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--- |
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tags: |
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- summarization |
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- led |
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- summary |
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- longformer |
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license: apache-2.0 |
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datasets: |
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- kmfoda/booksum |
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metrics: |
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- rouge |
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widget: |
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- text: large earthquakes along a given fault segment do not occur at random intervals |
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because it takes time to accumulate the strain energy for the rupture. The rates |
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at which tectonic plates move and accumulate strain at their boundaries are approximately |
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uniform. Therefore, in first approximation, one may expect that large ruptures |
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of the same fault segment will occur at approximately constant time intervals. |
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If subsequent main shocks have different amounts of slip across the fault, then |
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the recurrence time may vary, and the basic idea of periodic mainshocks must be |
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modified. For great plate boundary ruptures the length and slip often vary by |
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a factor of 2. Along the southern segment of the San Andreas fault the recurrence |
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interval is 145 years with variations of several decades. The smaller the standard |
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deviation of the average recurrence interval, the more specific could be the long |
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term prediction of a future mainshock. |
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example_title: earthquakes |
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- text: " A typical feed-forward neural field algorithm. Spatiotemporal coordinates\ |
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\ are fed into a neural network that predicts values in the reconstructed domain.\ |
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\ Then, this domain is mapped to the sensor domain where sensor measurements are\ |
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\ available as supervision. Class and Section Problems Addressed Generalization\ |
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\ (Section 2) Inverse problems, ill-posed problems, editability; symmetries. Hybrid\ |
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\ Representations (Section 3) Computation & memory efficiency, representation\ |
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\ capacity, editability: Forward Maps (Section 4) Inverse problems Network Architecture\ |
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\ (Section 5) Spectral bias, integration & derivatives. Manipulating Neural Fields\ |
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\ (Section 6) Edit ability, constraints, regularization. Table 2: The five classes\ |
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\ of techniques in the neural field toolbox each addresses problems that arise\ |
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\ in learning, inference, and control. (Section 3). We can supervise reconstruction\ |
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\ via differentiable forward maps that transform Or project our domain (e.g, 3D\ |
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\ reconstruction via 2D images; Section 4) With appropriate network architecture\ |
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\ choices, we can overcome neural network spectral biases (blurriness) and efficiently\ |
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\ compute derivatives and integrals (Section 5). Finally, we can manipulate neural\ |
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\ fields to add constraints and regularizations, and to achieve editable representations\ |
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\ (Section 6). Collectively, these classes constitute a 'toolbox' of techniques\ |
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\ to help solve problems with neural fields There are three components in a conditional\ |
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\ neural field: (1) An encoder or inference function \u20AC that outputs the conditioning\ |
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\ latent variable 2 given an observation 0 E(0) =2. 2 is typically a low-dimensional\ |
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\ vector, and is often referred to aS a latent code Or feature code_ (2) A mapping\ |
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\ function 4 between Z and neural field parameters O: Y(z) = O; (3) The neural\ |
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\ field itself $. The encoder \u20AC finds the most probable z given the observations\ |
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\ O: argmaxz P(2/0). The decoder maximizes the inverse conditional probability\ |
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\ to find the most probable 0 given Z: arg- max P(Olz). We discuss different encoding\ |
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\ schemes with different optimality guarantees (Section 2.1.1), both global and\ |
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\ local conditioning (Section 2.1.2), and different mapping functions Y (Section\ |
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\ 2.1.3) 2. Generalization Suppose we wish to estimate a plausible 3D surface\ |
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\ shape given a partial or noisy point cloud. We need a suitable prior over the\ |
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\ sur- face in its reconstruction domain to generalize to the partial observations.\ |
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\ A neural network expresses a prior via the function space of its architecture\ |
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\ and parameters 0, and generalization is influenced by the inductive bias of\ |
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\ this function space (Section 5)." |
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example_title: scientific paper |
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- text: ' the big variety of data coming from diverse sources is one of the key properties |
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of the big data phenomenon. It is, therefore, beneficial to understand how data |
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is generated in various environments and scenarios, before looking at what should |
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be done with this data and how to design the best possible architecture to accomplish |
|
this The evolution of IT architectures, described in Chapter 2, means that the |
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data is no longer processed by a few big monolith systems, but rather by a group |
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of services In parallel to the processing layer, the underlying data storage has |
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also changed and became more distributed This, in turn, required a significant |
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paradigm shift as the traditional approach to transactions (ACID) could no longer |
