This research will examine a given set of books and compare their LibraryThing folksonomic tags with their assigned Library of Congress Subject Headings. In particular, I am looking for commonalities and differences in the ways in which these subject languages describe the materials to which they are applied. Can folksonomies be used to enhance subject access to materials in library catalogs? What does user tagging tell us about the way that people think about the subjects of a book? In an information environment where students are so attuned to keyword and Google-style searching, does the application of folksonomic tags increase the findability of library materials
Social tagging systems, known as ‘folksonomies’, represent an important part of web resource discove...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοSocial tagging is one of the most popular of social media applications and...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοEarly literature on tagging has been enthusiastic about the potential that...
This research will examine a given set of books and compare their LibraryThing folksonomic tags wit...
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), one of the standard descriptive languages used in libra...
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), the standard subject language used in library catalogu...
Folksonomies, or user-created taxonomies, are currently used as collaborative tools to describe imag...
This study examines the extent to which LibraryThing tags match their equivalent Library of Congress...
This study examines the extent to which LibraryThing tags match their equivalent Library of Congress...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοSocial tagging aims to generate folksonomies through the users’ collaborat...
While controlled vocabularies, such as the Library of Congress Subject Headings, are an essential co...
The aim of this thesis is to study social tagging in an OPAC by looking at the tags of Ann Arbor Dis...
The internet in its role of Web 2.0 with interactive and participativetools has given birth to the i...
Nowadays, many libraries have developed social tagging services, after the considerable use of socia...
Social tagging, as a new approach for creating metadata, has caught the attention of library and inf...
Social tagging systems, known as ‘folksonomies’, represent an important part of web resource discove...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοSocial tagging is one of the most popular of social media applications and...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοEarly literature on tagging has been enthusiastic about the potential that...
This research will examine a given set of books and compare their LibraryThing folksonomic tags wit...
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), one of the standard descriptive languages used in libra...
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH), the standard subject language used in library catalogu...
Folksonomies, or user-created taxonomies, are currently used as collaborative tools to describe imag...
This study examines the extent to which LibraryThing tags match their equivalent Library of Congress...
This study examines the extent to which LibraryThing tags match their equivalent Library of Congress...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοSocial tagging aims to generate folksonomies through the users’ collaborat...
While controlled vocabularies, such as the Library of Congress Subject Headings, are an essential co...
The aim of this thesis is to study social tagging in an OPAC by looking at the tags of Ann Arbor Dis...
The internet in its role of Web 2.0 with interactive and participativetools has given birth to the i...
Nowadays, many libraries have developed social tagging services, after the considerable use of socia...
Social tagging, as a new approach for creating metadata, has caught the attention of library and inf...
Social tagging systems, known as ‘folksonomies’, represent an important part of web resource discove...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοSocial tagging is one of the most popular of social media applications and...
Περιέχει το πλήρες κείμενοEarly literature on tagging has been enthusiastic about the potential that...