ACM Home Page
Please provide us with feedback. Feedback
To tag or not to tag -: harvesting adjacent metadata in large-scale tagging systems
Full text PdfPdf (175 KB)
Source
Annual ACM Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval archive
Proceedings of the 31st annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval table of contents
Singapore, Singapore
POSTER SESSION: Posters group 2: blog, tagging, opinion analysis and web IR table of contents
Pages 733-734  
Year of Publication: 2008
ISBN:978-1-60558-164-4
Authors
Adriana Budura  EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
Sebastian Michel  EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
Philippe Cudré-Mauroux  MIT, Cambridge, USA
Karl Aberer  EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGIR: ACM Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
Bibliometrics
Downloads (6 Weeks): 10,   Downloads (12 Months): 167,   Citation Count: 2
Additional Information:

abstract   references   cited by   index terms   collaborative colleagues  

Tools and Actions: Request Permissions Request Permissions    Review this Article  
DOI Bookmark: Use this link to bookmark this Article: http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1390334.1390476
What is a DOI?

ABSTRACT

We present HAMLET, a suite of principles, scoring models and algorithms to automatically propagate metadata along edges in a document neighborhood. As a showcase scenario we consider tag prediction in community-based Web 2.0 tagging applications. Experiments using real-world data demonstrate the viability of our approach in large-scale environments where tags are scarce. To the best of our knowledge, HAMLET is the first system to promote an efficient and precise reuse of shared metadata in highly dynamic, large-scale Web 2.0 tagging systems.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

1
2
 
3
 
4
5
6


Collaborative Colleagues:
Adriana Budura: colleagues
Sebastian Michel: colleagues
Philippe Cudré-Mauroux: colleagues
Karl Aberer: colleagues