metadata
tags:
- sentence-transformers
- sentence-similarity
- feature-extraction
- generated_from_trainer
- dataset_size:400
- loss:MatryoshkaLoss
- loss:MultipleNegativesRankingLoss
base_model: Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-l
widget:
- source_sentence: >-
QUESTION #2: What percentage of patients in the study reported
experiencing "chills" and "feverish discomfort"?
sentences:
- >-
been proven superior. Annual influenza vaccination is recommended for
all people six months and older who do not have
contraindications. ( Am Fam Physician. 2019; 100(12):751-758. Copyright
© 2019 American Academy of Family Physicians.)
BEST PRACTICES IN INFECTIOUS DISEASE
Recommendations from the Choosing
Wisely Campaign
Recommendation Sponsoring organization
Do not routinely avoid
influenza vaccination in
egg-allergic patients.
American Academy of Allergy,
Asthma, and Immunology
Source: For more information on the Choosing Wisely Campaign,
- |-
Review
722 Vol 5 November 2005
accompanied by fever and some subjects have a transient
fall in body temperature during the early stages of
common cold. In a study of 272 patients with sore throat
associated with URTIs, the mean aural temperature was
36·8ºC and around 35% of these patients said they were
suffering from “chills” and “feverish discomfort”.49 The
sensation of chilliness may be unrelated to any change in
skin or body temperature. In a study of human
volunteers, a sensation of chill still develops on
administration of exogenous pyrogen even though the
- |-
ered when the results will modify management or when a
patient with signs or symptoms of influenza is hospitalized.19
TABLE 2
Complications of Influenza
Cardiovascular 26
Cerebrovascular accidents
Ischemic heart disease
Myocarditis
Hematologic 26
Hemolytic uremic syndrome
Hemophagocytic syndrome
Thrombotic thrombocytope -
nic purpura
Musculoskeletal 19,26
Myositis
Rhabdomyolysis
Neurologic 26
Acute disseminated
encephalomyelitis
Encephalitis
Guillain-Barré syndrome
Postinfluenza encephalopathy
(neurologic symptoms occur -
ring after resolution but within
- source_sentence: >-
How do cytokines interact with the body's systems to influence the
hypothalamus and affect body temperature?
sentences:
- |-
interleukin 1, interleukin 6, and tumour necrosis factor
alpha, as well as the anti-inflammatory cytokines
interleukin-1 receptor antagonist and interleukin 10
have been investigated for their pyrogenic or antipyretic
action.17 Interleukin 1 and interleukin 6 are believed to
be the most important cytokines that induce fever. 55
Cytokines are believed to cross the blood–brain barrier
or interact with the vagus nerve endings to signal the
temperature control centre of the hypothalamus to
increase the thermal set point.55,56 The hypothalamus
then initiates shivering, constriction of skin blood
- |-
mended human dose; possible
risk of embryo-fetal toxicity with
continuous intravenous infusion
based on limited animal data
Baloxavir (Xofluza),
available as oral
tablets
NA ($160) Adults and children 12 years
and older:
88 to 174 lb (40 to 79 kg):
single dose of 40 mg
≥ 175 lb (80 kg): single dose
of 80 mg
Treatment of uncom-
plicated acute
influenza in patients
12 years and older who
have been symptom -
atic for no more than
48 hours
Contraindicated in people with
a history of hypersensitivity to
baloxavir or any component of the
product
- >-
CME This clinical content conforms to AAFP criteria for con-
tinuing medical education (CME). See CME Quiz on page 271.
Author disclosure: No relevant financial affiliations.
Patient information: Handouts on this topic, written by the
authors of this article, are available at https:// www.aafp.org/
afp/2019/0901/p281-s1.html and https:// www.aafp.org/
afp/2019/0901/p281-s2.html.
