Go Inoue
Update README.md
e77cb23
|
raw
history blame
10.6 kB
metadata
language:
  - ar
license: apache-2.0
widget:
  - text: الهدف من الحياة هو [MASK] .

CAMeLBERT: A collection of pre-trained models for Arabic NLP tasks

Model description

CAMeLBERT is a collection of BERT models pre-trained on Arabic texts with different sizes and variants. The details are described in the paper "The Interplay of Variant, Size, and Task Type in Arabic Pre-trained Language Models." We release eight models with different sizes and variants as follows:

Model Variant Size #Word
bert-base-camelbert-mix CA,DA,MSA 167GB 17.3B
bert-base-camelbert-ca CA 6GB 847M
bert-base-camelbert-da DA 54GB 5.8B
bert-base-camelbert-msa MSA 107GB 12.6B
bert-base-camelbert-msa-half MSA 53GB 6.3B
bert-base-camelbert-msa-quarter MSA 27GB 3.1B
bert-base-camelbert-msa-eighth MSA 14GB 1.6B
bert-base-camelbert-msa-sixteenth MSA 6GB 746M

This model card describes CAMeLBERT-MSA (bert-base-camelbert-msa), a model pre-trained on the entire MSA dataset.

Intended uses

You can use the released model for either masked language modeling or next sentence prediction. However, it is mostly intended to be fine-tuned on an NLP task, such as NER, POS tagging, sentiment analysis, dialect identification, and poetry classification. We release our fine-tuninig code here.

How to use

You can use this model directly with a pipeline for masked language modeling:

>>> from transformers import pipeline
>>> unmasker = pipeline('fill-mask', model='CAMeL-Lab/bert-base-camelbert-msa')
>>> unmasker("الهدف من الحياة هو [MASK] .")
[{'sequence': '[CLS] الهدف من الحياة هو العمل. [SEP]',
  'score': 0.08507660031318665,
  'token': 2854,
  'token_str': 'العمل'},
 {'sequence': '[CLS] الهدف من الحياة هو الحياة. [SEP]',
  'score': 0.058905381709337234,
  'token': 3696, 'token_str': 'الحياة'},
 {'sequence': '[CLS] الهدف من الحياة هو النجاح. [SEP]',
  'score': 0.04660581797361374, 'token': 6232,
  'token_str': 'النجاح'},
 {'sequence': '[CLS] الهدف من الحياة هو الربح. [SEP]',
  'score': 0.04156001657247543,
  'token': 12413, 'token_str': 'الربح'},
 {'sequence': '[CLS] الهدف من الحياة هو الحب. [SEP]',
  'score': 0.03534102067351341,
  'token': 3088,
  'token_str': 'الحب'}]

Note: to download our models, you would need transformers>=3.5.0. Otherwise, you could download the models manually.

Here is how to use this model to get the features of a given text in PyTorch:

from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModel
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained('CAMeL-Lab/bert-base-camelbert-msa')
model = AutoModel.from_pretrained('CAMeL-Lab/bert-base-camelbert-msa')
text = "مرحبا يا عالم."
encoded_input = tokenizer(text, return_tensors='pt')
output = model(**encoded_input)

and in TensorFlow:

from transformers import AutoTokenizer, TFAutoModel
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained('CAMeL-Lab/bert-base-camelbert-msa')
model = TFAutoModel.from_pretrained('CAMeL-Lab/bert-base-camelbert-msa')
text = "مرحبا يا عالم."
encoded_input = tokenizer(text, return_tensors='tf')
output = model(encoded_input)

Training data

Training procedure

We use the original implementation released by Google for pre-training. We follow the original English BERT model's hyperparameters for pre-training, unless otherwise specified.

Preprocessing

  • After extracting the raw text from each corpus, we apply the following pre-processing.
  • We first remove invalid characters and normalize white spaces using the utilities provided by the original BERT implementation.
  • We also remove lines without any Arabic characters.
  • We then remove diacritics and kashida using CAMeL Tools.
  • Finally, we split each line into sentences with a heuristics-based sentence segmenter.
  • We train a WordPiece tokenizer on the entire dataset (167 GB text) with a vocabulary size of 30,000 using HuggingFace's tokenizers.
  • We do not lowercase letters nor strip accents.

