Elizeu Santos-Neto

2papers

2 Papers

SIOct 11, 2015
Assessing the Value of Peer-Produced Information for Exploratory Search

Elizeu Santos-Neto, Flavio Figueiredo, Nigini Oliveira et al.

Tagging is a popular feature that supports several collaborative tasks, including search, as tags produced by one user can help others finding relevant content. However, task performance depends on the existence of 'good' tags. A first step towards creating incentives for users to produce 'good' tags is the quantification of their value in the first place. This work fills this gap by combining qualitative and quantitative research methods. In particular, using contextual interviews, we first determine aspects that influence users' perception of tags' value for exploratory search. Next, we formalize some of the identified aspects and propose an information-theoretical method with provable properties that quantifies the two most important aspects (according to the qualitative analysis) that influence the perception of tag value: the ability of a tag to reduce the search space while retrieving relevant items to the user. The evaluation on real data shows that our method is accurate: tags that users consider more important have higher value than tags users have not expressed interest.

IRJan 25, 2013
Reuse, Temporal Dynamics, Interest Sharing, and Collaboration in Social Tagging Systems

Elizeu Santos-Neto, David Condon, Nazareno Andrade et al.

User-generated content is shaping the dynamics of the World Wide Web. Indeed, an increasingly large number of systems provide mechanisms to support the growing demand for content creation, sharing, and management. Tagging systems are a particular class of these systems where users share and collaboratively annotate content such as photos and URLs. This collaborative behavior and the pool of user-generated metadata create opportunities to improve existing systems and to design new mechanisms. However, to realize this potential, it is necessary to understand the usage characteristics of current systems. This work addresses this issue characterizing three tagging systems (CiteULike, Connotea and del.icio.us) while focusing on three aspects: i) the patterns of information (tags and items) production; ii) the temporal dynamics of users' tag vocabularies; and, iii) the social aspects of tagging systems.