Folksonomies And Tagging
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Transcript of Folksonomies And Tagging
Folksonomies and Tagging: Libraries & the Hive Mind
Tom ReamyChief Knowledge Architect
KAPS Group
Knowledge Architecture Professional Services
http://www.kapsgroup.com
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Agenda Introduction - Themes Essentials of Folksonomies
– Advantages, Disadvantages, and Dangers of Folksonomies Improving the Quality of Folksonomies
– Facets and Flickr– Del.icio.is – Topics, Popularity and Findability– LibraryThing – facets, topics, and weirdness
Folksonomies and Libraries– What Won’t Work – What Might Work– Semantic Infrastructure Approach– Evolving Folksonomies
Conclusion
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KAPS Group: General
Knowledge Architecture Professional Services Virtual Company: Network of consultants – 12-15 Partners – Convera, Inxight, Siderean, FAST, etc. Consulting, Strategy, Knowledge architecture audit Taxonomies: Enterprise, Marketing, Insurance, etc. Services:
– Taxonomy development, consulting, customization– Technology Consulting – Search, CMS, Portals, etc.– Metadata standards and implementation– Knowledge Management: Collaboration, Expertise, e-learning– Applied Theory – Faceted taxonomies, complexity theory, natural
categories
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2.0 Themes
“Tags are great because you throw caution to the wind, forget about whittling down everything into a distinct set of categories and instead let folks loose categorizing their own stuff on their own terms." - Matt Haughey - MetaFilter
“It’s MySpace meets YouTube meets Wikipedia meets Google – on steroids.”
“It’s ignorance meets egotism meets bad taste meets mob rule – on steroids.” – The Cult of the Amateur – Andrew Keen
“Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,…The best lack all conviction, while the worstAre full of passionate conviction.” - The Second Coming – W.B. Yeats
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Essentials of Folksonomies?
Wikipedia: A folksonomy is an Internet-based information retrieval methodology consisting of collaboratively generated, open-ended labels that categorize content such as Web pages, online photographs, and Web links.
A folksonomy is most notably contrasted from a taxonomy – done by users, not professionals,
Example sites – Del.icio.us and Flickr (not really – no feedback)
It is just metadata that users add Key – social mechanism for seeing other tags
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Advantages of Folksonomies
Simple (no complex structure to learn)– No need to learn difficult formal classification system
Lower cost of categorization– Distributes cost of tagging over large population
Open ended – can respond quickly to changes Relevance – User’s own terms Support serendipitous form of browsing Easy to tag any object – photo, document, bookmark Better than no tags at all Getting people excited about metadata!
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Disadvantages of Folksonomies - Quality
They don’t work very well for finding– Re-finding is of marginal value
No structure, no conceptual relationships– Flats lists do not a onomy make
Issues of scale – popular tags already showing a million hits Limited applicability – only useful for non-technical or non-
specialist domains Either personal tags (other’s can’t find) or popularity tags – lose
interesting terms (Power law distribution)– Most people can’t tag very well – learned skill
Errors – misspellings, single words or bad compounds, single use or idiosyncratic use
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Dangers of Folksonomies
Unwisdom of Crowds– “We find that whole communities suddenly fix their minds upon one
object, and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it, till their attention is caught by some new folly more captivating than the first.”
– From witch hunts to tulipomania to stock market crash • Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds
Tyranny of the majority– Popularity drowns quality– Narrowing of choices, lost content
Belief that hierarchy, taxonomy not needed
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Will Social Networking make better Folksonomies?
Not so far – example of Del.icio.us – same tags Quality and Popularity are very different things Most people don’t tag, don’t re-tag Study – folksonomies follow NISO guidelines – nouns, etc –
but do they actually work – see analysis (hint – no) Most tags deal with computers and are created by people
that love to do this stuff – not regular users and infrequent users – Beware true believers!
