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Publikation

Vocabulary Patterns in Free-for-all Collaborative Indexing Systems

Wolfgang Maaß; Tobias Kowatsch; Timo Münster
In: Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Emergent Semantics and Ontology Evolution, ESOE 2007, co-located with ISWC 2007 + ASWC 2007. Emergent Semantics and Ontology Evolution - workshop (ESOE-2007), November 12, Busan, Korea, Republic of, Pages 45-57, ISWC Organizing Committee, 2007.

Zusammenfassung

In collaborative indexing systems users generate a big amount of metadata by labelling web-based content. These labels are known as tags and form a shared vocabulary. In order to understand the characteristics of that vocabulary, we study structural patterns of these tags by implying the theory of self-organizing systems. Therefore, we utilize the graph theoretic notion to model the network of tags and their valued connections, which represent frequency rates of co-occurring tags. Empirical data is provided by the free-for-all collaborative indexing systems Delicious, Connotea and CiteULike. First, we measure the frequency distribution of co-occurring tags. Secondly, we correlate these tags towards their rank over time. Results indicate a strong relationship among a few tags as well as a notable persistence of these tags over time. Therefore, we make the educated guess that the observed collaborative indexing systems are self-organizing systems towards a shared vocabulary building. Implications on the results are the presence of semantic domains based on high frequency rates of co-occurring tags, which reflect topics of interest among the user community. When observing those semantic domains over time, that information can be used to provide a historical or trend-setting development of the community’s interests, thus enhancing collaborative indexing systems in general as well as providing a new tool to develop community-based products and services at the same time.

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