Grouping is an attractive interaction metaphor for users to create reference collections of Web resources they are interested in. Each grouping activity has a certain semantics: things which were previously unrelated are now connected with others via the group. We present the GroupMe! application which allows users to group and arrange multimedia Web resources they are interested in. GroupMe! has an easy-to-use interface for gathering and grouping of resources, and allows users to tag everything they like. The semantics of any user interaction is captured, transformed and stored as adequate RDF descriptions. As an example application of this automatically derived RDF content, we show the enhancement of search for tagged Web resources, which evaluates the grouping information to deduce additional contextual information about the resources. GroupMe! is available via http://www.groupme.org .
%0 Book Section
%1 citeulike:2748195
%A Abel, Fabian
%A Frank, Mischa
%A Henze, Nicola
%A Krause, Daniel
%A Plappert, Daniel
%A Siehndel, Patrick
%B The Semantic Web
%D 2007
%E Aberer, Karl
%E Choi, Key-Sun
%E Noy, Natasha
%E Allemang, Dean
%E Lee, Kyung-Il
%E Nixon, Lyndon
%E Golbeck, Jennifer
%E Mika, Peter
%E Maynard, Diana
%E Mizoguchi, Riichiro
%E Schreiber, Guus
%E Cudré-Mauroux, Philippe
%I Springer Berlin Heidelberg
%J The Semantic Web
%K social-navigation social-web
%P 871--878
%R 10.1007/978-3-540-76298-0_63
%T GroupMe! - Where Semantic Web Meets Web 2.0
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76298-0_63
%V 4825
%X Grouping is an attractive interaction metaphor for users to create reference collections of Web resources they are interested in. Each grouping activity has a certain semantics: things which were previously unrelated are now connected with others via the group. We present the GroupMe! application which allows users to group and arrange multimedia Web resources they are interested in. GroupMe! has an easy-to-use interface for gathering and grouping of resources, and allows users to tag everything they like. The semantics of any user interaction is captured, transformed and stored as adequate RDF descriptions. As an example application of this automatically derived RDF content, we show the enhancement of search for tagged Web resources, which evaluates the grouping information to deduce additional contextual information about the resources. GroupMe! is available via http://www.groupme.org .
@incollection{citeulike:2748195,
abstract = {{Grouping is an attractive interaction metaphor for users to create reference collections of Web resources they are interested in. Each grouping activity has a certain semantics: things which were previously unrelated are now connected with others via the group. We present the GroupMe! application which allows users to group and arrange multimedia Web resources they are interested in. GroupMe! has an easy-to-use interface for gathering and grouping of resources, and allows users to tag everything they like. The semantics of any user interaction is captured, transformed and stored as adequate RDF descriptions. As an example application of this automatically derived RDF content, we show the enhancement of search for tagged Web resources, which evaluates the grouping information to deduce additional contextual information about the resources. GroupMe! is available via http://www.groupme.org .}},
added-at = {2018-03-19T12:24:51.000+0100},
author = {Abel, Fabian and Frank, Mischa and Henze, Nicola and Krause, Daniel and Plappert, Daniel and Siehndel, Patrick},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c03fbf15bc1061743c1927283089c223/aho},
booktitle = {The Semantic Web},
citeulike-article-id = {2748195},
citeulike-linkout-0 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76298-0_63},
citeulike-linkout-1 = {http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-540-76298-0_63},
doi = {10.1007/978-3-540-76298-0_63},
editor = {Aberer, Karl and Choi, Key-Sun and Noy, Natasha and Allemang, Dean and Lee, Kyung-Il and Nixon, Lyndon and Golbeck, Jennifer and Mika, Peter and Maynard, Diana and Mizoguchi, Riichiro and Schreiber, Guus and Cudr\'{e}-Mauroux, Philippe},
interhash = {df73cc53d276c94e9d72acb3800a637a},
intrahash = {c03fbf15bc1061743c1927283089c223},
journal = {The Semantic Web},
keywords = {social-navigation social-web},
pages = {871--878},
posted-at = {2016-04-24 20:10:22},
priority = {2},
publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg},
series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
timestamp = {2018-03-19T12:24:51.000+0100},
title = {{GroupMe! - Where Semantic Web Meets Web 2.0}},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-76298-0_63},
volume = 4825,
year = 2007
}