Benz, D.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Mitzlaff, F.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy.
In: The VLDB Journal,
Ausgabe/Number: 6,
Vol. 19,
Verlag/Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc..
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 849-875.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
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.
@article{Benz:2010:SBP:1921763.1921804,
author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy},
journal = {The VLDB Journal},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.},
address = {Secaucus, NJ, USA},
year = {2010},
volume = {19},
number = {6},
pages = {849--875},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
issn = {1066-8888},
keywords = {publicationmanagment, bookmark, publikationsmanagment, social, myown, bibsonomy, publication, management},
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.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Secaucus, NJ, USA
%D = 2010
%I = Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
%T = The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy
%U = http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4
Benz, D.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Mitzlaff, F.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy.
In: The VLDB Journal,
Ausgabe/Number: 6,
Vol. 19,
Verlag/Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc..
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 849-875.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
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.
@article{benz2010social,
author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy},
journal = {The VLDB Journal},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.},
address = {Secaucus, NJ, USA},
year = {2010},
volume = {19},
number = {6},
pages = {849--875},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
issn = {1066-8888},
keywords = {bookmark, social, benz},
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.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Secaucus, NJ, USA
%D = 2010
%I = Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
%T = The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy
%U = http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4
Benz, D.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Mitzlaff, F.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy.
In: The VLDB Journal,
Ausgabe/Number: 6,
Vol. 19,
Verlag/Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc..
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 849-875.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
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.
@article{benz2010social,
author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy},
journal = {The VLDB Journal},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.},
address = {Secaucus, NJ, USA},
year = {2010},
volume = {19},
number = {6},
pages = {849--875},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
issn = {1066-8888},
keywords = {bookmark, bibtex, social, publication, management},
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.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Secaucus, NJ, USA
%D = 2010
%I = Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
%T = The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System Bibsonomy
%U = http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4
Benz, D.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Mitzlaff, F.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy.
In: The VLDB Journal,
Ausgabe/Number: 6,
Vol. 19,
Verlag/Publisher: Springer.
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 849-875.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
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.
@article{benz2010social,
author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy},
journal = {The VLDB Journal},
publisher = {Springer},
address = {Berlin / Heidelberg},
year = {2010},
volume = {19},
number = {6},
pages = {849--875},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/benz2010social.pdf},
doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
issn = {1066-8888},
keywords = {vldb, system, collaborative, social, 2010, folksonomy, publication, management},
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.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Berlin / Heidelberg
%D = 2010
%I = Springer
%T = The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy
%U = http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/benz2010social.pdf
Benz, D.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Mitzlaff, F.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy.
In: The VLDB Journal,
Ausgabe/Number: 6,
Vol. 19,
Verlag/Publisher: Springer.
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 849-875.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
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.
@article{benz2010social,
author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy},
journal = {The VLDB Journal},
publisher = {Springer},
address = {Berlin / Heidelberg},
year = {2010},
volume = {19},
number = {6},
pages = {849--875},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/benz2010social.pdf},
doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
issn = {1066-8888},
keywords = {tagging, taggingsurvey, vldb, system, social, 2010, myown, bibsonomy, publication},
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.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Berlin / Heidelberg
%D = 2010
%I = Springer
%T = The Social Bookmark and Publication Management System BibSonomy
%U = http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/benz2010social.pdf
Benz, D.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Mitzlaff, F.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
The social bookmark and publication management system BibSonomy.
In: The VLDB Journal,
Verlag/Publisher: Springer.
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
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.
@article{benz2010social,
author = {Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The social bookmark and publication management system BibSonomy},
journal = {The VLDB Journal},
publisher = {Springer},
address = {Berlin / Heidelberg},
year = {2010},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
doi = {10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4},
issn = {1066-8888},
keywords = {itegpub, BibSonomy, system, bookmark, social, l3s, 2010, VLDB, myown, VLDBJ, publication, management},
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.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Benz, Dominik and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Mitzlaff, Folke and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Berlin / Heidelberg
%D = 2010
%I = Springer
%T = The social bookmark and publication management system BibSonomy
%U = http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00778-010-0208-4
Hotho, A.; Benz, D.; Eisterlehner, F.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy - ein Social-Bookmarking-System für Wissenschaftler.