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be supported. On top of this, cloud computing is becoming a major approach with |
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the benefits of reducing costs and providing on-demand scalability but at the |
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same time introducing concerns about privacy, data ownership, etc In the meantime |
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the Internet continues its exponential growth: Every day both structured and unstructured |
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data is published and available for processing: To achieve competitive advantage |
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companies have to relate their corporate resources to external services, e.g. |
|
financial markets, weather forecasts, social media, etc While several of the sites |
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provide some sort of API to access the data in a more orderly fashion; countless |
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sources require advanced web mining and Natural Language Processing (NLP) processing |
|
techniques: Advances in science push researchers to construct new instruments |
|
for observing the universe O conducting experiments to understand even better |
|
the laws of physics and other domains. Every year humans have at their disposal |
|
new telescopes, space probes, particle accelerators, etc These instruments generate |
|
huge streams of data, which need to be stored and analyzed. The constant drive |
|
for efficiency in the industry motivates the introduction of new automation techniques |
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and process optimization: This could not be done without analyzing the precise |
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data that describe these processes. As more and more human tasks are automated, |
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machines provide rich data sets, which can be analyzed in real-time to drive efficiency |
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to new levels. Finally, it is now evident that the growth of the Internet of Things |
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is becoming a major source of data. More and more of the devices are equipped |
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with significant computational power and can generate a continuous data stream |
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from their sensors. In the subsequent sections of this chapter, we will look at |
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the domains described above to see what they generate in terms of data sets. We |
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will compare the volumes but will also look at what is characteristic and important |
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from their respective points of view. 3.1 The Internet is undoubtedly the largest |
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database ever created by humans. While several well described; cleaned, and structured |
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data sets have been made available through this medium, most of the resources |
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are of an ambiguous, unstructured, incomplete or even erroneous nature. Still, |
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several examples in the areas such as opinion mining, social media analysis, e-governance, |
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etc, clearly show the potential lying in these resources. Those who can successfully |
|
mine and interpret the Internet data can gain unique insight and competitive advantage |
|
in their business An important area of data analytics on the edge of corporate |
|
IT and the Internet is Web Analytics.' |
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example_title: data science textbook |
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- text: "Transformer-based models have shown to be very useful for many NLP tasks.\ |
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\ However, a major limitation of transformers-based models is its O(n^2)O(n 2)\ |
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\ time & memory complexity (where nn is sequence length). Hence, it's computationally\ |
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\ very expensive to apply transformer-based models on long sequences n > 512n>512.\ |
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\ Several recent papers, e.g. Longformer, Performer, Reformer, Clustered attention\ |
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\ try to remedy this problem by approximating the full attention matrix. You can\ |
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\ checkout \U0001F917's recent blog post in case you are unfamiliar with these\ |
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\ models.\nBigBird (introduced in paper) is one of such recent models to address\ |
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\ this issue. BigBird relies on block sparse attention instead of normal attention\ |
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\ (i.e. BERT's attention) and can handle sequences up to a length of 4096 at a\ |
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\ much lower computational cost compared to BERT. It has achieved SOTA on various\ |
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\ tasks involving very long sequences such as long documents summarization, question-answering\ |
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\ with long contexts.\nBigBird RoBERTa-like model is now available in \U0001F917\ |
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Transformers. The goal of this post is to give the reader an in-depth understanding\ |
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\ of big bird implementation & ease one's life in using BigBird with \U0001F917\ |
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Transformers. But, before going into more depth, it is important to remember that\ |
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\ the BigBird's attention is an approximation of BERT's full attention and therefore\ |
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\ does not strive to be better than BERT's full attention, but rather to be more\ |
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\ efficient. It simply allows to apply transformer-based models to much longer\ |
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\ sequences since BERT's quadratic memory requirement quickly becomes unbearable.\ |
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\ Simply put, if we would have \u221E compute & \u221E time, BERT's attention\ |
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\ would be preferred over block sparse attention (which we are going to discuss\ |
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\ in this post).\nIf you wonder why we need more compute when working with longer\ |
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\ sequences, this blog post is just right for you!\nSome of the main questions\ |
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\ one might have when working with standard BERT-like attention include:\nDo all\ |
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\ tokens really have to attend to all other tokens? Why not compute attention\ |
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\ only over important tokens? How to decide what tokens are important? How to\ |
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\ attend to just a few tokens in a very efficient way? In this blog post, we will\ |
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\ try to answer those questions.\nWhat tokens should be attended to? We will give\ |
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\ a practical example of how attention works by considering the sentence 'BigBird\ |
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\ is now available in HuggingFace for extractive question answering'. In BERT-like\ |
