39,051 research outputs found
Improving Sequential Determinantal Point Processes for Supervised Video Summarization
It is now much easier than ever before to produce videos. While the
ubiquitous video data is a great source for information discovery and
extraction, the computational challenges are unparalleled. Automatically
summarizing the videos has become a substantial need for browsing, searching,
and indexing visual content. This paper is in the vein of supervised video
summarization using sequential determinantal point process (SeqDPP), which
models diversity by a probabilistic distribution. We improve this model in two
folds. In terms of learning, we propose a large-margin algorithm to address the
exposure bias problem in SeqDPP. In terms of modeling, we design a new
probabilistic distribution such that, when it is integrated into SeqDPP, the
resulting model accepts user input about the expected length of the summary.
Moreover, we also significantly extend a popular video summarization dataset by
1) more egocentric videos, 2) dense user annotations, and 3) a refined
evaluation scheme. We conduct extensive experiments on this dataset (about 60
hours of videos in total) and compare our approach to several competitive
baselines
Query and Output: Generating Words by Querying Distributed Word Representations for Paraphrase Generation
Most recent approaches use the sequence-to-sequence model for paraphrase
generation. The existing sequence-to-sequence model tends to memorize the words
and the patterns in the training dataset instead of learning the meaning of the
words. Therefore, the generated sentences are often grammatically correct but
semantically improper. In this work, we introduce a novel model based on the
encoder-decoder framework, called Word Embedding Attention Network (WEAN). Our
proposed model generates the words by querying distributed word representations
(i.e. neural word embeddings), hoping to capturing the meaning of the according
words. Following previous work, we evaluate our model on two
paraphrase-oriented tasks, namely text simplification and short text
abstractive summarization. Experimental results show that our model outperforms
the sequence-to-sequence baseline by the BLEU score of 6.3 and 5.5 on two
English text simplification datasets, and the ROUGE-2 F1 score of 5.7 on a
Chinese summarization dataset. Moreover, our model achieves state-of-the-art
performances on these three benchmark datasets.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1710.0231
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