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Structuring folksonomies with implicit tag relations

Published: 25 June 2012 Publication History

Abstract

Tagging systems allow users to assign arbitrary text labels (i.e., tags) to various types of resources, such as photos or web pages, to facilitate future retrieval and selective sharing of contents. The resulting system of classification is referred to as a folksonomy. The uncontrolled nature of tags leads to inconsistencies in the usage of terms which impairs the utility of the system. Approaches to this problem that map tags to concepts of external knowledge representations, such as ontologies, are often inapplicable since they require that corresponding concepts exist and that they reflect the meaning of tags as intended by the users. In this paper, we present the notion of implicit tag relations. Our aim is to improve the accessibility of contents in tagging systems without significantly reducing the flexibility and universal applicability of tags. Instead of explicitly relating tags to each other, we propose to give users the ability to retroactively alter folksonomies by changing the tags of many resources with a single operation. This way, the usage of tags can be harmonized and it can be controlled how they are used in combination. We highlight the benefits of our approach compared to explicit tag relations and discuss important implications as well as its limitations.

References

[1]
P. Lambe. Organising Knowledge: Taxonomies, Knowledge and Organisational Effectiveness: Taxonomies, Knowledge and Organization Effectiveness. Chandos Publishing (Oxford) Ltd, 1st edition edition, 2007.
[2]
S. R. Ranganathan. The colon classification. Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, 1965.
[3]
G. M. Sacco and Y. Tzitzikas. Dynamic Taxonomies and Faceted Search. Springer, 1st edition edition, 2009.
[4]
T. Vander Wal. Folksonomy definition and wikipedia. http://www.vanderwal.net/random/entrysel.php?blog=1750, 2005. accessed February 8th, 2012.
[5]
K. Weller and I. Peters. Seeding, weeding, fertilizing. different tag gardening activities for folksonomy maintenance and enrichment. In Proceedings of I-SEMANTICS '08, pages 100--117, 2008.

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cover image ACM Conferences
HT '12: Proceedings of the 23rd ACM conference on Hypertext and social media
June 2012
340 pages
ISBN:9781450313353
DOI:10.1145/2309996

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 25 June 2012

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Author Tags

  1. folksonomies
  2. organization structures
  3. social tagging

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HT '12
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HT '12: 23rd ACM Conference on Hypertext and Social Media
June 25 - 28, 2012
Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA

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HT '12 Paper Acceptance Rate 33 of 120 submissions, 28%;
Overall Acceptance Rate 378 of 1,158 submissions, 33%

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