Whether we changed the Web or the Web has changed us is difficult to discern, even with the wisdom of hindsight. Social Networks and the Semantic Web provides two major case studies. The first case study shows the possibilities of tracking a research community over the Web, combining the information
Social Networks and the Semantic Web
โ Scribed by Peter Mika (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 237
- Series
- Semantic Web and Beyond 5
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
We are not just building the Web any more: we are on it. The latest set of applications have transformed the Web from a mere document collection into a social space: the new services developed under the banner of Web 2.0 cater to our needs of connecting through the medium and allow us to explicitly describe, maintain and develop our online self. At the same time, documents and other forms of content are not only up- and downloaded any more, but actively exchanged, filtered, organized and discussed in groups of all sizes. While the pace of change is dizzying, investigating this complex social-technological system is paramount to our ability of designing intelligent information systems that can guide us through the new online universe.
Social Networks and the Semantic Web combines the concepts and the methods of two fields of investigation, which together have the power to aid in the analysis of the social Web and the design of a new class of applications that combine human intelligence with machine processing. Social Network Analysis and the emerging Semantic Web are also the fields that stand to gain most from the new Web in achieving their full potential. On the one hand, the social Web delivers social network data at an extraordinary scale, with a dynamics and precision that has been outside of reach for more traditional methods of observing social structure and behavior. In realizing this potential, the technology of the Semantic Web provides the key in aggregating information across heterogeneous sources. The Semantic Web itself benefits by incorporating user-generated metadata and other clues left behind by users.
Social Networks and the Semantic Web is designed for practitioners and researchers in industry, as well as graduate-level students in Computer Science within the Semantic Web field, and Social Science with an interest in working with electronic data and observing online social networks. This book also supplies developers of social-semantic applications with an understanding of the key concepts and methods of both fields and describes real-world applications incorporating social and semantic metadata.
Foreword by Frank van Harmelen, author of the Semantic Web Primer
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XIII
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
The Semantic Web....Pages 3-26
Social Network Analysis....Pages 27-47
Front Matter....Pages 49-49
Electronic sources for network analysis....Pages 51-63
Knowledge Representation on the Semantic Web....Pages 65-92
Modelling and aggregating social network data....Pages 93-120
Developing social-semantic applications....Pages 121-151
Front Matter....Pages 153-153
Evaluation of web-based social network extraction....Pages 155-173
Semantic-based Social Network Analysis in the sciences....Pages 175-191
Ontologies are us: emergent semantics in folksonomy systems....Pages 193-207
Front Matter....Pages 209-209
The perfect storm....Pages 211-224
Back Matter....Pages 225-234
โฆ Subjects
Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet); Database Management; Computer Communication Networks; Social Sciences, general; Information Systems and Communication Service; Electronic Commerce/e-business
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