Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Peter A. Rankel

Also published as: Peter Rankel


2024

pdf bib
Plausibly Problematic Questions in Multiple-Choice Benchmarks for Commonsense Reasoning
Shramay Palta | Nishant Balepur | Peter A. Rankel | Sarah Wiegreffe | Marine Carpuat | Rachel Rudinger
Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: EMNLP 2024

2019

pdf bib
RANLP 2019 Multilingual Headline Generation Task Overview
Marina Litvak | John M. Conroy | Peter A. Rankel
Proceedings of the Workshop MultiLing 2019: Summarization Across Languages, Genres and Sources

The objective of the 2019 RANLP Multilingual Headline Generation (HG) Task is to explore some of the challenges highlighted by current state of the art approaches on creating informative headlines to news articles: non-descriptive headlines, out-of-domain training data, generating headlines from long documents which are not well represented by the head heuristic, and dealing with multilingual domain. This tasks makes available a large set of training data for headline generation and provides an evaluation methods for the task. Our data sets are drawn from Wikinews as well as Wikipedia. Participants were required to generate headlines for at least 3 languages, which were evaluated via automatic methods. A key aspect of the task is multilinguality. The task measures the performance of multilingual headline generation systems using the Wikipedia and Wikinews articles in multiple languages. The objective is to assess the performance of automatic headline generation techniques on text documents covering a diverse range of languages and topics outside the news domain.

2017

pdf bib
Proceedings of the MultiLing 2017 Workshop on Summarization and Summary Evaluation Across Source Types and Genres
George Giannakopoulos | Elena Lloret | John M. Conroy | Josef Steinberger | Marina Litvak | Peter Rankel | Benoit Favre
Proceedings of the MultiLing 2017 Workshop on Summarization and Summary Evaluation Across Source Types and Genres

pdf bib
MultiLing 2017 Overview
George Giannakopoulos | John Conroy | Jeff Kubina | Peter A. Rankel | Elena Lloret | Josef Steinberger | Marina Litvak | Benoit Favre
Proceedings of the MultiLing 2017 Workshop on Summarization and Summary Evaluation Across Source Types and Genres

In this brief report we present an overview of the MultiLing 2017 effort and workshop, as implemented within EACL 2017. MultiLing is a community-driven initiative that pushes the state-of-the-art in Automatic Summarization by providing data sets and fostering further research and development of summarization systems. This year the scope of the workshop was widened, bringing together researchers that work on summarization across sources, languages and genres. We summarize the main tasks planned and implemented this year, the contributions received, and we also provide insights on next steps.

2013

pdf bib
A Decade of Automatic Content Evaluation of News Summaries: Reassessing the State of the Art
Peter A. Rankel | John M. Conroy | Hoa Trang Dang | Ani Nenkova
Proceedings of the 51st Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 2: Short Papers)

2012

pdf bib
Assessing the Effect of Inconsistent Assessors on Summarization Evaluation
Karolina Owczarzak | Peter A. Rankel | Hoa Trang Dang | John M. Conroy
Proceedings of the 50th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Volume 2: Short Papers)

2011

pdf bib
Ranking Human and Machine Summarization Systems
Peter Rankel | John Conroy | Eric Slud | Dianne O’Leary
Proceedings of the 2011 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing