Madoka Ishioroshi


2020

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Extraction of the Argument Structure of Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly Minutes: Segmentation of Question-and-Answer Sets
Keiichi Takamaru | Yasutomo Kimura | Hideyuki Shibuki | Hokuto Ototake | Yuzu Uchida | Kotaro Sakamoto | Madoka Ishioroshi | Teruko Mitamura | Noriko Kando
Proceedings of the Twelfth Language Resources and Evaluation Conference

In this study, we construct a corpus of Japanese local assembly minutes. All speeches in an assembly were transcribed into a local assembly minutes based on the local autonomy law. Therefore, the local assembly minutes form an extremely large amount of text data. Our ultimate objectives were to summarize and present the arguments in the assemblies, and to use the minutes as primary information for arguments in local politics. To achieve this, we structured all statements in assembly minutes. We focused on the structure of the discussion, i.e., the extraction of question and answer pairs. We organized the shared task “QA Lab-PoliInfo” in NTCIR 14. We conducted a “segmentation task” to identify the scope of one question and answer in the minutes as a sub task of the shared task. For the segmentation task, 24 runs from five teams were submitted. Based on the obtained results, the best recall was 1.000, best precision was 0.940, and best F-measure was 0.895.

2012

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Introduction of a Probabilistic Language Model to Non-Factoid Question Answering Using Example Q&A Pairs
Kyosuke Yoshida | Taro Ueda | Madoka Ishioroshi | Hideyuki Shibuki | Tatsunori Mori
Proceedings of the 26th Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information, and Computation

2010

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Construction of Text Summarization Corpus for the Credibility of Information on the Web
Masahiro Nakano | Hideyuki Shibuki | Rintaro Miyazaki | Madoka Ishioroshi | Koichi Kaneko | Tatsunori Mori
Proceedings of the Seventh International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC'10)

Recently, the credibility of information on the Web has become an important issue. In addition to telling about content of source documents, indicating how to interpret the content, especially showing interpretation of the relation between statements appeared to contradict each other, is important for helping a user judge the credibility of information. In this paper, we will describe the purpose and the way in the construction of a text summarization corpus. Our purpose in the construction of the corpus includes the following three points; to collect Web documents relevant to several query sentences, to prepare gold standard data to evaluate smaller sub-processes in the extraction process and the summary generation process, to investigate the summaries made by human summarizers. The constructed corpus contains six query sentences, 24 manually-constructed summaries, and 24 collections of source Web documents. We also investigated how the descriptions of interpretation, which help a user judge the credibility of other descriptions in the summary, appear in the corpus. As a result, we confirmed that showing interpretation on conflicts is important for helping a user judge the credibility of information.

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A Method for Automatically Generating a Mediatory Summary to Verify Credibility of Information on the Web
Hideyuki Shibuki | Takahiro Nagai | Masahiro Nakano | Rintaro Miyazaki | Madoka Ishioroshi | Tatsunori Mori
Coling 2010: Posters

2009

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Mediatory Summary Generation: Summary-Passage Extraction for Information Credibility on the Web
Koichi Kaneko | Hideyuki Shibuki | Masahiro Nakano | Rintaro Miyazaki | Madoka Ishioroshi | Tatsunori Mori
Proceedings of the 23rd Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computation, Volume 1