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\ attention, every word would simply attend to all other tokens.\nLet's think\ |
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\ about a sensible choice of key tokens that a queried token actually only should\ |
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\ attend to by writing some pseudo-code. Will will assume that the token available\ |
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\ is queried and build a sensible list of key tokens to attend to.\n>>> # let's\ |
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\ consider following sentence as an example >>> example = ['BigBird', 'is', 'now',\ |
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\ 'available', 'in', 'HuggingFace', 'for', 'extractive', 'question', 'answering']\n\ |
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>>> # further let's assume, we're trying to understand the representation of 'available'\ |
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\ i.e. >>> query_token = 'available' >>> # We will initialize an empty `set` and\ |
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\ fill up the tokens of our interest as we proceed in this section. >>> key_tokens\ |
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\ = [] # => currently 'available' token doesn't have anything to attend Nearby\ |
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\ tokens should be important because, in a sentence (sequence of words), the current\ |
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\ word is highly dependent on neighboring past & future tokens. This intuition\ |
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\ is the idea behind the concept of sliding attention." |
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example_title: bigbird blog intro |
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- text: 'The majority of available text summarization datasets include short-form |
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source documents that lack long-range causal and temporal dependencies, and often |
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contain strong layout and stylistic biases. While relevant, such datasets will |
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offer limited challenges for future generations of text summarization systems. |
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We address these issues by introducing BookSum, a collection of datasets for long-form |
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narrative summarization. Our dataset covers source documents from the literature |
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domain, such as novels, plays and stories, and includes highly abstractive, human |
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written summaries on three levels of granularity of increasing difficulty: paragraph-, |
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chapter-, and book-level. The domain and structure of our dataset poses a unique |
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set of challenges for summarization systems, which include: processing very long |
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documents, non-trivial causal and temporal dependencies, and rich discourse structures. |
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To facilitate future work, we trained and evaluated multiple extractive and abstractive |
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summarization models as baselines for our dataset.' |
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example_title: BookSum Abstract |
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inference: |
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parameters: |
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max_length: 64 |
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min_length: 8 |
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no_repeat_ngram_size: 3 |
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early_stopping: true |
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repetition_penalty: 3.5 |
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length_penalty: 0.3 |
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encoder_no_repeat_ngram_size: 3 |
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num_beams: 4 |
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model-index: |
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- name: pszemraj/led-base-book-summary |
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results: |
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- task: |
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type: summarization |
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name: Summarization |
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dataset: |
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name: kmfoda/booksum |
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type: kmfoda/booksum |
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config: kmfoda--booksum |
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split: test |
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metrics: |
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- name: ROUGE-1 |
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type: rouge |
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value: 33.4536 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-2 |
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type: rouge |
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value: 5.2232 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-L |
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type: rouge |
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value: 16.2044 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-LSUM |
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type: rouge |
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value: 29.9765 |
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verified: true |
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- name: loss |
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type: loss |
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value: 3.1985862255096436 |
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verified: true |
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- name: gen_len |
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type: gen_len |
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value: 191.9783 |
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verified: true |
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- task: |
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type: summarization |
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name: Summarization |
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dataset: |
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name: samsum |
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type: samsum |
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config: samsum |
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split: test |
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metrics: |
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- name: ROUGE-1 |
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type: rouge |
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value: 32.0 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-2 |
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type: rouge |
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value: 10.0781 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-L |
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type: rouge |
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value: 23.6331 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-LSUM |
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type: rouge |
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value: 28.7831 |
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verified: true |
