March 2009

Mar
30

Thunder in the Desert

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Mar
28

Queen’s Park Hawk

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Mar
27

HT09 workshop: Semiotic dynamics in online social communities

Proposers

Vittorio Loreto
University of Rome “La Sapienza”
vittorio.loreto@roma1.infn.it

Andrea Capocci
University of Rome “La Sapienza”
andrea.capocci@gmail.com

Description

In the last few years, social annotation through the World Wide Web has shifted from its pioneering early stage to its current technological maturity: popular collaborative tagging communities are attended for many purposes by millions of users worldwide. The TAGora FET EU research project, among a wider community of scholars, has closely accompanied this evolution, by analyzing several collaborative networks born at a high rate during this time. Through deep statistical analysis, many common regularities have been uncovered throughout such systems. As a result, features found in such communities are now considered somewhat “universal”, telling researchers about the underlying social structure and semantics.

Moreover, the research groups involved in TAGora have directly impacted on such evolution, by conceiving and implementing novel projects and algorithms to enhance the power of online collaborative tagging. Websites such as Bibsonomy.org or applications such as MyTag and Tagster embody the wide knowledge developed within TAGora, taking advantage of the theoretical investigation and translating it into practical projects.

However, most of the theoretical work has not fully deployed its applicative potential yet. The study of relevance evaluation techniques, of multiple folksonomy integration and of the sociology of social tagging are still open to scientists’ contribution and the object of ongoing research. Accordingly, the workshop will consist in invited contributions reviewing the work already accomplished within TAGora by the authors themselves and possibly a small number of invited speakers, to disseminate to the general public the main results achieved so far and discuss newborn methods and future applications in such field with the community. The contributions will mainly focus on the following topics:

Non-exaustive list of topics

Collective phenomena in collaborative tagging systems
Cross-folksonomy users’ studies
Models for users’ tagging strategies
Semantics of large shared vocabularies
Recommendation strategies and algorithms

Format

The workshop will run a half day. Presentations will be preferably short (< 15 minutes) in order to leave room for open discussion, involving both experts and general audience.

Workshop Organizing Committee

Vittorio Loreto (University of Rome “La Sapienza” - ISI, Turin, Italy)
Steffen Staab (University of Koblenz, Germany)
Harith Alani (University of Southampton, UK)
Gerd Stumme (University of Kassel, Germany)
Luc Steels (Sony Computer Science Lab, Paris, France)

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Mar
27

You better save this as publication…

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Mar
27

You better save this as publication…

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Mar
26

Stargazing

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Mar
26

Social Collider

Social Collider

The Social Collider reveals cross-connections between conversations on Twitter.

With the Internet's promise of instant and absolute connectedness, two things appear to be curiously underrepresented: both temporal and lateral perspective of our data-trails. Yet, the amount of data we are constantly producing provides a whole world of contexts, many of which can reveal astonishing relationships if only looked at through time.

This experiment explores these possibilities by starting with messages on the microblogging-platform Twitter. One can search for usernames or topics, which are tracked through time and visualized much like the way a particle collider draws pictures of subatomic matter. Posts that didn't resonate with anyone just connect to the next item in the stream. The ones that did, however, spin off and horizontally link to users or topics who relate to them, either directly or in terms of their content.

The Social Collider acts as a metaphorical instrument which can be used to make visible how memes get created and how they propagate. Ideally, it might catch the Zeitgeist at work.

You can read more about the project here.

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Mar
26

3D Dewey Data Visualization

3D Dewey Data Visualization

Wanting to explore a variety of topics, such as 3D Space, particle systems, OpenGL, Java, alpha blending, bill boarding, user interactivity, self-organizing algorithms, and electromagnetic attractions & repulsion, Syed Reza Ali produced another experimental visualization on Library record data.

Syed used one year's (2008) transaction data (books, DVDs, etc) from the Seattle Public Library, in order to drive this visualization. Each particle/sphere is given properties, pertaining to each category/subcategory of the Dewey system it represents and the amount of checked out items in that category. This allows users to quickly view all the categories in a 3D space and differentiate which category had more traffic for the specific month and what sub-category was most popular. The visualization could also accommodate automatic updating to show popularity throughout the day at the library. A physics system is used to separate the nodes evenly on the surface of the sphere (via electromagnetic repulsion), while a specific algorithm clusters the category-related nodes together.

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Mar
25

CiteSmart

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Mar
25

CiteSmart

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