In: HMD - Praxis der Wirtschaftsinformatik,
Vol. 271,
Verlag/Publisher: dpunkt.verlag.
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 47-58.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
Kooperative Verschlagwortungs- bzw. Social-Bookmarking-Systeme wie Delicious, Mister Wong oder auch unser eigenes System BibSonomy erfreuen sich immer größerer 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 Allgegenwärtigkeit, die ständige Verfügbarkeit, aber auch die Möglichkeit, Gleichgesinnte spontan in solchen Systemen zu entdecken oder sie schlicht als Informationsquelle zu nutzen, sind Gründe für ihren gegenwärtigen Erfolg. Der Artikel führt den Begriff Social Bookmarking ein und diskutiert zentrale Elemente wie Browsing und Suche am Beispiel von BibSonomy anhand typischer Arbeitsabläufe eines Wissenschaftlers. Wir beschreiben die Architektur von BibSonomy sowie Wege der Integration und Vernetzung von BibSonomy mit Content-Management-Systemen und Webauftritten. Der Artikel schließt mit Querbezügen zu aktuellen Forschungsfragen im Bereich Social Bookmarking.
@article{hotho2010publikationsmanagement,
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Benz, Dominik and Eisterlehner, Folke and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy - ein Social-Bookmarking-System für Wissenschaftler},
editor = {Hengartner, Urs and Meier, Andreas},
journal = {HMD - Praxis der Wirtschaftsinformatik},
publisher = {dpunkt.verlag},
year = {2010},
volume = {271},
pages = {47--58},
url = {http://hmd.dpunkt.de/271/05.php},
issn = {1436-3011},
keywords = {social, 2010, bookmarking, myown, bibsonomy},
abstract = {Kooperative Verschlagwortungs- bzw. Social-Bookmarking-Systeme wie Delicious, Mister Wong oder auch unser eigenes System BibSonomy erfreuen sich immer größerer 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 Allgegenwärtigkeit, die ständige Verfügbarkeit, aber auch die Möglichkeit, Gleichgesinnte spontan in solchen Systemen zu entdecken oder sie schlicht als Informationsquelle zu nutzen, sind Gründe für ihren gegenwärtigen Erfolg. Der Artikel führt den Begriff Social Bookmarking ein und diskutiert zentrale Elemente wie Browsing und Suche am Beispiel von BibSonomy anhand typischer Arbeitsabläufe eines Wissenschaftlers. Wir beschreiben die Architektur von BibSonomy sowie Wege der Integration und Vernetzung von BibSonomy mit Content-Management-Systemen und Webauftritten. Der Artikel schließt mit Querbezügen zu aktuellen Forschungsfragen im Bereich Social Bookmarking.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Hotho, Andreas and Benz, Dominik and Eisterlehner, Folke and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%D = 2010
%I = dpunkt.verlag
%T = Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy - ein Social-Bookmarking-System für Wissenschaftler
%U = http://hmd.dpunkt.de/271/05.php
Hotho, A.; Benz, D.; Eisterlehner, F.; Jäschke, R.; Krause, B.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2010):
Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy - ein Social-Bookmarking-System für Wissenschaftler.
In: HMD -- Praxis der Wirtschaftsinformatik,
Vol. Heft 271,
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2010.
Seiten/Pages: 47-58.
[Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
Kooperative Verschlagwortungs- bzw. Social-Bookmarking-Systeme wie Delicious, Mister Wong oder auch unser eigenes System BibSonomy erfreuen sich immer größerer 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 Allgegenwärtigkeit, die ständige Verfügbarkeit, aber auch die Möglichkeit, Gleichgesinnte spontan in solchen Systemen zu entdecken oder sie schlicht als Informationsquelle zu nutzen, sind Gründe für ihren gegenwärtigen Erfolg. Der Artikel führt den Begriff Social Bookmarking ein und diskutiert zentrale Elemente (wie Browsing und Suche) am Beispiel von BibSonomy anhand typischer Arbeitsabläufe eines Wissenschaftlers. Wir beschreiben die Architektur von BibSonomy sowie Wege der Integration und Vernetzung von BibSonomy mit Content-Management-Systemen und Webauftritten. Der Artikel schließt mit Querbezügen zu aktuellen Forschungsfragen im Bereich Social Bookmarking.
