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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

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800565791
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Denis Rothman Denis Rothman
Author Profile Icon Denis Rothman
Denis Rothman
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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 measured the impact of the tokenization and subsequent data encoding process on transformer models. A transformer model can only attend to tokens from the embedding and positional encoding sub-layers of a stack. It does not matter if the model is an encoder-decoder, encoder-only, or decoder-only model. It does not matter if the dataset seems good enough to train.

If the tokenization process fails, even partly, the transformer model we are running will miss critical tokens.

We first saw that for standard language tasks, raw datasets might be enough to train a transformer.

However, we discovered that even if a pretrained tokenizer has gone through a billion words, it only creates a dictionary with a small portion of the vocabulary it comes across. Like us, a tokenizer captures the essence of the language it is learning and only "remembers" the most important words if these words are also frequently used. This approach works well for...

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