This link has been bookmarked by 93 people . It was first bookmarked on 31 Mar 2006, by Torsten Rox-Edling.
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Adam Crowe"My abilities to solve problems, to make analogies, to make jokes, to explain tagwebs, to understand people, to think - allof these things have been improved greatly. I now understand how my brain works and I can act in ways that embraces that knowledge"
metadata tagging tags tagcloud semanticweb cognition brain knowledge folksonomy flickr del.icio.us
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Julia LesageBy looking at how we tag photos on Flickr, we can understand how humans process information. Feb, 2005
academic folksonomy essays learning tagging theory socialbookmarking
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05 Nov 06
wally maharWhat if we could tag not just photos, but also other tags? We could start to build a tagweb. When a tagweb is created from your tags, that tagweb works perfectly within the realm of what makes sense to you. The reason nobody came up with this before Flick
tags flickr folksonomy classification tagweb tagging delicious
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Lambert Heller"What if we could tag not just photos, but also other tags? We could start to build a tagweb. (...) A tagweb emulates its creator's brain."
essay folksonomy flickr tagging cognitive psychology semanticweb folksonomies lang:en
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Martin Lindnertagweb: tagging tags for emergent semantics
semanticweb tagging folksonomy metadata semantic_cloud knowledgepulse delicious
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According to Scientific American, in 1966 Ben-Ami Lipetz concluded that: ...breakthroughs in information retrieval would come when researchers gained a deeper understanding of how humans process information and then endowed machines with analogous capabilities. Well, Ben was right, as you'll soon see for yourself. By looking at how we tag photos on Flickr, we can understand how humans process information. Once we understand that, we can understand how to model it with computers, thereby creating better information retrieval systems.
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Piers YoungGood idea refreshingly presented in collegehumor.com style.
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Are Halland"By looking at how we tag photos on Flickr, we can understand how humans process information"
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Tagging, as seen on Flickr and other sites, allows you to organize things in a way that makes sense to your brain. You may also notice that tagging photos on Flickr is the first time that organizing something has made perfect sense. According to Scientific American, in 1966 Ben-Ami Lipetz concluded that: ...breakthroughs in information retrieval would come when researchers gained a deeper understanding of how humans process information and then endowed machines with analogous capabilities. Well, Ben was right, as you'll soon see for yourself. By looking at how we tag photos on Flickr, we can understand how humans process information. Once we understand that, we can understand how to model it with computers, thereby creating better information retrieval systems. What Ben was unable to predict all those years ago was that we will not only develop better information retreival systems, but also model our own brains on the lowest levels, and eventually create artificial intelligence. ... What if we could tag not just photos, but also other tags? We could start to build a tagweb. When a tagweb is created from your tags, that tagweb works perfectly within the realm of what makes sense to you.
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Tagging, as seen on Flickr and other sites, allows you to organize things in a way that makes sense to your brain. You may also notice that tagging photos on Flickr is the first time that organizing something has made perfect sense. According to Scientific American, in 1966 Ben-Ami Lipetz concluded that: ...breakthroughs in information retrieval would come when researchers gained a deeper understanding of how humans process information and then endowed machines with analogous capabilities. Well, Ben was right, as you'll soon see for yourself. By looking at how we tag photos on Flickr, we can understand how humans process information. Once we understand that, we can understand how to model it with computers, thereby creating better information retrieval systems. What Ben was unable to predict all those years ago was that we will not only develop better information retreival systems, but also model our own brains on the lowest levels, and eventually create artificial intelligence. ... What if we could tag not just photos, but also other tags? We could start to build a tagweb. When a tagweb is created from your tags, that tagweb works perfectly within the realm of what makes sense to you.
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Triple Entendreemergent effects of tagging the tags. I can probably find a way to model this in my del.icio.us account and import to OpenCyc
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kris wicksTagging tags to interrelate concepts.
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06 Feb 05
Linda HartleyAn introduction to tagwebs: What if we could tag not just photos, but also other tags? We could start to build a tagweb. When a tagweb is created from your tags, that tagweb works perfectly within the realm of what makes sense to you. The reason nobody...
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05 Feb 05
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Tagging, as seen on Flickr and other sites, allows you to organize things in a way that makes sense to your brain. You may also notice that tagging photos on Flickr is the first time that organizing something has made perfect sense.
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Yvonne LInteresting?
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Tagging, as seen on Flickr and other sites, allows you to organize things in a way that makes sense to your brain. You may also notice that tagging photos on Flickr is the first time that organizing something has made perfect sense. According to Scientific American, in 1966 Ben-Ami Lipetz concluded that: ...breakthroughs in information retrieval would come when researchers gained a deeper understanding of how humans process information and then endowed machines with analogous capabilities.
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04 Feb 05
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Erhardt GraeffRIT Grad Jake Lodwick dumbs down his idea of folksonomies for the Flickr users
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03 Feb 05
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