Knight, K. and Marcu, D. (2000). Statistics-based summarization - step one: Sentence compression. In AAAI/IAAI, pages 703-710.
Abstract
When humans produce summaries of documents, they do not simply extract sentences and concatenate them. Rather, they create new sentences that are grammatical, that cohere with one another, and that capture the most salient pieces of information in the original document. Given that large collections of text/abstract pairs are available online, it is now possible to envision algorithms that are trained to mimic this process. In this paper, we focus on sentence compression, a simpler version of this larger challenge. We aim to achieve two goals simultaneously: our compressions should be grammatical, and they should retain the most important pieces of information. These two goals can conflict. We devise both noisy-channel and decision-tree approaches to the problem, and we evaluate results against manual compressions and a simple baseline.
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[das2007survey] "Knight and Marcu (2000) introduced a statistical approach to sentence compression. The authors believe that understanding the simpler task of compressing a sentence may be a fruitful rst step to later tackle the problems of single and multi-document summarization"
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