HunSum-1: an Abstractive Summarization Dataset for HungarianBotond Barta, Dorina Lakatos, Attila Nagy et al.
We introduce HunSum-1: a dataset for Hungarian abstractive summarization, consisting of 1.14M news articles. The dataset is built by collecting, cleaning and deduplicating data from 9 major Hungarian news sites through CommonCrawl. Using this dataset, we build abstractive summarizer models based on huBERT and mT5. We demonstrate the value of the created dataset by performing a quantitative and qualitative analysis on the models' results. The HunSum-1 dataset, all models used in our experiments and our code are available open source.
TreeSwap: Data Augmentation for Machine Translation via Dependency Subtree SwappingAttila Nagy, Dorina Lakatos, Botond Barta et al.
Data augmentation methods for neural machine translation are particularly useful when limited amount of training data is available, which is often the case when dealing with low-resource languages. We introduce a novel augmentation method, which generates new sentences by swapping objects and subjects across bisentences. This is performed simultaneously based on the dependency parse trees of the source and target sentences. We name this method TreeSwap. Our results show that TreeSwap achieves consistent improvements over baseline models in 4 language pairs in both directions on resource-constrained datasets. We also explore domain-specific corpora, but find that our method does not make significant improvements on law, medical and IT data. We report the scores of similar augmentation methods and find that TreeSwap performs comparably. We also analyze the generated sentences qualitatively and find that the augmentation produces a correct translation in most cases. Our code is available on Github.
Data Augmentation for Machine Translation via Dependency Subtree SwappingAttila Nagy, Dorina Petra Lakatos, Botond Barta et al.
We present a generic framework for data augmentation via dependency subtree swapping that is applicable to machine translation. We extract corresponding subtrees from the dependency parse trees of the source and target sentences and swap these across bisentences to create augmented samples. We perform thorough filtering based on graphbased similarities of the dependency trees and additional heuristics to ensure that extracted subtrees correspond to the same meaning. We conduct resource-constrained experiments on 4 language pairs in both directions using the IWSLT text translation datasets and the Hunglish2 corpus. The results demonstrate consistent improvements in BLEU score over our baseline models in 3 out of 4 language pairs. Our code is available on GitHub.
1.2NAJul 15, 2011
ReactionKinetics - A Mathematica package with applications II. Computational problems when building a reaction kinetics packageA. L. Nagy, D. Papp, J. Tóth
Treating a realistic problem in any field of reaction kinetics raises a series of problems: we review these illustrated with examples using ReactionKinetics, a Mathematica based package.
From News to Summaries: Building a Hungarian Corpus for Extractive and Abstractive SummarizationBotond Barta, Dorina Lakatos, Attila Nagy et al.
Training summarization models requires substantial amounts of training data. However for less resourceful languages like Hungarian, openly available models and datasets are notably scarce. To address this gap our paper introduces HunSum-2 an open-source Hungarian corpus suitable for training abstractive and extractive summarization models. The dataset is assembled from segments of the Common Crawl corpus undergoing thorough cleaning, preprocessing and deduplication. In addition to abstractive summarization we generate sentence-level labels for extractive summarization using sentence similarity. We train baseline models for both extractive and abstractive summarization using the collected dataset. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the trained models, we perform both quantitative and qualitative evaluation. Our dataset, models and code are publicly available, encouraging replication, further research, and real-world applications across various domains.
1.2NAJul 15, 2011
ReactionKinetics---A Mathematica Package with Applications I. Requirements for a Reaction Kinetics PackageJ. Tóth, A. L. Nagy, D. Papp
Requirements are formulated for a reaction kinetics package to be useful for an as wide as possible circle of users and illustrated with examples using ReactionKinetics, a Mathematica based package.
Syntax-based data augmentation for Hungarian-English machine translationAttila Nagy, Patrick Nanys, Balázs Frey Konrád et al.
We train Transformer-based neural machine translation models for Hungarian-English and English-Hungarian using the Hunglish2 corpus. Our best models achieve a BLEU score of 40.0 on HungarianEnglish and 33.4 on English-Hungarian. Furthermore, we present results on an ongoing work about syntax-based augmentation for neural machine translation. Both our code and models are publicly available.
Automatic punctuation restoration with BERT modelsAttila Nagy, Bence Bial, Judit Ács
We present an approach for automatic punctuation restoration with BERT models for English and Hungarian. For English, we conduct our experiments on Ted Talks, a commonly used benchmark for punctuation restoration, while for Hungarian we evaluate our models on the Szeged Treebank dataset. Our best models achieve a macro-averaged $F_1$-score of 79.8 in English and 82.2 in Hungarian. Our code is publicly available.