The New York Times Annotated Corpus


Item Name: The New York Times Annotated Corpus
Authors: Evan Sandhaus
LDC Catalog No.: LDC2008T19
ISBN: 1-58563-486-7
Release Date: Oct 17, 2008
Data Type: text
Data Source(s): newswire
Application(s): information extraction, information retrieval, metadata extraction, summarization
Language(s): English
Language ID(s): eng
Distribution: 1 DVD
Member fee: $0 for 2008 members
Non-member Fee: US $300.00
Reduced-License Fee: US $200.00
Extra-Copy Fee: US $200.00
Non-member License: yes
Member License: yes
Online documentation: yes
Licensing Instructions: Subscription & Standard Members, and Non-Members
Citation: Evan Sandhaus
2008
The New York Times Annotated Corpus
Linguistic Data Consortium, Philadelphia

Introduction

The New York Times Annotated Corpus contains over 1.8 million articles written and published by the New York Times between January 1, 1987 and June 19, 2007 with article metadata provided by the New York Times Newsroom, the New York Times Indexing Service and the online production staff at nytimes.com. The corpus includes:

  • Over 1.8 million articles (excluding wire services articles that appeared during the covered period).
  • Over 650,000 article summaries written by library scientists.
  • Over 1,500,000 articles manually tagged by library scientists with tags drawn from a normalized indexing vocabulary of people, organizations, locations and topic descriptors.
  • Over 275,000 algorithmically-tagged articles that have been hand verified by the online production staff at nytimes.com.
  • Java tools for parsing corpus documents from .xml into a memory resident object.

As part of the New York Times' indexing procedures, most articles are manually summarized and tagged by a staff of library scientists. This collection contains over 650,000 article-summary pairs which may prove to be useful in the development and evaluation of algorithms for automated document summarization. Also, over 1.5 million documents have at least one tag. Articles are tagged for persons, places, organizations, titles and topics using a controlled vocabulary that is applied consistently across articles. For instance if one article mentions "Bill Clinton" and another refers to "President William Jefferson Clinton", both articles will be tagged with "CLINTON, BILL".

The New York Times has established a community website for researchers working on the data set at http://groups.google.com/group/nytnlp and encourages feedback and discussion about the corpus.

Data

The text in this corpus is formatted in News Industry Text Format (NITF) developed by the International Press Telecommunications Council, an independent association of news agencies and publishers. NITF is an XML specification that provides a standardized representation for the content and structure of discrete news articles. NITF encompasses structural markup such as bylines, headlines and paragraphs. The format also provides management attributes for categorizing articles into topics, summarization usage restrictions and revision histories. The goals of NITF are to answer the essential questions inherent in news articles: Who, What, When, Where and Why.

  • Who: Who owns the copyright, who has rights to republish the article and who the article is about.
  • What: The subjects reported, the named entities inside the article and the events it describes.
  • When: When the article was written, when it was issued and when it was revised.
  • Where: Where the article was written, where the events took place and where it was delivered.
  • Why: The metadata describing the newsworthiness of the article.

Samples

Presented below is an image of the abstract of one article. To see a larger view, click on the image.

Updates

A revised manual is now available.

Content Copyright

Portions © 1987-2008 New York Times, © 2008 Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania