@article{benz2010social, abstract = {Social resource sharing systems are central elements of the Web 2.0 and use the same kind of lightweight knowledge representation, called folksonomy. Their large user communities and ever-growing networks of user-generated content have made them an attractive object of investigation for researchers from different disciplines like Social Network Analysis, Data Mining, Information Retrieval or Knowledge Discovery. In this paper, we summarize and extend our work on different aspects of this branch of Web 2.0 research, demonstrated and evaluated within our own social bookmark and publication sharing system BibSonomy, which is currently among the three most popular systems of its kind. We structure this presentation along the different interaction phases of a user with our system, coupling the relevant research questions of each phase with the corresponding implementation issues. This approach reveals in a systematic fashion important aspects and results of the broad bandwidth of folksonomy research like capturing of emergent semantics, spam detection, ranking algorithms, analogies to search engine log data, personalized tag recommendations and information extraction techniques. We conclude that when integrating a real-life application like BibSonomy into research, certain constraints have to be considered; but in general, the tight interplay between our scientific work and the running system has made BibSonomy a valuable platform for demonstrating and evaluating Web 2.0 research.}, address = {Berlin / Heidelberg}, author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd}, doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4}, interhash = {57fe43734b18909a24bf5bf6608d2a09}, intrahash = {c9437d5ec56ba949f533aeec00f571e3}, issn = {1066-8888}, journal = {The VLDB Journal}, month = dec, number = 6, pages = {849--875}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy}, url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/benz2010social.pdf}, volume = 19, year = 2010 } @article{hotho2010publikationsmanagement, abstract = {Kooperative Verschlagwortungs- bzw. Social-Bookmarking-Systeme wie Delicious, Mister Wong oder auch unser eigenes System BibSonomy erfreuen sich immer gr{\"o}{\ss}erer Beliebtheit und bilden einen zentralen Bestandteil des heutigen Web 2.0. In solchen Systemen erstellen Nutzer leichtgewichtige Begriffssysteme, sogenannte Folksonomies, die die Nutzerdaten strukturieren. Die einfache Bedienbarkeit, die Allgegenw{\"a}rtigkeit, die st{\"a}ndige Verf{\"u}gbarkeit, aber auch die M{\"o}glichkeit, Gleichgesinnte spontan in solchen Systemen zu entdecken oder sie schlicht als Informationsquelle zu nutzen, sind Gr{\"u}nde f{\"u}r ihren gegenw{\"a}rtigen Erfolg. Der Artikel f{\"u}hrt den Begriff Social Bookmarking ein und diskutiert zentrale Elemente (wie Browsing und Suche) am Beispiel von BibSonomy anhand typischer Arbeitsabl{\"a}ufe eines Wissenschaftlers. Wir beschreiben die Architektur von BibSonomy sowie Wege der Integration und Vernetzung von BibSonomy mit Content-Management-Systemen und Webauftritten. Der Artikel schlie{\ss}t mit Querbez{\"u}gen zu aktuellen Forschungsfragen im Bereich Social Bookmarking.}, author = {Hotho, Andreas and Benz, Dominik and Eisterlehner, Folke and J{\"a}schke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd}, file = {dpunkt Product page:http\://hmd.dpunkt.de/271/05.html:URL}, interhash = {4555775b639fe1ec65a302a61ee6532c}, intrahash = {250d83c41fb10b89c73f54bd7040bd6e}, issn = {1436-3011}, journal = {HMD -- Praxis der Wirtschaftsinformatik}, month = {#feb#}, pages = {47-58}, title = {{Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy -- ein Social-Bookmarking-System f{\"u}r Wissenschaftler}}, volume = {Heft 271}, year = 2010 } @article{jaeschke2008discovering, abstract = {Social bookmarking tools are rapidly emerging on the Web. In such systems users are setting up lightweight conceptual structures called folksonomies. Unlike ontologies, shared conceptualizations are not formalized, but rather implicit. We present a new data mining task, the mining of all frequent tri-concepts, together with an efficient algorithm, for discovering these implicit shared conceptualizations. Our approach extends the data mining task of discovering all closed itemsets to three-dimensional data structures to allow for mining folksonomies. We provide a formal definition of the problem, and present an efficient algorithm for its solution. Finally, we show the applicability of our approach on three large real-world examples.}, author = {Jäschke, Robert and Hotho, Andreas and Schmitz, Christoph and Ganter, Bernhard and Stumme, Gerd}, booktitle = {Semantic Web and Web 2.0}, interhash = {cfca594f9dbe30694bfbcdeb40dc4e88}, intrahash = {63901930c137df0c2dad84075c564b14}, journal = {Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web}, month = feb, number = 1, pages = {38--53}, title = {Discovering Shared Conceptualizations in Folksonomies}, url = {http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B758F-4R53WD4-1/2/ae56bd6e7132074272ca2035be13781b}, volume = 6, year = 2008 }