The Tower of Babel Meets Web 2.0: User-Generated Content and its Applications in a Multilingual Context
B. Hecht, and D. Gergle. Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '10), Atlanta, GA, USA, page 291--300. New York, ACM, (2010)
DOI: 10.1145/1753326.1753370
Abstract
This study explores language's fragmenting effect on user-generated content by examining the diversity of knowledge representations across 25 different Wikipedia language editions. This diversity is measured at two levels: the concepts that are included in each edition and the ways in which these concepts are described. We demonstrate that the diversity present is greater than has been presumed in the literature and has a significant influence on applications that use Wikipedia as a source of world knowledge. We close by explicating how knowledge diversity can be beneficially leveraged to create culturally-aware applications and hyperlingual applications.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 HechtGergle10CHI
%A Hecht, Brent
%A Gergle, Darren
%B Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '10), Atlanta, GA, USA
%C New York
%D 2010
%I ACM
%K 01624 acm paper ai web application social software language knowledge processing user interface requirements
%P 291--300
%R 10.1145/1753326.1753370
%T The Tower of Babel Meets Web 2.0: User-Generated Content and its Applications in a Multilingual Context
%X This study explores language's fragmenting effect on user-generated content by examining the diversity of knowledge representations across 25 different Wikipedia language editions. This diversity is measured at two levels: the concepts that are included in each edition and the ways in which these concepts are described. We demonstrate that the diversity present is greater than has been presumed in the literature and has a significant influence on applications that use Wikipedia as a source of world knowledge. We close by explicating how knowledge diversity can be beneficially leveraged to create culturally-aware applications and hyperlingual applications.
%@ 978-1-60558-929-9
@inproceedings{HechtGergle10CHI,
abstract = {This study explores language's fragmenting effect on user-generated content by examining the diversity of knowledge representations across 25 different Wikipedia language editions. This diversity is measured at two levels: the concepts that are included in each edition and the ways in which these concepts are described. We demonstrate that the diversity present is greater than has been presumed in the literature and has a significant influence on applications that use Wikipedia as a source of world knowledge. We close by explicating how knowledge diversity can be beneficially leveraged to create culturally-aware applications and hyperlingual applications.},
added-at = {2017-05-21T16:24:01.000+0200},
address = {New York},
author = {Hecht, Brent and Gergle, Darren},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2fa88f3a8a4be1f03485ec9679c194b00/flint63},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '10), Atlanta, GA, USA},
doi = {10.1145/1753326.1753370},
file = {ACM Digital Library:2010/HechtGergle10CHI.pdf:PDF},
groups = {public},
interhash = {8991b8165164088464cec08f7aa7e861},
intrahash = {fa88f3a8a4be1f03485ec9679c194b00},
isbn = {978-1-60558-929-9},
keywords = {01624 acm paper ai web application social software language knowledge processing user interface requirements},
pages = {291--300},
publisher = {ACM},
timestamp = {2017-07-13T18:02:06.000+0200},
title = {The Tower of {Babel} Meets Web 2.0: User-Generated Content and its Applications in a Multilingual Context},
username = {flint63},
year = 2010
}