@article{hotho2010publikationsmanagement,
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Benz, Dominik and Eisterlehner, Folke and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy -- ein Social-Bookmarking-System für Wissenschaftler},
journal = {HMD -- Praxis der Wirtschaftsinformatik},
year = {2010},
volume = {Heft 271},
pages = {47-58},
issn = {1436-3011},
keywords = {tagging, taggingsurvey, 2.0, social, 2010, bookmarking, myown, bibsonomy, web},
abstract = {Kooperative Verschlagwortungs- bzw. Social-Bookmarking-Systeme wie Delicious, Mister Wong oder auch unser eigenes System BibSonomy erfreuen sich immer größerer 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 Allgegenwärtigkeit, die ständige Verfügbarkeit, aber auch die Möglichkeit, Gleichgesinnte spontan in solchen Systemen zu entdecken oder sie schlicht als Informationsquelle zu nutzen, sind Gründe für ihren gegenwärtigen Erfolg. Der Artikel führt den Begriff Social Bookmarking ein und diskutiert zentrale Elemente (wie Browsing und Suche) am Beispiel von BibSonomy anhand typischer Arbeitsabläufe eines Wissenschaftlers. Wir beschreiben die Architektur von BibSonomy sowie Wege der Integration und Vernetzung von BibSonomy mit Content-Management-Systemen und Webauftritten. Der Artikel schließt mit Querbezügen zu aktuellen Forschungsfragen im Bereich Social Bookmarking.}
}
%0 = article
%A = Hotho, Andreas and Benz, Dominik and Eisterlehner, Folke and Jäschke, Robert and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%D = 2010
%T = Publikationsmanagement mit BibSonomy -- ein Social-Bookmarking-System für Wissenschaftler
Krause, B.; Schmitz, C.; Hotho, A. & Stumme, G.
(2008):
The Anti-Social Tagger - Detecting Spam in Social Bookmarking Systems.
In: Proc. of the Fourth International Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web,
[Volltext]
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{krause2008antisocialb,
author = {Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Hotho, Andreas and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Anti-Social Tagger - Detecting Spam in Social Bookmarking Systems},
booktitle = {Proc. of the Fourth International Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web},
year = {2008},
url = {http://airweb.cse.lehigh.edu/2008/submissions/krause_2008_anti_social_tagger.pdf},
keywords = {2008, systems, folksonomies, 2.0, tagger, web2.0, myown, web, itegpub, tagorapub, social, bookmarking, folksonomy, spam}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Hotho, Andreas and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proc. of the Fourth International Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web
%D = 2008
%T = The Anti-Social Tagger - Detecting Spam in Social Bookmarking Systems
%U = http://airweb.cse.lehigh.edu/2008/submissions/krause_2008_anti_social_tagger.pdf
Krause, B.; Schmitz, C.; Hotho, A. & Stumme, G.
(2008):
The Anti-Social Tagger - Detecting Spam in Social Bookmarking Systems.
In: Proc. of the Fourth International Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web,
[Volltext]
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{krause2008antisocialb,
author = {Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Hotho, Andreas and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {The Anti-Social Tagger - Detecting Spam in Social Bookmarking Systems},
booktitle = {Proc. of the Fourth International Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web},
year = {2008},
url = {http://airweb.cse.lehigh.edu/2008/submissions/krause_2008_anti_social_tagger.pdf},
keywords = {systems, 2008, folksonomies, 2.0, tagger, web2.0, web, itegpub, tagorapub, social, bookmarking, folksonomy, spam}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Hotho, Andreas and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proc. of the Fourth International Workshop on Adversarial Information Retrieval on the Web
%D = 2008
%T = The Anti-Social Tagger - Detecting Spam in Social Bookmarking Systems
%U = http://airweb.cse.lehigh.edu/2008/submissions/krause_2008_anti_social_tagger.pdf
Cattuto, C.; Schmitz, C.; Baldassarri, A.; Servedio, V. D. P.; Loreto, V.; Hotho, A.; Grahl, M. & Stumme, G.
(2007):
Network Properties of Folksonomies.
In: AI Communications,
Ausgabe/Number: 4,
Vol. 20,
Verlag/Publisher: IOS Press.
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2007.