Acute upper respiratory tract infections are extremely common in adults
and children, but only a few safe and effective treat-
- source_sentence: >-
What are the limitations of using adamantanes (amantadine and rimantadine)
for influenza treatment according to the context?
sentences:
- >-
December 15, 2019 ◆ Volume 100, Number 12 www.aafp.org/afp American
Family Physician 755
INFLUENZA
Clinicians caring for high-risk patients can also be consid -
ered for treatment.28
Four antiviral drugs have been approved for the treat -
ment of influenza (Table 4): the NA inhibitors oseltamivir
(Tamiflu), zanamivir (Relenza), and peramivir (Rapivab),
and the cap-dependent endonuclease inhibitor baloxa -
vir (Xofluza). 18,37 Any of these agents can be used in age-
appropriate, otherwise healthy outpatients with uncom -
plicated influenza and no contraindications. 18 Baloxavir is
- >-
756 American Family Physician www.aafp.org/afp Volume 100, Number 12 ◆
December 15, 2019
INFLUENZA
the risk of bronchospasm. 18,28 Adamantanes (amantadine
and rimantadine [Flumadine]) are approved for influenza
treatment but are not currently recommended. These med -
ications are not active against influenza B, and most influ -
enza A strains have shown adamantane resistance for the
past 10 years.18
There is no demonstrated benefit to treating patients
with more than one antiviral agent or using higher than
recommended dosages. 28 However, extended treatment
- >-
distress syndrome
Diffuse alveolar
hemorrhage
Hypoxic respiratory
failure
Primary viral pneumonia
Secondary bacterial
pneumonia
Renal 26
Acute kidney injury
(e.g., acute tubulo-
interstitial nephritis,
glomerulonephritis,
minimal change disease)
Multiorgan failure
Information from references 8, 19, and 25-27.
SORT: KEY RECOMMENDATIONS FOR PRACTICE
Clinical recommendation
Evidence
rating Comments
Annual influenza vaccination is recommended for all people 6 months and
older. 15,16 A Reports of expert committees
- source_sentence: >-
Which symptoms of colds and flu are now better understood due to new
knowledge in molecular biology?
sentences:
- >-
mechanisms that generate the familiar symptoms is poor compared with the
amount of knowledge available on the
molecular biology of the viruses involved. New knowledge of the effects
of cytokines in human beings now helps to
explain some of the symptoms of colds and flu that were previously in the
realm of folklore rather than medicine—
eg, fever, anorexia, malaise, chilliness, headache, and muscle aches and
pains. The mechanisms of symptoms of
sore throat, rhinorrhoea, sneezing, nasal congestion, cough, watery
eyes, and sinus pain are discussed, since these
- |-
medicines such as ipratropium. These studies have
demonstrated that nasal secretions in the first 4 days of a
common cold are inhibited by intranasal administration
of ipratropium.25 The nasal discharge also consists of a
protein-rich plasma exudate derived from subepithelial
capillaries,28 which may explain why anticholinergics
only partly inhibit nasal discharge associated with
URTIs.27
The colour of nasal discharge and sputum is often
used as a clinical marker to determine whether or not to
prescribe antibiotics but there is no evidence from the
- |-
ing diffuse alveolar hemorrhage in immunocompetent patients: a state-
of-the-art review. Lung. 2013; 191(1): 9-18.
28. Uyeki TM, Bernstein HH, Bradley JS, et al. Clinical practice guidelines by
the Infectious Diseases Society of America: 2018 update on diagnosis,
treatment, chemoprophylaxis, and institutional outbreak management
of seasonal influenza. Clin Infect Dis. 2019; 68(6): 895-902.
29. Ebell MH, Afonso AM, Gonzales R, et al. Development and validation of
a clinical decision rule for the diagnosis of influenza. J Am Board Fam
Med. 2012; 25(1): 55-62.
