Title :
Towards semantic tagging in collaborative environments
Author :
Chandramouli, K. ; Kliegr, T. ; Svatek, V. ; Izquierdo, E.
Author_Institution :
Multimedia & Vision Res. Group, Queen Mary, Univ. of London, London, UK
Abstract :
Tags pose an efficient and effective way of organization of resources, but they are not always available. A technique called SCM/THD investigated in this paper extracts entities from free-text annotations, and using the Lin similarity measure over the WordNet thesaurus classifies them into a controlled vocabulary of tags. Hypernyms extracted from Wikipedia are used to map uncommon entities to Wordnet synsets. In collaborative environments, users can assign multiple annotations to the same object hence increasing the amount of information available. Assuming that the semantics of the annotations overlap, this redundancy can be exploited to generate higher quality tags. A preliminary experiment presented in the paper evaluates the consistency and quality of tags generated from multiple annotations of the same image. The results obtained on an experimental dataset comprising of 62 annotations from four annotators show that the accuracy of a simple majority vote surpasses the average accuracy obtained through assessing the annotations individually by 18%. A moderate-strength correlation has been found between the quality of generated tags and the consistency of annotations.
Keywords :
Web sites; text analysis; Lin similarity measure; SCM; THD; Wikipedia; WordNet thesaurus; free-text annotations; hypernyms; semantic tagging; Collaboration; Collaborative work; Computer science; Informatics; Knowledge engineering; Ontologies; Statistics; Tagging; Taxonomy; Wikipedia; Collaborative image tagging; Semantic Concept Mapping; Targeted Hypernym Discovery; User-Generated Content;
Conference_Titel :
Digital Signal Processing, 2009 16th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Santorini-Hellas
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3297-4
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-3298-1
DOI :
10.1109/ICDSP.2009.5201138