Search icon CANCEL
Subscription
0
Cart icon
Your Cart (0 item)
Close icon
You have no products in your basket yet
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Transformers for Natural Language Processing

You're reading from   Transformers for Natural Language Processing Build innovative deep neural network architectures for NLP with Python, PyTorch, TensorFlow, BERT, RoBERTa, and more

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800565791
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
Arrow right icon
Author (1):
Arrow left icon
Denis Rothman Denis Rothman
Author Profile Icon Denis Rothman
Denis Rothman
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with the Model Architecture of the Transformer 2. Fine-Tuning BERT Models FREE CHAPTER 3. Pretraining a RoBERTa Model from Scratch 4. Downstream NLP Tasks with Transformers 5. Machine Translation with the Transformer 6. Text Generation with OpenAI GPT-2 and GPT-3 Models 7. Applying Transformers to Legal and Financial Documents for AI Text Summarization 8. Matching Tokenizers and Datasets 9. Semantic Role Labeling with BERT-Based Transformers 10. Let Your Data Do the Talking: Story, Questions, and Answers 11. Detecting Customer Emotions to Make Predictions 12. Analyzing Fake News with Transformers 13. Other Books You May Enjoy
14. Index
Appendix: Answers to the Questions

Summary

In this chapter, we found that question-answering isn't as easy as it seems. Implementing a transformer model only takes a few minutes. Getting it to work can take a few hours or several months!

We first asked the default transformer in the Hugging Face pipeline to answer some simple questions. DistilBERT, the default transformer, answered the simple questions quite well. However, we chose easy questions. In real life, users ask all kinds of questions. The transformer can get confused and produce erroneous outputs.

We then had the choice of continuing to ask random questions and get random answers, or we could begin to design the blueprint of a question generator, which is a more productive solution.

We started by using NER to find useful content. We designed a function that could automatically create questions based on NER output. The quality was promising but required more work.

We tried an ELECTRA model that did not produce the results...

lock icon The rest of the chapter is locked
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $19.99/month. Cancel anytime
Banner background image