The dynamic nature of modern human social interactions, and the increasing capability of wireless and mobile devices for creating and sharing contents, open up the opportunity for a wide dissemination of information through complex knowledge sharing systems. As the shared knowledge components build cognitive ties, there is no real sharing of knowledge without a common understanding of it. In this article, particular emphasis is laid on technologies in Natural Language understanding and knowledge management for providing structured, intelligent access to the continuously evolving content, generated on-line in a pervasive collaborative environment. In detail, robust automated techniques for term extraction and knowledge acquisition are used to tap the information density and the global coherence of text excerpts sampled from both general-purpose and subject-specific social networks. We show empirically that the two sources may exhibit considerable differences in terms of content accessibility and informativeness.

Knowledge communities in grey

Marzi Claudia
Primo
2012

Abstract

The dynamic nature of modern human social interactions, and the increasing capability of wireless and mobile devices for creating and sharing contents, open up the opportunity for a wide dissemination of information through complex knowledge sharing systems. As the shared knowledge components build cognitive ties, there is no real sharing of knowledge without a common understanding of it. In this article, particular emphasis is laid on technologies in Natural Language understanding and knowledge management for providing structured, intelligent access to the continuously evolving content, generated on-line in a pervasive collaborative environment. In detail, robust automated techniques for term extraction and knowledge acquisition are used to tap the information density and the global coherence of text excerpts sampled from both general-purpose and subject-specific social networks. We show empirically that the two sources may exhibit considerable differences in terms of content accessibility and informativeness.
Campo DC Valore Lingua
dc.authority.ancejournal THE GREY JOURNAL en
dc.authority.orgunit Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC en
dc.authority.people Marzi Claudia en
dc.collection.id.s b3f88f24-048a-4e43-8ab1-6697b90e068e *
dc.collection.name 01.01 Articolo in rivista *
dc.contributor.appartenenza Istituto di linguistica computazionale "Antonio Zampolli" - ILC *
dc.contributor.appartenenza.mi 918 *
dc.date.accessioned 2024/02/16 05:04:56 -
dc.date.available 2024/02/16 05:04:56 -
dc.date.firstsubmission 2024/09/26 15:49:52 *
dc.date.issued 2012 -
dc.date.submission 2024/09/26 15:49:52 *
dc.description.abstracteng The dynamic nature of modern human social interactions, and the increasing capability of wireless and mobile devices for creating and sharing contents, open up the opportunity for a wide dissemination of information through complex knowledge sharing systems. As the shared knowledge components build cognitive ties, there is no real sharing of knowledge without a common understanding of it. In this article, particular emphasis is laid on technologies in Natural Language understanding and knowledge management for providing structured, intelligent access to the continuously evolving content, generated on-line in a pervasive collaborative environment. In detail, robust automated techniques for term extraction and knowledge acquisition are used to tap the information density and the global coherence of text excerpts sampled from both general-purpose and subject-specific social networks. We show empirically that the two sources may exhibit considerable differences in terms of content accessibility and informativeness. -
dc.description.affiliations Institute for Computational Linguistics, Italian National Research Council (CNR-ILC, Pisa) -
dc.description.allpeople Marzi, Claudia -
dc.description.allpeopleoriginal Marzi Claudia en
dc.description.fulltext none en
dc.description.numberofauthors 1 -
dc.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-84883276602 en
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/6179 -
dc.identifier.url http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-84883276602&origin=inward en
dc.language.iso eng en
dc.miur.last.status.update 2024-09-26T13:50:10Z *
dc.relation.firstpage 27 en
dc.relation.issue 1 en
dc.relation.lastpage 33 en
dc.relation.medium STAMPA en
dc.relation.numberofpages 7 en
dc.relation.volume 8 en
dc.subject.keywordseng Grey Literature -
dc.subject.keywordseng Web Communities -
dc.subject.keywordseng Knowledge sharing -
dc.subject.keywordseng Concept Maps -
dc.subject.singlekeyword Grey Literature *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Web Communities *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Knowledge sharing *
dc.subject.singlekeyword Concept Maps *
dc.title Knowledge communities in grey en
dc.type.circulation Internazionale en
dc.type.driver info:eu-repo/semantics/article -
dc.type.full 01 Contributo su Rivista::01.01 Articolo in rivista it
dc.type.miur 262 -
dc.type.referee Comitato scientifico en
dc.ugov.descaux1 217353 -
iris.orcid.lastModifiedDate 2024/11/28 16:39:24 *
iris.orcid.lastModifiedMillisecond 1732808364743 *
iris.scopus.extIssued 2012 -
iris.scopus.extTitle Knowledge communities in grey -
iris.sitodocente.maxattempts 1 -
scopus.authority.ancejournal THE GREY JOURNAL###1574-1796 *
scopus.category 3309 *
scopus.contributor.affiliation -
scopus.contributor.afid -
scopus.contributor.auid 36621334800 -
scopus.contributor.country -
scopus.contributor.dptid -
scopus.contributor.name Claudia -
scopus.contributor.subaffiliation -
scopus.contributor.surname Marzi -
scopus.date.issued 2012 *
scopus.description.abstracteng The dynamic nature of modern human social interactions, and the increasing capability of wireless and mobile devices for creating and sharing contents, open up the opportunity for a wide dissemination of information through complex knowledge sharing systems. As the shared knowledge components build cognitive ties, there is no real sharing of knowledge without a common understanding of it. In this article, particular emphasis is laid on technologies in Natural Language understanding and knowledge management for providing structured, intelligent access to the continuously evolving content, generated on-line in a pervasive collaborative environment. In detail, robust automated techniques for term extraction and knowledge acquisition are used to tap the information density and the global coherence of text excerpts sampled from both general-purpose and subject-specific social networks. We show empirically that the two sources may exhibit considerable differences in terms of content accessibility and informativeness. *
scopus.description.allpeopleoriginal Marzi C. *
scopus.differences scopus.description.allpeopleoriginal *
scopus.document.type ar *
scopus.document.types ar *
scopus.identifier.eissn 1574-180X *
scopus.identifier.pui 369707734 *
scopus.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-84883276602 *
scopus.journal.sourceid 17500155021 *
scopus.language.iso eng *
scopus.publisher.name GreyNet *
scopus.relation.firstpage 27 *
scopus.relation.issue 1 *
scopus.relation.lastpage 33 *
scopus.relation.volume 8 *
scopus.title Knowledge communities in grey *
scopus.titleeng Knowledge communities in grey *
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