@inproceedings{vanmulligen2006oow, title = {{An Online Ontology: WiktionaryZ}}, author = {E.M. van Mulligen and E. M{\"o}ller and P.J. Roes and M. Weeber and G. Meijssen and C. Chichester and B. Mons}, booktitle = {Proceedings of Knowledge Representation in Medicine (KR-MED) 2006 }, year = 2006, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c42fee8fe3ee95753596a75534ce0c45/brightbyte}, keywords = {wiki hesaurus wikidata omegawiki dictionary} } @phdthesis{Reagle2008, title = {In good faith: {Wikipedia} collaboration and the pursuit of the universal encyclopedia}, address = {New York, NY}, author = {Joseph Reagle}, month = {May}, school = {New York University}, year = 2008, url = {http://reagle.org/joseph/2008/03/dsrtn-in-good-faith}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/26e0cb2fe77e4d119354a806b93ed06a9/brightbyte}, keywords = {WW-SHOULD quality community wikipedia collaboration} } @book{cunningham2001ww, title = {The Wiki Way: Collaboration and Sharing on the Internet}, author = {Bo Leuf and Ward Cunningham}, howpublished = {Paperback}, month = {April}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley Professional}, year = 2001, id = {114322}, priority = {2}, isbn = {020171499X}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {Suitable for system administrators or managers seeking an affordable content-management solution, The Wiki Wayshows off how to take advantage of Wiki collaborative software, which allows users to post and edit content remotely. This book is all you need to get up and running with this exciting (and free) way to build and manage content. This text is first and foremost a guide to what Wiki software is and how to install, customize, and administer it within your organization. Early sections discuss the advantages of Wiki Web sites, which allow all users to add and edit content. While it might sound like a free-for-all, the authors suggest such Web sites have been used successfully in research, business, and education to document project designs, for brainstorming, and for otherwise creating content in a collaborative fashion. Case studies for such organizations as Georgia Tech, New York Times Digital, and Motorola give a glimpse of Wiki used in real settings, so you will get a sense of what to expect. This book is also a guide to the nuts and bolts of downloading and installing Wiki and customizing it for your site. Sections on basic tweaks to Wiki's Perl scripts will let you customize your site to match your organization's needs. Standout material includes almost three dozen customization tips. This volume is illustrated with actual screen shots of Wiki, so you can get a sense of what it is like for users to work together in such an unrestricted fashion. Throughout the text, the authors are suitably upbeat about Wiki's prospects for wider adoption, but they are realistic enough to note compromises (such as requiring passwords and restricting edit rights) required in business settings. They also survey the field of Wiki open-source projects and clones, as well as other similar content-management solutions (such as Zope and the emerging WebDAV standard). While it's hard to predict whether Wiki-based Web sites are for everyone, this book presents the pros and cons of a potentially exciting and useful tool that promotes collaborative content creation. This title can help any organization get going with a Wiki Web site, from the standpoint of planning, deployment, and basic administration. --Richard Dragan }, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c165b610c5be5ddc70677753269321f6/brightbyte}, keywords = {wiki classic} } @inproceedings{conf/wikis/WitteG07, title = {Connecting wikis and natural language processing systems.}, author = {René Witte and Thomas Gitzinger}, booktitle = {Int. Sym. Wikis}, crossref = {conf/wikis/2007}, editor = {Alain Désilets and Robert Biddle}, pages = {165-176}, publisher = {ACM}, year = 2007, url = {http://dblp.uni-trier.de/db/conf/wikis/wikis2007.html#WitteG07}, ee = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1296951.1296969}, isbn = {978-1-59593-861-9}, date = {2007-10-31}, description = {dblp}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/274b7994868034b05625d7b63e14f7d48/brightbyte}, keywords = {nlp READ integration wiki} } @misc{citeulike:1536510, title = {Wikipedia and the Semantic Web - The Missing Links}, author = {M. Krötzsch and D. Vrandecic and M. Völkel}, year = 2005, url = {http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/krotzsch05wikipedia.html}, id = {1536510}, priority = {3}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {Wikipedia is the biggest collaboratively created source of encyclopaedic knowledge. Growing beyond the borders of any traditional encyclopaedia, it is facing new problems of knowledge management: The current excessive usage of article lists and categories witnesses the fact that 19th century content organization technologies like inter-article references and indices are no longer su\#cient for today's needs.