Thilina Rajapakse

2papers

2 Papers

CLAug 19, 2024
Beyond Relevant Documents: A Knowledge-Intensive Approach for Query-Focused Summarization using Large Language Models

Weijia Zhang, Jia-Hong Huang, Svitlana Vakulenko et al. · amazon-science

Query-focused summarization (QFS) is a fundamental task in natural language processing with broad applications, including search engines and report generation. However, traditional approaches assume the availability of relevant documents, which may not always hold in practical scenarios, especially in highly specialized topics. To address this limitation, we propose a novel knowledge-intensive approach that reframes QFS as a knowledge-intensive task setup. This approach comprises two main components: a retrieval module and a summarization controller. The retrieval module efficiently retrieves potentially relevant documents from a large-scale knowledge corpus based on the given textual query, eliminating the dependence on pre-existing document sets. The summarization controller seamlessly integrates a powerful large language model (LLM)-based summarizer with a carefully tailored prompt, ensuring the generated summary is comprehensive and relevant to the query. To assess the effectiveness of our approach, we create a new dataset, along with human-annotated relevance labels, to facilitate comprehensive evaluation covering both retrieval and summarization performance. Extensive experiments demonstrate the superior performance of our approach, particularly its ability to generate accurate summaries without relying on the availability of relevant documents initially. This underscores our method's versatility and practical applicability across diverse query scenarios.

CLDec 14, 2021
Tackling Query-Focused Summarization as A Knowledge-Intensive Task: A Pilot Study

Weijia Zhang, Svitlana Vakulenko, Thilina Rajapakse et al.

Query-focused summarization (QFS) requires generating a summary given a query using a set of relevant documents. However, such relevant documents should be annotated manually and thus are not readily available in realistic scenarios. To address this limitation, we tackle the QFS task as a knowledge-intensive (KI) task without access to any relevant documents. Instead, we assume that these documents are present in a large-scale knowledge corpus and should be retrieved first. To explore this new setting, we build a new dataset (KI-QFS) by adapting existing QFS datasets. In this dataset, answering the query requires document retrieval from a knowledge corpus. We construct three different knowledge corpora, and we further provide relevance annotations to enable retrieval evaluation. Finally, we benchmark the dataset with state-of-the-art QFS models and retrieval-enhanced models. The experimental results demonstrate that QFS models perform significantly worse on KI-QFS compared to the original QFS task, indicating that the knowledge-intensive setting is much more challenging and offers substantial room for improvement. We believe that our investigation will inspire further research into addressing QFS in more realistic scenarios.