folksonomic
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English
[edit]Adjective
[edit]folksonomic (comparative more folksonomic, superlative most folksonomic) (usually not comparable)
- Of or pertaining to folksonomy.
- 2005 December 11, Daniel H. Pink, “Folksonomy”, in New York Times[1], section 6, page 69:
- Now folksonomies are moving into new realms. At the Art Museum Community Cataloging Project, officials from the Guggenheim, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and a half-dozen other establishments are taking a folksonomic approach to their online collections by allowing patrons to supplement the specialized lexicon of curators. And this fall, Amazon.com introduced a system that allows readers to classify books.
- 2011, Heejin Park, “A Conceptual Framework to Study Folksonomic Interaction”, in Knowledge Organization, volume 38, number 6, pages 515–529:
- The author uses information scent and foraging theory as a context to discuss how folksonomy is constructed through interactions among users, a folksonomic system, and a given domain that consists of a group of users who share the same interest or goals.