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Finding nuggets in documents: A machine learning approach

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  • Yi‐fang Brook Wu
  • Quanzhi Li
  • Razvan Stefan Bot
  • Xin Chen

Abstract

Document keyphrases provide a concise summary of a document's content, offering semantic metadata summarizing a document. They can be used in many applications related to knowledge management and text mining, such as automatic text summarization, development of search engines, document clustering, document classification, thesaurus construction, and browsing interfaces. Because only a small portion of documents have keyphrases assigned by authors, and it is time‐consuming and costly to manually assign keyphrases to documents, it is necessary to develop an algorithm to automatically generate keyphrases for documents. This paper describes a Keyphrase Identification Program (KIP), which extracts document keyphrases by using prior positive samples of human identified phrases to assign weights to the candidate keyphrases. The logic of our algorithm is: The more keywords a candidate keyphrase contains and the more significant these keywords are, the more likely this candidate phrase is a keyphrase. KIP's learning function can enrich the glossary database by automatically adding new identified keyphrases to the database. KIP's personalization feature will let the user build a glossary database specifically suitable for the area of his/her interest. The evaluation results show that KIP's performance is better than the systems we compared to and that the learning function is effective.

Suggested Citation

  • Yi‐fang Brook Wu & Quanzhi Li & Razvan Stefan Bot & Xin Chen, 2006. "Finding nuggets in documents: A machine learning approach," Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, Association for Information Science & Technology, vol. 57(6), pages 740-752, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:bla:jamist:v:57:y:2006:i:6:p:740-752
    DOI: 10.1002/asi.20341
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