This dataset contains over 60,000 users, around half a million declared relationships of three types, and millions of interactions (messages, comments on resources, etc.). We show that the enriched semantic web framework is particularly well-suited for representing online social networks, for identifying their key features and for predicting their evolution. Organizing huge quantity of socially produced information is necessary for a future acceptance of social applications in corporate contexts
Collaborative Deep Learning for Recommender Systems
Collaborative filtering (CF) is a successful approach commonly used by many
recommender systems. Conventional CF-based methods use the ratings given to
items by users as the sole source of information for learning to make
recommendation. However, the ratings are often very sparse in many
applications, causing CF-based methods to degrade significantly in their
recommendation performance. To address this sparsity problem, auxiliary
information such as item content information may be utilized. Collaborative
topic regression (CTR) is an appealing recent method taking this approach which
tightly couples the two components that learn from two different sources of
information. Nevertheless, the latent representation learned by CTR may not be
very effective when the auxiliary information is very sparse. To address this
problem, we generalize recent advances in deep learning from i.i.d. input to
non-i.i.d. (CF-based) input and propose in this paper a hierarchical Bayesian
model called collaborative deep learning (CDL), which jointly performs deep
representation learning for the content information and collaborative filtering
for the ratings (feedback) matrix. Extensive experiments on three real-world
datasets from different domains show that CDL can significantly advance the
state of the art
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