- source_sentence: >-
QUESTION #2: How does the sneeze centre in the brainstem coordinate the
actions involved in sneezing?
sentences:
- |-
stroke, seizure disorder, dementia)
Asthma or other chronic pulmonary disease
Chronic kidney disease
Chronic liver disease
Heart disease (acquired or congenital)
Immunosuppression (e.g., HIV infection, cancer, transplant
recipients, use of immunosuppressive medications)
Long-term aspirin therapy in patients younger than 19 years
Metabolic disorders (acquired [e.g., diabetes mellitus] or
inherited [e.g., mitochondrial disorders])
Morbid obesity
Sickle cell anemia and other hemoglobinopathies
Special groups
Adults 65 years and older
American Indians and Alaska Natives
- |-
causes sneezing.23 The trigeminal nerves relay
information to the sneeze centre in the brainstem and
cause reflex activation of motor and parasympathetic
branches of the facial nerve and activate respiratory
muscles. A model of the sneeze reflex is illustrated in
figure 1. The sneeze centre coordinates the inspiratory
and expiratory actions of sneezing via respiratory
muscles, and lacrimation and nasal congestion via
parasympathetic branches of the facial nerve. The eyes
are always closed during sneezing by activation of facial
muscles, indicating a close relation between the
- |-
during experimental rhinovirus infections have not
been able to find any morphological changes in the
nasal epithelium of infected volunteers, apart from a
substantial increase in polymorphonuclear leucocytes
early in the course of the infection.11 The major cell
monitoring the host for the invasion of pathogens is
the macrophage, which has the ability to trigger an
acute phase response when stimulated with
components of viruses or bacteria—eg, viral RNA and
bacterial cell wall components.12 The surface of the
macrophage exhibits toll-like receptors that combine
pipeline_tag: sentence-similarity
library_name: sentence-transformers
metrics:
- cosine_accuracy@1
- cosine_accuracy@3
- cosine_accuracy@5
- cosine_accuracy@10
- cosine_precision@1
- cosine_precision@3
- cosine_precision@5
- cosine_precision@10
- cosine_recall@1
- cosine_recall@3
- cosine_recall@5
- cosine_recall@10
- cosine_ndcg@10
- cosine_mrr@10
- cosine_map@100
model-index:
- name: SentenceTransformer based on Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-l
results:
- task:
type: information-retrieval
name: Information Retrieval
dataset:
name: Unknown
type: unknown
metrics:
- type: cosine_accuracy@1
value: 0.6122448979591837
name: Cosine Accuracy@1
- type: cosine_accuracy@3
value: 0.8877551020408163
name: Cosine Accuracy@3
- type: cosine_accuracy@5
value: 0.9387755102040817
name: Cosine Accuracy@5
- type: cosine_accuracy@10
value: 0.9897959183673469
name: Cosine Accuracy@10
- type: cosine_precision@1
value: 0.6122448979591837
name: Cosine Precision@1
- type: cosine_precision@3
value: 0.29591836734693877
name: Cosine Precision@3
- type: cosine_precision@5
value: 0.1877551020408163
name: Cosine Precision@5
- type: cosine_precision@10
value: 0.09897959183673469
name: Cosine Precision@10
- type: cosine_recall@1
value: 0.6122448979591837
name: Cosine Recall@1
- type: cosine_recall@3
value: 0.8877551020408163
name: Cosine Recall@3
- type: cosine_recall@5
value: 0.9387755102040817
name: Cosine Recall@5
- type: cosine_recall@10
value: 0.9897959183673469
name: Cosine Recall@10
- type: cosine_ndcg@10
value: 0.8165441473931409
name: Cosine Ndcg@10
- type: cosine_mrr@10
value: 0.7593091998704244
name: Cosine Mrr@10
