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Automatic Generation of Social Tags for Music Recommendation

Neural Information Processing Systems

Social tags are user-generated keywords associated with some resource on the Web. In the case of music, social tags have become an important component of Web2.0" recommender systems, allowing users to generate playlists based on use-dependent terms such as "chill" or "jogging" that have been applied to particular songs. In this paper, we propose a method for predicting these social tags directly from MP3 files. Using a set of boosted classifiers, we map audio features onto social tags collected from the Web. The resulting automatic tags (or "autotags") furnish information about music that is otherwise untagged or poorly tagged, allowing for insertion of previously unheard music into a social recommender. This avoids the ''cold-start problem'' common in such systems. Autotags can also be used to smooth the tag space from which similarities and recommendations are made by providing a set of comparable baseline tags for all tracks in a recommender system."


Automatic Generation of Social Tags for Music Recommendation

Neural Information Processing Systems

Social tags are user-generated keywords associated with some resource on the Web. In the case of music, social tags have become an important component of Web2.0" recommender systems, allowing users to generate playlists based on use-dependent terms such as "chill" or "jogging" that have been applied to particular songs. In this paper, we propose a method for predicting these social tags directly from MP3 files. Using a set of boosted classifiers, we map audio features onto social tags collected from the Web. The resulting automatic tags (or "autotags") furnish information about music that is otherwise untagged or poorly tagged, allowing for insertion of previously unheard music into a social recommender. This avoids the ''cold-start problem'' common in such systems. Autotags can also be used to smooth the tag space from which similarities and recommendations are made by providing a set of comparable baseline tags for all tracks in a recommender system."


Beyond Flickr: Not All Image Tagging Is Created Equal

AAAI Conferences

This paper reports on the linguistic analysis of a tag set of nearly 50,000 tags collected as part of the steve.museum project. The tags describe images of objects in museum collections. We present our results on morphological, part of speech and semantic analysis. We demonstrate that deeper tag processing provides valuable information for organizing and categorizing social tags. This promises to improve access to museum objects by leveraging the characteristics of tags and the relationships between them rather than treating them as individual items. The paper shows the value of using deep computational linguistic techniques in interdisciplinary projects on tagging over images of objects in museums and libraries. We compare our data and analysis to Flickr and other image tagging projects.


Improving Text Clustering with Social Tagging

AAAI Conferences

Another important question is the absoluteness of the constraints. Lately several web-based tagging systems such as Technorati, Even if we use this approach to turn tags into constraints, Flickr or Delicious have become very popular. In this a fair amount of them are bound to be inaccurate paper we will exploit the information created by the community (i.e., linking documents which should not be in the same in Delicious: a social bookmarking service where cluster) until a high value of the parameter t, due to the polysemy the users can save the URLs of their favourite webpages of the terms used as tags or to differences in the criteria offering also the possibility of associating tags to them. of the taggers. Consequently, we have used soft positive On the other hand the clustering methods are a very important constraints, meaning that the documents affected by one of data mining tool in order to exploit the knowledge them are likely to be in the same cluster, without forcing the present in data collections. In the last years a new family of clustering algorithm to actually put them so.


Automatic Generation of Social Tags for Music Recommendation

Neural Information Processing Systems

Social tags are user-generated keywords associated with some resource on the Web. In the case of music, social tags have become an important component of Web2.0" recommender systems, allowing users to generate playlists based on use-dependent terms such as "chill" or "jogging" that have been applied to particular songs. In this paper, we propose a method for predicting these social tags directly from MP3 files. Using a set of boosted classifiers, we map audio features onto social tags collected from the Web. The resulting automatic tags (or "autotags") furnish information about music that is otherwise untagged or poorly tagged, allowing for insertion of previously unheard music into a social recommender. This avoids the ''cold-start problem'' common in such systems. Autotags can also be used to smooth the tag space from which similarities and recommendations are made by providing a set of comparable baseline tags for all tracks in a recommender system."