Dal Cin, GiuliaGiuliaDal Cin2026-02-262026-02-262026https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/112942Masterarbeit, Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg, 2025In recent years, research in the field of automatic text summarization (ATS) has mainly focused on improving model performance, but it has rarely considered the context and the purpose for which summaries are produced. Therefore, in this master’s thesis, five multilingual ATS scenarios are defined, and each of them is associated with a purpose and some specific requirements. These scenarios are used to evaluate and compare the summaries produced by three ATS systems: extractive algorithm LexRank, pre-trained language model mLongT5, and large language model Mistral NeMo. Both quantitative and qualitative evaluation is performed. Results show that LexRank often fails at writing well-structured and coherent summaries; to a minor extend, mLongT5 does as well. In some of the five scenarios, both systems also produce summaries with insufficient information coverage. Additionally, mLongT5-generated summaries often contain factually incorrect statements or hallucinations. Problems linked to factually incorrect content, hallucinations and insufficient information coverage also occur in NeMo-generated summaries, but only rarely. Additionally, NeMo often does not respect length requirements, and it sometimes switches language in its summaries. Despite these problems, NeMo has good results in almost every scenario, outperforming the other two systems. However, performance differences between the systems vary based on the scenario.engAutomatic Text SummarizationNatural Language ProcessingMultilingual Text Summarization004Multilingual Text Summarization Approaches : A Case Study on Generative and Extractive Methodsmasterthesisurn:nbn:de:bvb:473-irb-112942x