Adler, M. (2009). Transcending library catalogs: a comparative study of controlled terms in library of congress subject headings and user-generated tags in librarything for transgender books. Journal of Web Librarianship, 3 (4), 309-331.
Carman, N. (2009). Library thing tags and library of congress subject headings: a comparison of science fiction and fantasy works. Unpublished master’s thesis, Victoria University of Wellington, USA.
Chen, Y. (2008). Analysis of social tagging and book cataloging: a case study. HKLA 50th Anniversary Conference Hong Kong, November 5. Retrieved November 05, 2015, from http://www.hkla.org/events/2008/conf/yi.ppt
Evans, W. (2009). Building Library 3.0. Chandos: Oxford.
Frazier, A. (2012). Playing tag: an exploration of folksonomy in comparison to LCSH. Retrieved November 07, 2015, from http://www.sidelongcitation.com/uploads/8/2/5/6/8256205/frazier.pdf
Furner, J. (2010). Empowering users through social tagging. Retrieved December 25, 2014, from http://www.tammiyk.com/uploads/9/2/1/3/9213112/subject_cataloging.pdf
Heymann, P., & Garcia-Molina, H. (2009). Contrasting controlled vocabulary and tagging: Do experts choose the right names to label the wrong things? Retrieved November 11, 2014, from http://ilpubs.stanford.edu:8090/955/1/cvuv-lbrp.pdf
Lawson, K. G. (2009). Mining social tagging data for enhanced subject access for readers and researchers. Retrieved October 17, 2015, from http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/libcat_pubs
Lu, C., Park, J., & Hu, X. (2010). User tags versus expert-assigned subject terms: a comparison of librarything tags and Library of Congress Subject Headings. Journal of Information Science 36 (6), 763-779.
Rahman, A. I. M. J. (2012). Social tagging versus Expert created subject headings. Master Thesis, Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences, Oslo, Norway. Retrieves Aug. 17, 2015, from http://hdl.handle.net/10760/2558
Rolla, P. J. (2009). User tags versus subject headings: can user-supplied data improve subject access to library collections?. Association for Library Collections & Technical Services, 53 (3), 174-184.
Smith, T. (2007). Cataloging and you: Measuring the efficacy of a folksonomy for subject analysis. In J., Lussky (Ed.) Proceedings of the 18th Workshop of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, Special Interest Group in Classification Research, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Retrieved December 02, 2015, from http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu/2061
Thomas, M., Caudle, D. M., & Schmitz, C. M. (2009). To tag or not to tag? Library Hi Tech, 27(3), 411-434.
Vaidya, P., & Harinarayana, N. S. (2016). The comparative and analytical study of librarything tags with library of congress subject headings. Knowledge Organization, 43 (1), 35-43.
Weber, J. (2006). Folksonomy and controlled vocabulary in librarything. Unpublished Final Project, University of Pittsburgh. Retrieved October 10, 2015, from http://jonathanweber.info/samples/2452-Folksonomy.pdf
Voorbij, H. J. (1998). Title keywords and subject descriptors: a comparison of subject search entries of books in the humanities and social sciences. Journal of Documentation, 54 (4), 466-476.
Wu, D., He, D., Qiu, J., Lin, R., & Liu, Y. (2013). Comparing social tags with subject headings on annotating books: a study comparing the information science domain in English and Chinese. Journal of Information Science, 39 (2), 169-187.
Send comment about this article