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- name: loss |
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type: loss |
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value: 2.903024673461914 |
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verified: true |
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- name: gen_len |
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type: gen_len |
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value: 60.7411 |
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verified: true |
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- task: |
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type: summarization |
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name: Summarization |
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dataset: |
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name: cnn_dailymail |
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type: cnn_dailymail |
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config: 3.0.0 |
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split: test |
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metrics: |
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- name: ROUGE-1 |
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type: rouge |
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value: 30.5046 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-2 |
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type: rouge |
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value: 13.2577 |
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verified: true |
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- name: ROUGE-L |
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type: rouge |
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value: 19.0306 |
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verified: true |
|
- name: ROUGE-LSUM |
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type: rouge |
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value: 28.3421 |
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verified: true |
|
- name: loss |
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type: loss |
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value: 3.9484164714813232 |
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verified: true |
|
- name: gen_len |
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type: gen_len |
|
value: 231.0762 |
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verified: true |
|
--- |
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|
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# Longformer Encoder-Decoder (LED) for Narrative-Esque Long Text Summarization |
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|
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- **What:** This is the (current) result of the quest for a summarization model that condenses technical/long information down well _in general, academic and narrative usage |
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- **Use cases:** long narrative summarization (think stories - as the dataset intended), article/paper/textbook/other summarization, technical:simple summarization. |
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- Models trained on this dataset tend to also _explain_ what they are summarizing, which IMO is awesome. |
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|
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- works well on lots of text, and can hand 16384 tokens/batch. |
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|
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## About |
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|
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- Trained for 16 epochs vs. [`pszemraj/led-base-16384-finetuned-booksum`](https://huggingface.co/pszemraj/led-base-16384-finetuned-booksum), |
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- parameters adjusted for _very_ fine-tuning type training (super low LR, etc) |
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- all the parameters for generation on the API are the same for easy comparison between versions. |
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|
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## Other Checkpoints on Booksum |
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|
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- See [led-large-book-summary](https://huggingface.co/pszemraj/led-large-book-summary) for LED-large trained on the same dataset. |
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--- |
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# Usage - Basics |
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|
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- it is recommended to use `encoder_no_repeat_ngram_size=3` when calling the pipeline object to improve summary quality. |
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- this param forces the model to use new vocabulary and create an abstractive summary otherwise it may l compile the best _extractive_ summary from the input provided. |
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- create the pipeline object: |
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|
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``` |
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from transformers import AutoModelForSeq2SeqLM, AutoTokenizer |
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from transformers import pipeline |
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hf_name = 'pszemraj/led-base-book-summary' |
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_model = AutoModelForSeq2SeqLM.from_pretrained( |
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hf_name, |
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low_cpu_mem_usage=True, |
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) |
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_tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained( |
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hf_name |
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) |
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summarizer = pipeline( |
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"summarization", |
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model=_model, |
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tokenizer=_tokenizer |
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) |
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``` |
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- put words into the pipeline object: |
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|
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``` |
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wall_of_text = "your words here" |
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|
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result = summarizer( |
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wall_of_text, |
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min_length=8, |
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max_length=256, |
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no_repeat_ngram_size=3, |
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encoder_no_repeat_ngram_size=3, |
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repetition_penalty=3.5, |
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num_beams=4, |
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do_sample=False, |
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early_stopping=True, |
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) |
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print(result[0]['generated_text']) |
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``` |
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--- |
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# Results |
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**no results for this version yet** |
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--- |