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Flickr Facets
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Flickr Facets
Faceted navigation – extremely powerful, easy to use to find
– Combine strength of structure and personal perspectives
Basic Facets – over 90% of content– Place – Amsterdam to Beach – 40%– Events, Date, People, Things / Animals, Color
Subject Matter – less than 1% Works on lower level scales:
– Artparade, tourofbritain, stgilesfair, hideoutblockparty (last weeks)
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Del.icio.us Tags
Design blog software music tools reference art video programming webdesign web2.0 mac howto linux tutorial web free news photography shopping blogs css imported education travel javascript food games
Development inspiration politics flash apple tips java google osx business windows iphone science productivity books toread helath funny internet wordpress ajax ruby research humor fun technology search opensource
Photoshop media recipes cool work article marketing security mobile jobs rails lifehacks tutorials resources php social download diy ubuntu freeware portfolio photo movies writing graphics youtube audio online
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Del.icio.us - Topics, not Facets
High level topics - photography, news, education Get related terms by popularity, not conceptual
– Photography• Synonyms - photo, photos• Related – art, design, images, camera• Related Facet – howto, tutorial, photoshop
Popularity is not quality– Dominance of computer terms– Tyranny of the majority – design (1 MIL), interior design – 3,909
Top 25 – same set, slight order shift – social inertia– New terms - important – iphone, ipod, .net, ebooks,facebook– Dropped terms – adult, babes, britney, naked, sex, sexy
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Del.icio.us - Folksonomy Findability
Too many hits (where have we heard that before?)– Design – 1 Mil, software – 931,259, sex – 129,468
No plurals, stemming (singular preferred)– Folksonomy – 14,073, folksonomies – 3,843, both – 1,891– Blog-1.7M, blogs – 516,340, Weblog- 155,917, weblogs – 36,434,
blogging – 157,922, bloging – 697– Taxonomy – 9.683, taxonomies – 1,574
Personal tags – cool, fun, funny, etc– Good for social research, not finding documents or sites– How good for personal use? Funny is time dependent
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Improving the Quality – Internet Sites
Add automatic facets - Flickr– Design facet system – one time cost, some monitoring
Cluster tags – Taxonomy / Ontology – Entity Extraction, populate facets and subjects – Types of relationships – ubuntu – tutorial, howto, reference, tips,
install Add broad general taxonomy of most popular tags
– Tags as natural categories – build up and down– Start – evolve a simple 2 level taxonomy
Evolve quality of tags and emerging structure of tags– Preferred term = popular (Blog/blogs – Books/book)– Add mechanisms – rank tags, taggers, categories
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Folksonomy and Libraries
Three contexts:– Library Catalog– Internet Service– Enterprise (KM) contributor
Univ of Pennsylvania– Penn Tags – academic tagging
Stanford – educate patrons about library resources– Tool for librarians to identify good Internet sites
Research – ALA, Louise Spiteri, Margaret Kipp Library Thing
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Library Thing
Book people aren’t much better at tagging High level concepts – psychology (55,000), religion
(120,000), science (101,000) Issue – variety of terms – cognitive science – need at least
40 other tags to cover the actual field of cognitive science Strange tags – book (19,000) – it’s a book site? Combination of facets and topics
– Facets – Date (16th century, 1950’s, 2007) // Function (owned, not read) // Type (graphic novel, novel) // Genre (horror, mystery)
– Topics – majority like Del.icio.us
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Library Thing – Book on Neuroscience
1) (Location: dining room)(1) biological(1) biology(8) box74(1) Brain(1) brain research(1) brains(1) cognitive neuroscience(1) cognitive science(1) consciousness(1) currently reading(1) HelixHealth(1) kognitionswissenschaft(1) medical(1) medicine(1) neuroscience(19) non-fiction(5) partread(1) Psychology(4) Science(10) textbook(10) theory(1)
Too General: Science, Psychology, biology, textbook Too specific: Location: dining room, box74 Facets: currently reading, partread
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Library Thing – Harry Potter
(51) 2003(55) 2007(44) adventure(118) Boarding school(86) British(193) children(292) children's(624) Children's books(39) Children's Fiction(118) children's literature(255) coming of age(41) england(142) English(48) Fantasy(3,412) favorite(54) Favorites(57) Fiction(2,277) film(47) friendship(47) hardcover(136) harry potter(1,499) Hogwarts(90) hp(80) J.K. Rowling(60) juvenile(97) juvenile fiction(40) kids(81) magic(922) Mystery(53) Novel(182) own(175) Owned(51) potter(56) Read(419) rowling(95) school(105) series(435) witchcraft(47) witches(125) Wizardry(68) wizards(409) young adult(823) youth(50)
