Usage¶
This page shows the most frequent use-cases when using the library. The models available allow for many different configurations and a great versatility in use-cases. The most simple ones are presented here, showcasing usage for tasks such as question answering, sequence classification, named entity recognition and others.
These examples leverage auto-models, which are classes that will instantiate a model according to a given checkpoint,
automatically selecting the correct model architecture. Please check the AutoModel
documentation
for more information.
Feel free to modify the code to be more specific and adapt it to your specific use-case.
In order for a model to perform well on a task, it must be loaded from a checkpoint corresponding to that task. These checkpoints are usually pre-trained on a large corpus of data and fine-tuned on a specific task. This means the following:
Not all models were fine-tuned on all tasks. If you want to fine-tune a model on a specific task, you can leverage one of the run_$TASK.py script in the examples directory.
Fine-tuned models were fine-tuned on a specific dataset. This dataset may or may not overlap with your use-case and domain. As mentioned previously, you may leverage the examples scripts to fine-tune your model, or you may create your own training script.
In order to do an inference on a task, several mechanisms are made available by the library:
Pipelines: very easy-to-use abstractions, which require as little as two lines of code.
Using a model directly with a tokenizer (PyTorch/TensorFlow): the full inference using the model. Less abstraction, but much more powerful.
Both approaches are showcased here.
Note
All tasks presented here leverage pre-trained checkpoints that were fine-tuned on specific tasks. Loading a checkpoint that was not fine-tuned on a specific task would load only the base transformer layers and not the additional head that is used for the task, initializing the weights of that head randomly.
This would produce random output.
Sequence Classification¶
Sequence classification is the task of classifying sequences according to a given number of classes. An example of sequence classification is the GLUE dataset, which is entirely based on that task. If you would like to fine-tune a model on a GLUE sequence classification task, you may leverage the run_glue.py or run_tf_glue.py scripts.
Here is an example using the pipelines do to sentiment analysis: identifying if a sequence is positive or negative. It leverages a fine-tuned model on sst2, which is a GLUE task.
from transformers import pipeline
nlp = pipeline("sentiment-analysis")
print(nlp("I hate you"))
print(nlp("I love you"))
This returns a label (“POSITIVE” or “NEGATIVE”) alongside a score, as follows:
[{'label': 'NEGATIVE', 'score': 0.9991129}]
[{'label': 'POSITIVE', 'score': 0.99986565}]
Here is an example of doing a sequence classification using a model to determine if two sequences are paraphrases of each other. The process is the following:
Instantiate a tokenizer and a model from the checkpoint name. The model is identified as a BERT model and loads it with the weights stored in the checkpoint.
Build a sequence from the two sentences, with the correct model-specific separators token type ids and attention masks (
encode()
andencode_plus()
take care of this)Pass this sequence through the model so that it is classified in one of the two available classes: 0 (not a paraphrase) and 1 (is a paraphrase)
Compute the softmax of the result to get probabilities over the classes
Print the results
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForSequenceClassification
import torch
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased-finetuned-mrpc")
model = AutoModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased-finetuned-mrpc")
classes = ["not paraphrase", "is paraphrase"]
sequence_0 = "The company HuggingFace is based in New York City"
sequence_1 = "Apples are especially bad for your health"
sequence_2 = "HuggingFace's headquarters are situated in Manhattan"
paraphrase = tokenizer.encode_plus(sequence_0, sequence_2, return_tensors="pt")
not_paraphrase = tokenizer.encode_plus(sequence_0, sequence_1, return_tensors="pt")
paraphrase_classification_logits = model(**paraphrase)[0]
not_paraphrase_classification_logits = model(**not_paraphrase)[0]
paraphrase_results = torch.softmax(paraphrase_classification_logits, dim=1).tolist()[0]
not_paraphrase_results = torch.softmax(not_paraphrase_classification_logits, dim=1).tolist()[0]