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b7f5e166ea3e58d128cab38e3a4eb3d3/brightbyte}, keywords = {semantic-web wikipedia WW-SHOULD collaboration semantic ontology wiki} } @misc{citeulike:825835, title = {Towards a Semantic Wiki Experience - Desktop Integration and Interactivity in WikSAR}, author = {David Aumueller and Sören Auer}, year = 2005, url = {http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/aumueller05towards.html}, id = {825835}, priority = {2}, abstract = {Common Wiki systems such as MediaWiki lack semantic annotations. WikSAR (Semantic Authoring and Retrieval within a Wiki), a prototype of a semantic Wiki, offers effortless semantic authoring. Instant gratification of users is achieved by context aware means of navigation, interactive graph visualisation of the emerging ontology, as well as semantic retrieval possibilities. Embedding queries into Wiki pages creates views (as dependant collections) on the information space. Desktop integration...}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b423f71fb2100b179984195b8a026b22/brightbyte}, keywords = {wiki desktop semantic} } @article{kittur1pfv, title = {Power of the Few vs. Wisdom of the Crowd: Wikipedia and the Rise of the Bourgeoisie}, author = {A. Kittur and E. Chi and B. A. Pendleton and B. Suh and T. Mytkowicz}, journal = {World Wide Web}, number = 2, volume = 1, year = 2006, id = {2157100}, priority = {3}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/26a541729069825d526b6134b096897cd/brightbyte}, keywords = {collaboration wikipedia} } @misc{citeulike:600598, title = {Collaborative thesaurus tagging the Wikipedia way}, author = {Jakob Voss}, month = {Apr}, year = 2006, url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/cs.IR/0604036}, id = {600598}, priority = {3}, eprint = {cs.IR/0604036}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {This paper explores the system of categories that is used to classify articles in Wikipedia. It is compared to collaborative tagging systems like del.icio.us and to hierarchical classification like the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC). Specifics and commonalitiess of these systems of subject indexing are exposed. Analysis of structural and statistical properties (descriptors per record, records per descriptor, descriptor levels) shows that the category system of Wikimedia is a thesaurus that combines collaborative tagging and hierarchical subject indexing in a special way.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2269e8b153ed5856542d0a6e5b2bc7853/brightbyte}, keywords = {semantic tagging collaboration wikipedia WW-MUST READ} } @incollection{citeulike:1447656, title = {OntoWiki – A Tool for Social, Semantic Collaboration}, author = {S\"{o}ren Auer and Sebastian Dietzold and Thomas Riechert}, journal = {The Semantic Web - ISWC 2006}, pages = {736--749}, year = 2006, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11926078\_53}, id = {1447656}, priority = {2}, doi = {10.1007/11926078\_53}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {We present OntoWiki, a tool providing support for agile, distributed knowledge engineering scenarios. OntoWiki facilitates the visual presentation of a knowledge base as an information map, with different views on instance data. It enables intuitive authoring of semantic content, with an inline editing mode for editing RDF content, similar to WYSIWYG for text documents. It fosters social collaboration aspects by keeping track of changes, allowing to comment and discuss every single part of a knowledge base, enabling to rate and measure the popularity of content and honoring the activity of users. Ontowiki enhances the browsing and retrieval by offering semantic enhanced search strategies. All these techniques are applied with the ultimate goal of decreasing the entrance barrier for projects and domain experts to collaborate using semantic technologies. In the spirit of the Web 2.0 OntoWiki implements an ”architecture of participation” that allows users to add value to the application as they use it. It is available as open-source software and a demonstration platform can be accessed at http://3ba.se.