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Most Influential ACL 2018 Paper · 2026-03 edition

Fast Abstractive Summarization With Reinforce-Selected Sentence Rewriting

Yen-Chun Chen; Mohit Bansal

Venue
Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) 2018
Recognition
Most Influential ACL 2018 Paper (Rank No. 14)
Edition
2026-03
Impact factor
7
Certificate ID
b0d0bf179538b551

Abstract

Inspired by how humans summarize long documents, we propose an accurate and fast summarization model that first selects salient sentences and then rewrites them abstractively (i.e., compresses and paraphrases) to generate a concise overall summary. We use a novel sentence-level policy gradient method to bridge the non-differentiable computation between these two neural networks in a hierarchical way, while maintaining language fluency. Empirically, we achieve the new state-of-the-art on all metrics (including human evaluation) on the CNN/Daily Mail dataset, as well as significantly higher abstractiveness scores. Moreover, by first operating at the sentence-level and then the word-level, we enable parallel decoding of our neural generative model that results in substantially faster (10-20x) inference speed as well as 4x faster training convergence than previous long-paragraph encoder-decoder models. We also demonstrate the generalization of our model on the test-only DUC-2002 dataset, where we achieve higher scores than a state-of-the-art model.

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