Social-tagging communities offer great potential for smart recommendation and “socially enhanced” search result ranking. Beyond traditional forms of collaborative recommendation that are based on the item-user matrix of the entire community, a specific opportunity of social communities is to reflect the different degrees of friendships and mutual trust, in addition to the behavioral similarities among users. This paper presents a framework for harnessing such social relations for search and recommendation. The framework is implemented in the SENSE prototype system, and its usefulness is demonstrated in experiments with an excerpt of the librarything community data
Abstract—Social tagging systems pose new challenges to developers of recommender systems. As observe...
"A thesis submitted in fulfilment for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Comput...
We study personalized item recommendation within an enterprise social media application suite that i...
Social-tagging communities offer great potential for smart recommendation and “socially enhanced” se...
Tapping into the wisdom of the crowd, social tagging can be considered an alternative mechanism—as o...
Collaboration and sharing of information are the basis of modern social web system. Users in the soc...
Social tagging is an innovative and powerful mechanism introduced by social Web: it shifts the task ...
This paper aims to examine whether users' watching networks can improve collaborative filtering-base...
Collaborative Tagging Systems such as Flickr, del.icio.us, and BibSonomy are examples of Web 2.0 app...
This research article presents a study about the background in Group Recommender Systems and how soc...
Social bookmarking websites allow users to store, organize, and search bookmarks of web pages. Users...
Abstract. Collaborative tagging systems are harnessing the power of online communities, making the t...
This paper aims to examine whether users' watching networks can improve collaborative filtering-base...
Social tagging networks have become highly popular for publishing and searching contents. Users in s...
The powerful and democratic activity of social tagging allows the wide set of Web users to add free ...
Abstract—Social tagging systems pose new challenges to developers of recommender systems. As observe...
"A thesis submitted in fulfilment for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Comput...
We study personalized item recommendation within an enterprise social media application suite that i...
Social-tagging communities offer great potential for smart recommendation and “socially enhanced” se...
Tapping into the wisdom of the crowd, social tagging can be considered an alternative mechanism—as o...
Collaboration and sharing of information are the basis of modern social web system. Users in the soc...
Social tagging is an innovative and powerful mechanism introduced by social Web: it shifts the task ...
This paper aims to examine whether users' watching networks can improve collaborative filtering-base...
Collaborative Tagging Systems such as Flickr, del.icio.us, and BibSonomy are examples of Web 2.0 app...
This research article presents a study about the background in Group Recommender Systems and how soc...
Social bookmarking websites allow users to store, organize, and search bookmarks of web pages. Users...
Abstract. Collaborative tagging systems are harnessing the power of online communities, making the t...
This paper aims to examine whether users' watching networks can improve collaborative filtering-base...
Social tagging networks have become highly popular for publishing and searching contents. Users in s...
The powerful and democratic activity of social tagging allows the wide set of Web users to add free ...
Abstract—Social tagging systems pose new challenges to developers of recommender systems. As observe...
"A thesis submitted in fulfilment for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Comput...
We study personalized item recommendation within an enterprise social media application suite that i...