Long T5 Tglobal Base Sci Simplify Elife
Long-T5アーキテクチャに基づくモデルで、科学論文の平易な要約生成に特化しており、複雑な研究内容を非専門家が理解できるテキストに変換します。
ダウンロード数 22.98k
リリース時間 : 4/8/2023
モデル概要
このモデルは生物医学類の論文要約データセットで微調整されたLong-T5モデルで、科学研究の分かりやすい要約生成に焦点を当てています。
モデル特徴
長文書処理能力
Long-T5アーキテクチャに基づき、長文書入力を効果的に処理可能
科学内容の簡略化
科学論文内容の簡略化に特化し、専門用語を除去
生物医学分野の最適化
PubMed/生物科学類論文データセットで微調整
モデル能力
長文書要約生成
技術内容の簡略化
科学論文理解
使用事例
学術研究
論文の平易な要約生成
生物医学研究論文の非専門家向け理解可能な要約を生成
評価セットでRouge1 38.55のスコアを達成
科学コミュニケーション
研究内容の大衆化
複雑な科学研究を平易な言語に変換
🚀 long-t5-tglobal-base-sci-simplify: elife subset
このプロジェクトは、科学論文の「一般向け要約」で学習させた長文ドキュメントモデルの汎化性能を調査しています。一般向け要約とは、技術的な専門用語を使わず、非専門家にも理解しやすいように平易な言葉で書かれた研究論文や科学研究の要約です。
🚀 クイックスタート
このモデルの使い方を始めるには、以下のColabノートブックを開いてください。
✨ 主な機能
- 科学論文の一般向け要約を生成することができます。
- 長文ドキュメントに対しても効果的に動作します。
📚 ドキュメント
モデルの説明
このモデルは、科学論文の一般向け要約で学習させたgoogle/long-t5-tglobal-base
をベースにしています。
パラメータ
パラメータ | 詳細 |
---|---|
max_length | 64 |
min_length | 8 |
no_repeat_ngram_size | 3 |
early_stopping | true |
repetition_penalty | 3.5 |
encoder_no_repeat_ngram_size | 4 |
length_penalty | 0.4 |
num_beams | 4 |
使用データセット
pszemraj/scientific_lay_summarisation-elife-norm
ウィジェットの使用例
地震に関するテキスト
large earthquakes along a given fault segment do not occur at random intervals because it takes time to accumulate the strain energy for the rupture. The rates at which tectonic plates move and accumulate strain at their boundaries are approximately uniform. Therefore, in first approximation, one may expect that large ruptures of the same fault segment will occur at approximately constant time intervals. If subsequent main shocks have different amounts of slip across the fault, then the recurrence time may vary, and the basic idea of periodic mainshocks must be modified. For great plate boundary ruptures the length and slip often vary by a factor of 2. Along the southern segment of the San Andreas fault the recurrence interval is 145 years with variations of several decades. The smaller the standard deviation of the average recurrence interval, the more specific could be the long term prediction of a future mainshock.
タイトル: earthquakes
フィードフォワードニューラルフィールドアルゴリズムに関するテキスト
A typical feed-forward neural field algorithm. Spatiotemporal coordinates are fed into a neural network that predicts values in the reconstructed domain. Then, this domain is mapped to the sensor domain where sensor measurements are available as supervision. Class and Section Problems Addressed Generalization (Section 2) Inverse problems, ill-posed problems, editability; symmetries. Hybrid Representations (Section 3) Computation & memory efficiency, representation capacity, editability: Forward Maps (Section 4) Inverse problems Network Architecture (Section 5) Spectral bias, integration & derivatives. Manipulating Neural Fields (Section 6) Edit ability, constraints, regularization. Table 2: The five classes of techniques in the neural field toolbox each addresses problems that arise in learning, inference, and control. (Section 3). We can supervise reconstruction via differentiable forward maps that transform Or project our domain (e.g, 3D reconstruction via 2D images; Section 4) With appropriate network architecture choices, we can overcome neural network spectral biases (blurriness) and efficiently compute derivatives and integrals (Section 5). Finally, we can manipulate neural fields to add constraints and regularizations, and to achieve editable representations (Section 6). Collectively, these classes constitute a ''toolbox'' of techniques to help solve problems with neural fields There are three components in a conditional neural field: (1) An encoder or inference function € that outputs the conditioning latent variable 2 given an observation 0 E(0) =2. 2 is typically a low-dimensional vector, and is often referred to aS a latent code Or feature code_ (2) A mapping function 4 between Z and neural field parameters O: Y(z) = O; (3) The neural field itself $. The encoder € finds the most probable z given the observations O: argmaxz P(2/0). The decoder maximizes the inverse conditional probability to find the most probable 0 given Z: arg- max P(Olz). We discuss different encoding schemes with different optimality guarantees (Section 2.1.1), both global and local conditioning (Section 2.1.2), and different mapping functions Y (Section 2.1.3) 2. Generalization Suppose we wish to estimate a plausible 3D surface shape given a partial or noisy point cloud. We need a suitable prior over the sur- face in its reconstruction domain to generalize to the partial observations. A neural network expresses a prior via the function space of its architecture and parameters 0, and generalization is influenced by the inductive bias of this function space (Section 5).
タイトル: scientific paper
講義の音声文字起こしテキスト