Pre-training

  • The model was trained on a single cloud TPU (v3-8) for one million steps in total.
  • The first 90,000 steps were trained with a batch size of 1,024 and the rest was trained with a batch size of 256.
  • The sequence length was limited to 128 tokens for 90% of the steps and 512 for the remaining 10%.
  • We use whole word masking and a duplicate factor of 10.
  • We set max predictions per sequence to 20 for the dataset with max sequence length of 128 tokens and 80 for the dataset with max sequence length of 512 tokens.
  • We use a random seed of 12345, masked language model probability of 0.15, and short sequence probability of 0.1.
  • The optimizer used is Adam with a learning rate of 1e-4, β1=0.9\beta_{1} = 0.9 and β2=0.999\beta_{2} = 0.999, a weight decay of 0.01, learning rate warmup for 10,000 steps and linear decay of the learning rate after.

Evaluation results

  • We evaluate our pre-trained language models on five NLP tasks: NER, POS tagging, sentiment analysis, dialect identification, and poetry classification.
  • We fine-tune and evaluate the models using 12 dataset.
  • We used Hugging Face's transformers to fine-tune our CAMeLBERT models.
  • We used transformers v3.1.0 along with PyTorch v1.5.1.
  • The fine-tuning was done by adding a fully connected linear layer to the last hidden state.
  • We use F1F_{1} score as a metric for all tasks.
  • Code used for fine-tuning is available here.

Results

Task Dataset Variant Mix CA DA MSA MSA-1/2 MSA-1/4 MSA-1/8 MSA-1/16
NER ANERcorp MSA 80.2% 66.2% 74.2% 82.4% 82.3% 82.0% 82.3% 80.5%
POS PATB (MSA) MSA 97.3% 96.6% 96.5% 97.4% 97.4% 97.4% 97.4% 97.4%
ARZTB (EGY) DA 90.1% 88.6% 89.4% 90.8% 90.3% 90.5% 90.5% 90.4%
Gumar (GLF) DA 97.3% 96.5% 97.0% 97.1% 97.0% 97.0% 97.1% 97.0%
SA ASTD MSA 76.3% 69.4% 74.6% 76.9% 76.0% 76.8% 76.7% 75.3%
ArSAS MSA 92.7% 89.4% 91.8% 93.0% 92.6% 92.5% 92.5% 92.3%
SemEval MSA 69.0% 58.5% 68.4% 72.1% 70.7% 72.8% 71.6% 71.2%
DID MADAR-26 DA 62.9% 61.9% 61.8% 62.6% 62.0% 62.8% 62.0% 62.2%
MADAR-6 DA 92.5% 91.5% 92.2% 91.9% 91.8% 92.2% 92.1% 92.0%
MADAR-Twitter-5 MSA 75.7% 71.4% 74.2% 77.6% 78.5% 77.3% 77.7% 76.2%
NADI DA 24.7% 17.3% 20.1% 24.9% 24.6% 24.6% 24.9% 23.8%
Poetry APCD CA 79.8% 80.9% 79.6% 79.7% 79.9% 80.0% 79.7% 79.8%

Results (Average)

Variant Mix CA DA MSA MSA-1/2 MSA-1/4 MSA-1/8 MSA-1/16
Variant-wise-average[1] MSA 81.9% 75.3% 79.9% 83.2% 82.9% 83.1% 83.0% 82.1%
DA 73.5% 71.1% 72.1% 73.5% 73.1% 73.4% 73.3% 73.1%
CA 79.8% 80.9% 79.6% 79.7% 79.9% 80.0% 79.7% 79.8%
Macro-Average ALL 78.2% 74.0% 76.6% 78.9% 78.6% 78.8% 78.7% 78.2%

[1]: Variant-wise-average refers to average over a group of tasks in the same language variant.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported with Cloud TPUs from Google’s TensorFlow Research Cloud (TFRC).

Citation

@inproceedings{inoue-etal-2021-interplay,
    title = "The Interplay of Variant, Size, and Task Type in {A}rabic Pre-trained Language Models",
    author = "Inoue, Go  and
      Alhafni, Bashar  and
      Baimukan, Nurpeiis  and
      Bouamor, Houda  and
      Habash, Nizar",
    booktitle = "Proceedings of the Sixth Arabic Natural Language Processing Workshop",
    month = apr,
    year = "2021",
    address = "Kyiv, Ukraine (Online)",
    publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
    abstract = "In this paper, we explore the effects of language variants, data sizes, and fine-tuning task types in Arabic pre-trained language models. To do so, we build three pre-trained language models across three variants of Arabic: Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), dialectal Arabic, and classical Arabic, in addition to a fourth language model which is pre-trained on a mix of the three. We also examine the importance of pre-training data size by building additional models that are pre-trained on a scaled-down set of the MSA variant. We compare our different models to each other, as well as to eight publicly available models by fine-tuning them on five NLP tasks spanning 12 datasets. Our results suggest that the variant proximity of pre-training data to fine-tuning data is more important than the pre-training data size. We exploit this insight in defining an optimized system selection model for the studied tasks.",
}