Seiten/Pages: 245-262.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
Social resource sharing systems like YouTube and del.icio.us have acquired a large number of users within the last few years. They provide rich resources for data analysis, information retrieval, and knowledge discovery applications. A first step towards this end is to gain better insights into content and structure of these systems. In this paper, we will analyse the main network characteristics of two of these systems. We consider their underlying data structures - so-called folksonomies - as tri-partite hypergraphs, and adapt classical network measures like characteristic path length and clustering coefficient to them. Subsequently, we introduce a network of tag co-occurrence and investigate some of its statistical properties, focusing on correlations in node connectivity and pointing out features that reflect emergent semantics within the folksonomy. We show that simple statistical indicators unambiguously spot non-social behavior such as spam.
@article{cattuto2007network,
author = {Cattuto, Ciro and Schmitz, Christoph and Baldassarri, Andrea and Servedio, Vito D. P. and Loreto, Vittorio and Hotho, Andreas and Grahl, Miranda and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Network Properties of Folksonomies},
journal = {AI Communications},
publisher = {IOS Press},
address = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands},
year = {2007},
volume = {20},
number = {4},
pages = {245--262},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/cattuto2007network.pdf},
issn = {0921-7126},
keywords = {ol_tut2010, social, analysis, folksonomy, property, network, sna},
abstract = {Social resource sharing systems like YouTube and del.icio.us have acquired a large number of users within the last few years. They provide rich resources for data analysis, information retrieval, and knowledge discovery applications. A first step towards this end is to gain better insights into content and structure of these systems. In this paper, we will analyse the main network characteristics of two of these systems. We consider their underlying data structures - so-called folksonomies - as tri-partite hypergraphs, and adapt classical network measures like characteristic path length and clustering coefficient to them. Subsequently, we introduce a network of tag co-occurrence and investigate some of its statistical properties, focusing on correlations in node connectivity and pointing out features that reflect emergent semantics within the folksonomy. We show that simple statistical indicators unambiguously spot non-social behavior such as spam. }
}
%0 = article
%A = Cattuto, Ciro and Schmitz, Christoph and Baldassarri, Andrea and Servedio, Vito D. P. and Loreto, Vittorio and Hotho, Andreas and Grahl, Miranda and Stumme, Gerd
%C = Amsterdam, The Netherlands
%D = 2007
%I = IOS Press
%T = Network Properties of Folksonomies
%U = http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/cattuto2007network.pdf
Jäschke, R.; Hotho, A.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2007):
Analysis of the Publication Sharing Behaviour in BibSonomy.
In: Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2007),
Berlin, Heidelberg.
[Kurzfassung] [BibTeX][Endnote]
BibSonomy is a web-based social resource sharing system which allows users to organise and share bookmarks and publications in a collaborative manner. In this paper we present the system, followed by a description of the insights in the structure of its bibliographic data that we gained by applying techniques we developed in the area of Formal Concept Analysis.
@inproceedings{jaeschke2007analysis,
author = {Jäschke, Robert and Hotho, Andreas and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Analysis of the Publication Sharing Behaviour in BibSonomy},
editor = {Priss, U. and Polovina, S. and Hill, R.},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2007)},
series = {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
year = {2007},
volume = {4604},
pages = {283--295},
isbn = {3-540-73680-8},
keywords = {2007, l3s, iccs, myown, bibsonomy, publication, itegpub, BibSonomy, trias, sharing, social, folksonomy, bookmarking, fca},
abstract = {BibSonomy is a web-based social resource sharing system which allows users to organise and share bookmarks and publications in a collaborative manner. In this paper we present the system, followed by a description of the insights in the structure of its bibliographic data that we gained by applying techniques we developed in the area of Formal Concept Analysis.}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Jäschke, Robert and Hotho, Andreas and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2007)
%C = Berlin, Heidelberg
%D = 2007
%I = Springer-Verlag
%T = Analysis of the Publication Sharing Behaviour in BibSonomy
Jäschke, R.; Hotho, A.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2007):
Analysis of the Publication Sharing Behaviour in BibSonomy.
In: Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2007),
Berlin, Heidelberg.
