140 research outputs found
Semantic Grounding Strategies for Tagbased Recommender Systems
Recommender systems usually operate on similarities between recommended items
or users. Tag based recommender systems utilize similarities on tags. The tags
are however mostly free user entered phrases. Therefore, similarities computed
without their semantic groundings might lead to less relevant recommendations.
In this paper, we study a semantic grounding used for tag similarity calculus.
We show a comprehensive analysis of semantic grounding given by 20 ontologies
from different domains. The study besides other things reveals that currently
available OWL ontologies are very narrow and the percentage of the similarity
expansions is rather small. WordNet scores slightly better as it is broader but
not much as it does not support several semantic relationships. Furthermore,
the study reveals that even with such number of expansions, the recommendations
change considerably.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Measuring Similarity in Large-Scale Folksonomies
Social (or folksonomic) tagging has become a very popular way to describe content within Web 2.0 websites. Unlike\ud
taxonomies, which overimpose a hierarchical categorisation of content, folksonomies enable end-users to freely create and choose the categories (in this case, tags) that best\ud
describe some content. However, as tags are informally de-\ud
fined, continually changing, and ungoverned, social tagging\ud
has often been criticised for lowering, rather than increasing, the efficiency of searching, due to the number of synonyms, homonyms, polysemy, as well as the heterogeneity of\ud
users and the noise they introduce. To address this issue, a\ud
variety of approaches have been proposed that recommend\ud
users what tags to use, both when labelling and when looking for resources. As we illustrate in this paper, real world\ud
folksonomies are characterized by power law distributions\ud
of tags, over which commonly used similarity metrics, including the Jaccard coefficient and the cosine similarity, fail\ud
to compute. We thus propose a novel metric, specifically\ud
developed to capture similarity in large-scale folksonomies,\ud
that is based on a mutual reinforcement principle: that is,\ud
two tags are deemed similar if they have been associated to\ud
similar resources, and vice-versa two resources are deemed\ud
similar if they have been labelled by similar tags. We offer an efficient realisation of this similarity metric, and assess its quality experimentally, by comparing it against cosine similarity, on three large-scale datasets, namely Bibsonomy, MovieLens and CiteULike
Analyzing Tag Semantics Across Collaborative Tagging Systems
The objective of our group was to exploit state-of-the-art Information Retrieval methods for finding associations and dependencies between tags, capturing and representing differences in tagging behavior and vocabulary of various folksonomies, with the overall aim to better understand the semantics of tags and the tagging process. Therefore we analyze the semantic content of tags in the Flickr and Delicious folksonomies. We find that: tag context similarity leads to meaningful results in Flickr, despite its narrow folksonomy character; the comparison of tags across Flickr and Delicious shows little semantic overlap, being tags in Flickr associated more to visual aspects rather than technological as it seems to be in Delicious; there are regions in the tag-tag space, provided with the cosine similarity metric, that are characterized by high density; the order of tags inside a post has a semantic relevance
An integrated approach to discover tag semantics
Tag-based systems have become very common for online classification thanks to their intrinsic advantages such as self-organization and rapid evolution. However, they are still affected by some issues that limit their utility, mainly due to the inherent ambiguity in the semantics of tags. Synonyms, homonyms, and polysemous words, while not harmful for the casual user, strongly affect the quality of search results and the performances of tag-based recommendation systems. In this paper we rely on the concept of tag relatedness in order to study small groups of similar tags and detect relationships between them. This approach is grounded on a model that builds upon an edge-colored multigraph of users, tags, and resources. To put our thoughts in practice, we present a modular and extensible framework of analysis for discovering synonyms, homonyms and hierarchical relationships amongst sets of tags. Some initial results of its application to the delicious database are presented, showing that such an approach could be useful to solve some of the well known problems of folksonomies
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