print("Should be paraphrase")
for i in range(len(classes)):
print(f"{classes[i]}: {round(paraphrase_results[i] * 100)}%")
print("\nShould not be paraphrase")
for i in range(len(classes)):
print(f"{classes[i]}: {round(not_paraphrase_results[i] * 100)}%")
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, TFAutoModelForSequenceClassification
import tensorflow as tf
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased-finetuned-mrpc")
model = TFAutoModelForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased-finetuned-mrpc")
classes = ["not paraphrase", "is paraphrase"]
sequence_0 = "The company HuggingFace is based in New York City"
sequence_1 = "Apples are especially bad for your health"
sequence_2 = "HuggingFace's headquarters are situated in Manhattan"
paraphrase = tokenizer.encode_plus(sequence_0, sequence_2, return_tensors="tf")
not_paraphrase = tokenizer.encode_plus(sequence_0, sequence_1, return_tensors="tf")
paraphrase_classification_logits = model(paraphrase)[0]
not_paraphrase_classification_logits = model(not_paraphrase)[0]
paraphrase_results = tf.nn.softmax(paraphrase_classification_logits, axis=1).numpy()[0]
not_paraphrase_results = tf.nn.softmax(not_paraphrase_classification_logits, axis=1).numpy()[0]
print("Should be paraphrase")
for i in range(len(classes)):
print(f"{classes[i]}: {round(paraphrase_results[i] * 100)}%")
print("\nShould not be paraphrase")
for i in range(len(classes)):
print(f"{classes[i]}: {round(not_paraphrase_results[i] * 100)}%")
This outputs the following results:
Should be paraphrase
not paraphrase: 10%
is paraphrase: 90%
Should not be paraphrase
not paraphrase: 94%
is paraphrase: 6%
Extractive Question Answering¶
Extractive Question Answering is the task of extracting an answer from a text given a question. An example of a question answering dataset is the SQuAD dataset, which is entirely based on that task. If you would like to fine-tune a model on a SQuAD task, you may leverage the run_squad.py.
Here is an example using the pipelines do to question answering: extracting an answer from a text given a question. It leverages a fine-tuned model on SQuAD.
from transformers import pipeline
nlp = pipeline("question-answering")
context = r"""
Extractive Question Answering is the task of extracting an answer from a text given a question. An example of a
question answering dataset is the SQuAD dataset, which is entirely based on that task. If you would like to fine-tune
a model on a SQuAD task, you may leverage the `run_squad.py`.
"""
print(nlp(question="What is extractive question answering?", context=context))
print(nlp(question="What is a good example of a question answering dataset?", context=context))
This returns an answer extracted from the text, a confidence score, alongside “start” and “end” values which are the positions of the extracted answer in the text.
{'score': 0.622232091629833, 'start': 34, 'end': 96, 'answer': 'the task of extracting an answer from a text given a question.'}
{'score': 0.5115299158662765, 'start': 147, 'end': 161, 'answer': 'SQuAD dataset,'}
Here is an example of question answering using a model and a tokenizer. The process is the following:
Instantiate a tokenizer and a model from the checkpoint name. The model is identified as a BERT model and loads it with the weights stored in the checkpoint.
Define a text and a few questions.
Iterate over the questions and build a sequence from the text and the current question, with the correct model-specific separators token type ids and attention masks
Pass this sequence through the model. This outputs a range of scores across the entire sequence tokens (question and text), for both the start and end positions.
Compute the softmax of the result to get probabilities over the tokens
Fetch the tokens from the identified start and stop values, convert those tokens to a string.
Print the results
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForQuestionAnswering
import torch
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-large-uncased-whole-word-masking-finetuned-squad")
model = AutoModelForQuestionAnswering.from_pretrained("bert-large-uncased-whole-word-masking-finetuned-squad")
text = r"""
🤗 Transformers (formerly known as pytorch-transformers and pytorch-pretrained-bert) provides general-purpose
architectures (BERT, GPT-2, RoBERTa, XLM, DistilBert, XLNet…) for Natural Language Understanding (NLU) and Natural
Language Generation (NLG) with over 32+ pretrained models in 100+ languages and deep interoperability between
TensorFlow 2.0 and PyTorch.