[Kurzfassung] [BibTeX][Endnote]
BibSonomy is a web-based social resource sharing system which allows users to organise and share bookmarks and publications in a collaborative manner. In this paper we present the system, followed by a description of the insights in the structure of its bibliographic data that we gained by applying techniques we developed in the area of Formal Concept Analysis.
@inproceedings{jaeschke2007analysis,
author = {Jäschke, Robert and Hotho, Andreas and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Analysis of the Publication Sharing Behaviour in BibSonomy},
editor = {Priss, U. and Polovina, S. and Hill, R.},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2007)},
series = {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
address = {Berlin, Heidelberg},
year = {2007},
volume = {4604},
pages = {283--295},
isbn = {3-540-73680-8},
keywords = {2007, ol_web2.0, widely_related, analysis, l3s, iccs, bibsonomy, emergentsemantics_evidence, trias, social, bookmarking, folksonomy, fca},
abstract = {BibSonomy is a web-based social resource sharing system which allows users to organise and share bookmarks and publications in a collaborative manner. In this paper we present the system, followed by a description of the insights in the structure of its bibliographic data that we gained by applying techniques we developed in the area of Formal Concept Analysis.}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Jäschke, Robert and Hotho, Andreas and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Conceptual Structures (ICCS 2007)
%C = Berlin, Heidelberg
%D = 2007
%I = Springer-Verlag
%T = Analysis of the Publication Sharing Behaviour in BibSonomy
Jäschke, R.; Grahl, M.; Hotho, A.; Krause, B.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2007):
Organizing Publications and Bookmarks in BibSonomy.
In: Workshop on Social and Collaborative Construction of Structured Knowledge (CKC 2007) at WWW 2007,
Banff, Canada.
[Volltext]
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{jaeschke07organizing,
author = {Jäschke, Robert and Grahl, Miranda and Hotho, Andreas and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Organizing Publications and Bookmarks in BibSonomy},
editor = {Alani, Harith and Noy, Natasha and Stumme, Gerd and Mika, Peter and Sure, York and Vrandecic, Denny},
booktitle = {Workshop on Social and Collaborative Construction of Structured Knowledge (CKC 2007) at WWW 2007},
address = {Banff, Canada},
year = {2007},
url = {http://www2007.org/workshops/paper_25.pdf},
keywords = {2007, system, social, folksonomy, bookmarking, myown}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Jäschke, Robert and Grahl, Miranda and Hotho, Andreas and Krause, Beate and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Workshop on Social and Collaborative Construction of Structured Knowledge (CKC 2007) at WWW 2007
%C = Banff, Canada
%D = 2007
%T = Organizing Publications and Bookmarks in BibSonomy
%U = http://www2007.org/workshops/paper_25.pdf
Hoser, B.; Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2006):
Semantic Network Analysis of Ontologies.
In: The Semantic Web: Research and Applications.
4011. Aufl./Vol..
Hrsg./Editors: Sure, Y. & Domingue, J.
Verlag/Publisher: Springer,
Berlin/Heidelberg.
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2006.
Seiten/Pages: 514-529.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
A key argument for modeling knowledge in ontologies is the easy reuse and re-engineering of the knowledge. However, current ontology engineering tools provide only basic functionalities for analyzing ontologies. Since ontologies can be considered as graphs, graph analysis techniques are a suitable answer for this need. Graph analysis has been performed by sociologists for over 60 years, and resulted in the vivid research area of Social Network Analysis (SNA).While social network structures currently receive high attention in the Semantic Web community, there are only very few SNA applications, and virtually none for analyzing the structure of ontologies. We illustrate the benefits of applying SNA to ontologies and the Semantic Web, and discuss which research topics arise on the edge between the two areas. In particular, we discuss how different notions of centrality describe the core content and structure of an ontology. From the rather simple notion of degree centrality over betweenness centrality to the more complex eigenvector centrality, we illustrate the insights these measures provide on two ontologies, which are different in purpose, scope, and size.
