A. Hotho, R. Jäschke, C. Schmitz, and G. Stumme. Proc. First International Conference on Semantics And Digital Media Technology (SAMT), volume 4306 of LNCS, page 56-70. Heidelberg, Springer, (December 2006)
Abstract
As the number of resources on the web exceeds by far the number of
documents one can track, it becomes increasingly difficult to remain
up to date on ones own areas of interest. The problem becomes more
severe with the increasing fraction of multimedia data, from which
it is difficult to extract some conceptual description of their
contents.
One way to overcome this problem are social bookmark tools, which
are rapidly emerging on the web. In such systems, users are setting
up lightweight conceptual structures called folksonomies, and
overcome thus the knowledge acquisition bottleneck. As more and more
people participate in the effort, the use of a common vocabulary
becomes more and more stable. We present an approach for discovering
topic-specific trends within folksonomies. It is based on a
differential adaptation of the PageRank algorithm to the triadic
hypergraph structure of a folksonomy. The approach allows for any
kind of data, as it does not rely on the internal structure of the
documents. In particular, this allows to consider different data
types in the same analysis step. We run experiments on a large-scale
real-world snapshot of a social bookmarking system.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 hotho2006trend
%A Hotho, Andreas
%A Jäschke, Robert
%A Schmitz, Christoph
%A Stumme, Gerd
%B Proc. First International Conference on Semantics And Digital Media Technology (SAMT)
%C Heidelberg
%D 2006
%E Avrithis, Yannis S.
%E Kompatsiaris, Yiannis
%E Staab, Steffen
%E O'Connor, Noel E.
%I Springer
%K folksonomy printed trend
%P 56-70
%T Trend Detection in Folksonomies
%U http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/stumme/papers/2006/hotho2006trend.pdf
%V 4306
%X As the number of resources on the web exceeds by far the number of
documents one can track, it becomes increasingly difficult to remain
up to date on ones own areas of interest. The problem becomes more
severe with the increasing fraction of multimedia data, from which
it is difficult to extract some conceptual description of their
contents.
One way to overcome this problem are social bookmark tools, which
are rapidly emerging on the web. In such systems, users are setting
up lightweight conceptual structures called folksonomies, and
overcome thus the knowledge acquisition bottleneck. As more and more
people participate in the effort, the use of a common vocabulary
becomes more and more stable. We present an approach for discovering
topic-specific trends within folksonomies. It is based on a
differential adaptation of the PageRank algorithm to the triadic
hypergraph structure of a folksonomy. The approach allows for any
kind of data, as it does not rely on the internal structure of the
documents. In particular, this allows to consider different data
types in the same analysis step. We run experiments on a large-scale
real-world snapshot of a social bookmarking system.
%@ 3-540-49335-2
@inproceedings{hotho2006trend,
abstract = {As the number of resources on the web exceeds by far the number of
documents one can track, it becomes increasingly difficult to remain
up to date on ones own areas of interest. The problem becomes more
severe with the increasing fraction of multimedia data, from which
it is difficult to extract some conceptual description of their
contents.
One way to overcome this problem are social bookmark tools, which
are rapidly emerging on the web. In such systems, users are setting
up lightweight conceptual structures called folksonomies, and
overcome thus the knowledge acquisition bottleneck. As more and more
people participate in the effort, the use of a common vocabulary
becomes more and more stable. We present an approach for discovering
topic-specific trends within folksonomies. It is based on a
differential adaptation of the PageRank algorithm to the triadic
hypergraph structure of a folksonomy. The approach allows for any
kind of data, as it does not rely on the internal structure of the
documents. In particular, this allows to consider different data
types in the same analysis step. We run experiments on a large-scale
real-world snapshot of a social bookmarking system.},
added-at = {2007-04-25T14:46:08.000+0200},
address = {Heidelberg},
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/242cda5911e901eadd0ac6a106a6aa1dc/rabeeh},
booktitle = {Proc. First International Conference on Semantics And Digital Media Technology (SAMT) },
date = {2006-12-13},
editor = {Avrithis, Yannis S. and Kompatsiaris, Yiannis and Staab, Steffen and O'Connor, Noel E.},
ee = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11930334_5},
interhash = {227be738c5cea57530d592463fd09abd},
intrahash = {42cda5911e901eadd0ac6a106a6aa1dc},
isbn = {3-540-49335-2},
keywords = {folksonomy printed trend},
month = dec,
pages = {56-70},
publisher = {Springer},
series = {LNCS},
timestamp = {2007-04-25T14:46:08.000+0200},
title = {Trend Detection in Folksonomies},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/stumme/papers/2006/hotho2006trend.pdf},
vgwort = {27},
volume = 4306,
year = 2006
}