301 research outputs found

    A Novel ILP Framework for Summarizing Content with High Lexical Variety

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    Summarizing content contributed by individuals can be challenging, because people make different lexical choices even when describing the same events. However, there remains a significant need to summarize such content. Examples include the student responses to post-class reflective questions, product reviews, and news articles published by different news agencies related to the same events. High lexical diversity of these documents hinders the system's ability to effectively identify salient content and reduce summary redundancy. In this paper, we overcome this issue by introducing an integer linear programming-based summarization framework. It incorporates a low-rank approximation to the sentence-word co-occurrence matrix to intrinsically group semantically-similar lexical items. We conduct extensive experiments on datasets of student responses, product reviews, and news documents. Our approach compares favorably to a number of extractive baselines as well as a neural abstractive summarization system. The paper finally sheds light on when and why the proposed framework is effective at summarizing content with high lexical variety.Comment: Accepted for publication in the journal of Natural Language Engineering, 201

    Deep Learning for Semantic Video Understanding

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    The field of computer vision has long strived to extract understanding from images and videos sequences. The recent flood of video data along with massive increments in computing power have provided the perfect environment to generate advanced research to extract intelligence from video data. Video data is ubiquitous, occurring in numerous everyday activities such as surveillance, traffic, movies, sports, etc. This massive amount of video needs to be analyzed and processed efficiently to extract semantic features towards video understanding. Such capabilities could benefit surveillance, video analytics and visually challenged people. While watching a long video, humans have the uncanny ability to bypass unnecessary information and concentrate on the important events. These key events can be used as a higher-level description or summary of a long video. Inspired by the human visual cortex, this research affords such abilities in computers using neural networks. Useful or interesting events are first extracted from a video and then deep learning methodologies are used to extract natural language summaries for each video sequence. Previous approaches of video description either have been domain specific or use a template based approach to fill detected objects such as verbs or actions to constitute a grammatically correct sentence. This work involves exploiting temporal contextual information for sentence generation while working on wide domain datasets. Current state-of- the-art video description methodologies are well suited for small video clips whereas this research can also be applied to long sequences of video. This work proposes methods to generate visual summaries of long videos, and in addition proposes techniques to annotate and generate textual summaries of the videos using recurrent networks. End to end video summarization immensely depends on abstractive summarization of video descriptions. State-of- the-art neural language & attention joint models have been used to generate textual summaries. Interesting segments of long video are extracted based on image quality as well as cinematographic and consumer preference. This novel approach will be a stepping stone for a variety of innovative applications such as video retrieval, automatic summarization for visually impaired persons, automatic movie review generation, video question and answering systems

    Analysis of Abstractive and Extractive Summarization Methods

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    This paper explains the existing approaches employed for (automatic) text summarization. The summarizing method is part of the natural language processing (NLP) field and is applied to the source document to produce a compact version that preserves its aggregate meaning and key concepts. On a broader scale, approaches for text-based summarization are categorized into two groups: abstractive and extractive. In abstractive summarization, the main contents of the input text are paraphrased, possibly using vocabulary that is not present in the source document, while in extractive summarization, the output summary is a subset of the input text and is generated by using the sentence ranking technique. In this paper, the main ideas behind the existing methods used for abstractive and extractive summarization are discussed broadly. A comparative study of these methods is also highlighted
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