@incollection{hoser2006semantic,
author = {Hoser, Bettina and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {Semantic Network Analysis of Ontologies},
editor = {Sure, York and Domingue, John},
booktitle = {The Semantic Web: Research and Applications},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
publisher = {Springer},
address = {Berlin/Heidelberg},
year = {2006},
volume = {4011},
pages = {514--529},
note = {10.1007/11762256_38},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11762256_38},
doi = {10.1007/11762256_38},
isbn = {978-3-540-34544-2},
keywords = {trias_example, 2006, semantic, social, l3s, analysis, iccs_example, network, myown, sna, ontology},
abstract = { A key argument for modeling knowledge in ontologies is the easy reuse and re-engineering of the knowledge. However, current ontology engineering tools provide only basic functionalities for analyzing ontologies. Since ontologies can be considered as graphs, graph analysis techniques are a suitable answer for this need. Graph analysis has been performed by sociologists for over 60 years, and resulted in the vivid research area of Social Network Analysis (SNA).While social network structures currently receive high attention in the Semantic Web community, there are only very few SNA applications, and virtually none for analyzing the structure of ontologies. We illustrate the benefits of applying SNA to ontologies and the Semantic Web, and discuss which research topics arise on the edge between the two areas. In particular, we discuss how different notions of centrality describe the core content and structure of an ontology. From the rather simple notion of degree centrality over betweenness centrality to the more complex eigenvector centrality, we illustrate the insights these measures provide on two ontologies, which are different in purpose, scope, and size. }
}
%0 = incollection
%A = Hoser, Bettina and Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = The Semantic Web: Research and Applications
%C = Berlin/Heidelberg
%D = 2006
%I = Springer
%T = Semantic Network Analysis of Ontologies
%U = http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11762256_38
Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2006):
BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System.
In: Proceedings of the First Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures,
Aalborg.
[Volltext]
[Kurzfassung] [BibTeX][Endnote]
Social bookmark tools are rapidly emerging on the Web. In suchsystems users are setting up lightweight conceptual structurescalled folksonomies. The reason for their immediate success is thefact that no specific skills are needed for participating. In thispaper we specify a formal model for folksonomies and briefly describe our own system BibSonomy, which allows for sharing both bookmarksand publication references in a kind of personal library.
@inproceedings{hotho2006bibsonomy,
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System},
editor = {de Moor, Aldo and Polovina, Simon and Delugach, Harry},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the First Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures},
publisher = {Aalborg Universitetsforlag},
address = {Aalborg},
year = {2006},
pages = {87-102},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/stumme/papers/2006/hotho2006bibsonomy.pdf},
isbn = {87-7307-769-0},
keywords = {nepomuk, tagorapub, OntologyHandbook, 2006, FCA, social, l3s, folksonomy, bookmarking, iccs, bibsonomy},
abstract = {Social bookmark tools are rapidly emerging on the Web. In suchsystems users are setting up lightweight conceptual structurescalled folksonomies. The reason for their immediate success is thefact that no specific skills are needed for participating. In thispaper we specify a formal model for folksonomies and briefly describe our own system BibSonomy, which allows for sharing both bookmarksand publication references in a kind of personal library.}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proceedings of the First Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures
%C = Aalborg
%D = 2006
%I = Aalborg Universitetsforlag
%T = BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System
%U = http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/stumme/papers/2006/hotho2006bibsonomy.pdf
Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2006):
BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System.
In: Proceedings of the Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures,
Aalborg, Denmark.
[Volltext]
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{hjss06bibsonomy,
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System},
editor = {de Moor, Aldo and Polovina, Simon and Delugach, Harry},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures},
publisher = {Aalborg University Press},
address = {Aalborg, Denmark},
year = {2006},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/hotho06bibsonomy.pdf},
isbn = {87-7307-769-0},
keywords = {trias_example, 2006, social, l3s, folksonomy, bookmarking, iccs_example, iccs, myown, bibsonomy}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proceedings of the Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures
%C = Aalborg, Denmark
%D = 2006
%I = Aalborg University Press
%T = BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System
%U = http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/pub/pdf/hotho06bibsonomy.pdf
Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2006):
BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System.
In: Proceedings of the First Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures,
Aalborg.
[Volltext]
[Kurzfassung] [BibTeX][Endnote]
Social bookmark tools are rapidly emerging on the Web. In such systems users are setting up lightweight conceptual structures called folksonomies. The reason for their immediate success is the fact that no specific skills are needed for participating. In this paper we specify a formal model for folksonomies and briefly describe our own system BibSonomy, which allows for sharing both bookmarks and publication references in a kind of personal library.