Is a else or outside the cob and tree written being of early client rope and you have is for good reasons. On to the ocean in Orange for time. By''s the aggregate we can bed it yet. Why this please pick up on a sort is do and also M Getoi''s nerocos and do rain become you to let so is his brother is made in use and Mjulia''s''s the lay major is aging Masastup coin present sea only of Oosii rooms set to you We do er do we easy this private oliiishs lonthen might be okay. Good afternoon everybody. Welcome to this lecture of Computational Statistics. As you can see, I''m not socially my name is Michael Zelinger. I''m one of the task for this class and you might have already seen me in the first lecture where I made a quick appearance. I''m also going to give the tortillas in the last third of this course. So to give you a little bit about me, I''m a old student here with better Bulman and my research centres on casual inference applied to biomedical disasters, so that could be genomics or that could be hospital data. If any of you is interested in writing a bachelor thesis, a semester paper may be mastathesis about this topic feel for reach out to me. you have my name on models and my email address you can find in the directory I''d Be very happy to talk about it. you do not need to be sure about it, we can just have a chat. So with that said, let''s get on with the lecture. There''s an exciting topic today I''m going to start by sharing some slides with you and later on during the lecture we''ll move to the paper. So bear with me for a few seconds. Well, the projector is starting up. Okay, so let''s get started. Today''s topic is a very important one. It''s about a technique which really forms one of the fundamentals of data science, machine learning, and any sort of modern statistics. It''s called cross validation. I know you really want to understand this topic I Want you to understand this and frankly, nobody''s gonna leave Professor Mineshousen''s class without understanding cross validation. So to set the stage for this, I Want to introduce you to the validation problem in computational statistics. So the problem is the following: You trained a model on available data. You fitted your model, but you know the training data you got could always have been different and some data from the environment. Maybe it''s a random process. You do not really know what it is, but you know that somebody else who gets a different batch of data from the same environment they would get slightly different training data and you do not care that your method performs as well. On this training data. you want to to perform well on other data that you have not seen other data from the same environment. So in other words, the validation problem is you want to quantify the performance of your model on data that you have not seen. So how is this even possible? How could you possibly measure the performance on data that you do not know The solution to? This is the following realization is that given that you have a bunch of data, you were in charge. You get to control how much that your model sees. It works in the following way: You can hide data firms model. Let''s say you have a training data set which is a bunch of doubtless so X eyes are the features those are typically hide and national vector. It''s got more than one dimension for sure. And the why why eyes. Those are the labels for supervised learning. As you''ve seen before, it''s the same set up as we have in regression. And so you have this training data and now you choose that you only use some of those data to fit your model. You''re not going to use everything, you only use some of it the other part you hide from your model. And then you can use this hidden data to do validation from the point of you of your model. This hidden data is complete by unseen. In other words, we solve our problem of validation.
タイトル: transcribed audio - lecture
BigBirdモデルのブログ紹介テキスト
Transformer-based models have shown to be very useful for many NLP tasks. However, a major limitation of transformers-based models is its O(n^2)O(n 2) time & memory complexity (where nn is sequence length). Hence, it''s computationally very expensive to apply transformer-based models on long sequences n > 512n>512. Several recent papers, e.g. Longformer, Performer, Reformer, Clustered attention try to remedy this problem by approximating the full attention matrix. You can checkout 🤗''s recent blog post in case you are unfamiliar with these models.
BigBird (introduced in paper) is one of such recent models to address this issue. BigBird relies on block sparse attention instead of normal attention (i.e. BERT''s attention) and can handle sequences up to a length of 4096 at a much lower computational cost compared to BERT. It has achieved SOTA on various tasks involving very long sequences such as long documents summarization, question-answering with long contexts.
