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Typical user profile in Social Networking Sites  

Typical user profile in Social Networking Sites  

Source publication
Article
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Social Networking Sites (SNS) have become increasingly popular with the rise of the Web 2.0 in which internet users are invited to contribute and interact on web sites. Although many SNS are criticized for privacy issues, most of their users tend to share more and more personal (and sometimes intimate) content on these communities. This creates new...

Context in source publication

Context 1
... applications can appear as public widgets on the user's profile, leverage his/her community and integrate new social interactions in the facebook interface. For example, as depicted on Figure 3, a social application about users' favorite books can display a widget on the user's profile in order to show off the user's favorite book to the user's contacts, and to invite them to interact about these books (e.g. rating books). ...

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Citations

... Some discuss the importance of using contextual information such as Brézillon [4] and Wang [39]. Others deal with the extraction of contextual information Zitnik [44], Ghita [10], Joly [20], Narayanan [31] and White [40]. Others deal with the use of contextual information in social networks through mobile devices like Johansson [19], Zigkolis [43], Hardy [14] and Qiao [33]. ...
... Joly et al. (Joly et al. 2009) pensent que l'utilisation de certaines informations du contexte peut aider ou remplacer des saisies manuelles des informations de contexte comme la localisation qui peut aider à entamer une communication. ...
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... [34]- [38] IV-E, IV-F Gadget addiction Addiction is fueled by interactivity and quick rewards. ...
... So context-aware services that would provide extensive information shared by family members should be carefully designed with a variety of personalised settings capabilities. There is also a new trend to add context-aware services to SNS [38]. The idea is to use contextual information to provide a more tailored service for the user, for example during a meeting it is possible to automatically map participants to a special SNS group. ...
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... formal definitions for social contexts. Social context can provide content such as a user's location, activity, surrounding people, agenda [18], and emotion [10]. Other definitions about social context refer to interactions wherein people react to events differently, depending on their immediate situation. ...
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Social networking services (in short, SNS) allow users to share their own data with family, friends, and communities. Since there are many kinds of information that has been uploaded and shared through the SNS, the amount of information on the SNS keeps increasing exponentially. Particularly, Facebook has adopted some interesting features related to entertainment (e.g., movie, music and TV show). However, they do not consider contextual information of users for recommendation (e.g., time, location, and social contexts). Therefore, in this paper, we propose a novel approach for movie recommendation based on the integration of a variety contextual information (i.e., when the users watched the movies, where the users watched the movies, and who watched the movie with them). Thus, we developed a Facebook application (called MyMovieHistory) for recording the movie history of users and recommending relevant movies.
... Each work treats a view. Some works treat the whole notion of context as Brézillon [7] and Wang [29]; others treat the contextual information extraction as Zitnik [34], Ghita [17], Joly [19], Narayanan [25], Damian [10] and White [30]. ...
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... Research has focused on different aspects regarding social networks, such as identifying their distinctive features (Cormode and Krishnamurthy, 2008;Golbeck, 2007;Joly et al., 2009) or describing the nature of social network interactions in comparison with online interactions (Holland and Harpin, 2008;Jarrett, 2008;Lampe et al., 2007;McKenna et al., 2002;Tidwell and Walther, 2002;Willson, 2010;. Much attention has also been devoted to how Facebook users represent themselves (Bouvier, 2012;DeAndrea et al., 2010;DeWall et al., 2011). ...
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... Previous research show that user context can be captured using multimedia information stored in Internet-based services [7,[13][14][15]. Joly et al. [16] built a prototype called "Meeting Room Assistant," where different Internet-based services are triggered by sharing contextual artifacts such as content or personal information. Gartrell [15] presents a framework for building context-aware Internet-based services that reflect the preferences of one or more users engaged in collaborative works together. ...
... The functionalities provided by the framework are: the ability of knowing where people are located, easy access to services (input parameters automatically provide context parameters like local weather, public transport information, etc.), remote logging of activities and preferences, and the sharing of such information across different applications. Although the above works in [7,13,15,16] provide user context from data coming from a limited subset of social network sites, they did not include sensors in their context-aware system. They work only inside an indoor environment and hence, do not support user mobility. ...
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... Previous research shows that user context can be captured using multimedia information stored in Internet-based services [7,13,14,19]. Authors in [15] built a prototype called "Meeting Room Assistant," where different Internet-based services are triggered by sharing contextual artefacts such as content or personal information. The author in [14] presents a framework for building context-aware Internet-based services that reflect the preferences of one or more users engaged in collaborative works together. ...
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