@inproceedings{hotho2006bibsonomy,
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System},
editor = {de Moor, Aldo and Polovina, Simon and Delugach, Harry},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the First Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures},
publisher = {Aalborg Universitetsforlag},
address = {Aalborg},
year = {2006},
pages = {87-102},
url = {http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/stumme/papers/2006/hotho2006bibsonomy.pdf},
isbn = {87-7307-769-0},
keywords = {description, BibSonomy, system, bookmark, 2006, social, folksonomy, tutorial, kde, reference},
abstract = {Social bookmark tools are rapidly emerging on the Web. In such systems users are setting up lightweight conceptual structures called folksonomies. The reason for their immediate success is the fact that no specific skills are needed for participating. In this paper we specify a formal model for folksonomies and briefly describe our own system BibSonomy, which allows for sharing both bookmarks and publication references in a kind of personal library.}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proceedings of the First Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability Workshop at the 14th International Conference on Conceptual Structures
%C = Aalborg
%D = 2006
%I = Aalborg Universitetsforlag
%T = BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System
%U = http://www.kde.cs.uni-kassel.de/stumme/papers/2006/hotho2006bibsonomy.pdf
Hotho, A.; Jäschke, R.; Schmitz, C. & Stumme, G.
(2006):
BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System.
In: Proc. of the ICCS 2006 Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability
Workshop,
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{hjss06bibsonomy,
author = {Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd},
title = {BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System},
booktitle = {Proc. of the ICCS 2006 Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability
Workshop},
year = {2006},
note = {(to appear)},
keywords = {OntologyHandbook, FCA, social, folksonomy, bookmarking, iccs, bibsonomy}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Hotho, Andreas and Jäschke, Robert and Schmitz, Christoph and Stumme, Gerd
%B = Proc. of the ICCS 2006 Conceptual Structures Tool Interoperability
Workshop
%D = 2006
%T = BibSonomy: A Social Bookmark and Publication Sharing System
Bozsak, E.; Ehrig, M.; Handschuh, S.; Hotho, A.; Maedche, A.; Motik, B.; Oberle, D.; Schmitz, C.; Staab, S.; Stojanovic, L.; Stojanovic, N.; Studer, R.; Stumme, G.; Sure, Y.; Tane, J.; Volz, R. & Zacharias, V.
(2002):
KAON - Towards a large scale Semantic Web.
In: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on E-Commerce and Web Technologies (EC-Web 2002), Aix-en-Provence, France,
[Volltext]
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{bozsak2002towards,
author = {Bozsak, E. and Ehrig, Marc and Handschuh, Siegfried and Hotho, Andreas and Maedche, Alexander and Motik, Boris and Oberle, Daniel and Schmitz, Christoph and Staab, Steffen and Stojanovic, Ljiljana and Stojanovic, Nenad and Studer, Rudi and Stumme, Gerd and Sure, York and Tane, Julien and Volz, Raphael and Zacharias, Valentin},
title = {KAON - Towards a large scale Semantic Web},
editor = {Bauknecht, Kurt and Tjoa, A. Min and Quirchmayr, Gerald},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third International Conference on E-Commerce and Web Technologies (EC-Web 2002), Aix-en-Provence, France},
series = {LNCS},
publisher = {Springer},
year = {2002},
volume = {2455},
pages = {304-313},
url = {http://www.aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de/WBS/ysu/publications/2002_ecweb_kaon.pdf},
keywords = {ontologies, kaon, semantic, 2002, social, l3s, myown, aifb, web, karlsruhe}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Bozsak, E. and Ehrig, Marc and Handschuh, Siegfried and Hotho, Andreas and Maedche, Alexander and Motik, Boris and Oberle, Daniel and Schmitz, Christoph and Staab, Steffen and Stojanovic, Ljiljana and Stojanovic, Nenad and Studer, Rudi and Stumme, Gerd and Sure, York and Tane, Julien and Volz, Raphael and Zacharias, Valentin
%B = Proceedings of the Third International Conference on E-Commerce and Web Technologies (EC-Web 2002), Aix-en-Provence, France
%D = 2002
%I = Springer
%T = KAON - Towards a large scale Semantic Web
%U = http://www.aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de/WBS/ysu/publications/2002_ecweb_kaon.pdf