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What is Folksonomies

Handbook of Research on Web 2.0, 3.0, and X.0: Technologies, Business, and Social Applications
Folksonomy is the result of personal free tagging of information and objects (anything with a URL) for one's own retrieval. The tagging is done in a social environment (usually shared and open to others). Folksonomy is created from the act of tagging by the person consuming the information.
Published in Chapter:
Towards Disambiguating Social Tagging Systems
Antonina Dattolo (University of Udine, Italy), Silvia Duca (University of Bologna, Italy), Francesca Tomasi (University of Bologna, Italy), and Fabio Vitali (University of Bologna, Italy)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-60566-384-5.ch020
Abstract
Social tagging to annotate resources represents one of the innovative aspects introduced with Web 2.0 and the new challenges of the (semantic) Web 3.0. Social tagging, also known as user-generated keywords or folksonomies, implies that keywords, from an arbitrarily large and uncontrolled vocabulary, are used by a large community of readers to describe resources. Despite undeniable success and usefulness of social tagging systems, they also suffer from some drawbacks: the proliferation of social tags, coming as they are from an unrestricted vocabulary leads to ambiguity when determining their intended meaning; the lack of predefined schemas or structures for inserting metadata leads to confusions as to their roles and justification; and the flatness of the structure of the keywords and lack of relationships among them imply difficulties in relating different keywords when they describe the same or similar concepts. So in order to increase precision, in the searches and classifications made possible by folksonomies, some experiences and results from formal classification and subjecting systems are considered, in order to help solve, if not to prevent altogether, the ambiguities that are intrinsic in such systems. Some successful and not so successful approaches as proposed in the scientific literature are discussed, and a few more are introduced here to further help dealing with special cases. In particular, we believe that adding depth and structure to the terms used in folksonomies could help in word sense disambiguation, as well as correctly identifying and classifying proper names, metaphors, and slang words when used as social tags.
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More Results
EduOntoWiki Project for Supporting Social, Educational, and Knowledge Construction Processes with Semantic Web Paradigm
Folksonomies are bottom-up taxonomies that people create on their own, as opposed to being created and imposed by a group or institution such as by professional librarians using complex and lengthy rule sets (e.g., Dewey decimal system or Library of Congress index). Synonyms include folk categorization, social tagging, and ethnoclassification. They are grassroots classification systems for data. The value in folksonomies is derived from many people adding their own tags. The more people tagging one object, the better, because it gives alternative ways of searching for and finding information.
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Accessing, Analyzing, and Extracting Information from User Generated Contents
Contraction of folk (person) and taxonomy, a folksonomy is a decentralized, social approach to creating classification data (metadata)
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From Web to Web 2.0 and E-Learning 2.0
According Stock (2007) In order to index documents the producer’s and consumer’s of information apply the method of folksonomy, which is a kind of collaborative free keyword indexing. There are no indexing rules, everyone can tag a document with his or her favorite words. (p.97)
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Could Web 2.0 Technologies Support Knowledge Management in Organizations?
The collaborative final-user practice of creating and managing tags to annotate and categorize content on the Web.
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The Virtual Public Sphere
Folksonomies allow Internet users to categorize Web pages, photographs, and links. This labelling process is called “tagging,” and the result is an improved quality of search results.
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