The SCOT(Social Semantic Cloud Of Tags) ontology is to semantically represent the structure and semantics of a collection of tags and to represent social networks among users based on the tags.
The growing popularity of social tagging systems promises to alleviate the knowledge bottleneck that slows the full materialization of the Semantic Web, as these systems are cheap, extendable, scalable and respond quickly to user needs. However, for the sake of knowledge workflow, one needs to find a compromise between the ungoverned nature of folksonomies and the controlled vocabulary of domain-experts. In this paper, we address this concern by first devising a method that automatically combines folksonomies with domain-expert ontologies resulting in an enriched folksonomy. We then introduce a new algorithm based on frequent itemsets mining that efficiently learns an ontology over the concepts present in the enriched folksonomy. Moreover, we propose a new benchmark for ontology evaluation, which is used in the context of information finding, since this is one of the leading motivations for using ontologies in social tagging systems, to quantitatively assess our method. We conduct experiments on real data and empirically show the effectiveness of our approach.
In this website you can find information about folksonomies, their strenghts and weaknesses, and Sem4Tags an approach to improve multilingual folksonomies using semantic web techniques. In addition, there is information about the developed demo software to associate tags with semantic entities.
This specification describes the FOAF language, defined as a dictionary of named properties and classes using W3C's RDF technology.
FOAF is a project devoted to linking people and information using the Web. Regardless of whether information is in people's heads, in physical or digital documents, or in the form of factual data, it can be linked. FOAF integrates three kinds of network: social networks of human collaboration, friendship and association; representational networks that describe a simplified view of a cartoon universe in factual terms, and information networks that use Web-based linking to share independently published descriptions of this inter-connected world. FOAF does not compete with socially-oriented Web sites; rather it provides an approach in which different sites can tell different parts of the larger story, and by which users can retain some control over their information in a non-proprietary format.
C. Schmitz, A. Hotho, R. Jäschke, and G. Stumme. Data Science and Classification: Proc. of the 10th IFCS Conf., page 261--270. Berlin, Heidelberg, Springer, (2006)
M. Barla, and M. Bieliková. Computational Collective Intelligence. Semantic Web, Social Networks and Multiagent System, volume 5796 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 309-320. Springer, (2009)
J. Tang, H. fung Leung, Q. Luo, D. Chen, and J. Gong. IJCAI'09: Proceedings of the 21st international jont conference on Artifical intelligence, page 2089--2094. San Francisco, CA, USA, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., (2009)
C. Van Damme, T. Coenen, and E. Vandijck. chapter Turning a Corporate Folksonomy into a Lightweight Corporate Ontology, page 36--47. Springer Berlin, (2008)
D. Laniado, D. Eynard, and M. Colombetti. Semantic Web Application and Perspectives - Fourth Italian Semantic Web Workshop, page 192--201. (December 2007)
D. Laniado, D. Eynard, and M. Colombetti. Semantic Web Application and Perspectives - Fourth Italian Semantic Web Workshop, page 192--201. (December 2007)
F. Limpens, F. Gandon, and M. Buffa. Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on, (September 2008)
T. Rattenbury, N. Good, and M. Naaman. SIGIR '07: Proceedings of the 30th Annual International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval, page 103--110. New York, NY, USA, ACM Press, (2007)
J. Tang, H. fung Leung, Q. Luo, D. Chen, and J. Gong. IJCAI'09: Proceedings of the 21st international jont conference on Artifical intelligence, page 2089--2094. San Francisco, CA, USA, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers Inc., (2009)
C. Schmitz, A. Hotho, R. J�schke, and G. Stumme. Data Science and Classification: Proc. of the 10th IFCS Conf., page 261--270. Berlin, Heidelberg, Springer, (2006)
M. Barla, and M. Bielikov�. Computational Collective Intelligence. Semantic Web, Social Networks
and Multiagent System, volume 5796 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 309-320. Springer, (2009)
C. Damme, M. Hepp, and K. Siorpaes. In Proceedings of the ESWC Workshop ``Bridging the Gap between Semantic
Web and Web 2.0'' (SemNet 2007), page 57--70. (2007)
H. Kim, S. Scerri, J. Breslin, S. Decker, and H. Kim. Proceedings of the 2008 International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications, page 128--137. Berlin, Deutschland, Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, (2008)
A. Plangprasopchok, K. Lerman, and L. Getoor. Proceedings of the 4th ACM Web Search and Data Mining Conference, (2010)cite arxiv:1011.3557Comment: In Proceedings of the 4th ACM Web Search and Data Mining Conference (WSDM).
G. Solskinnsbakk, and J. Gulla. On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems, OTM 2010, volume 6427 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg, (2010)
N. Tomuro, and A. Shepitsen. Proceedings of the 2009 Workshop on The People's Web Meets NLP: Collaboratively Constructed Semantic Resources, page 42--50. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2009)
F. Limpens, F. Gandon, and M. Buffa. Automated Software Engineering - Workshops, 2008. ASE Workshops 2008. 23rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on, (September 2008)
P. Mika. The Semantic Web - ISWC 2005, Proceedings of the 4th International Semantic Web Conference, ISWC 2005, Galway, Ireland, November 6-10, volume 3729 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 522-536. Springer, (2005)
A. Plangprasopchok, K. Lerman, and L. Getoor. Proceedings of the 16th ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, page 949--958. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2010)