RÊGO, A. S. C.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1582109846489096; RÊGO, Alex Sandro da Cunha.
Resumen:
Folksonomies have emerged as useful tools for online management of digital content. Popular websites as Delicious, Flickr and BibSonomy are now widespread with thousands of users using them daily to upload digital content (e.g., webpages, photos, videos and bibliographic information) and tagging for later retrieval. The lack of semantic relations such as synonym and hypernym/hyponym in the tag space may diminish the ability of users in finding relevant resources. Many research works in the literature employ similarity measures to detect synonymy and to build hierarchies of tags automatically by means of heuristic algorithms. In this thesis, the problems of synonym and subsumption detection between pairs of tags are cast as a pairwise classification problem. From the literature, several similarity measures that are good indicators of synonymy and subsumption were identified, which are used as learning features. Under this setting, there is a severe class imbalance and class overlapping which motivated us to investigate and employ class imbalance techniques to overcome these problems. A comprehensive set of experiments were conducted on two large real-world datasets of BibSonomy and Delicious systems, showing that the proposed approach named CPDST outperforms the best performing heuristic-based baseline in the tasks of synonym and subsumption detection. CPDST is also applied in the context of tag list generation for providing access to additional resources annotated with other semantically related tags. Besides CPDST approach, two algorithms based on WordNet and ConceptNet accesses are proposed for capturing specifically synonyms and hyponyms. The outcome of an evaluative quantitative analysis showed that CPDST approach yields relevant tag lists in relation to the produced ones by the compared methods.