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Presentation Social Systems: Can we do more than just poke friends?

Seem 5010 Advanced Database and Information System. Presentation Social Systems: Can we do more than just poke friends?. Jack Cheng Ka Ho The Chinese University of Hong Kong. List of Content. Motivation CourseRank Unique Features Lessons Learnt so Far Interaction with Rich Data

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Presentation Social Systems: Can we do more than just poke friends?

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  1. Seem 5010Advanced Database and Information System PresentationSocial Systems: Can we do more than just poke friends? Jack Cheng Ka Ho The Chinese University of Hong Kong

  2. List of Content • Motivation • CourseRank • Unique Features • Lessons Learnt so Far • Interaction with Rich Data • Data Clouds • Flexible Recommendations • Conclusion

  3. Motivation • Social web sites • FaceBook, MySpace, Y! Answers and Flickr • Shared resources • Photos, Personal Information, Evaluations, Answers to Questions and else • Thinking: • Have they attracted equal attention from the research community? • Are there any new or interesting challenges to researchers? Can we do more than just poke friends?

  4. Motivation (Con’t)

  5. Motivation (Con’t) • Some Important Questions for Social Systems • What are the most effective ways for user to interact? • What can be shared among the users in a community? Is it sensitive information? • What information can be trusted? How to build into or studied in a social site? • What are the best ways for users to visualize and interact with information? • How and what kind of resources can interact among users? • How do the systems grow over time? Will it affect the user experience? CourseRank

  6. CourseRank • Educational Social Site • For Stanford students can explore course offerings and plan academic program • Provides an ideal platform for conducting hand-on research on social systems • Helps to experiment with different algorithms and interface and “out of the box” thinking easily • Live System without competition

  7. CourseRank (Con’t) • What a Stanford social site can do … • For students: • Search for courses of interest • Rank the accuracy of others’ comments • Get personalized recommendations • Shop for classes • Organize classes into quarterly or 4-year schedule • Check fulfill the requirements • Feedback tool for faculty and administrators • For Faculties: • Modify/Add comments to courses • Check the class compare to others • Little over a year, 9000 out of about 14000 Stanford students are using it.

  8. CourseRank – Unique Features • Hybrid System • Database application + Social System • Rich Data • New Tools • Planner, Requirement Tracker, CourseCloud and FlexRecs • Site Control • Centrally stored • Closed Community • Stanford Community • Constituents • Students, Faculty and Staff • Restricted Access • Stanford Network

  9. CourseRank – Lessons Learnt so Far • Learnt from building and running CourseRank … • Meaningful Incentives – • Critical for Visit and Share Resources • Example-Yahoo! Answers (Scoring Scheme) • Best Answers (10 points), Login each day (1 point), Vote to become the Best Answer (1 point) … • Boosting Reputation • CourseRank • Different Tools – Course Planner, Requirement Tracker and else • Motivate to input Accurate data

  10. CourseRank – Lessons Learnt so Far • Interaction for Constituents • Offer the specialized and customized features for each • Motivate each to use • The Power of a Close Community • Known Identities • Willing to Contribute • No Spammers and Malicious users • Trust CourseRank

  11. CourseRank – Lessons Learnt so Far • It’s the Data, Stupid • Official & External Data + User Input Data • HARD => Getting Permissions and the Right • Economic and Privacy • Carefully Negotiated with Owners • Privacy can be “shared” • Unconcerned about Privacy • Closed Community • Like to Visit others’s Pages on Facebook or MySpace

  12. CourseRank – Lessons Learnt so Far • Closed Loop Feedback • CourseRank is better than Others built by outside contractor • Reason: Developers is Stanford Students • Familiar with the application • Feedback loop with customers • Beyond CourseRank: The Corporate Social Site • Interact and Share Experiences and Resourses • Some companies are tracking the progress

  13. Interaction with Rich Data • CourseRank is an excellent testbed with Rich Data • Study Social System & Identify the features • Challenges: • Search Engines • Important Keywords should be known • “Can we make unexpected connections?” • Recommendation Engines • Popular Items • “Can we take into account the student’s personal interests and grade history to recommend appropriate courses?” Data Clouds & Flexible Recommendations

  14. Interaction with Rich Data - Data Clouds • Data Cloud = Tag Cloud (Hyperlink) • Tags are the most representative and significant words after keyword search over the database • Summarize Search Results • Help refine the Searches • Questions: • How do they effectively define and search over search entities that span multiple relations? • How do they rank search entities depending on the position of a query term? • How can they dynamically and efficiently compute the data cloud?

  15. Interaction with Rich Data - Flexible Recommendations • Typical recommendation system • Limitations: • Hard to modify the algorithm • Hard to experiment • FlexRecs • Easily Defined, Customized and Processed • Special recommend operator • Input a set of tuples and rank them by comparing them to others

  16. Interaction with Rich Data - Flexible Recommendations • The relations: • A related course workflow: • Challenges: • How can we optimize the execution of workflows? • What is an appropriate interface for allowing users to control recommendations?

  17. Conclusion • Social Sites • Well-defined Community • User more willing to contribute => Rich Data • Rich Data => Social Interaction Tools • 2 tools • Data Clouds • FlexRecs Social site can provide valuable services based on user contributed information and present interesting information management and interaction challenges.

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