ScholarGate
Assistant

Comparer des méthodes

Examinez les méthodes sélectionnées côte à côte ; les lignes qui diffèrent sont mises en évidence.

Synthèse multi-documents×Analyse des sentiments×Classification de texte×TF-IDF×
DomaineFouille de textesFouille de textesFouille de textesFouille de textes
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine1988
Auteur d'origineSalton & Buckley
TypeNLP text-summarization taskNLP text-classification taskSupervised NLP classification taskText vectorization / term-weighting scheme
Source fondatriceErkan, G. & Radev, D.R. (2004). LexRank: Graph-Based Lexical Centrality as Salience in Text Summarization. Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 22, 457-479. link ↗Pang, B. & Lee, L. (2008). Opinion Mining and Sentiment Analysis. Foundations and Trends in Information Retrieval, 2(1-2), 1-135. DOI ↗Joachims, T. (1998). Text Categorization with Support Vector Machines: Learning with Many Relevant Features. ECML 1998. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 1398. Springer. DOI ↗Salton, G. & Buckley, C. (1988). Term-weighting approaches in automatic text retrieval. Information Processing & Management, 24(5), 513-523. DOI ↗
AliasMDS, Çok Belgeli Özetleme (Multi-Document Summarization), multi-source summarizationopinion mining, polarity detection, duygu analizitext categorization, document classification, topic classification, metin sınıflandırmaterm weighting, tf-idf weighting, TF-IDF Vektörizasyonu
Apparentées5343
RésuméMulti-document summarization (MDS) is a natural-language-processing task that condenses a cluster of related documents into a single comprehensive, coherent, and non-redundant summary. Formally described by Erkan and Radev (2004) through the LexRank algorithm, MDS is used in news cluster analysis, systematic literature reviews, and research synthesis to give readers a unified view of information spread across multiple sources.Sentiment analysis, also called opinion mining, is a natural-language-processing task that detects the emotional tone of text — typically classifying it as positive, negative, or neutral. It turns unstructured opinion text into structured, quantifiable polarity signals using one of three families of approaches: sentiment lexicons, trained machine-learning classifiers, or pretrained transformer models.Text classification, also called text categorization, is a supervised natural-language-processing task that automatically assigns documents to predefined categories. Building on the support-vector-machine approach to text categorization established by Joachims (1998) and consolidated in the text-mining literature by Aggarwal and Zhai (2012), it powers tasks such as spam detection and topic classification by learning from labelled examples.TF-IDF, introduced by Salton and Buckley (1988), is a term-weighting scheme that scores each word in a document by how often it appears there and how rare it is across the whole collection. It turns raw text into weighted document vectors, giving high weight to terms that are frequent in one document but uncommon elsewhere.
ScholarGateJeu de données
  1. v1
  2. 2 Sources
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v2
  2. 1 Sources
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 2 Sources
  3. PUBLISHED
  1. v1
  2. 1 Sources
  3. PUBLISHED

Aller à la recherche Télécharger les diapositives

ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Multi-Document Summarization · Sentiment Analysis · Text Classification · TF-IDF. Consulté le 2026-06-17 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare