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--- |
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language: en |
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tags: |
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- tapas |
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license: apache-2.0 |
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datasets: |
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- msr_sqa |
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--- |
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# TAPAS mini model fine-tuned on Sequential Question Answering (SQA) |
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This model has 2 versions which can be used. The default version corresponds to the `tapas_sqa_inter_masklm_mini_reset` checkpoint of the [original Github repository](https://github.com/google-research/tapas). |
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This model was pre-trained on MLM and an additional step which the authors call intermediate pre-training, and then fine-tuned on [SQA](https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=54253). It uses relative position embeddings (i.e. resetting the position index at every cell of the table). |
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The other (non-default) version which can be used is: |
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- `no_reset`, which corresponds to `tapas_sqa_inter_masklm_mini` (intermediate pre-training, absolute position embeddings). |
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Disclaimer: The team releasing TAPAS did not write a model card for this model so this model card has been written by |
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the Hugging Face team and contributors. |
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## Results on SQA - Dev Accuracy |
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Size | Reset | Dev Accuracy | Link |
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-------- | --------| -------- | ---- |
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LARGE | noreset | 0.7223 | [tapas-large-finetuned-sqa (absolute pos embeddings)](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-large-finetuned-sqa/tree/no_reset) |
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LARGE | reset | 0.7289 | [tapas-large-finetuned-sqa](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-large-finetuned-sqa/tree/main) |
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BASE | noreset | 0.6737 | [tapas-base-finetuned-sqa (absolute pos embeddings)](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-base-finetuned-sqa/tree/no_reset) |
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BASE | reset | 0.6874 | [tapas-base-finetuned-sqa](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-base-finetuned-sqa/tree/main) |
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MEDIUM | noreset | 0.6464 | [tapas-medium-finetuned-sqa (absolute pos embeddings)](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-medium-finetuned-sqa/tree/no_reset) |
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MEDIUM | reset | 0.6561 | [tapas-medium-finetuned-sqa](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-medium-finetuned-sqa/tree/main) |
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SMALL | noreset | 0.5876 | [tapas-small-finetuned-sqa (absolute pos embeddings)](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-small-finetuned-sqa/tree/no_reset) |
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SMALL | reset | 0.6155 | [tapas-small-finetuned-sqa](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-small-finetuned-sqa/tree/main) |
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**MINI** | **noreset** | **0.4574** | [tapas-mini-finetuned-sqa (absolute pos embeddings)](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-mini-finetuned-sqa/tree/no_reset) |
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**MINI** | **reset** | **0.5148** | [tapas-mini-finetuned-sqa](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-mini-finetuned-sqa/tree/main)) |
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TINY | noreset | 0.2004 | [tapas-tiny-finetuned-sqa (absolute pos embeddings)](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-tiny-finetuned-sqa/tree/no_reset) |
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TINY | reset | 0.2375 | [tapas-tiny-finetuned-sqa](https://huggingface.co/google/tapas-tiny-finetuned-sqa/tree/main) |
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## Model description |
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TAPAS is a BERT-like transformers model pretrained on a large corpus of English data from Wikipedia in a self-supervised fashion. |
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This means it was pretrained on the raw tables and associated texts only, with no humans labelling them in any way (which is why it |
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can use lots of publicly available data) with an automatic process to generate inputs and labels from those texts. More precisely, it |
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was pretrained with two objectives: |
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- Masked language modeling (MLM): taking a (flattened) table and associated context, the model randomly masks 15% of the words in |
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the input, then runs the entire (partially masked) sequence through the model. The model then has to predict the masked words. |
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This is different from traditional recurrent neural networks (RNNs) that usually see the words one after the other, |
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or from autoregressive models like GPT which internally mask the future tokens. It allows the model to learn a bidirectional |
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representation of a table and associated text. |
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- Intermediate pre-training: to encourage numerical reasoning on tables, the authors additionally pre-trained the model by creating |
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a balanced dataset of millions of syntactically created training examples. Here, the model must predict (classify) whether a sentence |
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is supported or refuted by the contents of a table. The training examples are created based on synthetic as well as counterfactual statements. |
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This way, the model learns an inner representation of the English language used in tables and associated texts, which can then be used |
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to extract features useful for downstream tasks such as answering questions about a table, or determining whether a sentence is entailed |
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or refuted by the contents of a table. Fine-tuning is done by adding a cell selection head on top of the pre-trained model, and then jointly |
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train this randomly initialized classification head with the base model on SQA. |
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## Intended uses & limitations |
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You can use this model for answering questions related to a table in a conversational set-up. |
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For code examples, we refer to the documentation of TAPAS on the HuggingFace website. |
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## Training procedure |
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### Preprocessing |
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The texts are lowercased and tokenized using WordPiece and a vocabulary size of 30,000. The inputs of the model are |
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then of the form: |
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``` |
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[CLS] Question [SEP] Flattened table [SEP] |
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``` |
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### Fine-tuning |
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The model was fine-tuned on 32 Cloud TPU v3 cores for 200,000 steps with maximum sequence length 512 and batch size of 128. |
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In this setup, fine-tuning takes around 20 hours. The optimizer used is Adam with a learning rate of 1.25e-5, and a warmup ratio |
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of 0.2. An inductive bias is added such that the model only selects cells of the same column. This is reflected by the |
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`select_one_column` parameter of `TapasConfig`. See also table 12 of the [original paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2004.02349). |
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### BibTeX entry and citation info |
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```bibtex |
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@misc{herzig2020tapas, |
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title={TAPAS: Weakly Supervised Table Parsing via Pre-training}, |
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author={Jonathan Herzig and Paweł Krzysztof Nowak and Thomas Müller and Francesco Piccinno and Julian Martin Eisenschlos}, |
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year={2020}, |
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eprint={2004.02349}, |
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archivePrefix={arXiv}, |
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primaryClass={cs.IR} |
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} |
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``` |
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```bibtex |
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@misc{eisenschlos2020understanding, |
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title={Understanding tables with intermediate pre-training}, |
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author={Julian Martin Eisenschlos and Syrine Krichene and Thomas Müller}, |
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year={2020}, |
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eprint={2010.00571}, |
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archivePrefix={arXiv}, |
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primaryClass={cs.CL} |
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} |
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``` |
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```bibtex |
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@InProceedings{iyyer2017search-based, |
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author = {Iyyer, Mohit and Yih, Scott Wen-tau and Chang, Ming-Wei}, |
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title = {Search-based Neural Structured Learning for Sequential Question Answering}, |
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booktitle = {Proceedings of the 55th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, |
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year = {2017}, |
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month = {July}, |
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abstract = {Recent work in semantic parsing for question answering has focused on long and complicated questions, many of which would seem unnatural if asked in a normal conversation between two humans. In an effort to explore a conversational QA setting, we present a more realistic task: answering sequences of simple but inter-related questions. We collect a dataset of 6,066 question sequences that inquire about semi-structured tables from Wikipedia, with 17,553 question-answer pairs in total. To solve this sequential question answering task, we propose a novel dynamic neural semantic parsing framework trained using a weakly supervised reward-guided search. Our model effectively leverages the sequential context to outperform state-of-the-art QA systems that are designed to answer highly complex questions.}, |
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publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, |
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url = {https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/publication/search-based-neural-structured-learning-sequential-question-answering/}, |
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} |
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``` |