"""
questions = [
"How many pretrained models are available in Transformers?",
"What does Transformers provide?",
"Transformers provides interoperability between which frameworks?",
]
for question in questions:
inputs = tokenizer.encode_plus(question, text, add_special_tokens=True, return_tensors="pt")
input_ids = inputs["input_ids"].tolist()[0]
text_tokens = tokenizer.convert_ids_to_tokens(input_ids)
answer_start_scores, answer_end_scores = model(**inputs)
answer_start = torch.argmax(
answer_start_scores
) # Get the most likely beginning of answer with the argmax of the score
answer_end = torch.argmax(answer_end_scores) + 1 # Get the most likely end of answer with the argmax of the score
answer = tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_string(tokenizer.convert_ids_to_tokens(input_ids[answer_start:answer_end]))
print(f"Question: {question}")
print(f"Answer: {answer}\n")
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, TFAutoModelForQuestionAnswering
import tensorflow as tf
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-large-uncased-whole-word-masking-finetuned-squad")
model = TFAutoModelForQuestionAnswering.from_pretrained("bert-large-uncased-whole-word-masking-finetuned-squad")
text = r"""
🤗 Transformers (formerly known as pytorch-transformers and pytorch-pretrained-bert) provides general-purpose
architectures (BERT, GPT-2, RoBERTa, XLM, DistilBert, XLNet…) for Natural Language Understanding (NLU) and Natural
Language Generation (NLG) with over 32+ pretrained models in 100+ languages and deep interoperability between
TensorFlow 2.0 and PyTorch.
"""
questions = [
"How many pretrained models are available in Transformers?",
"What does Transformers provide?",
"Transformers provides interoperability between which frameworks?",
]
for question in questions:
inputs = tokenizer.encode_plus(question, text, add_special_tokens=True, return_tensors="tf")
input_ids = inputs["input_ids"].numpy()[0]
text_tokens = tokenizer.convert_ids_to_tokens(input_ids)
answer_start_scores, answer_end_scores = model(inputs)
answer_start = tf.argmax(
answer_start_scores, axis=1
).numpy()[0] # Get the most likely beginning of answer with the argmax of the score
answer_end = (
tf.argmax(answer_end_scores, axis=1) + 1
).numpy()[0] # Get the most likely end of answer with the argmax of the score
answer = tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_string(tokenizer.convert_ids_to_tokens(input_ids[answer_start:answer_end]))
print(f"Question: {question}")
print(f"Answer: {answer}\n")
This outputs the questions followed by the predicted answers:
Question: How many pretrained models are available in Transformers?
Answer: over 32 +
Question: What does Transformers provide?
Answer: general - purpose architectures
Question: Transformers provides interoperability between which frameworks?
Answer: tensorflow 2 . 0 and pytorch
Language Modeling¶
Language modeling is the task of fitting a model to a corpus, which can be domain specific. All popular transformer based models are trained using a variant of language modeling, e.g. BERT with masked language modeling, GPT-2 with causal language modeling.
Language modeling can be useful outside of pre-training as well, for example to shift the model distribution to be domain-specific: using a language model trained over a very large corpus, and then fine-tuning it to a news dataset or on scientific papers e.g. LysandreJik/arxiv-nlp.
Masked Language Modeling¶
Masked language modeling is the task of masking tokens in a sequence with a masking token, and prompting the model to fill that mask with an appropriate token. This allows the model to attend to both the right context (tokens on the right of the mask) and the left context (tokens on the left of the mask). Such a training creates a strong basis for downstream tasks requiring bi-directional context such as SQuAD (question answering, see Lewis, Lui, Goyal et al., part 4.2).
Here is an example of using pipelines to replace a mask from a sequence:
from transformers import pipeline
nlp = pipeline("fill-mask")
print(nlp(f"HuggingFace is creating a {nlp.tokenizer.mask_token} that the community uses to solve NLP tasks."))
This outputs the sequences with the mask filled, the confidence score as well as the token id in the tokenizer vocabulary:
[
{'sequence': '<s> HuggingFace is creating a tool that the community uses to solve NLP tasks.</s>', 'score': 0.15627853572368622, 'token': 3944},
{'sequence': '<s> HuggingFace is creating a framework that the community uses to solve NLP tasks.</s>', 'score': 0.11690319329500198, 'token': 7208},
{'sequence': '<s> HuggingFace is creating a library that the community uses to solve NLP tasks.</s>', 'score': 0.058063216507434845, 'token': 5560},
{'sequence': '<s> HuggingFace is creating a database that the community uses to solve NLP tasks.</s>', 'score': 0.04211743175983429, 'token': 8503},
{'sequence': '<s> HuggingFace is creating a prototype that the community uses to solve NLP tasks.</s>', 'score': 0.024718601256608963, 'token': 17715}
]
Here is an example doing masked language modeling using a model and a tokenizer. The process is the following:
Instantiate a tokenizer and a model from the checkpoint name. The model is identified as a DistilBERT model and loads it with the weights stored in the checkpoint.