- type: cosine_map@100
value: 0.7600380628441854
name: Cosine Map@100
- type: cosine_accuracy@1
value: 0.61
name: Cosine Accuracy@1
- type: cosine_accuracy@3
value: 0.86
name: Cosine Accuracy@3
- type: cosine_accuracy@5
value: 0.91
name: Cosine Accuracy@5
- type: cosine_accuracy@10
value: 0.98
name: Cosine Accuracy@10
- type: cosine_precision@1
value: 0.61
name: Cosine Precision@1
- type: cosine_precision@3
value: 0.2866666666666666
name: Cosine Precision@3
- type: cosine_precision@5
value: 0.18199999999999997
name: Cosine Precision@5
- type: cosine_precision@10
value: 0.09799999999999998
name: Cosine Precision@10
- type: cosine_recall@1
value: 0.61
name: Cosine Recall@1
- type: cosine_recall@3
value: 0.86
name: Cosine Recall@3
- type: cosine_recall@5
value: 0.91
name: Cosine Recall@5
- type: cosine_recall@10
value: 0.98
name: Cosine Recall@10
- type: cosine_ndcg@10
value: 0.8056804227184741
name: Cosine Ndcg@10
- type: cosine_mrr@10
value: 0.7489960317460317
name: Cosine Mrr@10
- type: cosine_map@100
value: 0.7504795482295481
name: Cosine Map@100
SentenceTransformer based on Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-l
This is a sentence-transformers model finetuned from Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-l. It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 1024-dimensional dense vector space and can be used for semantic textual similarity, semantic search, paraphrase mining, text classification, clustering, and more.
Model Details
Model Description
- Model Type: Sentence Transformer
- Base model: Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-l
- Maximum Sequence Length: 512 tokens
- Output Dimensionality: 1024 dimensions
- Similarity Function: Cosine Similarity
Model Sources
- Documentation: Sentence Transformers Documentation
- Repository: Sentence Transformers on GitHub
- Hugging Face: Sentence Transformers on Hugging Face
Full Model Architecture
SentenceTransformer(
(0): Transformer({'max_seq_length': 512, 'do_lower_case': False}) with Transformer model: BertModel
(1): Pooling({'word_embedding_dimension': 1024, 'pooling_mode_cls_token': True, 'pooling_mode_mean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_max_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_sqrt_len_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_weightedmean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_lasttoken': False, 'include_prompt': True})
(2): Normalize()
)
Usage
Direct Usage (Sentence Transformers)
First install the Sentence Transformers library:
pip install -U sentence-transformers
Then you can load this model and run inference.
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
# Download from the 🤗 Hub
model = SentenceTransformer("Gonalb/flucold-ft-v2")
# Run inference
sentences = [
'QUESTION #2: How does the sneeze centre in the brainstem coordinate the actions involved in sneezing?',
'causes sneezing.23 The trigeminal nerves relay\ninformation to the sneeze centre in the brainstem and\ncause reflex activation of motor and parasympathetic\nbranches of the facial nerve and activate respiratory\nmuscles. A model of the sneeze reflex is illustrated in\nfigure 1. The sneeze centre coordinates the inspiratory\nand expiratory actions of sneezing via respiratory\nmuscles, and lacrimation and nasal congestion via\nparasympathetic branches of the facial nerve. The eyes\nare always closed during sneezing by activation of facial\nmuscles, indicating a close relation between the',
