Bottom-Up Abstractive Summarization
read the original abstract
Neural network-based methods for abstractive summarization produce outputs that are more fluent than other techniques, but which can be poor at content selection. This work proposes a simple technique for addressing this issue: use a data-efficient content selector to over-determine phrases in a source document that should be part of the summary. We use this selector as a bottom-up attention step to constrain the model to likely phrases. We show that this approach improves the ability to compress text, while still generating fluent summaries. This two-step process is both simpler and higher performing than other end-to-end content selection models, leading to significant improvements on ROUGE for both the CNN-DM and NYT corpus. Furthermore, the content selector can be trained with as little as 1,000 sentences, making it easy to transfer a trained summarizer to a new domain.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
-
Enriching and Controlling Global Semantics for Text Summarization
A normalizing-flow neural topic model plus control mechanism are added to Transformer summarizers to supply and regulate global semantics, with reported gains over prior models on five benchmarks.
-
Do Transformer Attention Heads Provide Transparency in Abstractive Summarization?
Analysis of transformer attention heads in abstractive summarization shows specialization in some heads and proposes a method to measure model reliance on learned attention distributions.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.