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2dc8fcee92604686f68952010e271a39a/brightbyte}, keywords = {wiki semantic} } @inproceedings{Volkel, title = {Towards a Wiki Interchange Format (WIF)}, author = {Max V{\"o}lkel and Eyal Oren}, booktitle = {1st Workshop on Semantic Wikis:}, month = {June{ December}}, year = 2006, url = {http://eyaloren.org/pubs/semwiki2006-wif.pdf}, id = {2160160}, priority = {2}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {Wikis are increasingly being used in world-wide, intranet and even in personal settings. Unfortunately, current wikis are data islands: people can read and edit them, but machines can only send around text strings without structure. Wiki migration, publishing from one wiki to another one and free choice of syntax hold back broader wiki usage. We define a wiki interchange format (WIF) that allows data exchange between wikis and between related tools. Different from other approaches, we also tackle page content and semantic annotations. The linking from formal annotations to parts of a structured text is analysed and described.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2a2e04abdfd6358d5807f613d3422fae8/brightbyte}, keywords = {semantic markup, wiki} } @article{Wagner2006, title = {Building Semantic Webs for e-government with Wiki technology}, author = {Christian Wagner and Rachael K. F. Ip and Karen S. K. Cheung and Stefan B{\"o}ttcher}, journal = {Electronic Government}, number = 1, pages = {36--56}, volume = 3, year = 2006, url = {http://colab.cim3.net/file/work/SICoP/2006-02-09/EGov{\\\\%}20Wiki.pdf}, id = {2160168}, priority = {2}, comment = {Brief article about the paper: http://www.gcn.com/vol1{\_}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {E-government webs are among the largest webs in existence, based on the size, number of users and number of information providers. Thus, creating a Semantic Web infrastructure to meaningfully organise e-government webs is highly desirable. At the same time, the complexity of the existing e-government implementations also challenges the feasibility of Semantic Web creation. We therefore propose the design of a two-layer semantic Wiki web, which consists of a content Wiki, largely identical to the traditional web and a semantic layer, also maintained within the Wiki, that describes semantic relationships. This architectural design promises several advantages that enable incremental growth, collaborative development by a large community of non-technical users and the ability to continually grow the content layer without the immediate overhead of parallel maintenance of the semantic layer. This paper explains current challenges to the development of a Semantic Web, identifies Wiki advantages, illustrates a potential solution and summarises major directions for further research.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/212df5a0eaba823c671e102def459d1b1/brightbyte}, keywords = {wiki politicusagesemanticpolitics, semantic usage,} } @article{citeulike:559522, title = {Building a semantic wiki}, author = {A. Souzis}, journal = {Intelligent Systems, IEEE [see also IEEE Intelligent Systems and Their Applications]}, number = 5, pages = {87--91}, volume = 20, year = 2005, url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs\\_all.jsp?arnumber=1512004}, id = {2162744}, priority = {2}, description = {stuff from citeyoulike}, abstract = {The semantic Web vision of a ``unifying logical language that enables concepts to be progressively linked into a universal Web'' is part of along lineage of dreams of a universal repository of ideas: from Diderot's universal encyclopedia in the 18th century to Vannevar Bush's Memex at the beginning of the computer age to Ted Nelson's Xanadu in the 1970s. However, the semantic Web's development so far has focused primarily on metadata and carefully designed data structures. To realize Berners-Lee's vision, the semantic Web must capture and represent content created every day by people without special training - such content includes blogs, emails, and discussion groups. Rhizome is an experimental, open source content management framework the author have created that can capture and represent informal, human-authored content in a semantically rich manner. Rhizome aims to help bring about a new kind of commons - one of ideas. This commons wouldn't comprise just a web of interlinked pages of content, as is the current World Wide Web, but a web of relationships between the underlying ideas and distinctions that the content implies: a permanent, universally accessible interlinking of content based on imputed semantics such as concepts, definitions, or structured argumentation.}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2ce0489fefebd98ea82095ad41438d844/brightbyte}, keywords = {semantic wiki} }