Argumentative classification of extracted sentences as a first step towards flexible abstracting: Difference between revisions

From HLT@INESC-ID

No edit summary
 
Line 11: Line 11:
== Abstract ==
== Abstract ==


Knowledge about the rhetorical structure of a text is useful for automatic abstraction. We are interested in the automatic extraction of rhetorical units from the source text, units such as PROBLEM STATEMENT, CON-CLUSIONS alld RESULTS. We want to use such extracts to generate high-compression abstracts of scientific articles. In this paper, we present an extension of Kupiec, Pealersen and Chen's (1995) methodology for trainable statistical sentence extraction. Our extension addition-ally classifies the extracted sentences according to their rhetorical role.
Knowledge about the rhetorical structure of a text is useful for automatic abstraction. We are interested in the automatic extraction of rhetorical units from the source text, units such as PROBLEM STATEMENT, CONCLUSIONS alld RESULTS. We want to use such extracts to generate high-compression abstracts of scientific articles. In this paper, we present an extension of Kupiec, Pealersen and Chen's (1995) methodology for trainable statistical sentence extraction. Our extension addition-ally classifies the extracted sentences according to their rhetorical role.


[[category:discourse]]
[[category:discourse]]
[[category:summarization]]
[[category:summarization]]

Revision as of 17:18, 3 March 2009

Bibliographical data

  • Source: Advances in Automatic Text Summarization
  • Pages: 155-171
  • Year: 1999
  • Authors: Simone Teufel and Marc Moens
  • Publisher: MIT Press

Citeseerx

Abstract

Knowledge about the rhetorical structure of a text is useful for automatic abstraction. We are interested in the automatic extraction of rhetorical units from the source text, units such as PROBLEM STATEMENT, CONCLUSIONS alld RESULTS. We want to use such extracts to generate high-compression abstracts of scientific articles. In this paper, we present an extension of Kupiec, Pealersen and Chen's (1995) methodology for trainable statistical sentence extraction. Our extension addition-ally classifies the extracted sentences according to their rhetorical role.