HT06, tagging paper, taxonomy, Flickr, academic article, to read
Proceedings of the seventeenth conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
From social bookmarking to social summarization: an experiment in community-based summary generation
Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Intelligent user interfaces
Web science: a provocative invitation to computer science
Communications of the ACM - Smart business networks
Watch what I watch: using community activity to understand content
Proceedings of the international workshop on Workshop on multimedia information retrieval
Blog Community Discovery and Evolution Based on Mutual Awareness Expansion
WI '07 Proceedings of the IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence
Finding high-quality content in social media
WSDM '08 Proceedings of the 2008 International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining
An analysis of failed queries for web image retrieval
Journal of Information Science
Can blog communication dynamics be correlated with stock market activity?
Proceedings of the nineteenth ACM conference on Hypertext and hypermedia
Opinion Mining and Sentiment Analysis
Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval
Phatics and the design of community
CHI '09 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Small Tech: The Culture of Digital Tools
Small Tech: The Culture of Digital Tools
MM '09 Proceedings of the 17th ACM international conference on Multimedia
Making sense of meaning: leveraging social processes to understand media semantics
ICME'09 Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE international conference on Multimedia and Expo
Multimedia Tools and Applications
Emotional reactions to real-world events in social networks
PAKDD'11 Proceedings of the 15th international conference on New Frontiers in Applied Data Mining
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With Multimedia Information Retrieval frustrated by the seemingly intractable semantic gap, we turn to the related field of linguistics for fresh inspiration and ideas for old problems and new opportunities. An explosion in the amount and ease with which multimedia items are created and shared, courtesy of new devices and Web 2.0, prompts us to consider what happens when those items are viewed not as artefacts, or "built things", but as utterances. These conversations occur in a mixture of mediums, including text, images, audio, and video, and channels, including Twitter, Facebook, Youtube and blogs, and range in scope from one-to-one exchanges to loosely-bounded meta-conversations that cross cultures and span the globe via remixing of shared meanings like memes. We propose that MIR add to its toolbox a linguistic perspective, and highlight three useful emphases of research: genre, emergence, and effect.