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Home / Business / Companies / Media and marketing

AP introduces business reports written by a robot

Washington Post
28 Jul, 2014 02:55 AM6 mins to read

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Machines rather than humans will be writing stories on corporate earnings at The Associated Press. Photo / Thinkstock

Machines rather than humans will be writing stories on corporate earnings at The Associated Press. Photo / Thinkstock

The Associated Press announced last week in its blog that it is now publishing stories on corporate earnings based on an algorithm that aggregates data. In other words, machines rather than humans will be writing more of these stories.

Teaming up with the company Automated Insights, the wire service company built a platform that allows it to produce 150- to 350-word stories related to the AP's business coverage. The company expects to fully automate its stories on earnings reports by the end of the quarter. It's also aiming to roll out the algorithm for sports coverage by the end of the year, said Lou Ferrara, AP vice president and managing editor.

"Technology is enabling us to do things that we couldn't do before," he said. "Our expectation is to free reporters' time for them to cover their beats."

The AP expects to increase their number of earning reports from 300 manually written stories to 4,400 automated pieces about companies across the United States every quarter. The company's stated goal is to make reporters' jobs easier. When asked whether the algorithm could also help save the AP labour costs, Lou Ferrara referred to the company's press release.

"This is about using technology to free journalists to do more journalism and less data processing, not about eliminating jobs. In fact, most of the staff has been receptive to the effort and involved for the past few months of discussion," the AP's blog post said.

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Read also:
• Woman or machine? New robots look creepily human
• Emotional robot Pepper set for sale in Japan next year

Reduce reporters' workload

The company Automated Insights has been building algorithms like this one for years, not only for news organisations but also for companies like Samsung, Microsoft and GreatCall. Scott Frederick, chief operating officer of Automated Insights, said that the goal is to provide personalised, engaging narratives while reducing reporters' workload.

"We let the data tell its own story. Our added value for journalism is focusing on quantitative aspects of the news: the what, where and when," said Frederick, "so that we can free reporters to work on the how and why."

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Some financial reporters welcomed the tool for alleviating their work with numbers. Other experts expressed concerns, though, that the quality of financial reporting could suffer.

"We still have to wait and see what happens with other players like Reuters, Bloomberg and Dow Jones," said Greg David, director of the City University of New York's business reporting program. "One aspect that concerns me is, if reporters are no longer monitoring the earning reports, that they might miss good stories on their beat."

'Stressful time'

But some reporters who work on financial earnings praised the platform. "From the perspective of a journalist, I must say that this is pretty exciting," wrote Jordan Crook in

TechCrunch

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. "Earnings season is a stressful time for all media publications."

Kevin Roose wrote for New York Magazine that "the stories that today's robots can write are, frankly the kinds of stories that humans hate writing anyway." He recalled his painful experience working on earning reports at The New York Times and said he is enthusiastic about how algorithms can process information and deal with tons of data that humans have a hard time handling.

The algorithm, in Automated Insights' words, is "the next generation presentation layer for big data." One of the challenges of reporters working with long data sets, Frederick said, is that not only do reporters get exhausted, but audiences also can't manage information overload.

"People don't like browsing dashboards they need to interpret," Frederick said, "They would like to see pictures. They would like to be told stories."

Although the AP and other media outlets have been working with automated feeds of data for a while now, this is the first time that an algorithm is using raw numbers to produce written pieces rather than just charts. With a label below that says "Generated automatically by Automated Insight" the AP makes clear which stories are created by robots.

Since every news outlet has its own style, this particular algorithm was trained and educated on the AP writing style, complying with the same rules given to reporters. This way, the robot digests structured data, coming up with an output that should be more consistent with the publication's standards by simulating tone and style.

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Quiz

Take this quiz and see if you can guess which ones were written by humans and which ones by a machine. Below are fragments of news stories published by the

AP

. Go to the

bottom of the page

for the answers.

1. Hasbro Inc. (HAS) on Monday reported profit that decreased by 8.2 per cent in its second quarter, and missed analysts' expectations.

2. Underlying replacement cost profit for the period was $3.7 billion, down from $5.7 billion a year earlier. The figure excludes non-operating items and accounting effects.

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3. Revenue fell 4 per cent to $1.08 billion from $1.14 billion. After subtracting commissions paid to Yahoo's ad partners, revenue totaled $1.04 million, down 3 per cent from $1.07 billion a year ago.

4. The Glens Falls, New York-based bank said net income after dividends on preferred stock increased to $5.5 million, or 45 cents per share, from $5.2 million, or 42 cents per share, in the same quarter a year ago.

5. Arrow Financial shares have declined $1.20, or 4.5 per cent, to $25.36 since the beginning of the year. The stock has fallen 78 cents, or 3 per cent, in the last 12 months.

6. The company said revenue rose 8.2 per cent to $829.3 million from $766.3 million in the same quarter a year earlier, and missed Wall Street forecasts. Analysts expected $842.8 million, according to Zacks.

7. Netflix earned $29.5 million, or 49 cents per share, in the quarter, up from $6.2 million, or 11 cents per share, a year earlier.

8. Tax returns viewed Wednesday afternoon show that about $105,000 of the Haleys' 2013 earnings came from her book. They also earned $70,500 from investments.

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9. Wall Street analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting higher earnings of $1.27 per share and revenue of $10.04 billion.

10. Earnings, adjusted for pre-tax expenses, were 36 cents per share. The average estimate of analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of 37 cents per share.

Answers: 1. Robot, 2. Human, 3. Human, 4. Robot, 5. Robot, 6. Robot, 7. Human, 8. Human, 9. Human, 10. Robot.

- Washington Post

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