Bridging ontologies and folksonomies to leverage knowledge sharing on the social Web: A brief survey
F. Limpens, F. Gandon, and M. Buffa. Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on, page 13-18. (September 2008)
DOI: 10.1109/ASEW.2008.4686305
Abstract
Social tagging systems have recently became very popular as a means to classify large sets of resources shared among on-line communities over the social Web. However, the folksonomies resulting from the use of these systems revealed limitations : tags are ambiguous and their spelling may vary, and folksonomies are difficult to exploit in order to retrieve or exchange information. This article compares the recent attempts to overcome these limitations and to support the use of folksonomies with formal languages and ontologies from the Semantic Web.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Limpens2008
%A Limpens, Freddy
%A Gandon, Fabien
%A Buffa, Michel
%B Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on
%D 2008
%J Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on
%K folksonomies ontology
%P 13-18
%R 10.1109/ASEW.2008.4686305
%T Bridging ontologies and folksonomies to leverage knowledge sharing on the social Web: A brief survey
%X Social tagging systems have recently became very popular as a means to classify large sets of resources shared among on-line communities over the social Web. However, the folksonomies resulting from the use of these systems revealed limitations : tags are ambiguous and their spelling may vary, and folksonomies are difficult to exploit in order to retrieve or exchange information. This article compares the recent attempts to overcome these limitations and to support the use of folksonomies with formal languages and ontologies from the Semantic Web.
@inproceedings{Limpens2008,
abstract = {Social tagging systems have recently became very popular as a means to classify large sets of resources shared among on-line communities over the social Web. However, the folksonomies resulting from the use of these systems revealed limitations : tags are ambiguous and their spelling may vary, and folksonomies are difficult to exploit in order to retrieve or exchange information. This article compares the recent attempts to overcome these limitations and to support the use of folksonomies with formal languages and ontologies from the Semantic Web.},
added-at = {2011-01-11T13:33:27.000+0100},
author = {Limpens, Freddy and Gandon, Fabien and Buffa, Michel},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2407f373bfc2d60880a7bbb8d99454f37/enitsirhc},
booktitle = {Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on},
doi = {10.1109/ASEW.2008.4686305},
interhash = {cb1d534be80d664a50df66e8977b774e},
intrahash = {407f373bfc2d60880a7bbb8d99454f37},
journal = {Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on},
keywords = {folksonomies ontology},
month = {Sept.},
pages = {13-18},
timestamp = {2011-11-24T13:59:49.000+0100},
title = {Bridging ontologies and folksonomies to leverage knowledge sharing on the social Web: A brief survey},
year = 2008
}