FolkTrails: Interpreting Navigation Behavior in a Social Tagging System
T. Niebler, M. Becker, D. Zoller, S. Doerfel, and A. Hotho. Proceedings of the 25th ACM International on Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2016)forthcoming.
Abstract
Social tagging systems have established themselves as a quick and easy way to organize information by annotating resources with tags. In recent work, user behavior in social tagging systems was studied, that is, how users assign tags, and consume content. However, it is still unclear how users make use of the navigation options they are given. Understanding their behavior and differences in behavior of different user groups is an important step towards assessing the effectiveness of a navigational concept and of improving it to better suit the users’ needs. In this work, we investigate navigation trails in the popular scholarly social tagging system BibSonomy from six years of log data. We discuss dynamic browsing behavior of the general user population and show that different navigational subgroups exhibit different navigational traits. Furthermore, we provide strong evidence that the semantic nature of the underlying folksonomy is an essential factor for explaining navigation.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 niebler2016folktrails
%A Niebler, Thomas
%A Becker, Martin
%A Zoller, Daniel
%A Doerfel, Stephan
%A Hotho, Andreas
%B Proceedings of the 25th ACM International on Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
%C New York, NY, USA
%D 2016
%I ACM
%K 2016 bibsonomy cikm folktrails groups hyptrails myown navigation trails user 2006 folksonomy mining social web
%T FolkTrails: Interpreting Navigation Behavior in a Social Tagging System
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2983323.2983686
%X Social tagging systems have established themselves as a quick and easy way to organize information by annotating resources with tags. In recent work, user behavior in social tagging systems was studied, that is, how users assign tags, and consume content. However, it is still unclear how users make use of the navigation options they are given. Understanding their behavior and differences in behavior of different user groups is an important step towards assessing the effectiveness of a navigational concept and of improving it to better suit the users’ needs. In this work, we investigate navigation trails in the popular scholarly social tagging system BibSonomy from six years of log data. We discuss dynamic browsing behavior of the general user population and show that different navigational subgroups exhibit different navigational traits. Furthermore, we provide strong evidence that the semantic nature of the underlying folksonomy is an essential factor for explaining navigation.
@inproceedings{niebler2016folktrails,
abstract = {Social tagging systems have established themselves as a quick and easy way to organize information by annotating resources with tags. In recent work, user behavior in social tagging systems was studied, that is, how users assign tags, and consume content. However, it is still unclear how users make use of the navigation options they are given. Understanding their behavior and differences in behavior of different user groups is an important step towards assessing the effectiveness of a navigational concept and of improving it to better suit the users’ needs. In this work, we investigate navigation trails in the popular scholarly social tagging system BibSonomy from six years of log data. We discuss dynamic browsing behavior of the general user population and show that different navigational subgroups exhibit different navigational traits. Furthermore, we provide strong evidence that the semantic nature of the underlying folksonomy is an essential factor for explaining navigation.},
added-at = {2016-11-24T12:24:24.000+0100},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
author = {Niebler, Thomas and Becker, Martin and Zoller, Daniel and Doerfel, Stephan and Hotho, Andreas},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b3b6e9c496fc336dbfc47169647959a2/kde-alumni},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 25th ACM International on Conference on Information and Knowledge Management},
interhash = {e2417e87eb95086190374f2a4a36cae5},
intrahash = {b3b6e9c496fc336dbfc47169647959a2},
keywords = {2016 bibsonomy cikm folktrails groups hyptrails myown navigation trails user 2006 folksonomy mining social web},
note = {forthcoming},
publisher = {ACM},
series = {CIKM '16},
timestamp = {2016-11-29T17:46:25.000+0100},
title = {FolkTrails: Interpreting Navigation Behavior in a Social Tagging System},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2983323.2983686},
year = 2016
}