Implements Radev's Lexrank algorithm http://www.jair.org/papers/paper1523.html for unsupervised text summarization in node. Basically applying PageRank to each sentence in a document, finding the most important sentences, and reranking them.
var lexrank = require('lexrank');
The lexrank
provides two functions:
lexrank.summarize(text, lineCount, callback)
where
text
is the original text. There's no need to tokenize the text. Raw text is fine.lexrank.js
does a sentence tokenization and then word tokenization.lineCount
is the number of sentences in the output desired.
lexrank.summarizePage(url, lineCount, callback)
where
url
is the URL of the page to summarize.lexrank
then usesnode-unfluff
to extract the text content from the page, then passes it tolexrank.summarize
The other parameters are the same.
var lexrank = require('lexrank');
var originalText = 'some...text...here...';
var topLines = lexrank.summarize(originalText, 5, function (err, toplines, text) {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
}
console.log(toplines);
// [{
// weight: 0.16398118821187135,
// text: 'The intention of all these rules is to prevent a repeat of the bankruptcies and bail-outs of 2008.',
// index: 3
// }, {
// weight: 0.1603637724075845,
// text: 'By throttling the bits of banks that “make markets” in bonds, shares, currencies and commodities, the theory goes, watchdogs have made such assets less liquid.',
// index: 5
// }, {
// weight: 0.1670898954042791,
// text: 'Meanwhile, the value of outstanding bonds has swollen to record levels, most of them in the hands of asset managers (see chart).',
// index: 12
// }, {
// weight: 0.17266004699219448,
// text: 'That is in part a corollary of banks trimming lending, and so pushing borrowers to the bond market instead, and in part a natural response to low interest rates.',
// index: 13
// }, {
// weight: 0.16298329363189878,
// text: 'They also suspect, however, that the high level of liquidity before the crisis was an anomaly that bankers are harping on about in an effort to roll back regulation.',
// index: 32
// }]
console.log(text);
// The intention of all these rules is to prevent a repeat of the bankruptcies
// and bail-outs of 2008. By throttling the bits of banks that “make markets” in
// bonds, shares, currencies and commodities, the theory goes, watchdogs have
// made such assets less liquid. Meanwhile, the value of outstanding bonds has
// swollen to record levels, most of them in the hands of asset managers (see
// chart). That is in part a corollary of banks trimming lending, and so pushing
// borrowers to the bond market instead, and in part a natural response to low
// interest rates. They also suspect, however, that the high level of liquidity
// before the crisis was an anomaly that bankers are harping on about in an
// effort to roll back regulation.
});
lexrank returns both a toplines object which contains an array of the top sentences objects together with their text, eigenvalues associated with them ,and their sentence index.
Since most of us will be using this to grab text from sites, lexrank can take URLs as well.
var lexrank = require('lexrank');
var url = 'http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21648673-regulators-have-made-banking-safer-has-made-markets-riskier-frozen';
var topLines = lexrank.summarizePage(url, 5, function (err, topLines, text) {
if (err) {
console.log(err);
}
console.log(toplines);
console.log(text);
});
This is not a great summarization algorithm. However, it is an improvement on picking the first few sentences at little to no cost in time.
For example using this article from The Economist on liquidity in financial markets:
The first paragraph shows
TO ENSURE that it meets the 750 new rules on capital imposed in the aftermath of the financial crisis, JPMorgan Chase employs over 950 people. A further 400 or so try to follow around 500 regulations on the liquidity of its assets, designed to stop the bank toppling over if markets seize up. A team of 300 is needed to monitor compliance with the Volcker rule, which in almost 1,000 pages restricts banks from trading on their own account.
lexrank produces
The intention of all these rules is to prevent a repeat of the bankruptcies and bail-outs of 2008. By throttling the bits of banks that “make markets” in bonds, shares, currencies and commodities, the theory goes, watchdogs have made such assets less liquid. Meanwhile, the value of outstanding bonds has swollen to record levels, most of them in the hands of asset managers (see chart). That is in part a corollary of banks trimming lending, and so pushing borrowers to the bond market instead, and in part a natural response to low interest rates. They also suspect, however, that the high level of liquidity before the crisis was an anomaly that bankers are harping on about in an effort to roll back regulation.
Which is way more relevant than the story on JPMorgan. I'm sorry JPMorgan.
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Linan Qiu
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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