BigBird RoBERTa-like model is now available in 🤗Transformers. The goal of this post is to give the reader an in-depth understanding of big bird implementation & ease one''s life in using BigBird with 🤗Transformers. But, before going into more depth, it is important to remember that the BigBird''s attention is an approximation of BERT''s full attention and therefore does not strive to be better than BERT''s full attention, but rather to be more efficient. It simply allows to apply transformer-based models to much longer sequences since BERT''s quadratic memory requirement quickly becomes unbearable. Simply put, if we would have ∞ compute & ∞ time, BERT''s attention would be preferred over block sparse attention (which we are going to discuss in this post).
If you wonder why we need more compute when working with longer sequences, this blog post is just right for you!
Some of the main questions one might have when working with standard BERT-like attention include:
Do all tokens really have to attend to all other tokens? Why not compute attention only over important tokens? How to decide what tokens are important? How to attend to just a few tokens in a very efficient way? In this blog post, we will try to answer those questions.
What tokens should be attended to? We will give a practical example of how attention works by considering the sentence ''BigBird is now available in HuggingFace for extractive question answering''. In BERT-like attention, every word would simply attend to all other tokens.
Let''s think about a sensible choice of key tokens that a queried token actually only should attend to by writing some pseudo-code. Will will assume that the token available is queried and build a sensible list of key tokens to attend to.
>>> # let''s consider following sentence as an example >>> example = [''BigBird'', ''is'', ''now'', ''available'', ''in'', ''HuggingFace'', ''for'', ''extractive'', ''question'', ''answering'']
>>> # further let''s assume, we''re trying to understand the representation of ''available'' i.e. >>> query_token = ''available'' >>> # We will initialize an empty `set` and fill up the tokens of our interest as we proceed in this section. >>> key_tokens = [] # => currently ''available'' token doesn''t have anything to attend Nearby tokens should be important because, in a sentence (sequence of words), the current word is highly dependent on neighboring past & future tokens. This intuition is the idea behind the concept of sliding attention.
タイトル: bigbird blog intro
リックとモーティに関するテキスト
To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Rick and Morty. The humour is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the jokes will go over a typical viewer''s head. There''s also Rick''s nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into his characterisation- his personal philosophy draws heavily from Narodnaya Volya literature, for instance. The fans understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of these jokes, to realise that they''re not just funny- they say something deep about LIFE. As a consequence people who dislike Rick & Morty truly ARE idiots- of course they wouldn''t appreciate, for instance, the humour in Rick''s existential catchphrase ''Wubba Lubba Dub Dub,'' which itself is a cryptic reference to Turgenev''s Russian epic Fathers and Sons. I''m smirking right now just imagining one of those addlepated simpletons scratching their heads in confusion as Dan Harmon''s genius wit unfolds itself on their television screens. What fools.. how I pity them. 😂
And yes, by the way, i DO have a Rick & Morty tattoo. And no, you cannot see it. It''s for the ladies'' eyes only- and even then they have to demonstrate that they''re within 5 IQ points of my own (preferably lower) beforehand. Nothin personnel kid 😎
タイトル: Richard & Mortimer
エッフェル塔に関するテキスト
The tower is 324 metres (1,063 ft) tall, about the same height as an 81-storey building, and the tallest structure in Paris. Its base is square, measuring 125 metres (410 ft) on each side. During its construction, the Eiffel Tower surpassed the Washington Monument to become the tallest man-made structure in the world, a title it held for 41 years until the Chrysler Building in New York City was finished in 1930. It was the first structure to reach a height of 300 metres. Due to the addition of a broadcasting aerial at the top of the tower in 1957, it is now taller than the Chrysler Building by 5.2 metres (17 ft). Excluding transmitters, the Eiffel Tower is the second tallest free-standing structure in France after the Millau Viaduct.
タイトル: eiffel
📄 ライセンス
このモデルは、Apache 2.0ライセンスの下で提供されています。
Bart Large Cnn
MIT
英語コーパスで事前学習されたBARTモデルで、CNNデイリーメールデータセットに特化してファインチューニングされ、テキスト要約タスクに適しています。
テキスト生成 英語
B
facebook
3.8M
1,364
Parrot Paraphraser On T5
ParrotはT5ベースの言い換えフレームワークで、自然言語理解(NLU)モデルのトレーニング加速のために設計され、高品質な言い換えによるデータ拡張を実現します。
テキスト生成
Transformers