'stroke, seizure disorder, dementia)\nAsthma or other chronic pulmonary disease\nChronic kidney disease\nChronic liver disease\nHeart disease (acquired or congenital)\nImmunosuppression (e.g., HIV infection, cancer, transplant \nrecipients, use of immunosuppressive medications)\nLong-term aspirin therapy in patients younger than 19 years\nMetabolic disorders (acquired [e.g., diabetes mellitus] or \ninherited [e.g., mitochondrial disorders])\nMorbid obesity\nSickle cell anemia and other hemoglobinopathies\nSpecial groups\nAdults 65 years and older\nAmerican Indians and Alaska Natives',
]
embeddings = model.encode(sentences)
print(embeddings.shape)
# [3, 1024]
# Get the similarity scores for the embeddings
similarities = model.similarity(embeddings, embeddings)
print(similarities.shape)
# [3, 3]
Evaluation
Metrics
Information Retrieval
- Evaluated with
InformationRetrievalEvaluator
Metric | Value |
---|---|
cosine_accuracy@1 | 0.6122 |
cosine_accuracy@3 | 0.8878 |
cosine_accuracy@5 | 0.9388 |
cosine_accuracy@10 | 0.9898 |
cosine_precision@1 | 0.6122 |
cosine_precision@3 | 0.2959 |
cosine_precision@5 | 0.1878 |
cosine_precision@10 | 0.099 |
cosine_recall@1 | 0.6122 |
cosine_recall@3 | 0.8878 |
cosine_recall@5 | 0.9388 |
cosine_recall@10 | 0.9898 |
cosine_ndcg@10 | 0.8165 |
cosine_mrr@10 | 0.7593 |
cosine_map@100 | 0.76 |
Information Retrieval
- Evaluated with
InformationRetrievalEvaluator
Metric | Value |
---|---|
cosine_accuracy@1 | 0.61 |
cosine_accuracy@3 | 0.86 |
cosine_accuracy@5 | 0.91 |
cosine_accuracy@10 | 0.98 |
cosine_precision@1 | 0.61 |
cosine_precision@3 | 0.2867 |
cosine_precision@5 | 0.182 |
cosine_precision@10 | 0.098 |
cosine_recall@1 | 0.61 |
cosine_recall@3 | 0.86 |
cosine_recall@5 | 0.91 |
cosine_recall@10 | 0.98 |
cosine_ndcg@10 | 0.8057 |
cosine_mrr@10 | 0.749 |
cosine_map@100 | 0.7505 |
Training Details
Training Dataset
Unnamed Dataset
- Size: 400 training samples
- Columns:
sentence_0
andsentence_1
- Approximate statistics based on the first 400 samples:
sentence_0 sentence_1 type string string details - min: 2 tokens
- mean: 23.07 tokens
- max: 53 tokens
- min: 25 tokens
- mean: 122.33 tokens
- max: 296 tokens
- Samples:
sentence_0 sentence_1 What should individuals with asthma do if they experience flu symptoms?
People with asthma who get flu symptoms should call their health care provider right
away. There are antiviral drugs that can treat flu illness and help prevent serious flu
complications.
About asthma
Asthma is a lung disease that is caused by chronic inflammation of the airways. It is one of the most common long-term diseases among
children, but adults can have asthma, too. Asthma attacks occur when the lung airways tighten due to inflammation. Asthma attacks can beWhat causes asthma attacks to occur in individuals with asthma?
People with asthma who get flu symptoms should call their health care provider right
away. There are antiviral drugs that can treat flu illness and help prevent serious flu
complications.
About asthma
Asthma is a lung disease that is caused by chronic inflammation of the airways. It is one of the most common long-term diseases among
children, but adults can have asthma, too. Asthma attacks occur when the lung airways tighten due to inflammation. Asthma attacks can beQUESTION #1: How long are people with RSV typically contagious?
second birthday. However, repeat infections may occur throughout life.
People with RSV are usually contagious for 3 to 8 days and may become contagious a day or two before they start showing signs of illness.