Define a sequence with a masked token, placing the
tokenizer.mask_token
instead of a word.Encode that sequence into IDs and find the position of the masked token in that list of IDs.
Retrieve the predictions at the index of the mask token: this tensor has the same size as the vocabulary, and the values are the scores attributed to each token. The model gives higher score to tokens he deems probable in that context.
Retrieve the top 5 tokens using the PyTorch
topk
or TensorFlowtop_k
methods.Replace the mask token by the tokens and print the results
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
import torch
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-cased")
model = AutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-cased")
sequence = f"Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help {tokenizer.mask_token} our carbon footprint."
input = tokenizer.encode(sequence, return_tensors="pt")
mask_token_index = torch.where(input == tokenizer.mask_token_id)[1]
token_logits = model(input)[0]
mask_token_logits = token_logits[0, mask_token_index, :]
top_5_tokens = torch.topk(mask_token_logits, 5, dim=1).indices[0].tolist()
for token in top_5_tokens:
print(sequence.replace(tokenizer.mask_token, tokenizer.decode([token])))
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import TFAutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
import tensorflow as tf
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-cased")
model = TFAutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-cased")
sequence = f"Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help {tokenizer.mask_token} our carbon footprint."
input = tokenizer.encode(sequence, return_tensors="tf")
mask_token_index = tf.where(input == tokenizer.mask_token_id)[0, 1]
token_logits = model(input)[0]
mask_token_logits = token_logits[0, mask_token_index, :]
top_5_tokens = tf.math.top_k(mask_token_logits, 5).indices.numpy()
for token in top_5_tokens:
print(sequence.replace(tokenizer.mask_token, tokenizer.decode([token])))
This prints five sequences, with the top 5 tokens predicted by the model:
Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help reduce our carbon footprint.
Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help increase our carbon footprint.
Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help decrease our carbon footprint.
Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help offset our carbon footprint.
Distilled models are smaller than the models they mimic. Using them instead of the large versions would help improve our carbon footprint.
Causal Language Modeling¶
Causal language modeling is the task of predicting the token following a sequence of tokens. In this situation, the model only attends to the left context (tokens on the left of the mask). Such a training is particularly interesting for generation tasks.
Usually, the next token is predicted by sampling from the logits of the last hidden state the model produces from the input sequence.
Here is an example using the tokenizer and model and leveraging the top_k_top_p_filtering()
method to sample the next token following an input sequence of tokens.
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer, top_k_top_p_filtering
import torch
from torch.nn import functional as F
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("gpt2")
model = AutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("gpt2")
sequence = f"Hugging Face is based in DUMBO, New York City, and "
input_ids = tokenizer.encode(sequence, return_tensors="pt")
# get logits of last hidden state
next_token_logits = model(input_ids)[0][:, -1, :]
# filter
filtered_next_token_logits = top_k_top_p_filtering(next_token_logits, top_k=50, top_p=1.0)
# sample
probs = F.softmax(filtered_next_token_logits, dim=-1)
next_token = torch.multinomial(probs, num_samples=1)
generated = torch.cat([input_ids, next_token], dim=-1)
resulting_string = tokenizer.decode(generated.tolist()[0])
print(resulting_string)
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import TFAutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer, tf_top_k_top_p_filtering
import tensorflow as tf
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("gpt2")
model = TFAutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("gpt2")
sequence = f"Hugging Face is based in DUMBO, New York City, and "
input_ids = tokenizer.encode(sequence, return_tensors="tf")
# get logits of last hidden state
next_token_logits = model(input_ids)[0][:, -1, :]
# filter
filtered_next_token_logits = tf_top_k_top_p_filtering(next_token_logits, top_k=50, top_p=1.0)
# sample
next_token = tf.random.categorical(filtered_next_token_logits, dtype=tf.int32, num_samples=1)
generated = tf.concat([input_ids, next_token], axis=1)
resulting_string = tokenizer.decode(generated.numpy().tolist()[0])
print(resulting_string)
This outputs a (hopefully) coherent next token following the original sequence, which is in our case is the word has:
Hugging Face is based in DUMBO, New York City, and has
In the next section, we show how this functionality is leveraged in generate()
to generate multiple tokens up to a user-defined length.
