Lorince, J.; Joseph, K. & Todd, P.
(2015):
Analysis of Music Tagging and Listening Patterns: Do Tags Really Function as Retrieval Aids?.
In: Social Computing, Behavioral-Cultural Modeling, and Prediction.
9021. Aufl./Vol..
Hrsg./Editors: Agarwal, N.; Xu, K. & Osgood, N.
Verlag/Publisher: Springer International Publishing,
Erscheinungsjahr/Year: 2015.
Seiten/Pages: 141-152.
[Volltext] [Kurzfassung] [BibTeX]
[Endnote]
In collaborative tagging systems, it is generally assumed that users assign tags to facilitate retrieval of content at a later time. There is, however, little behavioral evidence that tags actually serve this purpose. Using a large-scale dataset from the social music website Last.fm, we explore how patterns of music tagging and subsequent listening interact to determine if there exist measurable signals of tags functioning as retrieval aids. Specifically, we describe our methods for testing if the assignment of a tag tends to lead to an increase in listening behavior. Results suggest that tagging, on average, leads to only very small increases in listening rates, and overall the data do
@incollection{lorince2015analysis,
author = {Lorince, Jared and Joseph, Kenneth and Todd, PeterM.},
title = {Analysis of Music Tagging and Listening Patterns: Do Tags Really Function as Retrieval Aids?},
editor = {Agarwal, Nitin and Xu, Kevin and Osgood, Nathaniel},
booktitle = {Social Computing, Behavioral-Cultural Modeling, and Prediction},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
year = {2015},
volume = {9021},
pages = {141-152},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16268-3_15},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-16268-3_15},
isbn = {978-3-319-16267-6},
keywords = {tagging, last.fm, folksonomy, retrieval, usage},
abstract = {In collaborative tagging systems, it is generally assumed that users assign tags to facilitate retrieval of content at a later time. There is, however, little behavioral evidence that tags actually serve this purpose. Using a large-scale dataset from the social music website Last.fm, we explore how patterns of music tagging and subsequent listening interact to determine if there exist measurable signals of tags functioning as retrieval aids. Specifically, we describe our methods for testing if the assignment of a tag tends to lead to an increase in listening behavior. Results suggest that tagging, on average, leads to only very small increases in listening rates, and overall the data do }
}
%0 = incollection
%A = Lorince, Jared and Joseph, Kenneth and Todd, PeterM.
%B = Social Computing, Behavioral-Cultural Modeling, and Prediction
%D = 2015
%I = Springer International Publishing
%T = Analysis of Music Tagging and Listening Patterns: Do Tags Really Function as Retrieval Aids?
%U = http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-16268-3_15
Lorince, J.; Zorowitz, S.; Murdock, J. & Todd, P.
(2014):
“Supertagger” Behavior in Building Folksonomies.
[BibTeX][Endnote]
@inproceedings{lorince2014supertagger,
author = {Lorince, Jared and Zorowitz, Sam and Murdock, Jaimie and Todd, Peter},
title = {“Supertagger” Behavior in Building Folksonomies},
year = {2014},
keywords = {tagging, supertagger, tag, toRead, distribution, analysis, folksonomy}
}
%0 = inproceedings
%A = Lorince, Jared and Zorowitz, Sam and Murdock, Jaimie and Todd, Peter
%D = 2014
%T = “Supertagger” Behavior in Building Folksonomies