analysis of social tagging and book cataloging: a case study yi-chen chen 陳怡蓁 dept. of library...
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Analysis of Social Tagging Analysis of Social Tagging and Book Cataloging: A and Book Cataloging: A Case StudyCase Study
Yi-Chen Chen 陳怡蓁
Dept. of Library & Information Science
National Taiwan University
HKLA 50th Anniversary Conference Hong Kong, 5 November 2008
Outline•Introduction
▫Background + Related Work•Research Questions •Data and Methodology•Results•Conclusions and Future Directions
Background
•the concept of social tagging has grown in popularity on the web-based services
• it is quite different from controlled vocabularies-based indexing or authority-based cataloging (Mathes, 2004; Guy & Tonkin, 2006)
•the emergence of social tagging has begun to challenge traditional ways of information organization
Related Works…
•the difference between social tagging and traditional cataloging/indexing has been noticed (Tennis, 2006), but very few of the studies were conducted to verify it
• little research has been performed to examine how social tagging is applied to resources of books▫since the resources (books) are already
catalogued with library subject headings
In this study…
Objective & purposes
•discover the properties and functions of social tags attached to books
•compare user-created tags with authoritative subject headings
Case study…
•A case study on LibraryThing’s tagging system ▫“an online service to help people catalog their
books easily” ▫allows its members to add tags for their
personal book collections
Research Questions•How can tags be organized or classified
into different function types? •What kinds of function tags are most often
used?•How are tagging terms similar to or
different from library subject headings?
Two parts of our studies•Part 1 investigate functions of tags and derives a classification based on the types of functions
explore what kinds of tag classes are more popular among users
•Part 2 compare social tags with LCSH assigned to the same works of books and examine their overlaps and variations
Part 1: Analysis of classifying tags and usage frequency
Data collection
•LibrayThing (http://www.librarything.com) is chosen as our platform for data collection and analysis
•The data we used for this study was gathered from LibraryThing in July 2008.
Data collection
•sample of books including both fiction and non-fiction works▫randomly selected from the “Most often tagged
fiction” and “Most often tagged non-fiction” booklist in LibraryThing
▫two criteria: (1) English books; (2) the corresponding catalog records should include LCSH.
Data collection
•total number of works = 50•25 fiction + 25 non-fiction
Part 1: Methodology
•extract the tagging data (tag cloud and tag frequency) from these 50 works
•only use the main pagemain page tag cloud tag cloud for analysis▫a tag cloud that appear on the main page
for each work includes only the top frequency tags
the tag frequency data was gathered on the tag cloud of each work, indicating how many times the tag was used for a particular work
• In total, there are 2,249 tags associated with the selected works, and 45 tags per work on average
Number of tags
Total Average (per work)
Fiction 1142 45.68
Non-fiction 1107 44.28
All works 2249 44.98
Part 1: Results(Ⅰ)
•For these 2,249 tags, we analyze their function types and classified them.
•Classification framework for tags was created
ClassClass SubclassSubclass
1. Bibliographic Description
Genre/Form
Author
Country of origin
Language
Edition
Variant formats
Audience
2. Subject-related
Character/People
Timeframe
Setting/Place
Topic
Subject area
3. Personal reference
Ownership
Reading Progress
Time
Task
Location
4. Opinion 5. Awards/Top list 6. Community
1. Bibliographic description
describe physical attributes of the work and can give factual information about the book
•Genre/Form (e.g. “science fiction” )•Author•Country of origin•Edition (e.g. “first edition”)•Variant formats (e.g. “film”)•Audience (e.g. “kids”)
2. Subject-related
tags that intended to reflect what a work is about and deal with the content of the resource
•abstract and concrete concepts, things or objects, subject areas, character names, settings or place, timeframe of the story, themes of the document, topics and the like
3. Personal reference
act as reminders to oneself based on his/her personal context
•Ownership (e.g. “borrowed”) •Reading Progress (e.g. “unread”, “tbr”) •Time (e.g. “2007”) •Task (e.g. “@work”, “textbook”)•Location (e.g. “bookshelf”)
4. Opinion
•users can express their feelings and opinion about the resource with tags subjectively
•reveal the reader’s value judgments and emotional reaction to a particular book (e.g. “favorite”, “interesting”)
5. Awards/Top list
•a specific award or prize name (e.g. “Pulitzer prize”, “Nobel prize”)
•the top book list (e.g. “1001books”)
6. Community
•apply such tags to the books that they wish to share or discuss with others
•convey the community meaning of the resource(e.g. “book club”)
Part 1: Results
•Distribution of number of tags•Distribution of tag frequency
Part 1: Results
•Distribution of number of tags•Distribution of tag frequency
Number of tags (all works)
Bibliographic description
Genre/Form
Personal reference
Reading Progress
Number of tags (fiction)
Number of tags (non-fiction)
Part 1: Results
•Distribution of number of tags•Distribution of tag frequency
Part 1: Results
•Distribution of number of tags•Distribution of tag frequency
▫investigate if certain tag classes are used more frequently than others
Tag frequency (all works)
Tag frequency (fiction)
Tag frequency (non-fiction)
Part 1: Results & Findings
•users are more likely to distinguish fiction works by their genre or form, and distinguish non-fiction works by their subject of books
Number of tags vs. Tag frequency ?
