On the effect of group structures on ranking strategies in folksonomies

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Abstract

Folksonomies have shown interesting potential for improving information discovery and exploration. Recent folksonomy systems explore the use of tag assignments, which combine Web resources with annotations (tags), and the users that have created the annotations. This article investigates on the effect of grouping resources in folksonomies, i.e. creating sets of resources, and using this additional structure for the tasks of search & ranking, and for tag recommendations. We propose several group-sensitive extensions of graph-based search and recommendation algorithms, and compare them with non group-sensitive versions. Our experiments show that the quality of search result ranking can be significantly improved by introducing and exploiting the grouping of resources (one-tailed t-Test, level of significance α=0.05). Furthermore, tag recommendations profit from the group context, and it is possible to make very good recommendations even for untagged resources-which currently known tag recommendation algorithms cannot fulfill. © 2009 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Abel, F., Henze, N., Krause, D., & Kriesell, M. (2009). On the effect of group structures on ranking strategies in folksonomies. In Weaving Services and People on the World Wide Web (pp. 275–300). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-00570-1_14

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