2,567 research outputs found
LCSTS: A Large Scale Chinese Short Text Summarization Dataset
Automatic text summarization is widely regarded as the highly difficult
problem, partially because of the lack of large text summarization data set.
Due to the great challenge of constructing the large scale summaries for full
text, in this paper, we introduce a large corpus of Chinese short text
summarization dataset constructed from the Chinese microblogging website Sina
Weibo, which is released to the public
{http://icrc.hitsz.edu.cn/Article/show/139.html}. This corpus consists of over
2 million real Chinese short texts with short summaries given by the author of
each text. We also manually tagged the relevance of 10,666 short summaries with
their corresponding short texts. Based on the corpus, we introduce recurrent
neural network for the summary generation and achieve promising results, which
not only shows the usefulness of the proposed corpus for short text
summarization research, but also provides a baseline for further research on
this topic.Comment: Recently, we received feedbacks from Yuya Taguchi from NAIST in Japan
and Qian Chen from USTC of China, that the results in the EMNLP2015 version
seem to be underrated. So we carefully checked our results and find out that
we made a mistake while using the standard ROUGE. Then we re-evaluate all
methods in the paper and get corrected results listed in Table 2 of this
versio
Learning to generate one-sentence biographies from Wikidata
We investigate the generation of one-sentence Wikipedia biographies from
facts derived from Wikidata slot-value pairs. We train a recurrent neural
network sequence-to-sequence model with attention to select facts and generate
textual summaries. Our model incorporates a novel secondary objective that
helps ensure it generates sentences that contain the input facts. The model
achieves a BLEU score of 41, improving significantly upon the vanilla
sequence-to-sequence model and scoring roughly twice that of a simple template
baseline. Human preference evaluation suggests the model is nearly as good as
the Wikipedia reference. Manual analysis explores content selection, suggesting
the model can trade the ability to infer knowledge against the risk of
hallucinating incorrect information
Graph-Sparse LDA: A Topic Model with Structured Sparsity
Originally designed to model text, topic modeling has become a powerful tool
for uncovering latent structure in domains including medicine, finance, and
vision. The goals for the model vary depending on the application: in some
cases, the discovered topics may be used for prediction or some other
downstream task. In other cases, the content of the topic itself may be of
intrinsic scientific interest.
Unfortunately, even using modern sparse techniques, the discovered topics are
often difficult to interpret due to the high dimensionality of the underlying
space. To improve topic interpretability, we introduce Graph-Sparse LDA, a
hierarchical topic model that leverages knowledge of relationships between
words (e.g., as encoded by an ontology). In our model, topics are summarized by
a few latent concept-words from the underlying graph that explain the observed
words. Graph-Sparse LDA recovers sparse, interpretable summaries on two
real-world biomedical datasets while matching state-of-the-art prediction
performance
Unsupervised Summarization for Chat Logs with Topic-Oriented Ranking and Context-Aware Auto-Encoders
Automatic chat summarization can help people quickly grasp important
information from numerous chat messages. Unlike conventional documents, chat
logs usually have fragmented and evolving topics. In addition, these logs
contain a quantity of elliptical and interrogative sentences, which make the
chat summarization highly context dependent. In this work, we propose a novel
unsupervised framework called RankAE to perform chat summarization without
employing manually labeled data. RankAE consists of a topic-oriented ranking
strategy that selects topic utterances according to centrality and diversity
simultaneously, as well as a denoising auto-encoder that is carefully designed
to generate succinct but context-informative summaries based on the selected
utterances. To evaluate the proposed method, we collect a large-scale dataset
of chat logs from a customer service environment and build an annotated set
only for model evaluation. Experimental results show that RankAE significantly
outperforms other unsupervised methods and is able to generate high-quality
summaries in terms of relevance and topic coverage.Comment: Accepted by AAAI 2021, 9 page
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