Datasets:
annotations_creators:
- crowd-sourced
language_creators:
- unknown
language:
- en
license:
- other
multilinguality:
- unknown
size_categories:
- unknown
source_datasets:
- original
task_categories:
- text2text-generation
task_ids:
- text-simplification
pretty_name: wiki_auto_asset_turk
dataset_info:
config_name: wiki_auto_asset_turk
features:
- name: gem_id
dtype: string
- name: gem_parent_id
dtype: string
- name: source
dtype: string
- name: target
dtype: string
- name: references
list: string
splits:
- name: train
num_bytes: 161095379
num_examples: 483801
- name: validation
num_bytes: 8211308
num_examples: 20000
- name: test_asset
num_bytes: 475336
num_examples: 359
- name: test_turk
num_bytes: 406842
num_examples: 359
- name: test_contract
num_bytes: 566999
num_examples: 659
- name: test_wiki
num_bytes: 423011
num_examples: 720
- name: challenge_train_sample
num_bytes: 219542
num_examples: 500
- name: challenge_validation_sample
num_bytes: 213048
num_examples: 500
- name: challenge_test_asset_backtranslation
num_bytes: 436820
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_asset_bfp02
num_bytes: 432742
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_asset_bfp05
num_bytes: 432742
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_asset_nopunc
num_bytes: 432735
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_turk_backtranslation
num_bytes: 417204
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_turk_bfp02
num_bytes: 414381
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_turk_bfp05
num_bytes: 414383
num_examples: 359
- name: challenge_test_turk_nopunc
num_bytes: 414388
num_examples: 359
download_size: 127498860
dataset_size: 175006860
Dataset Card for GEM/wiki_auto_asset_turk
Dataset Description
- Homepage: n/a
- Repository: https://github.com/chaojiang06/wiki-auto, [ASSET repository
- Paper: https://aclanthology.org/2020.acl-main.709/, [ASSET
- Leaderboard: N/A
- Point of Contact: WikiAuto: Chao Jiang; ASSET: Fernando Alva-Manchego and Louis Martin; TURK: Wei Xu
Link to Main Data Card
You can find the main data card on the GEM Website.
Dataset Summary
WikiAuto is an English simplification dataset that we paired with ASSET and TURK, two very high-quality evaluation datasets, as test sets. The input is an English sentence taken from Wikipedia and the target a simplified sentence. ASSET and TURK contain the same test examples but have references that are simplified in different ways (splitting sentences vs. rewriting and splitting).
You can load the dataset via:
import datasets
data = datasets.load_dataset('GEM/wiki_auto_asset_turk')
The data loader can be found here.
website
n/a
paper
authors
WikiAuto: Chao Jiang, Mounica Maddela, Wuwei Lan, Yang Zhong, Wei Xu; ASSET: Fernando Alva-Manchego, Louis Martin, Antoine Bordes, Carolina Scarton, and Benoîıt Sagot, and Lucia Specia; TURK: Wei Xu, Courtney Napoles, Ellie Pavlick, Quanze Chen, and Chris Callison-Burch
Dataset Overview
Where to find the Data and its Documentation
Download
Wiki-Auto repository, ASSET repository, TURKCorpus
Paper
BibTex
WikiAuto:
@inproceedings{jiang-etal-2020-neural,
title = "Neural {CRF} Model for Sentence Alignment in Text Simplification",
author = "Jiang, Chao and
Maddela, Mounica and
Lan, Wuwei and
Zhong, Yang and
Xu, Wei",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics",
month = jul,
year = "2020",
address = "Online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/2020.acl-main.709",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2020.acl-main.709",
pages = "7943--7960",
}
ASSET:
@inproceedings{alva-manchego-etal-2020-asset,
title = "{ASSET}: {A} Dataset for Tuning and Evaluation of Sentence Simplification Models with Multiple Rewriting Transformations",
author = "Alva-Manchego, Fernando and
Martin, Louis and
Bordes, Antoine and
Scarton, Carolina and
Sagot, Beno{\^\i}t and
Specia, Lucia",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics",
month = jul,
year = "2020",
address = "Online",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/2020.acl-main.424",
pages = "4668--4679",
}
TURK:
@article{Xu-EtAl:2016:TACL,
author = {Wei Xu and Courtney Napoles and Ellie Pavlick and Quanze Chen and Chris Callison-Burch},
title = {Optimizing Statistical Machine Translation for Text Simplification},
journal = {Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics},
volume = {4},
year = {2016},
url = {https://cocoxu.github.io/publications/tacl2016-smt-simplification.pdf},
pages = {401--415}
}
Contact Name
WikiAuto: Chao Jiang; ASSET: Fernando Alva-Manchego and Louis Martin; TURK: Wei Xu
Contact Email
jiang.1530@osu.edu, f.alva@sheffield.ac.uk, louismartincs@gmail.com, wei.xu@cc.gatech.edu
Has a Leaderboard?
no
Languages and Intended Use
Multilingual?
no
Covered Languages
English
Whose Language?
