Comparar métodos
Revisa los métodos seleccionados uno junto a otro; las filas que difieren aparecen resaltadas.
| Extracción de información× | Resumen de texto× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo | Minería de texto | Minería de texto |
| Familia | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Año de origen | — | — |
| Autor original | — | — |
| Tipo≠ | NLP structured-information task | NLP text-generation / text-reduction task |
| Fuente seminal≠ | Cowie, J. & Lehnert, W. (1996). Information Extraction. Communications of the ACM. DOI ↗ | Nenkova, A. & McKeown, K. (2011). Automatic Summarization. Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval. DOI ↗ |
| Alias≠ | IE, structured information extraction, Bilgi Çıkarma (Information Extraction) | automatic summarization, extractive summarization, abstractive summarization, Otomatik Metin Özetleme |
| Relacionados | 4 | 4 |
| Resumen≠ | Information extraction (IE) is a natural-language-processing task that converts unstructured text into structured information — such as events, relations, and attributes — so that facts buried in free-form documents become machine-readable records. The task was consolidated in early surveys by Cowie and Lehnert (1996) and later by Grishman (2012). | Automatic text summarization is a natural-language-processing task that condenses long documents into shorter summaries while preserving their key information. It works through one of two families of approaches — extractive summarization, which selects the most important spans from the source, or abstractive summarization, which generates new text. The field was consolidated by Nenkova and McKeown (2011), and sequence-to-sequence models such as BART (Lewis et al., 2020) advanced the abstractive side. |
| ScholarGateConjunto de datos ↗ |
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