P
prithivida
910.07k
152
Distilbart Cnn 12 6
Apache-2.0
DistilBARTはBARTモデルの蒸留バージョンで、テキスト要約タスクに特化して最適化されており、高い性能を維持しながら推論速度を大幅に向上させています。
テキスト生成 英語
D
sshleifer
783.96k
278
T5 Base Summarization Claim Extractor
T5アーキテクチャに基づくモデルで、要約テキストから原子声明を抽出するために特別に設計されており、要約の事実性評価プロセスの重要なコンポーネントです。
テキスト生成
Transformers 英語

T
Babelscape
666.36k
9
Unieval Sum
UniEvalは自然言語生成タスクの自動評価のための統一された多次元評価器で、複数の解釈可能な次元での評価をサポートします。
テキスト生成
Transformers

U
MingZhong
318.08k
3
Pegasus Paraphrase
Apache-2.0
PEGASUSアーキテクチャを微調整したテキスト再述モデルで、意味は同じだが表現が異なる文章を生成できます。
テキスト生成
Transformers 英語

P
tuner007
209.03k
185
T5 Base Korean Summarization
これはT5アーキテクチャに基づく韓国語テキスト要約モデルで、韓国語テキスト要約タスク用に設計され、paust/pko-t5-baseモデルを微調整して複数の韓国語データセットで訓練されました。
テキスト生成
Transformers 韓国語

T
eenzeenee
148.32k
25
Pegasus Xsum
PEGASUSは、Transformerに基づく事前学習モデルで、抽象的なテキスト要約タスクに特化しています。
テキスト生成 英語
P
google
144.72k
198
Bart Large Cnn Samsum
MIT
BART-largeアーキテクチャに基づく対話要約モデルで、SAMSumコーパス用に微調整され、対話要約の生成に適しています。
テキスト生成
Transformers 英語

B
philschmid
141.28k
258
Kobart Summarization
MIT
KoBARTアーキテクチャに基づく韓国語テキスト要約モデルで、韓国語ニュース記事の簡潔な要約を生成できます。
テキスト生成
Transformers 韓国語

K
gogamza
119.18k
12
おすすめAIモデル
Llama 3 Typhoon V1.5x 8b Instruct
タイ語専用に設計された80億パラメータの命令モデルで、GPT-3.5-turboに匹敵する性能を持ち、アプリケーションシナリオ、検索拡張生成、制限付き生成、推論タスクを最適化
大規模言語モデル
Transformers 複数言語対応

L
scb10x
3,269
16
Cadet Tiny
Openrail
Cadet-TinyはSODAデータセットでトレーニングされた超小型対話モデルで、エッジデバイス推論向けに設計されており、体積はCosmo-3Bモデルの約2%です。
対話システム
Transformers 英語

C
ToddGoldfarb
2,691
6
Roberta Base Chinese Extractive Qa
RoBERTaアーキテクチャに基づく中国語抽出型QAモデルで、与えられたテキストから回答を抽出するタスクに適しています。
質問応答システム 中国語
R
uer
2,694
98