Cross-tagging for personalized open social networking

verfasst von
Avaré Stewart, Ernesto Diaz-Aviles, Wolfgang Nejdl, Leandro Balby Marinho, Alexandros Nanopoulos, Lars Schmidt-Thieme
Abstract

The Social Web is successfully established and poised for continued growth. Web 2.0 applications such as blogs, bookmarking, music, photo and video sharing systems are among the most popular; and all of them incorporate a social aspect, i.e., users can easily share information with other users. But due to the diversity of these applications - serving different aims - the Social Web is ironically divided. Blog users who write about music for example, could possibly benefit from other users registered in other social systems operating within the same domain, such as a social radio station. Although these sites are two different and disconnected systems, offering distinct services to the users, the fact that domains are compatible could benefit users from both systems with interesting and multi-faceted information. In this paper we propose to automatically establish social links between distinct social systems through cross-tagging, i.e., enriching a social system with the tags of other similar social system(s). Since tags are known for increasing the prediction quality of recommender systems (RS), we propose to quantitatively evaluate the extent to which users can benefit from cross-tagging by measuring the impact of different cross-tagging approaches on tag-aware RS for personalized resource recommendations. We conduct experiments in real world data sets and empirically show the effectiveness of our approaches.

Organisationseinheit(en)
Forschungszentrum L3S
Externe Organisation(en)
Stiftung Universität Hildesheim
Typ
Aufsatz in Konferenzband
Seiten
271-278
Anzahl der Seiten
8
Publikationsdatum
29.06.2009
Publikationsstatus
Veröffentlicht
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Theoretische Informatik und Mathematik, Computergrafik und computergestütztes Design, Angewandte Informatik, Software
Elektronische Version(en)
https://doi.org/10.1145/1557914.1557960 (Zugang: Geschlossen)