Abstract
The informational and social impacts of tags on forming networked publics have drawn extensive scholarly attention. However, existing literature lacks systematic and longitudinal accounts of how trending tags garner community interest and facilitate the promotion of user-generated content. This study addresses this issue by explicating the structures and functions of social tagging, showing how users employed certain tags to improve performance. To provide empirical evidence, we tracked and analyzed social tagging activities in an online community from its early stage for seven years. Over this time frame, very few tags emerged as core tags–the consensus choices that both occurred and co-occurred frequently. Furthermore, the application of core tags, which can represent the tacit rules and platform vernaculars co-defined by the community members, improved performance noticeably more than using peripheral tags. Interestingly, among the core tags, those that possessed linguistic idiosyncrasies particularly contributed to high performance. The findings highlight the complex contingencies of social tagging structures and functions and provide practical implications for users and platforms to strategically manage tag-based networked publics.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 101854 |
Journal | Telematics and Informatics |
Volume | 72 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 2022 |
Funding
The project was supported by the National Science Foundation of the United States (Cyber-Human Systems, Grants: 5367004505 & 5467004506) and the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern California. The authors would like to thank Peter Monge and Lian Jian for their comments and suggestions on the earlier versions of this manuscript.
Keywords
- Core-periphery
- Expertise
- Hashtag
- Networked publics
- Networks
- Tag
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Communication
- Law
- Electrical and Electronic Engineering
- Computer Networks and Communications