Abstract
One of the most visible trends on the Web is the emergence of “Social Web” sites which facilitate the creation and gathering of knowledge through the simplification of user contributions via blogs, tagging and folksonomies, wikis, podcasts, and the deployment of online social networks. The Social Web has enabled community-based knowledge acquisition with efforts like the Wikipedia demonstrating the “wisdom of the crowds” in creating the world’s largest online encyclopaedia. Although it is difficult to define the exact boundaries of what structures or abstractions belong to the Social Web, a common property of such sites is that they facilitate collaboration and sharing between users with low technical barriers, although usually on single sites. As more social websites form around the connections between people and their objects of interest, and as these “object-centred networks” grow bigger and more diverse, more intuitive methods are needed for representing and navigating the content items in these sites: both within and across social websites. Also, to better enable user access to multiple sites, interoperability among social websites is required in terms of both the content objects and the person-to-person networks expressed on each site. This requires representation mechanisms to interconnect people and objects on the Social Web in an interoperable and extensible way. The Semantic Web provides such representation mechanisms: it can be used to link people and objects by representing the heterogeneous ties that bind us all to each other (either directly or indirectly). In this paper, we will describe methods that build on agreed-upon Semantic Web formats to describe people, content objects, and the connections that bind them together explicitly or implicitly, enabling social websites to interoperate by appealing to some common semantics. We will also focus on how developers can use the Semantic Web to augment the ways in which they create,reuse, and link content on social networking sites and social websites.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Aleman-Meza, B., Nagarajan, M., Ramakrishnan, C., Ding, L., Kolari, P., Sheth, A.P., Arpinar, I.B., Joshi, A., Finin, T.: Semantic Analytics on Social Networks: Experiences in Addressing the Problem of Conflict of Interest Detection. In: Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on the World Wide Web, Edinburgh, Scotland (2006)
Batagelj, V., Mrvar, A.: Pajek - Program for Large Network Analysis. Connections 21(2), 47–57 (1998)
Berners-Lee, T., Hendler, J.A., Lassila, O.: The Semantic Web. Scientific American 284(5), 34–43 (2001)
Bojārs, U., Heitmann, B., Oren, E.: A Prototype to Explore Content and Context on Social Community Sites. In: The SABRE Conference on Social Semantic Web (CSSW 2007), Leipzig, Germany (September 2007)
Bojārs, U., Breslin, J.G., Finn, A., Decker, S.: Using the Semantic Web for Linking and Reusing Data Across Web 2.0 Communities; Special Issue on the Semantic Web and Web 2.0, The Journal of Web Semantics (2008)
Bojārs, U., Passant, A., Breslin, J.G., Decker, S.: Social Network and Data Portability using Semantic Web Technologies. In: Proceedings of the BIS 2008 Workshop on Social Aspects of the Web, Innsbruck, Austria (May 2008)
Borgatti, S.P., Everett, M.G., Freeman, L.C.: UCINET for Windows: Software for Social Network Analysis. Analytic Technologies, Harvard (2002)
Boyd, D.M., Ellison, N.B.: Social Network Sites: Definition, History, and Scholarship. The Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 13(1) (2007)
Breslin, J.G., Harth, A., Bojārs, U., Decker, S.: Towards Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities. In: Gómez-Pérez, A., Euzenat, J. (eds.) ESWC 2005. LNCS, vol. 3532, pp. 500–514. Springer, Heidelberg (2005)
Breslin, J.G., Decker, S.: The Future of Social Networks on the Internet: The Need for Semantics. IEEE Internet Computing 11, 86–90 (2007)
Ding, L., Zhou, L., Finin, T., Joshi, A.: How the Semantic Web is Being Used: An Analysis of FOAF Documents. In: Proceedings of the 38th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS 2005) (2005)
