726 research outputs found
Abstractive Multi-Document Summarization via Phrase Selection and Merging
We propose an abstraction-based multi-document summarization framework that
can construct new sentences by exploring more fine-grained syntactic units than
sentences, namely, noun/verb phrases. Different from existing abstraction-based
approaches, our method first constructs a pool of concepts and facts
represented by phrases from the input documents. Then new sentences are
generated by selecting and merging informative phrases to maximize the salience
of phrases and meanwhile satisfy the sentence construction constraints. We
employ integer linear optimization for conducting phrase selection and merging
simultaneously in order to achieve the global optimal solution for a summary.
Experimental results on the benchmark data set TAC 2011 show that our framework
outperforms the state-of-the-art models under automated pyramid evaluation
metric, and achieves reasonably well results on manual linguistic quality
evaluation.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, accepted as a full paper at ACL 201
Adapting the Neural Encoder-Decoder Framework from Single to Multi-Document Summarization
Generating a text abstract from a set of documents remains a challenging
task. The neural encoder-decoder framework has recently been exploited to
summarize single documents, but its success can in part be attributed to the
availability of large parallel data automatically acquired from the Web. In
contrast, parallel data for multi-document summarization are scarce and costly
to obtain. There is a pressing need to adapt an encoder-decoder model trained
on single-document summarization data to work with multiple-document input. In
this paper, we present an initial investigation into a novel adaptation method.
It exploits the maximal marginal relevance method to select representative
sentences from multi-document input, and leverages an abstractive
encoder-decoder model to fuse disparate sentences to an abstractive summary.
The adaptation method is robust and itself requires no training data. Our
system compares favorably to state-of-the-art extractive and abstractive
approaches judged by automatic metrics and human assessors.Comment: 11 page
Deep Recurrent Generative Decoder for Abstractive Text Summarization
We propose a new framework for abstractive text summarization based on a
sequence-to-sequence oriented encoder-decoder model equipped with a deep
recurrent generative decoder (DRGN).
Latent structure information implied in the target summaries is learned based
on a recurrent latent random model for improving the summarization quality.
Neural variational inference is employed to address the intractable posterior
inference for the recurrent latent variables.
Abstractive summaries are generated based on both the generative latent
variables and the discriminative deterministic states.
Extensive experiments on some benchmark datasets in different languages show
that DRGN achieves improvements over the state-of-the-art methods.Comment: 10 pages, EMNLP 201
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