Text Generation¶
In text generation (a.k.a open-ended text generation) the goal is to create a coherent portion of text that is a continuation from the given context. As an example, is it shown how GPT-2 can be used in pipelines to generate text. As a default all models apply Top-K sampling when used in pipelines as configured in their respective configurations (see gpt-2 config for example).
from transformers import pipeline
text_generator = pipeline("text-generation")
print(text_generator("As far as I am concerned, I will", max_length=50))
Here the model generates a random text with a total maximal length of 50 tokens from context “As far as I am concerned, I will”.
The default arguments of PreTrainedModel.generate()
can directly be overriden in the pipeline as is shown above for the argument max_length
.
Here is an example for text generation using XLNet and its tokenzier.
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
model = AutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("xlnet-base-cased")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("xlnet-base-cased")
# Padding text helps XLNet with short prompts - proposed by Aman Rusia in https://github.com/rusiaaman/XLNet-gen#methodology
PADDING_TEXT = """In 1991, the remains of Russian Tsar Nicholas II and his family
(except for Alexei and Maria) are discovered.
The voice of Nicholas's young son, Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich, narrates the
remainder of the story. 1883 Western Siberia,
a young Grigori Rasputin is asked by his father and a group of men to perform magic.
Rasputin has a vision and denounces one of the men as a horse thief. Although his
father initially slaps him for making such an accusation, Rasputin watches as the
man is chased outside and beaten. Twenty years later, Rasputin sees a vision of
the Virgin Mary, prompting him to become a priest. Rasputin quickly becomes famous,
with people, even a bishop, begging for his blessing. <eod> </s> <eos>"""
prompt = "Today the weather is really nice and I am planning on "
inputs = tokenizer.encode(PADDING_TEXT + prompt, add_special_tokens=False, return_tensors="pt")
prompt_length = len(tokenizer.decode(inputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True, clean_up_tokenization_spaces=True))
outputs = model.generate(inputs, max_length=250, do_sample=True, top_p=0.95, top_k=60)
generated = prompt + tokenizer.decode(outputs[0])[prompt_length:]
print(generated)
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import TFAutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
model = TFAutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("xlnet-base-cased")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("xlnet-base-cased")
# Padding text helps XLNet with short prompts - proposed by Aman Rusia in https://github.com/rusiaaman/XLNet-gen#methodology
PADDING_TEXT = """In 1991, the remains of Russian Tsar Nicholas II and his family
(except for Alexei and Maria) are discovered.
The voice of Nicholas's young son, Tsarevich Alexei Nikolaevich, narrates the
remainder of the story. 1883 Western Siberia,
a young Grigori Rasputin is asked by his father and a group of men to perform magic.
Rasputin has a vision and denounces one of the men as a horse thief. Although his
father initially slaps him for making such an accusation, Rasputin watches as the
man is chased outside and beaten. Twenty years later, Rasputin sees a vision of
the Virgin Mary, prompting him to become a priest. Rasputin quickly becomes famous,
with people, even a bishop, begging for his blessing. <eod> </s> <eos>"""
prompt = "Today the weather is really nice and I am planning on "
inputs = tokenizer.encode(PADDING_TEXT + prompt, add_special_tokens=False, return_tensors="tf")
prompt_length = len(tokenizer.decode(inputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True, clean_up_tokenization_spaces=True))
outputs = model.generate(inputs, max_length=250, do_sample=True, top_p=0.95, top_k=60)
generated = prompt + tokenizer.decode(outputs[0])[prompt_length:]
print(generated)
Text generation is currently possible with GPT-2, OpenAi-GPT, CTRL, XLNet, Transfo-XL and Reformer in PyTorch and for most models in Tensorflow as well. As can be seen in the example above XLNet and Transfo-xl often need to be padded to work well. GPT-2 is usually a good choice for open-ended text generation because it was trained on millions on webpages with a causal language modeling objective.
For more information on how to apply different decoding strategies for text generation, please also refer to our generation blog post here.
