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  1. Added Sep 01, 2007 by longpd
    Folksonomy and tagged content by the masses
  2. Added Jul 23, 2007 by aseldow
    This research presents a case study on the use of Social Tagging in an undergraduate classroom at the University of Michigan during the Fall 2005 semester. Students were between 20 and 22 years of age. Students tagged their individual blog posts to contribute to themes and conversations in an online learning environment. Using content analysis of the blog posts and tags as well as semi-structured interviews, the study examines the role of online social tagging for tracking and aiding group knowledge formation.
  3. Added Jul 17, 2007 by aseldow
    Abstract—The ability to tag resources with uncontrolled metadata or “folksonomies†is often characterized as one of the central features of “Web 2.0†applications. Folksonomies are said to support emergent classification, where the semantic value of the tags and their relation to one another is worked out through a negotiated process of users applying their selected tags and seeing what others...
  4. Added Jul 05, 2007 by aseldow
    This short paper describes a novel technique for generating personalized tag recommendations for users of social book- marking sites such as del.icio.us. Existing techniques recommend tags on the basis of their popularity among the group of all users; on the basis of recent use; or on the basis of simple heuristics to extract keywords from the url being tagged. Our method is designed to...
  5. Added Jun 19, 2007 by aseldow and 1 other
    Some papers on ontologies, folksonomies, and social bookmarking
  6. Added May 31, 2007 by aseldow
    Academically speaking, semantic search ought to be a system which understands both the user's query and the Web text using cognitive algorithms similar to that of the human brain, then brings results that are dead on target (right context) at first glance (not requiring to open the Web page for further investigation.) There are several ideas on how to build such a system.
  7. Added Apr 02, 2007 by aseldow and 1 other
    Collaborative tagging systems, or folksonomies, have the potential of becoming technological infrastructure to support knowledge management activities in an organization or a society. There are many challenges, however. This paper presents designs that enhance collaborative tagging systems to meet some key challenges: community...( DOI: 10.1145/1149941.1149962 )
  8. Added Feb 02, 2007 by mhemment and 1 other
    Social tagging applications such as flickr and del.icio.us have become extremely popular. Their socially-focussed data collection strategies seem to have potential for museums struggling to make their collections more accessible and to build communities of interest around their holdings. But little is known about the terminology that visitors to museum sites might contribute or how best to obtain both useful terms and on-going social involvement in tagging museum collections. In the steve.museum project, a number of art museums are collaboratively researching this opportunity.
  9. Added Nov 06, 2006 by aseldow
    Social bookmarking services let you keep links to your favorite web destinations in one location that's accessible from any computer on the net. Add the ability to share your favorite web destinations and search through other users' bookmarks to discover new sites, and you've got a highly addictive and truly remarkable phenomenon.
  10. Added Oct 08, 2006 by aseldow
    This blog post links to a .pdf file with the best social bookmarking comparison chart I've found. It's a bit dated (February 2006), but it's a great place to start.
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