To What Extent does Content Selection affect Surface Realization in the context of Headline Generation?
Headline generation is a task where the most important information of a news article is condensed and embodied into a single short sentence. This task is normally addressed by summarization techniques, ideally combining extractive and abstractive methods together with sentence compression or fusion techniques.
Although Natural Language Generation (NLG) techniques have not been directly exploited for headline generation, they may provide better mechanisms than summarization techniques to paraphrase the information of a text. Therefore, this work analyzes and evaluates the effectiveness of NLG techniques for generating headlines. In NLG, both content selection and surface realization are equally important—there is no point in generating text without knowing the topic. Considering this premise, we therefore take HanaNLG—a hybrid surface realization approach—as a basis, and we analyze the effect in the generated text when different content selection strategies are integrated at macroplanning stage.
The experiments conducted show that, despite not using any sophisticated summarization method, the proposed approach provided the following benefits: i) it generated a coherent, linguistically structured headline; ii) it obtained results on standard datasets (i.e., DUC 2003 and DUC 2004) that were comparable to several competitive systems, in terms of the content of the generated headline; and, iii) the headlines generated by the whole approach (PLM-HanaNLG) were preferred by human assessors compared to those generated by the best performing system in DUC 2003.

Journal: Computer Speech & Language

Authors: Cristina Barros, Marta Vicente y Elena Lloret

Acceptance: December 2020

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