Named Entity Recognition¶
Named Entity Recognition (NER) is the task of classifying tokens according to a class, for example identifying a token as a person, an organisation or a location. An example of a named entity recognition dataset is the CoNLL-2003 dataset, which is entirely based on that task. If you would like to fine-tune a model on an NER task, you may leverage the ner/run_ner.py (PyTorch), ner/run_pl_ner.py (leveraging pytorch-lightning) or the ner/run_tf_ner.py (TensorFlow) scripts.
Here is an example using the pipelines do to named entity recognition, trying to identify tokens as belonging to one of 9 classes:
O, Outside of a named entity
B-MIS, Beginning of a miscellaneous entity right after another miscellaneous entity
I-MIS, Miscellaneous entity
B-PER, Beginning of a person’s name right after another person’s name
I-PER, Person’s name
B-ORG, Beginning of an organisation right after another organisation
I-ORG, Organisation
B-LOC, Beginning of a location right after another location
I-LOC, Location
It leverages a fine-tuned model on CoNLL-2003, fine-tuned by @stefan-it from dbmdz.
from transformers import pipeline
nlp = pipeline("ner")
sequence = "Hugging Face Inc. is a company based in New York City. Its headquarters are in DUMBO, therefore very" \
"close to the Manhattan Bridge which is visible from the window."
print(nlp(sequence))
This outputs a list of all words that have been identified as an entity from the 9 classes defined above. Here is the expected results:
[
{'word': 'Hu', 'score': 0.9995632767677307, 'entity': 'I-ORG'},
{'word': '##gging', 'score': 0.9915938973426819, 'entity': 'I-ORG'},
{'word': 'Face', 'score': 0.9982671737670898, 'entity': 'I-ORG'},
{'word': 'Inc', 'score': 0.9994403719902039, 'entity': 'I-ORG'},
{'word': 'New', 'score': 0.9994346499443054, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': 'York', 'score': 0.9993270635604858, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': 'City', 'score': 0.9993864893913269, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': 'D', 'score': 0.9825621843338013, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': '##UM', 'score': 0.936983048915863, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': '##BO', 'score': 0.8987102508544922, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': 'Manhattan', 'score': 0.9758241176605225, 'entity': 'I-LOC'},
{'word': 'Bridge', 'score': 0.990249514579773, 'entity': 'I-LOC'}
]
Note how the words “Hugging Face” have been identified as an organisation, and “New York City”, “DUMBO” and “Manhattan Bridge” have been identified as locations.
Here is an example doing named entity recognition using a model and a tokenizer. The process is the following:
Instantiate a tokenizer and a model from the checkpoint name. The model is identified as a BERT model and loads it with the weights stored in the checkpoint.
Define the label list with which the model was trained on.
Define a sequence with known entities, such as “Hugging Face” as an organisation and “New York City” as a location.
Split words into tokens so that they can be mapped to the predictions. We use a small hack by firstly completely encoding and decoding the sequence, so that we’re left with a string that contains the special tokens.
Encode that sequence into IDs (special tokens are added automatically).
Retrieve the predictions by passing the input to the model and getting the first output. This results in a distribution over the 9 possible classes for each token. We take the argmax to retrieve the most likely class for each token.
Zip together each token with its prediction and print it.
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoModelForTokenClassification, AutoTokenizer
import torch
model = AutoModelForTokenClassification.from_pretrained("dbmdz/bert-large-cased-finetuned-conll03-english")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased")
label_list = [
"O", # Outside of a named entity
"B-MISC", # Beginning of a miscellaneous entity right after another miscellaneous entity
"I-MISC", # Miscellaneous entity
"B-PER", # Beginning of a person's name right after another person's name
"I-PER", # Person's name
"B-ORG", # Beginning of an organisation right after another organisation
"I-ORG", # Organisation
"B-LOC", # Beginning of a location right after another location
"I-LOC" # Location
]
sequence = "Hugging Face Inc. is a company based in New York City. Its headquarters are in DUMBO, therefore very" \
"close to the Manhattan Bridge."
