Understanding the Semantics of Ambiguous Tags in Folksonomies
C. Yeung, N. Gibbins, and N. Shadbolt. Proceedings of the International Workshop on Emergent Semantics and Ontology Evolution (ESOE2007) at ISWC/ASWC2007, Busan, South Korea, (November 2007)
Abstract
The use of tags to describe Web resources in a collaborative manner has experienced rising popularity among Web users in recent years. The product of such activity is given the name folksonomy, which can be considered as a scheme of organizing information in the users' own way. In this paper, we present a possible way to analyze the tripartite graphs - graphs involving users, tags and resources - of folksonomies and discuss how these elements acquire their meanings through their associations with other elements, a process we call mutual contextualization. In particular, we demonstrate how different meanings of ambiguous tags can be discovered through such analysis of the tripartite graph by studying the tag sf. We also discuss how the result can be used as a basis to better understand the nature of folksonomies.
Description
The paper describes the advantages and disadavantages of Tagging. Also the show how to find out the different meanings of a tag in a folksonomy. For example the found out that the tag sf refers to science fiction or to san francisco
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Yeung/2007/Understanding
%A Yeung, Ching Man Au
%A Gibbins, Nicholas
%A Shadbolt, Nigel
%B Proceedings of the International Workshop on Emergent Semantics and Ontology Evolution (ESOE2007) at ISWC/ASWC2007, Busan, South Korea
%D 2007
%E Haase, Peter
%E Hotho, Andreas
%E Chen, Luke
%E Ong, Ernie
%E Mauroux, Philippe Cudre
%K folksonomy semantic taggig
%T Understanding the Semantics of Ambiguous Tags in Folksonomies
%X The use of tags to describe Web resources in a collaborative manner has experienced rising popularity among Web users in recent years. The product of such activity is given the name folksonomy, which can be considered as a scheme of organizing information in the users' own way. In this paper, we present a possible way to analyze the tripartite graphs - graphs involving users, tags and resources - of folksonomies and discuss how these elements acquire their meanings through their associations with other elements, a process we call mutual contextualization. In particular, we demonstrate how different meanings of ambiguous tags can be discovered through such analysis of the tripartite graph by studying the tag sf. We also discuss how the result can be used as a basis to better understand the nature of folksonomies.
@inproceedings{Yeung/2007/Understanding,
abstract = {The use of tags to describe Web resources in a collaborative manner has experienced rising popularity among Web users in recent years. The product of such activity is given the name folksonomy, which can be considered as a scheme of organizing information in the users' own way. In this paper, we present a possible way to analyze the tripartite graphs - graphs involving users, tags and resources - of folksonomies and discuss how these elements acquire their meanings through their associations with other elements, a process we call mutual contextualization. In particular, we demonstrate how different meanings of ambiguous tags can be discovered through such analysis of the tripartite graph by studying the tag sf. We also discuss how the result can be used as a basis to better understand the nature of folksonomies.},
added-at = {2008-08-07T12:53:03.000+0200},
author = {Yeung, Ching Man Au and Gibbins, Nicholas and Shadbolt, Nigel},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2cf35455c816a74dbfa4ddd5840bf19d6/claudia.wagner},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Workshop on Emergent Semantics and Ontology Evolution (ESOE2007) at ISWC/ASWC2007, Busan, South Korea},
crossref = {http://data.semanticweb.org/workshop/esoe/2007/proceedings},
description = {The paper describes the advantages and disadavantages of Tagging. Also the show how to find out the different meanings of a tag in a folksonomy. For example the found out that the tag sf refers to science fiction or to san francisco},
editor = {Haase, Peter and Hotho, Andreas and Chen, Luke and Ong, Ernie and Mauroux, Philippe Cudre},
interhash = {8d1bea2571673b0b9cdb818043a3a7db},
intrahash = {cf35455c816a74dbfa4ddd5840bf19d6},
keywords = {folksonomy semantic taggig},
month = {November},
timestamp = {2008-08-07T12:53:03.000+0200},
title = {Understanding the Semantics of Ambiguous Tags in Folksonomies},
year = 2007
}