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BooksOnline '11: Proceedings of the 4th ACM workshop on Online books, complementary social media and crowdsourcing
ACM2011 Proceeding
Publisher:
  • Association for Computing Machinery
  • New York
  • NY
  • United States
Conference:
CIKM '11: International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management Glasgow Scotland, UK 24 October 2011
ISBN:
978-1-4503-0961-5
Published:
24 October 2011
Sponsors:
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Abstract

It is our great pleasure to welcome you to the BooksOnline 2011 Workshop on Research Advances in Large Digital Book Repositories and Complementary Media. This year, the fourth edition of the workshop series places strong emphasis on the social dimension of reading and explores the role of social media in enhancing digital libraries and online digital book repository services.

Online social networks and services have seen a tremendous increase in popularity in recent years. They enable a fast growing population of users to connect, socialize, and share data and experiences on the Web, as well as support users in working together, contributing towards common goals. Examples of such online social movements around books and book repositories include various efforts of cataloguing and sharing "home library" records and systems that elicit and share book recommendations and reviews. A related recent phenomenon is that of crowdsourcing, which aims to harness the abilities of communities or crowds of people to complete otherwise daunting tasks such as correcting OCR errors in whole libraries of digitized books. Such social interactions and resulting social media hold the potential to revolutionize online publishing and digital libraries.

These themes are reflected in the topics chosen by our keynote speakers. We are honoured to have as our keynote speakers Adam Farquhar, Head of Digital Library Technology at the British Library and Ville Miettinen, founder and CEO of Microtask, a Finnish company specialised in commercializing technology for distributing digital labour. Ville Miettinen, who has been leading the digitization efforts of the Finnish National Library, will discuss the challenges of introducing human computation into heterogeneous large-scale digitization workflows. Adam Farquhar will address the transition from digital libraries as a means of supporting traditional book repositories to digital publishing.

The social dimension of online publishing and reading is also reflected in the work of several authors who contributed research or position papers to the workshop. Overall, the program consists of a high-quality selection of papers that focus on: 1) Technological innovations in the fields of information retrieval and information extraction that further the usability and engagement of digital books in order to better exploit the capabilities of digital media rather than inheriting the limitations of conventional print media, and 2) Methodologies and studies of changes in reading behaviour as a consequence of societal and technological developments that can guide further innovation. We hope that you will find this program interesting and thought-provoking and that the workshop will provide you with a valuable opportunity to share ideas with other researchers and practitioners from institutions around the world.

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SESSION: Tools, communities and crowds
research-article
Tools for whom: readers, fans, or authors?

Digitization, digital books, the web, social media, etc. all have the potential to change the way we read and write and indeed styles of reading and writing have changed. But we can also look at the ways in which such tools and possibilities have ...

research-article
Quality assurance in document conversion: a hit?

This paper discusses challenges and opportunities of using human computation and crowdsourcing for the task of quality assurance in document conversion processes and proposes a hybrid computer-human system approach. Digital content is never presented to ...

SESSION: Reading with a purpose
research-article
Evidence finding using a collection of books

This paper introduces the task of Evidence Finding, a novel information retrieval task that uses books - a traditionally more trust-worthy source of information - to help provide evidence to support a statement. What makes this evidence-finding task ...

research-article
New trends for reading scientific documents

When scientists or engineers are looking for information in document collections, or on the web, they generally have a precise objective in mind. Instead of looking for documents "about a topic T", they rather try to answer specific needs such as ...

research-article
How to carry over historic books into social networks

This paper describes how to make use of e-books that look like printed books in a knowledge network. After an overview of digitalization efforts and current digital library initiatives we introduce quality measures for the digitalization process. After ...

SESSION: Authors, links and relations
research-article
The impact of author ranking in a library catalogue

The field of information retrieval has witnessed over 50 years of research on retrieval methods for metadata descriptions and controlled indexing languages, the prototypical example being the library catalogue. It seems only natural to resort to ...

research-article
Automatic annotation of bibliographical references in digital humanities books, articles and blogs

In this paper, we deal with the problem of extracting and processing useful information from bibliographic references in Digital Humanities (DH) data. A machine learning technique for sequential data analysis, Conditional Random Field is applied to a ...

research-article
Mining relational structure from millions of books: position paper

Existing large-scale scanned book collections have many shortcomings for data-driven research, from OCR of variable quality to the lack of accurate descriptive and structural metadata. We argue that complementary research in inferring relational ...

SESSION: Keynote address
keynote
Digitalkoot: electrifying the finnish cultural heritage

In this talk we present Digitalkoot, a system for correcting errors in Optical Character Recognition (OCR) processing of old text materials through the use of crowdsourcing. By turning the labor-intensive part into simple games, we have been able to ...

SESSION: Reading experience
research-article
Changes in reading research proposition: some psychological aspects of reading 2.0

The reading process as a paradigm for the intimate experience and individual cogitation of the content is changing, mostly because of technological and social innovations known as the Web 2.0. Emerging new quality in reading is described via Reading 2.0 ...

research-article
Towards an engaging e-reading experience

Electronic books are gaining in popularity, but their potential is not fully exploited yet. This is especially true for children eBooks. HEBE (Highly Engaging eBook Experiences) project, aims to actively involve children in the design of a new concept ...

Contributors
  • Amazon.com, Inc.
  • University of Tübingen
  • University of Pittsburgh
  1. Proceedings of the 4th ACM workshop on Online books, complementary social media and crowdsourcing

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