# Bit of a hack to get the tokens with the special tokens
tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(tokenizer.decode(tokenizer.encode(sequence)))
inputs = tokenizer.encode(sequence, return_tensors="pt")
outputs = model(inputs)[0]
predictions = torch.argmax(outputs, dim=2)
print([(token, label_list[prediction]) for token, prediction in zip(tokens, predictions[0].tolist())])
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import TFAutoModelForTokenClassification, AutoTokenizer
import tensorflow as tf
model = TFAutoModelForTokenClassification.from_pretrained("dbmdz/bert-large-cased-finetuned-conll03-english")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased")
label_list = [
"O", # Outside of a named entity
"B-MISC", # Beginning of a miscellaneous entity right after another miscellaneous entity
"I-MISC", # Miscellaneous entity
"B-PER", # Beginning of a person's name right after another person's name
"I-PER", # Person's name
"B-ORG", # Beginning of an organisation right after another organisation
"I-ORG", # Organisation
"B-LOC", # Beginning of a location right after another location
"I-LOC" # Location
]
sequence = "Hugging Face Inc. is a company based in New York City. Its headquarters are in DUMBO, therefore very" \
"close to the Manhattan Bridge."
# Bit of a hack to get the tokens with the special tokens
tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(tokenizer.decode(tokenizer.encode(sequence)))
inputs = tokenizer.encode(sequence, return_tensors="tf")
outputs = model(inputs)[0]
predictions = tf.argmax(outputs, axis=2)
print([(token, label_list[prediction]) for token, prediction in zip(tokens, predictions[0].numpy())])
This outputs a list of each token mapped to their prediction. Differently from the pipeline, here every token has a prediction as we didn’t remove the “0” class which means that no particular entity was found on that token. The following array should be the output:
[('[CLS]', 'O'), ('Hu', 'I-ORG'), ('##gging', 'I-ORG'), ('Face', 'I-ORG'), ('Inc', 'I-ORG'), ('.', 'O'), ('is', 'O'), ('a', 'O'), ('company', 'O'), ('based', 'O'), ('in', 'O'), ('New', 'I-LOC'), ('York', 'I-LOC'), ('City', 'I-LOC'), ('.', 'O'), ('Its', 'O'), ('headquarters', 'O'), ('are', 'O'), ('in', 'O'), ('D', 'I-LOC'), ('##UM', 'I-LOC'), ('##BO', 'I-LOC'), (',', 'O'), ('therefore', 'O'), ('very', 'O'), ('##c', 'O'), ('##lose', 'O'), ('to', 'O'), ('the', 'O'), ('Manhattan', 'I-LOC'), ('Bridge', 'I-LOC'), ('.', 'O'), ('[SEP]', 'O')]
Summarization¶
Summarization is the task of summarizing a text / an article into a shorter text.
An example of a summarization dataset is the CNN / Daily Mail dataset, which consists of long news articles and was created for the task of summarization.
If you would like to fine-tune a model on a summarization task, you may leverage the examples/summarization/bart/run_train.sh
(leveraging pytorch-lightning) script.
Here is an example using the pipelines do to summarization. It leverages a Bart model that was fine-tuned on the CNN / Daily Mail data set.
from transformers import pipeline
summarizer = pipeline("summarization")
ARTICLE = """ New York (CNN)When Liana Barrientos was 23 years old, she got married in Westchester County, New York.
A year later, she got married again in Westchester County, but to a different man and without divorcing her first husband.
Only 18 days after that marriage, she got hitched yet again. Then, Barrientos declared "I do" five more times, sometimes only within two weeks of each other.
In 2010, she married once more, this time in the Bronx. In an application for a marriage license, she stated it was her "first and only" marriage.
Barrientos, now 39, is facing two criminal counts of "offering a false instrument for filing in the first degree," referring to her false statements on the
2010 marriage license application, according to court documents.
Prosecutors said the marriages were part of an immigration scam.
On Friday, she pleaded not guilty at State Supreme Court in the Bronx, according to her attorney, Christopher Wright, who declined to comment further.
After leaving court, Barrientos was arrested and charged with theft of service and criminal trespass for allegedly sneaking into the New York subway through an emergency exit, said Detective
Annette Markowski, a police spokeswoman. In total, Barrientos has been married 10 times, with nine of her marriages occurring between 1999 and 2002.
All occurred either in Westchester County, Long Island, New Jersey or the Bronx. She is believed to still be married to four men, and at one time, she was married to eight men at once, prosecutors say.