Wiki-Auto contains English text only (BCP-47: en
). It is presented as a translation task where Wikipedia Simple English is treated as its own idiom. For a statement of what is intended (but not always observed) to constitute Simple English on this platform, see Simple English in Wikipedia.
Both ASSET and TURK use crowdsourcing to change references, and their language is thus a combination of the WikiAuto data and the language of the demographic on mechanical Turk
License
other: Other license
Intended Use
WikiAuto provides a set of aligned sentences from English Wikipedia and Simple English Wikipedia as a resource to train sentence simplification systems.
The authors first crowd-sourced a set of manual alignments between sentences in a subset of the Simple English Wikipedia and their corresponding versions in English Wikipedia (this corresponds to the manual
config in this version of the dataset), then trained a neural CRF system to predict these alignments.
The trained alignment prediction model was then applied to the other articles in Simple English Wikipedia with an English counterpart to create a larger corpus of aligned sentences (corresponding to the auto
and auto_acl
configs here).
ASSET (Alva-Manchego et al., 2020) is multi-reference dataset for the evaluation of sentence simplification in English. The dataset uses the same 2,359 sentences from TurkCorpus (Xu et al., 2016) and each sentence is associated with 10 crowdsourced simplifications. Unlike previous simplification datasets, which contain a single transformation (e.g., lexical paraphrasing in TurkCorpus or sentence splitting in HSplit), the simplifications in ASSET encompass a variety of rewriting transformations.
TURKCorpus is a high quality simplification dataset where each source (not simple) sentence is associated with 8 human-written simplifications that focus on lexical paraphrasing. It is one of the two evaluation datasets for the text simplification task in GEM. It acts as the validation and test set for paraphrasing-based simplification that does not involve sentence splitting and deletion.
Add. License Info
WikiAuto: CC BY-NC 3.0
, ASSET: CC BY-NC 4.0
, TURK: GNU General Public License v3.0
Primary Task
Simplification
Communicative Goal
The goal is to communicate the main ideas of source sentence in a way that is easier to understand by non-native speakers of English.
Credit
Curation Organization Type(s)
academic
, industry
Curation Organization(s)
Ohio State University, University of Sheffield, Inria, Facebook AI Research, Imperial College London, University of Pennsylvania, John Hopkins University
Dataset Creators
WikiAuto: Chao Jiang, Mounica Maddela, Wuwei Lan, Yang Zhong, Wei Xu; ASSET: Fernando Alva-Manchego, Louis Martin, Antoine Bordes, Carolina Scarton, and Benoîıt Sagot, and Lucia Specia; TURK: Wei Xu, Courtney Napoles, Ellie Pavlick, Quanze Chen, and Chris Callison-Burch
Funding
WikiAuto: NSF, ODNI, IARPA, Figure Eight AI, and Criteo. ASSET: PRAIRIE Institute, ANR. TURK: NSF
Who added the Dataset to GEM?
GEM v1 had separate data cards for WikiAuto, ASSET, and TURK. They were contributed by Dhruv Kumar and Mounica Maddela. The initial data loader was written by Yacine Jernite. Sebastian Gehrmann merged and extended the data cards and migrated the loader to the v2 infrastructure.
Dataset Structure
Data Fields
source
: A source sentence from one of the datasetstarget
: A single simplified sentence corresponding tosource
references
: In the case of ASSET/TURK, references is a list of strings corresponding to the different references.
Reason for Structure
The underlying datasets have extensive secondary annotations that can be used in conjunction with the GEM version. We omit those annotations to simplify the format into one that can be used by seq2seq models.
Example Instance
{
'source': 'In early work, Rutherford discovered the concept of radioactive half-life , the radioactive element radon, and differentiated and named alpha and beta radiation .',
'target': 'Rutherford discovered the radioactive half-life, and the three parts of radiation which he named Alpha, Beta, and Gamma.'
}
Data Splits
In WikiAuto, which is used as training and validation set, the following splits are provided:
Tain | Dev | Test | |
---|---|---|---|
Total sentence pairs | 373801 | 73249 | 118074 |
Aligned sentence pairs | 1889 | 346 | 677 |
ASSET does not contain a training set; many models use WikiLarge (Zhang and Lapata, 2017) for training. For GEM, Wiki-Auto will be used for training the model.
