Applications of the Social Web are ubiquitous and have become an integral part of everyday life: Users make friends, for example, with the help of online social networks, share thoughts via Twitter, or collaboratively write articles in Wikipedia. All such interactions leave digital traces; thus, users participate in the creation of heterogeneous, distributed, collaborative data collections. In linguistics, the
Description
The social distributional hypothesis: a pragmatic proxy for homophily in online social networks - Springer
%0 Journal Article
%1 noKey
%A Mitzlaff, Folke
%A Atzmueller, Martin
%A Hotho, Andreas
%A Stumme, Gerd
%D 2014
%I Springer Vienna
%J Social Network Analysis and Mining
%K 2014 distributional from:hotho hypothesis myown pragmatic proxy social
%N 1
%R 10.1007/s13278-014-0216-2
%T The social distributional hypothesis: a pragmatic proxy for homophily in online social networks
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13278-014-0216-2
%V 4
%X Applications of the Social Web are ubiquitous and have become an integral part of everyday life: Users make friends, for example, with the help of online social networks, share thoughts via Twitter, or collaboratively write articles in Wikipedia. All such interactions leave digital traces; thus, users participate in the creation of heterogeneous, distributed, collaborative data collections. In linguistics, the
@article{noKey,
abstract = {Applications of the Social Web are ubiquitous and have become an integral part of everyday life: Users make friends, for example, with the help of online social networks, share thoughts via Twitter, or collaboratively write articles in Wikipedia. All such interactions leave digital traces; thus, users participate in the creation of heterogeneous, distributed, collaborative data collections. In linguistics, the },
added-at = {2015-11-12T15:16:05.000+0100},
author = {Mitzlaff, Folke and Atzmueller, Martin and Hotho, Andreas and Stumme, Gerd},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/25b268a7c5308af783c3028573ffcd0c0/dmir},
description = {The social distributional hypothesis: a pragmatic proxy for homophily in online social networks - Springer},
doi = {10.1007/s13278-014-0216-2},
eid = {216},
interhash = {7e02f08a123c801c33ac93109394adfb},
intrahash = {5b268a7c5308af783c3028573ffcd0c0},
issn = {1869-5450},
journal = {Social Network Analysis and Mining},
keywords = {2014 distributional from:hotho hypothesis myown pragmatic proxy social},
language = {English},
number = 1,
publisher = {Springer Vienna},
timestamp = {2024-01-18T10:31:52.000+0100},
title = {The social distributional hypothesis: a pragmatic proxy for homophily in online social networks},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13278-014-0216-2},
volume = 4,
year = 2014
}