@inproceedings{doerfel2012leveraging, abstract = {The ever-growing flood of new scientific articles requires novel retrieval mechanisms. One means for mitigating this instance of the information overload phenomenon are collaborative tagging systems, that allow users to select, share and annotate references to publications. These systems employ recommendation algorithms to present to their users personalized lists of interesting and relevant publications. In this paper we analyze different ways to incorporate social data and metadata from collaborative tagging systems into the graph-based ranking algorithm FolkRank to utilize it for recommending scientific articles to users of the social bookmarking system BibSonomy. We compare the results to those of Collaborative Filtering, which has previously been applied for resource recommendation.}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, author = {Doerfel, Stephan and Jäschke, Robert and Hotho, Andreas and Stumme, Gerd}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 4th ACM RecSys workshop on Recommender systems and the social web}, doi = {10.1145/2365934.2365937}, interhash = {beb2c81daf975eeed6e01e1b412196b1}, intrahash = {64bf590675a833770b7d284871435a8d}, isbn = {978-1-4503-1638-5}, location = {Dublin, Ireland}, month = sep, pages = {9--16}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {Leveraging Publication Metadata and Social Data into FolkRank for Scientific Publication Recommendation }, url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2365934.2365937}, year = 2012 } @inproceedings{landia2012extending, abstract = {Real-world tagging datasets have a large proportion of new/ untagged documents. Few approaches for recommending tags to a user for a document address this new item problem, concentrating instead on artificially created post-core datasets where it is guaranteed that the user as well as the document of each test post is known to the system and already has some tags assigned to it. In order to recommend tags for new documents, approaches are required which model documents not only based on the tags assigned to them in the past (if any), but also the content. In this paper we present a novel adaptation to the widely recognised FolkRank tag recommendation algorithm by including content data. We adapt the FolkRank graph to use word nodes instead of document nodes, enabling it to recommend tags for new documents based on their textual content. Our adaptations make FolkRank applicable to post-core 1 ie. the full real-world tagging datasets and address the new item problem in tag recommendation. For comparison, we also apply and evaluate the same methodology of including content on a simpler tag recommendation algorithm. This results in a less expensive recommender which suggests a combination of user related and document content related tags. Including content data into FolkRank shows an improvement over plain FolkRank on full tagging datasets. However, we also observe that our simpler content-aware tag recommender outperforms FolkRank with content data. Our results suggest that an optimisation of the weighting method of FolkRank is required to achieve better results.}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, author = {Landia, Nikolas and Anand, Sarabjot Singh and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Doerfel, Stephan and Mitzlaff, Folke}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 4th ACM RecSys workshop on Recommender systems and the social web}, doi = {10.1145/2365934.2365936}, interhash = {7400e35f8d412d15722fe3399aba14a3}, intrahash = {b16dabcd7e17b673c34608ac820ce3c7}, isbn = {978-1-4503-1638-5}, location = {Dublin, Ireland}, month = sep, pages = {1--8}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {Extending FolkRank with Content Data}, url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2365934.2365936}, year = 2012 } @inproceedings{gemmell2009improving, abstract = {Collaborative tagging applications allow users to annotate online resources. The result is a complex tapestry of interrelated users, resources and tags often called a folksonomy. Folksonomies present an attractive target for data mining applications such as tag recommenders. A challenge of tag recommendation remains the adaptation of traditional recommendation techniques originally designed to work with two dimensional data. To date the most successful recommenders have been graph based approaches which explicitly connects all three components of the folksonomy. In this paper we speculate that graph based tag recommendation can be improved by coupling it with item-based collaborative filtering. We motive this hypothesis with a discussion of informational channels in folksonomies and provide a theoretical explanation of the additive potential for item-based collaborative filtering. We then provided experimental results on hybrid tag recommenders built from graph models and other techniques based on popularity, user-based collaborative filtering and item-based collaborative filtering. We demonstrate that a hybrid recommender built from a graph based model and item-based collaborative filtering outperforms its constituent recommenders. furthermore the inability of the other recommenders to improve upon the graph-based approach suggests that they offer information already included in the graph based model. These results confirm our conjecture. We provide extensive evaluation of the hybrids using data collected from three real world collaborative tagging applications.}, author = {Gemmell, Jonathan and Schimoler, Thomas R. and Christiansen, Laura and Mobasher, Bamshad}, booktitle = {ACM RecSys'09 Workshop on Recommender Systems and the Social Web}, editor = {Jannach, Dietmar and Geyer, Werner and Freyne, Jill and Anand, Sarabjot Singh and Dugan, Casey and Mobasher, Bamshad and Kobsa, Alfred}, interhash = {0900f921d87c5ee19a4ed2c70e5a71df}, intrahash = {6b1ff3b7b691b84288fb7122968134c4}, issn = {1613-0073}, month = oct, pages = {17--24}, series = {CEUR-WS.org}, title = {Improving Folkrank With Item-Based Collaborative Filtering}, url = {http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-532/paper3.pdf}, volume = 532, year = 2009 }