Each input sentence has 10 associated reference simplified sentences. The statistics of ASSET are given below.
Dev | Test | Total | |
---|---|---|---|
Input Sentences | 2000 | 359 | 2359 |
Reference Simplifications | 20000 | 3590 | 23590 |
The test and validation sets are the same as those of TurkCorpus. The split was random.
There are 19.04 tokens per reference on average (lower than 21.29 and 25.49 for TurkCorpus and HSplit, respectively). Most (17,245) of the referece sentences do not involve sentence splitting.
TURKCorpus does not contain a training set; many models use WikiLarge (Zhang and Lapata, 2017) or Wiki-Auto (Jiang et. al 2020) for training.
Each input sentence has 8 associated reference simplified sentences. 2,359 input sentences are randomly split into 2,000 validation and 359 test sentences.
Dev | Test | Total | |
---|---|---|---|
Input Sentences | 2000 | 359 | 2359 |
Reference Simplifications | 16000 | 2872 | 18872 |
There are 21.29 tokens per reference on average.
Splitting Criteria
In our setup, we use WikiAuto as training/validation corpus and ASSET and TURK as test corpora. ASSET and TURK have the same inputs but differ in their reference style. Researchers can thus conduct targeted evaluations based on the strategies that a model should learn.
Dataset in GEM
Rationale for Inclusion in GEM
Why is the Dataset in GEM?
WikiAuto is the largest open text simplification dataset currently available. ASSET and TURK are high quality test sets that are compatible with WikiAuto.
Similar Datasets
yes
Unique Language Coverage
no
Difference from other GEM datasets
It's unique setup with multiple test sets makes the task interesting since it allows for evaluation of multiple generations and systems that simplify in different ways.
Ability that the Dataset measures
simplification
GEM-Specific Curation
Modificatied for GEM?
yes
GEM Modifications
other
Modification Details
We removed secondary annotations and focus on the simple input->output
format, but combine the different sub-datasets.
Additional Splits?
yes
Split Information
we split the original test set according to syntactic complexity of the source sentences. To characterize sentence syntactic complexity, we use the 8-level developmental level (d-level) scale proposed by Covington et al. (2006) and the implementation of Lu, Xiaofei (2010). We thus split the original test set into 8 subsets corresponding to the 8 d-levels assigned to source sentences. We obtain the following number of instances per level and average d-level of the dataset:
Total nb. sentences | L0 | L1 | L2 | L3 | L4 | L5 | L6 | L7 | Mean Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
359 | 166 | 0 | 58 | 32 | 5 | 28 | 7 | 63 | 2.38 |
Split Motivation
The goal was to assess performance when simplifying source sentences with different syntactic structure and complexity.
Getting Started with the Task
Pointers to Resources
There are recent supervised (Martin et al., 2019, Kriz et al., 2019, Dong et al., 2019, Zhang and Lapata, 2017) and unsupervised (Martin et al., 2020, Kumar et al., 2020, Surya et al., 2019) text simplification models that can be used as baselines.
Technical Terms
The common metric used for automatic evaluation is SARI (Xu et al., 2016).
Previous Results
Previous Results
Measured Model Abilities
Simplification
Metrics
Other: Other Metrics
, BLEU
Other Metrics
SARI: A simplification metric that considers both input and references to measure the "goodness" of words that are added, deleted, and kept.
Proposed Evaluation
The original authors of WikiAuto and ASSET used human evaluation to assess the fluency, adequacy, and simplicity (details provided in the paper). For TURK, the authors measured grammaticality, meaning-preservation, and simplicity gain (details in the paper).
Previous results available?
no
Dataset Curation
Original Curation
Original Curation Rationale
Wiki-Auto provides a new version of the Wikipedia corpus that is larger, contains 75% less defective pairs and has more complex rewrites than the previous WIKILARGE dataset.
ASSET was created in order to improve the evaluation of sentence simplification. It uses the same input sentences as the TurkCorpus dataset from (Xu et al., 2016). The 2,359 input sentences of TurkCorpus are a sample of "standard" (not simple) sentences from the Parallel Wikipedia Simplification (PWKP) dataset (Zhu et al., 2010), which come from the August 22, 2009 version of Wikipedia. The sentences of TurkCorpus were chosen to be of similar length (Xu et al., 2016). No further information is provided on the sampling strategy.
