"Rashmi's theory of tagging" --- any idea?
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Chris MeredithAt the start, let me confess that I struggled with this topic. From my first encounter with tagging (on systems such as del.icio.us & flickr), I could feel how easy it was to tag. But it took me a while to understand the cognitive processes at work. W
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Colin ApelInteresting article analyzing the superiority of tagging over categorizing by discussing the various costs and psychological problems involved with decision making around organizing information
behavior categorizing cognitive cost efficiency explanation psychology research semantic social tagging tags web2.0
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In the digital world, we don't just categorize an object, we also optimize its future findability
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In my opinion, tagging eliminates the decision - (choosing the right category), and takes away the analysis-paralysis stage for most people.
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taps into an existing cognitive process without adding add much cognitive cost.
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Add Sticky NoteWhat follows is Rashmi's theory of tagging
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This is a basic cognitive process - putting things into categories
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The brilliance of Gmail was to separate the tagging from the archiving
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Emma BentonAt the start, let me confess that I struggled with this topic. From my first encounter with tagging (on systems such as del.icio.us & flickr), I could feel how easy it was to tag. But it took me a while to understand the cognitive processes at work. What
del.icio.us folksonomy internet www web2.0 technology Tagging tags ict 1c cognitive psychology
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how the lower cognitive cost of tagging makes it popular
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Katie DayA cognitive analysis of tagging
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Alexander Zehtaggind is easy...
psychology web2.0 del.icio.us tag tagging cognitive blog for:lylebclarke
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the cognitive process that kicks into place
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Rashmi's theory of tagging
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The rapid growth of tagging
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cognitive level.
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it provides immediate self and social feedback. Each tag tells you a little about what you are interested in. And you find out the social context for that bit of self-knowledge.
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Rudy GarnsWhat follows is Rashmi's theory of tagging - my hypothesis about the cognitive process that kicks into place when we tag an item, and how this differs than the process of categorizing. In doing so, my hope is to explain the increasing popularity of taggin
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Karoly Czifrahow the lower cognitive cost of tagging makes it popular
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Fogday StudiosAt the start, let me confess that I struggled with this topic. From my first encounter with tagging (on systems such as del.icio.us & flickr), I could feel how easy it was to tag. But it took me a while to understand the cognitive processes at work
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Rekha Murthyfrom a commenter: "Tagging is sense-making for the tagger (hence the archiver).
internet collaborative cognition semanticweb theory delicious findability search
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Adam CroweSome nice diagrams illustrating the differences between using tags and categories. Very interesting comments too.
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in fact, one purpose that tagging serves is transmitting cultural knowledge about our constantly evolving digital lives.
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In the digital world, we don't just categorize an object, we also optimize its future findability. We need to consider not just the most likely category, but also where we are most likely to look for the item at the time of finding. These two questions might lead to conflicting answers, and complicate the categorization process.
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The brilliance of Gmail was to separate the tagging from the archiving.
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about tagging - it provides immediate self and social feedback. Each tag tells you a little about what you are interested in.
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Axel Vogelsangcognitive analysis of tagging
tagClouds tagging psychology Research Interaction design Web2.0
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A cognitive analysis of tagging
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Public Stiky Notes
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(or how the lower cognitive cost of tagging makes it popular)
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