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Topic identification based extrinsic evaluation of summarization techniques applied to conversational speech

Published in:
Proc. IEEE Int. Conf. on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, ICASSP, 25-30 March 2012, pp. 5073-6.

Summary

Document summarization algorithms are most commonly evaluated according to the intrinsic quality of the summaries they produce. An alternate approach is to examine the extrinsic utility of a summary, measured by the ability of the summary to aid a human in the completion of a specific task. In this paper, we use topic identification as a proxy for relevancy determination in the context of an information retrieval task, and a summary is deemed effective if it enables a user to determine the topical content of a retrieved document. We utilize Amazon's Mechanical Turk service to perform a large-scale human study contrasting four different summarization systems applied to conversational speech from the Fisher Corpus. We show that these results appear to be correlated with the performance of an automated topic identification system, and argue that this automated system can act as a low-cost proxy for a human evaluation during the development stages of a summarization system.
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Summary

Document summarization algorithms are most commonly evaluated according to the intrinsic quality of the summaries they produce. An alternate approach is to examine the extrinsic utility of a summary, measured by the ability of the summary to aid a human in the completion of a specific task. In this paper...

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