However, some infants and people with weakened immune systems can continue to spread the virus for 4 weeks or longer, even after they stop
showing symptoms. Children are often exposed to and infected with RSV outside the home, such as in school or childcare centers. They can then
transmit the virus to other members of the family. - Loss:
MatryoshkaLoss
with these parameters:{ "loss": "MultipleNegativesRankingLoss", "matryoshka_dims": [ 768, 512, 256, 128, 64 ], "matryoshka_weights": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "n_dims_per_step": -1 }
Training Hyperparameters
Non-Default Hyperparameters
eval_strategy
: stepsper_device_train_batch_size
: 10per_device_eval_batch_size
: 10num_train_epochs
: 10multi_dataset_batch_sampler
: round_robin
All Hyperparameters
Click to expand
overwrite_output_dir
: Falsedo_predict
: Falseeval_strategy
: stepsprediction_loss_only
: Trueper_device_train_batch_size
: 10per_device_eval_batch_size
: 10per_gpu_train_batch_size
: Noneper_gpu_eval_batch_size
: Nonegradient_accumulation_steps
: 1eval_accumulation_steps
: Nonetorch_empty_cache_steps
: Nonelearning_rate
: 5e-05weight_decay
: 0.0adam_beta1
: 0.9adam_beta2
: 0.999adam_epsilon
: 1e-08max_grad_norm
: 1num_train_epochs
: 10max_steps
: -1lr_scheduler_type
: linearlr_scheduler_kwargs
: {}warmup_ratio
: 0.0warmup_steps
: 0log_level
: passivelog_level_replica
: warninglog_on_each_node
: Truelogging_nan_inf_filter
: Truesave_safetensors
: Truesave_on_each_node
: Falsesave_only_model
: Falserestore_callback_states_from_checkpoint
: Falseno_cuda
: Falseuse_cpu
: Falseuse_mps_device
: Falseseed
: 42data_seed
: Nonejit_mode_eval
: Falseuse_ipex
: Falsebf16
: Falsefp16
: Falsefp16_opt_level
: O1half_precision_backend
: autobf16_full_eval
: Falsefp16_full_eval
: Falsetf32
: Nonelocal_rank
: 0ddp_backend
: Nonetpu_num_cores
: Nonetpu_metrics_debug
: Falsedebug
: []dataloader_drop_last
: Falsedataloader_num_workers
: 0dataloader_prefetch_factor
: Nonepast_index
: -1disable_tqdm
: Falseremove_unused_columns
: Truelabel_names
: Noneload_best_model_at_end
: Falseignore_data_skip
: Falsefsdp
: []fsdp_min_num_params
: 0fsdp_config
: {'min_num_params': 0, 'xla': False, 'xla_fsdp_v2': False, 'xla_fsdp_grad_ckpt': False}fsdp_transformer_layer_cls_to_wrap
: Noneaccelerator_config
: {'split_batches': False, 'dispatch_batches': None, 'even_batches': True, 'use_seedable_sampler': True, 'non_blocking': False, 'gradient_accumulation_kwargs': None}deepspeed
: Nonelabel_smoothing_factor
: 0.0optim
: adamw_torchoptim_args
: Noneadafactor
: Falsegroup_by_length
: Falselength_column_name
: lengthddp_find_unused_parameters
: Noneddp_bucket_cap_mb
: Noneddp_broadcast_buffers
: Falsedataloader_pin_memory
: Truedataloader_persistent_workers
: Falseskip_memory_metrics
: Trueuse_legacy_prediction_loop
: Falsepush_to_hub
: Falseresume_from_checkpoint
: Nonehub_model_id
: Nonehub_strategy
: every_savehub_private_repo
: Nonehub_always_push
: Falsegradient_checkpointing
: Falsegradient_checkpointing_kwargs
: Noneinclude_inputs_for_metrics
: Falseinclude_for_metrics
: []eval_do_concat_batches
: Truefp16_backend
: autopush_to_hub_model_id
