A Context-Sensitive Manifold Ranking Approach to Query-Focused Multi-document Summarization

Author(s):  
Xiaoyan Cai ◽  
Wenjie Li
2013 ◽  
Vol 380-384 ◽  
pp. 2811-2816
Author(s):  
Kai Lei ◽  
Yi Fan Zeng

Query-oriented multi-document summarization (QMDS) attempts to generate a concise piece of text byextracting sentences from a target document collection, with the aim of not only conveying the key content of that corpus, also, satisfying the information needs expressed by that query. Due to its great applicable value, QMDS has been intensively studied in recent decades. Three properties are supposed crucial for a good summary, i.e., relevance, prestige and low redundancy (orso-called diversity). Unfortunately, most existing work either disregarded the concern of diversity, or handled it with non-optimized heuristics, usually based on greedy sentences election. Inspired by the manifold-ranking process, which deals with query-biased prestige, and DivRank algorithm which captures query-independent diversity ranking, in this paper, we propose a novel biased diversity ranking model, named ManifoldDivRank, for query-sensitive summarization tasks. The top-ranked sentences discovered by our algorithm not only enjoy query-oriented high prestige, more importantly, they are dissimilar with each other. Experimental results on DUC2005and DUC2006 benchmark data sets demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposal.


2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 233-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Peper ◽  
Simone N. Loeffler

Current ambulatory technologies are highly relevant for neuropsychological assessment and treatment as they provide a gateway to real life data. Ambulatory assessment of cognitive complaints, skills and emotional states in natural contexts provides information that has a greater ecological validity than traditional assessment approaches. This issue presents an overview of current technological and methodological innovations, opportunities, problems and limitations of these methods designed for the context-sensitive measurement of cognitive, emotional and behavioral function. The usefulness of selected ambulatory approaches is demonstrated and their relevance for an ecologically valid neuropsychology is highlighted.


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