2011
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3199501
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Categorising Social Tags to Improve Folksonomy-Based Recommendations

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Cited by 42 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Despite the fact that there is not a clear correlation between tag/keyword frequencies in Delicious folksonomy and the Web, we found out significant and diverse nonlinear correlations between the semantic similarities obtained with our approach in Delicious folksonomy, and the semantic distances computed with the Google Similarity Distance with Web search results. As shown in Table 8, Jaccard and Dice similarities do have a Spearman correlation value of -0.35 7 . This result supports the motivation of exploiting our semantic contextualisation approach to enhance folksonomy-based personalised web search [21] and recommendation [6].…”
Section: Tag Similaritiesmentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Despite the fact that there is not a clear correlation between tag/keyword frequencies in Delicious folksonomy and the Web, we found out significant and diverse nonlinear correlations between the semantic similarities obtained with our approach in Delicious folksonomy, and the semantic distances computed with the Google Similarity Distance with Web search results. As shown in Table 8, Jaccard and Dice similarities do have a Spearman correlation value of -0.35 7 . This result supports the motivation of exploiting our semantic contextualisation approach to enhance folksonomy-based personalised web search [21] and recommendation [6].…”
Section: Tag Similaritiesmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…There are approaches that attempt to identify the actual meaning of a tag by linking it with structured knowledge bases [19,1,11,7]. These approaches rely on the availability of external knowledge resources, and so far are preliminary and have not been applied to personalisation and recommendation.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Tagging involves the assignment of unrestricted keywords to all kinds of content [11]. These assignments can assist to build up a knowledge repository which contains related useful information on a certain topic.…”
Section: A Taggingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We chose the Wilcoxon rank-sum test over the more commonly used two-samples t-test because we can not make any assumption about the normality of the distributions of the ratings. We observe that more sophisticated techniques for filtering out irrelevant tags can be implemented; for instance, as shown in [9], one can categorize tags in different semantic groups and then treat them as having different relevance weights. Denoting with T R u (i) the set of relevant tags assigned by user u on item i, UserItemRelTags predicts user ratings as follows:…”
Section: Useritemreltagsmentioning
confidence: 99%