The TurkCorpus dataset was developed in order to overcome some of the problems with sentence pairs from Standard and Simple Wikipedia: a large fraction of sentences were misaligned, or not actually simpler (Xu et al., 2016). However, TurkCorpus mainly focused on lexical paraphrasing, and so cannot be used to evaluate simplifications involving compression (deletion) or sentence splitting. HSplit (Sulem et al., 2018), on the other hand, can only be used to evaluate sentence splitting. The reference sentences in ASSET include a wider variety of sentence rewriting strategies, combining splitting, compression and paraphrasing. Annotators were given examples of each kind of transformation individually, as well as all three transformations used at once, but were allowed to decide which transformations to use for any given sentence.
An example illustrating the differences between TurkCorpus, HSplit and ASSET is given below:
Original: He settled in London, devoting himself chiefly to practical teaching.
TurkCorpus: He rooted in London, devoting himself mainly to practical teaching.
HSplit: He settled in London. He devoted himself chiefly to practical teaching.
ASSET: He lived in London. He was a teacher.
Communicative Goal
The goal is to communicate the same information as the source sentence using simpler words and grammar.
Sourced from Different Sources
yes
Source Details
Wikipedia
Language Data
How was Language Data Obtained?
Found
Where was it found?
Single website
Language Producers
The dataset uses language from Wikipedia: some demographic information is provided here.
Data Validation
not validated
Was Data Filtered?
algorithmically
Filter Criteria
The authors mention that they "extracted 138,095 article pairs from the 2019/09 Wikipedia dump using an improved version of the WikiExtractor library". The SpaCy library is used for sentence splitting.
Structured Annotations
Additional Annotations?
crowd-sourced
Number of Raters
11<n<50
Rater Qualifications
WikiAuto (Figure Eight): No information provided.
ASSET (MTurk):
- Having a HIT approval rate over 95%, and over 1000 HITs approved. No other demographic or compensation information is provided.
- Passing a Qualification Test (appropriately simplifying sentences). Out of 100 workers, 42 passed the test.
- Being a resident of the United States, United Kingdom or Canada.
TURK (MTurk):
- Reference sentences were written by workers with HIT approval rate over 95%. No other demographic or compensation information is provided.
Raters per Training Example
1
Raters per Test Example
5
Annotation Service?
yes
Which Annotation Service
Amazon Mechanical Turk
, Appen
Annotation Values
WikiAuto: Sentence alignment labels were crowdsourced for 500 randomly sampled document pairs (10,123 sentence pairs total). The authors pre-selected several alignment candidates from English Wikipedia for each Simple Wikipedia sentence based on various similarity metrics, then asked the crowd-workers to annotate these pairs. Finally, they trained their alignment model on this manually annotated dataset to obtain automatically aligned sentences (138,095 document pairs, 488,332 sentence pairs). No demographic annotation is provided for the crowd workers. The Figure Eight platform now part of Appen) was used for the annotation process.
ASSET: The instructions given to the annotators are available here.
TURK: The references are crowdsourced from Amazon Mechanical Turk. The annotators were asked to provide simplifications without losing any information or splitting the input sentence. No other demographic or compensation information is provided in the TURKCorpus paper. The instructions given to the annotators are available in the paper.
Any Quality Control?
none
Consent
Any Consent Policy?
yes
Consent Policy Details
Both Figure Eight and Amazon Mechanical Turk raters forfeit the right to their data as part of their agreements.
Private Identifying Information (PII)
Contains PII?
no PII
Justification for no PII
Since the dataset is created from Wikipedia/Simple Wikipedia, all the information contained in the dataset is already in the public domain.
Maintenance
Any Maintenance Plan?
no
Broader Social Context
Previous Work on the Social Impact of the Dataset
Usage of Models based on the Data
no
Impact on Under-Served Communities
Addresses needs of underserved Communities?
no
Discussion of Biases
Any Documented Social Biases?
yes
Links and Summaries of Analysis Work
The dataset may contain some social biases, as the input sentences are based on Wikipedia. Studies have shown that the English Wikipedia contains both gender biases (Schmahl et al., 2020) and racial biases (Adams et al., 2019).
Considerations for Using the Data
PII Risks and Liability
Potential PII Risk
All the data is in the public domain.
Licenses
Copyright Restrictions on the Dataset
open license - commercial use allowed
Copyright Restrictions on the Language Data
open license - commercial use allowed
Known Technical Limitations
Technical Limitations
The dataset may contain some social biases, as the input sentences are based on Wikipedia. Studies have shown that the English Wikipedia contains both gender biases (Schmahl et al., 2020) and racial biases (Adams et al., 2019).
Unsuited Applications
Since the test datasets contains only 2,359 sentences that are derived from Wikipedia, they are limited to a small subset of topics present on Wikipedia.