: Nonepush_to_hub_organization
: Nonemp_parameters
:auto_find_batch_size
: Falsefull_determinism
: Falsetorchdynamo
: Noneray_scope
: lastddp_timeout
: 1800torch_compile
: Falsetorch_compile_backend
: Nonetorch_compile_mode
: Nonedispatch_batches
: Nonesplit_batches
: Noneinclude_tokens_per_second
: Falseinclude_num_input_tokens_seen
: Falseneftune_noise_alpha
: Noneoptim_target_modules
: Nonebatch_eval_metrics
: Falseeval_on_start
: Falseuse_liger_kernel
: Falseeval_use_gather_object
: Falseaverage_tokens_across_devices
: Falseprompts
: Nonebatch_sampler
: batch_samplermulti_dataset_batch_sampler
: round_robin
Training Logs
Epoch | Step | Training Loss | cosine_ndcg@10 |
---|---|---|---|
1.0 | 40 | - | 0.8359 |
1.25 | 50 | - | 0.8312 |
2.0 | 80 | - | 0.8304 |
2.5 | 100 | - | 0.8156 |
3.0 | 120 | - | 0.8016 |
3.75 | 150 | - | 0.7952 |
4.0 | 160 | - | 0.7880 |
5.0 | 200 | - | 0.8021 |
6.0 | 240 | - | 0.8215 |
6.25 | 250 | - | 0.8286 |
7.0 | 280 | - | 0.8079 |
7.5 | 300 | - | 0.8043 |
8.0 | 320 | - | 0.8126 |
8.75 | 350 | - | 0.8099 |
9.0 | 360 | - | 0.8126 |
10.0 | 400 | - | 0.8165 |
0.6173 | 50 | - | 0.8138 |
1.0 | 81 | - | 0.8158 |
1.2346 | 100 | - | 0.7932 |
1.8519 | 150 | - | 0.7989 |
2.0 | 162 | - | 0.7866 |
2.4691 | 200 | - | 0.8012 |
3.0 | 243 | - | 0.7803 |
3.0864 | 250 | - | 0.7969 |
3.7037 | 300 | - | 0.8030 |
4.0 | 324 | - | 0.7993 |
4.3210 | 350 | - | 0.7848 |
4.9383 | 400 | - | 0.7852 |
5.0 | 405 | - | 0.7814 |
5.5556 | 450 | - | 0.7975 |
6.0 | 486 | - | 0.7846 |
6.1728 | 500 | 0.314 | 0.7925 |
6.7901 | 550 | - | 0.7994 |
7.0 | 567 | - | 0.8069 |
7.4074 | 600 | - | 0.8048 |
8.0 | 648 | - | 0.8063 |
8.0247 | 650 | - | 0.8062 |
8.6420 | 700 | - | 0.7992 |
9.0 | 729 | - | 0.8115 |
9.2593 | 750 | - | 0.8118 |
9.8765 | 800 | - | 0.8057 |
10.0 | 810 | - | 0.8057 |
Framework Versions
- Python: 3.11.11
- Sentence Transformers: 3.4.1
- Transformers: 4.48.3
- PyTorch: 2.5.1+cu124
- Accelerate: 1.3.0
- Datasets: 3.3.2
- Tokenizers: 0.21.0
Citation
BibTeX
Sentence Transformers
@inproceedings{reimers-2019-sentence-bert,
title = "Sentence-BERT: Sentence Embeddings using Siamese BERT-Networks",
author = "Reimers, Nils and Gurevych, Iryna",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2019 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing",
month = "11",
year = "2019",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.10084",
}
MatryoshkaLoss
@misc{kusupati2024matryoshka,
title={Matryoshka Representation Learning},
author={Aditya Kusupati and Gantavya Bhatt and Aniket Rege and Matthew Wallingford and Aditya Sinha and Vivek Ramanujan and William Howard-Snyder and Kaifeng Chen and Sham Kakade and Prateek Jain and Ali Farhadi},
year={2024},
eprint={2205.13147},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.LG}
}
MultipleNegativesRankingLoss
@misc{henderson2017efficient,
title={Efficient Natural Language Response Suggestion for Smart Reply},
author={Matthew Henderson and Rami Al-Rfou and Brian Strope and Yun-hsuan Sung and Laszlo Lukacs and Ruiqi Guo and Sanjiv Kumar and Balint Miklos and Ray Kurzweil},
year={2017},
eprint={1705.00652},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}