--- datasets: - natural_instructions - the_pile - cot - Muennighoff/P3 inference: parameters: max_new_tokens: 5 temperature: 1.0 top_k: 1 language: - en pipeline_tag: text-generation widget: - example_title: "Sentiment Analysis" text: |- The task is to label the post's emotion as sadness, joy, love, anger, fear, or surprise. Input: I'm feeling quite sad and sorry for myself but ill snap out of it soon. Output: sadness Input: I am just feeling cranky and blue. Output: anger Input: I can have for a treat or if i am feeling festive. Output: - example_title: "Country Currency" text: |- Return the currency of the given country. Input: Switzerland Output: Swiss Franc Input: India Output: - example_title: "Tweet Eval Hate" text: |- Label whether the following tweet contains hate speech against either immigrants or women. Hate Speech (HS) is commonly defined as any communication that disparages a person or a group on the basis of some characteristic such as race, color, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, nationality, religion, or other characteristics. Possible labels: 1. hate speech 2. not hate speech Tweet: HOW REFRESHING! In South Korea, there is no such thing as 'political correctness" when it comes to dealing with Muslim refugee wannabes via @user Label: hate speech Tweet: New to Twitter-- any men on here know what the process is to get #verified? Label: not hate speech Tweet: Dont worry @user you are and will always be the most hysterical woman. Label: - example_title: "Entity Recognition" text: |- Extract all the names of people, places, and organizations from the following sentences. Sentence: Satya Nadella, the CEO of Microsoft, was visiting the Bahamas last May. Entities: Satya Nadella, Microsoft, Bahamas Sentence: Pacific Northwest cities include Seattle and Portland, which I have visited with Vikash. Entities: - example_title: "Data Clearning" text: |- Format the data into a CSV file: Input: Jane Doe jane.doe@gmail.com (520) 382 2435 Output: Jane Doe,jane.doe@gmail.com,520-382-2435 Input: Peter Lee (510) 333-2429 email: peter@yahoo.com Output: ---

GPT-JT

# Model Summary > With a new decentralized training algorithm, we fine-tuned GPT-J (6B) on 3.53 billion tokens, resulting in GPT-JT (6B), a model that outperforms many 100B+ parameter models on classification benchmarks. We incorporated a collection of open techniques and datasets to build GPT-JT: - GPT-JT was based on [GPT-J (6B)](https://huggingface.co/EleutherAI/gpt-j-6B), created by [EleutherAI](https://www.eleuther.ai); - We used [UL2](https://github.com/google-research/google-research/tree/master/ul2)'s training objective, which allows the model to use bidirectional context to process the prompt; - The model was trained on a large collection of diverse data, including [Chain-of-Thought (CoT)](https://ai.googleblog.com/2022/05/language-models-perform-reasoning-via.html), [Public Pool of Prompts (P3) dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/bigscience/P3), [Natural-Instructions (NI) dataset](https://github.com/allenai/natural-instructions). With the help of techniques mentioned above, GPT-JT significantly improves the performance of classification tasks over the original GPT-J, and even outperforms most 100B+ parameter models! ***Please try out our [Online Demo](https://huggingface.co/spaces/togethercomputer/GPT-JT)!*** # Quick Start ```python from transformers import pipeline pipe = pipeline(model='togethercomputer/GPT-JT-6B-v1') pipe('''"I love this!" Is it positive? A:''') ``` or ```python from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("togethercomputer/GPT-JT-6B-v1") model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained("togethercomputer/GPT-JT-6B-v1") ``` # Training Details ## UL2 Training Objective We train GPT-JT using UL2 training objective [1][2]. The original GPT-J uses causal mask (as shown below left) for autoregressive generation. So for each token, it can only see its previous context. In order to fully leverage the context information, we continue to train GPT-J with UL2 training objectives, and uses causal mask with prefix (as shown below right) -- using bidirectional attention for the prompt / input and causal attention for token generation. Intuitively, being able to see context bidirectionally might improve downstream tasks that require this information. $$ \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 0 \\ 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 & 1 \end{bmatrix} $$ Furthermore, we leverage a large collection of data, including NI, P3, COT, the pile: - [Natural-Instructions](https://github.com/allenai/natural-instructions) - [P3](https://huggingface.co/datasets/Muennighoff/P3) - [MMLU-COT](https://github.com/jasonwei20/flan-2/blob/main/mmlu-cot.json) - [the Pile](https://huggingface.co/datasets/the_pile) Specifically, we first conduct training for 2.62 billion tokens using the UL2 loss on the Pile, followed by 0.92 billion tokens with a mixture of the above datasets: 5% of COT, 20% of P3, 20% of NI, and 55% of the Pile. ## Hyperparameters We used AdamW with a learning rate of 1e-5 and global batch size of 64 (16 for each data parallel worker). We used mix-precision training where the activation is in FP16 while the optimizer states are kept in FP32. We use both data parallelism and pipeline parallelism to conduct training. During training, we truncate the input sequence to 2048 tokens, and for input sequence that contains less than 2048 tokens, we concatenate multiple sequences into one long sequence to improve the data efficiency. ## Infrastructure We used [the Together Research Computer](https://together.xyz/) to conduct training. # References [1]: Tay, Yi, Mostafa Dehghani, Vinh Q. Tran, Xavier Garcia, Dara Bahri, Tal Schuster, Huaixiu Steven Zheng, Neil Houlsby, and Donald Metzler. "Unifying Language Learning Paradigms." arXiv preprint arXiv:2205.05131 (2022). [2]: Tay, Yi, Jason Wei, Hyung Won Chung, Vinh Q. Tran, David R. So, Siamak Shakeri, Xavier Garcia et al. "Transcending scaling laws with 0.1% extra compute." arXiv preprint arXiv:2210.11399 (2022).