Although Subject-related has the largest number of tags among all the works, its tag usage frequency is not as high as that of Bibliographic description.
vs.
Subject-related
Bibliographic description
Part 1: Results & Findings
•number of tags vs. tag usage frequency ?• the subject matter could be divergent and
expressed in a variety of words, so its tag usage frequency is lower
• the descriptions of bibliographic data often have common usage, especially of genre/form, thus resulting in clear convergence on the tagging terms
Part 2: Comparison of social tags and LCSH terms
Part 2: Methodology
•Dataset• the Bibliographic description tags and
Subject-related tags (from part 1)
• the subject headings data was extracted from the LCSH terms assigned to each selected work in Library of Congress Online Catalogs (http://catalog.loc.gov/webvoy.htm)
Part 2: Methodology
•subject heading string may comprise the main headings and dash-subdivisions with complicated combinations (e.g. Japan --History --20th century --Fiction)
•we separated the combination of subject headings into several concept terms and excluded the duplicate terms. (e.g. Japan. History. 20th century. Fiction.)
Part 2: Preliminary results•1,759 tags
(Bibliographic description and Subject-related tags)
•35.2 tags per work
•313 LCSH terms
•6.3 LCSH terms per work
Rules of comparison(1) tags and LCSH terms associated with the
same work are compared in a term-by-term manner.
(2) the overlap is identified with an exact or almost exact match in spelling, including plural/singular forms and case variations.
(3) abbreviations or acronyms are considered the same as the full form of terms.
(4) preposition, punctuation mark and symbol are ignored.
Overlaps between tags and LCSH
Overlapped tagsOverlapped tagstags not covered in SH
(Non-overlap)
tags not covered in SH
(Non-overlap)
All works10.8%
(overlap)10.8%
(overlap)
Fiction…10.2%
(overlap)10.2%
(overlap)
Non-fiction…11.5%
(overlap)11.5%
(overlap)
Tags vs. LCSH terms
•how the rest of 90% non-overlapped tags are different from the LCSH terms?▫not reflected in library subject headings
Compared with LCSH, Tags … •more genre/form information •describe more character names in the
content of books•simpler and informal usage on personal
names, geographic names, and timeframe
Tag: “classic fiction”, “Thriller”,
“historical fiction”LCSH: “Fiction”
Tag: “da vinci”LCSH: “Leonardo, da Vinci, 1452-1519”
Tag: ““Delft”LCSH: “Delft (Netherlands)”
Tag: “1920s”LCSH: “Alfonso XIII, 1886-1931”
the syntax of LCSH…
•multi-concepts phrases (e.g. “Good and evil”)
•subject headings can be with qualifiers to distinguish between homographs or to avoid ambiguity
•inverted headings (e.g. “Cookery, French”)
rarely used in social tagging
Non-overlapped tags (three types)(1)terms with identical meanings, but
different words or different grammatical forms
(2)variations of broader terms, narrower terms, and related terms
(3)terms expressing extra concepts
different ways of representing the concepts and the semantic relationships among terms
the different interpretation in subject analysis between users and library catalogers
Part 2: Findings
•Compared to the subject headings, these non-overlapped tags appear to be more exhaustive of the topics covered in a resource
• the non-overlapped tags, especially those terms with extra concepts, describe more themes or topics covered by the content of a book
Conclusions
Reorganizing and classifying tags•our classification framework is intended to
unveil the functions of tags applied to books
•understand how a book/item is described and identified by users in bibliographic records
•reorganize tags into classes to improve the user experience of searching and browsing
Subject cataloging and social tags•the relatively low degree of overlaps
between tags and LCSH •tags provide a richer description of the
book’s subject matter•higher exhaustivity•using tags supplement existing controlled
vocabularies such as subject description
Future Directions
•the classification framework for tags needs further evaluation to prove its usefulness and applicability of book cataloging
•the rules of comparison between tags and LCSH still need to be discussed
•study the overlapped and non-overlapped subject terms more comprehensively
•semantic issue…
Thank you!Thank you!
Comments & Comments & SuggestionsSuggestions
Acknowledgments
•The author would like to thank Dr. Muh-Chyun Tang and Dr. Kuang-hua Chen for their helpful comments.
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