⏳ Installation
pip install spacy_ke
🚀 Quickstart
Usage as a spaCy pipeline component (spaCy v2.x.x)
import spacy
import spacy_ke
nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
nlp.add_pipe("yake")
doc = nlp(
"Natural language processing (NLP) is a subfield of linguistics, computer science, and artificial intelligence "
"concerned with the interactions between computers and human language, in particular how to program computers "
"to process and analyze large amounts of natural language data. "
)
for keyword, score in doc._.extract_keywords(n=3):
print(keyword, "-", score)
Configure the pipeline component
Normally you'd want to configure the keyword extraction pipeline according to its implementation.
window: int = 2
lemmatize: bool = False
candidate_selection: str = "ngram"
nlp.add_pipe(
Yake(
nlp,
window=window,
lemmatize=lemmatize,
candidate_selection="ngram"
)
)
And if you want to define a custom candidate selection use the example below.
from typing import Iterable
from spacy.tokens import Doc
from spacy_ke.util import registry, Candidate
@registry.candidate_selection.register("custom")
def custom_selection(doc: Doc, n=3) -> Iterable[Candidate]:
...
nlp.add_pipe(
Yake(
nlp,
candidate_selection="custom"
)
)
Development
Set up virtualenv
$ python -m venv .venv
$ source .venv/bin/activate
Install dependencies
$ pip install -U pip
$ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Run unit test
$ pytest
Run black (code formatter)
$ black spacy_ke/ --config=pyproject.toml
Release package (via twine
)
$ python setup.py upload
References
[1] A Review of Keyphrase Extraction
@article{DBLP:journals/corr/abs-1905-05044,
author = {Eirini Papagiannopoulou and
Grigorios Tsoumakas},
title = {A Review of Keyphrase Extraction},
journal = {CoRR},
volume = {abs/1905.05044},
year = {2019},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1905.05044},
archivePrefix = {arXiv},
eprint = {1905.05044},
timestamp = {Tue, 28 May 2019 12:48:08 +0200},
biburl = {https://dblp.org/rec/journals/corr/abs-1905-05044.bib},
bibsource = {dblp computer science bibliography, https://dblp.org}
}
[2] pke: an open source python-based keyphrase extraction toolkit.
@InProceedings{boudin:2016:COLINGDEMO,
author = {Boudin, Florian},
title = {pke: an open source python-based keyphrase extraction toolkit},
booktitle = {Proceedings of COLING 2016, the 26th International Conference on Computational Linguistics: System Demonstrations},
month = {December},
year = {2016},
address = {Osaka, Japan},
pages = {69--73},
url = {http://aclweb.org/anthology/C16-2015}
}