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metadata
language:
  - af
  - am
  - ar
  - as
  - az
  - be
  - bg
  - bn
  - bo
  - bs
  - ca
  - ceb
  - co
  - cs
  - cy
  - da
  - de
  - el
  - en
  - eo
  - es
  - et
  - eu
  - fa
  - fi
  - fr
  - fy
  - ga
  - gd
  - gl
  - gu
  - ha
  - haw
  - he
  - hi
  - hmn
  - hr
  - ht
  - hu
  - hy
  - id
  - ig
  - is
  - it
  - ja
  - jv
  - ka
  - kk
  - km
  - kn
  - ko
  - ku
  - ky
  - la
  - lb
  - lo
  - lt
  - lv
  - mg
  - mi
  - mk
  - ml
  - mn
  - mr
  - ms
  - mt
  - my
  - ne
  - nl
  - 'no'
  - ny
  - or
  - pa
  - pl
  - pt
  - ro
  - ru
  - rw
  - si
  - sk
  - sl
  - sm
  - sn
  - so
  - sq
  - sr
  - st
  - su
  - sv
  - sw
  - ta
  - te
  - tg
  - th
  - tk
  - tl
  - tr
  - tt
  - ug
  - uk
  - ur
  - uz
  - vi
  - wo
  - xh
  - yi
  - yo
  - zh
  - zu
tags:
  - bert
  - sentence_embedding
  - multilingual
  - google
  - sentence-similarity
license: apache-2.0
datasets:
  - CommonCrawl
  - Wikipedia

Copy of setu4993/LaBSE that retruns the sentence embeddings

LaBSE

Model description

Language-agnostic BERT Sentence Encoder (LaBSE) is a BERT-based model trained for sentence embedding for 109 languages. The pre-training process combines masked language modeling with translation language modeling. The model is useful for getting multilingual sentence embeddings and for bi-text retrieval.

This is migrated from the v2 model on the TF Hub, which uses dict-based input. The embeddings produced by both the versions of the model are equivalent.

Usage

Using the model:

import torch
from transformers import BertModel, BertTokenizerFast


tokenizer = BertTokenizerFast.from_pretrained("setu4993/LaBSE")
model = BertModel.from_pretrained("setu4993/LaBSE")
model = model.eval()

english_sentences = [
    "dog",
    "Puppies are nice.",
    "I enjoy taking long walks along the beach with my dog.",
]
english_inputs = tokenizer(english_sentences, return_tensors="pt", padding=True)

with torch.no_grad():
    english_outputs = model(**english_inputs)

To get the sentence embeddings, use the pooler output:

english_embeddings = english_outputs.pooler_output

Output for other languages:

italian_sentences = [
    "cane",
    "I cuccioli sono carini.",
    "Mi piace fare lunghe passeggiate lungo la spiaggia con il mio cane.",
]
japanese_sentences = ["犬", "子犬はいいです", "私は犬と一緒にビーチを散歩するのが好きです"]
italian_inputs = tokenizer(italian_sentences, return_tensors="pt", padding=True)
japanese_inputs = tokenizer(japanese_sentences, return_tensors="pt", padding=True)

with torch.no_grad():
    italian_outputs = model(**italian_inputs)
    japanese_outputs = model(**japanese_inputs)

italian_embeddings = italian_outputs.pooler_output
japanese_embeddings = japanese_outputs.pooler_output

For similarity between sentences, an L2-norm is recommended before calculating the similarity:

import torch.nn.functional as F


def similarity(embeddings_1, embeddings_2):
    normalized_embeddings_1 = F.normalize(embeddings_1, p=2)
    normalized_embeddings_2 = F.normalize(embeddings_2, p=2)
    return torch.matmul(
        normalized_embeddings_1, normalized_embeddings_2.transpose(0, 1)
    )


print(similarity(english_embeddings, italian_embeddings))
print(similarity(english_embeddings, japanese_embeddings))
print(similarity(italian_embeddings, japanese_embeddings))

Details

Details about data, training, evaluation and performance metrics are available in the original paper.

BibTeX entry and citation info

@misc{feng2020languageagnostic,
      title={Language-agnostic BERT Sentence Embedding},
      author={Fangxiaoyu Feng and Yinfei Yang and Daniel Cer and Naveen Arivazhagan and Wei Wang},
      year={2020},
      eprint={2007.01852},
      archivePrefix={arXiv},
      primaryClass={cs.CL}
}