Prosecutors said the immigration scam involved some of her husbands, who filed for permanent residence status shortly after the marriages.
Any divorces happened only after such filings were approved. It was unclear whether any of the men will be prosecuted.
The case was referred to the Bronx District Attorney\'s Office by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security\'s
Investigation Division. Seven of the men are from so-called "red-flagged" countries, including Egypt, Turkey, Georgia, Pakistan and Mali.
Her eighth husband, Rashid Rajput, was deported in 2006 to his native Pakistan after an investigation by the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
If convicted, Barrientos faces up to four years in prison. Her next court appearance is scheduled for May 18.
"""
print(summarizer(ARTICLE, max_length=130, min_length=30))
Because the summarization pipeline depends on the PretrainedModel.generate()
method, we can override the default arguments
of PretrainedModel.generate()
directly in the pipeline as is shown for max_length
and min_length
above.
This outputs the following summary:
Liana Barrientos has been married 10 times, sometimes within two weeks of each other. Prosecutors say the marriages were part of an immigration scam. She pleaded not guilty at State Supreme Court in the Bronx on Friday.
Here is an example doing summarization using a model and a tokenizer. The process is the following:
Instantiate a tokenizer and a model from the checkpoint name. Summarization is usually done using an encoder-decoder model, such as
Bart
orT5
.Define the article that should be summarizaed.
Leverage the
PretrainedModel.generate()
method.Add the T5 specific prefix “summarize: “.
Here Google`s T5 model is used that was only pre-trained on a multi-task mixed data set (including CNN / Daily Mail), but nevertheless yields very good results.
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
model = AutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("t5-base")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("t5-base")
# T5 uses a max_length of 512 so we cut the article to 512 tokens.
inputs = tokenizer.encode("summarize: " + ARTICLE, return_tensors="pt", max_length=512)
outputs = model.generate(inputs, max_length=150, min_length=40, length_penalty=2.0, num_beams=4, early_stopping=True)
print(outputs)
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import TFAutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
model = TFAutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("t5-base")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("t5-base")
# T5 uses a max_length of 512 so we cut the article to 512 tokens.
inputs = tokenizer.encode("summarize: " + ARTICLE, return_tensors="tf", max_length=512)
outputs = model.generate(inputs, max_length=150, min_length=40, length_penalty=2.0, num_beams=4, early_stopping=True)
print(outputs)
Translation¶
Translation is the task of translating a text from one language to another.
An example of a translation dataset is the WMT English to German dataset, which has English sentences as the input data and German sentences as the target data.
Here is an example using the pipelines do to translation. It leverages a T5 model that was only pre-trained on a multi-task mixture dataset (including WMT), but yields impressive translation results nevertheless.
from transformers import pipeline
translator = pipeline("translation_en_to_de")
print(translator("Hugging Face is a technology company based in New York and Paris", max_length=40))
Because the translation pipeline depends on the PretrainedModel.generate()
method, we can override the default arguments
of PretrainedModel.generate()
directly in the pipeline as is shown for max_length
above.
This outputs the following translation into German:
Hugging Face ist ein Technologieunternehmen mit Sitz in New York und Paris.
Here is an example doing translation using a model and a tokenizer. The process is the following:
Instantiate a tokenizer and a model from the checkpoint name. Summarization is usually done using an encoder-decoder model, such as
Bart
orT5
.Define the article that should be summarizaed.
Leverage the
PretrainedModel.generate()
method.Add the T5 specific prefix “translate English to German: “
## PYTORCH CODE
from transformers import AutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
model = AutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("t5-base")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("t5-base")
inputs = tokenizer.encode("translate English to German: Hugging Face is a technology company based in New York and Paris", return_tensors="pt")
outputs = model.generate(inputs, max_length=40, num_beams=4, early_stopping=True)
print(outputs)
## TENSORFLOW CODE
from transformers import TFAutoModelWithLMHead, AutoTokenizer
model = TFAutoModelWithLMHead.from_pretrained("t5-base")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("t5-base")
inputs = tokenizer.encode("translate English to German: Hugging Face is a technology company based in New York and Paris", return_tensors="tf")
outputs = model.generate(inputs, max_length=40, num_beams=4, early_stopping=True)
print(outputs)