Fernandez, S., Berrueta, D., Labra, J.E.: Mailing Lists Meet the Semantic Web. In: Proceedings of the BIS 2007 Workshop on Social Aspects of the Web, Poznan, Poland (April 2007)
Freeman, L.C.: Visualizing Social Networks. Journal of Social Structure 1(1) (2000)
Ghita, S., Nejdl, W., Paiu, W.R.: Semantically Rich Recommendations in Social Networks for Sharing, Exchanging and Ranking Semantic Context. In: Proceedings of the 4th International Semantic Web Conference, Galway, Ireland (November 2005)
Girvan, M., Newman, M.E.J.: Community Structure in Social and Biological Networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99(12), 7821–7826 (2002)
Golbeck, J., Parsia, B., Hendler, J.: Trust Networks on the Semantic Web. In: Proceedings of Cooperative Intelligent Agents, Helsinki, Finland (August 2003)
Golder, S., Huberman, B.A.: The Structure of Collaborative Tagging Systems. Journal of Information Sciences 32(2), 198–208 (2006)
Gruber, T.: Ontology of Folksonomy: A Mash-up of Apples and Oranges. International Journal on Semantic Web and Information Systems 3(2) (2007)
Heer, J., Boyd, D.: Vizster: Visualizing Online Social Networks. In: IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization (InfoVis 2005), Minneapolis, Minnesota (October 2005)
Kim, H.L., Yang, S.K., Breslin, J.G., Kim, H.G.: Simple Algorithms for Representing Tag Frequencies in the SCOT Exporter. In: The IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Intelligent Agent Technology, pp. 536–539. IEEE Computer Society, Los Alamitos (2007)
Kinsella, S., Harth, A., Troussov, A., Sogrin, M., Judge, J., Hayes, C., Breslin, J.G.: Navigating and Annotating Semantically-Enabled Networks of People and Associated Objects. In: The 4th Conference on Applications of Social Network Analysis (ASNA 2007), University of Zurich, Switzerland (accepted, September 2007)
Liu, H., Maes, P., Davenport, G.: Unraveling the Taste Fabric of Social Networks. International Journal on Semantic Web and Information Systems 2, 42–71 (2006)
Mika, P.: Flink: Semantic Web Technology for the Extraction and Analysis of Social Networks. Web Semantics: Science, Services and Agents on the World Wide Web 3(2-3), 211–223 (2005)
Mika, P.: Ontologies are Us: A Unified Model of Social Networks and Semantics. In: International Semantic Web Conference. LNCS, pp. 522–536. Springer, Heidelberg (2005)
O’Madadhain, J., Fisher, D., White, S., Boey, Y.: The JUNG (Java Universal Network/Graph) Framework. University of California, Irvine (2003)
Specia, L., Motta, E.: Integrating Folksonomies with the Semantic Web. In: Franconi, E., Kifer, M., May, W. (eds.) ESWC 2007. LNCS, vol. 4519, pp. 624–639. Springer, Heidelberg (2007)
Wasserman, S., Faust, K.: Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1994)
Watts, D.J., Strogatz, S.H.: Collective Dynamics of ‘Small-World’ Networks. Nature 393(6684), 409–410 (1998)
Wu, X., Zhang, L., Yu, Y.: Exploring Social Annotations for the Semantic Web. In: Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on World Wide Web, Edinburgh, Scotland (May 2006)
Passant, A., Laublet, P.: Meaning Of A Tag: A Collaborative Approach to Bridge the Gap Between Tagging and Linked Data. In: Proceedings of the WWW 2008 Linked Data on the Web Workshop (LDOW 2008), Beijing, China (April 2008)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2008 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Kinsella, S., Breslin, J.G., Passant, A., Decker, S. (2008). Applications of Semantic Web Methodologies and Techniques to Social Networks and Social Websites. In: Baroglio, C., Bonatti, P.A., Małuszyński, J., Marchiori, M., Polleres, A., Schaffert, S. (eds) Reasoning Web. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 5224. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-85658-0_5
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-85658-0_5
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-85656-6
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-85658-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)