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Tagging and Findability: Do Tags Help Users Find Things?
Margaret Kipp
Proceedings Annual General Meeting of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, (01 Jan 2007)
 
Why killing Live Book Search is good for the future of books
Nate Anderson
Ars Technica, (26 May 2008)
 
Safer Children in a Digital World. The Report of the Byron Review
Tanya Byron
 
Suchmaschine zum Thema "Berufsbild BibliothekarIn"
Sarah Lohre
Infobib, (14 May 2008)
 
Searching the web: The public and their queries
Amanda Spink et al.
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 52 (3), 226 (2001)
 
Wikipedia's Arcane Rules Censor Health Information
John Grohol
e-patients, (19 Apr 2008)
 
Automatic classification of Web resources using Java and Dewey Decimal Classification
Charlotte Jenkins et al.
Computer Networks and ISDN Systems 30 (1-7), 646 (1998)
 
Can Social Bookmarking Improve Web Search?
Paul Heymann, Georgia Koutrika, and Hector Garcia-Molina
First ACM International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining (WSDM'08), (12 Feb 2008)
Social bookmarking is a recent phenomenon which has the potential to give us a great deal of data about pages on the web. One major question is whether that data can be used to augment systems like web search. To answer this question, over the past year we have gathered what we believe to be the largest dataset from a social bookmarking site yet analyzed by academic researchers. Our dataset represents about forty million bookmarks from the social bookmarking site del.icio.us. We contribute a characterization of posts to del.icio.us: how many bookmarks exist (about 115 million), how fast is it growing, and how active are the URLs being posted about (quite active). We also contribute a characterization of tags used by bookmarkers. We found that certain tags tend to gravitate towards certain domains, and vice versa. We also found that tags occur in over 50 percent of the pages that they annotate, and in only 20 percent of cases do they not occur in the page text, backlink page text, or forward link page text of the pages they annotate. We conclude that social bookmarking can provide search data not currently provided by other sources, though it may currently lack the size and distribution of tags necessary to make a significant impact.
 
Use of collaborative recommendations for web search: an exploratory user study
Xiangmin Zhang and Yuelin Li
Journal of Information Science 34 (2), 145 (2007)
 
Analyzing Communal Tag Relationships for Enhanced Navigation and User Modeling
Edwin Simpson and H Butler
HPL-2008-24, (12 Mar 2008)

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