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Library Thing – Harry Potter
Redundant: Harry Potter, J.K. Rowling Inconsistent: 51 say 2003, 55 say 2007 Too General: British, Fantasy, Fiction Too many variations – children, children’s, children’s books,
children’s fiction, children’s literature Strange: school, series, England, Mystery Personal: Favorites, owned, Read
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What Won’t Work
Traditional Library Strategies – improve users– Recommendations about count-non-count nouns or singular –
plural– Link to online dictionary or Wikipedia – extra work, whole
focus is on ease of tagging – any help has to be immediate and integrated - or done by a central group
Social Networking– Social networking good for socializing, not tagging– Social Network sites – getting worse not better
Either / Or – folksonomies or LCSH
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What Might Work
Semantic Infrastructure and Evolution– Environment and dynamic social rules
Integrated Evolving Solution: Content Structures, People, Technology, Policies and Procedures // with Feedback with consequences
New Relationship of Central and Crowd– Not top down or bottom up– Interpenetration of opposites
Reduce Folk and Increase ‘Onomy’– Wikipedia – Social plus 2,000 editors
Increase Folk – add discussions and social context to tags
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Semantic Infrastructure: New Library Roles
Library 2.0 – New librarians – social and intellectual context
New relationship of center and users – more sophisticated support, more freedom, more suggestions, more user input
– - New roles – for users (taggers, part of variety of communities – both distributed and central)
– New roles for central – create feedback system, tweak the evolution of the system, Develop initial candidates
Communities of Practice – apply to tagging, ranking– Community Maps – formal and informal – Map tags to communities – more useful suggestions– Use tags to uncover communities
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Semantic Infrastructure: Technology
Enterprise Content Management, KM Platforms– Place to add metadata – of all kinds, not just keywords– Policy support – important, part of job performance– Add tag clouds to input page– More sophisticated displays
• Tag clouds mapped to community map• Tag clusters, taxonomy location
Semantic Software – Inxight, SchemaLogic etc.– Suggest terms based on text, on tag clouds
Social Networking – add semantics– SNA – apply to people and tags
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Semantic Infrastructure: Putting it all togetherComplexity Theory and Folksonomies: Feedback
Ranking Methods– Explicit – people rank directly
• Categories, tags, taggers
• Good tags, best bets for terms or categories?
– Implicit – software evaluation, reverse relevance
Ranking Roles– Taggers – everyone (rewards, make it easy and fun)– Meta-taggers – everyone (but levels of meta-taggers)– Editors – tagging system, integration with taxonomy, resolve
disputes, Wikipedia model
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Best of Both Worlds: Integrated Solutions
Start and end with a formal taxonomy / Ontology– Findability vastly superior– Communication with others – share tags– Take advantage of conceptual relationships
Tagging experience – folksonomies plus – Users can type any word – system looks it up – plurals, synonyms,
preferred terms, spelling variations– Software suggestions – based on content of bookmark, document
and on popular user tags – natural level not top down– New terms flagged and routed to central team
Facets – for both things and documents (faceted taxonomy)– Software suggests facet values, user override – Cognitively simpler task than own value, complex hierarchy
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Conclusions: Folksonomies and Libraries
Library 2.0 – focus on social collaboration, not tagging– More complex use of folksonomies
Folksonomies can help – but they need help to evolve better quality
– Fundamental contradiction of ease of tagging and findability will limit usefulness of Internet folksonomies
90% of what you hear about Folksonomies (2.0) is hype – again– Folksonomies are a great source for first drafts and social research
Evolution, not Revolution!– Evolve folksonomies, taxonomies, ontologies
Semantic Infrastructure solution (people, policy, technology, semantics) and feedback is best approach
Questions?
KAPS Group
Knowledge Architecture Professional Services
http://www.kapsgroup.com