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---
language: en
datasets:
- conll2003
widget:
- text: "My name is jean-baptiste and I live in montreal"
- text: "My name is clara and I live in berkeley, california."
- text: "My name is wolfgang and I live in berlin"
train-eval-index:
- config: conll2003
task: token-classification
task_id: entity_extraction
splits:
eval_split: validation
col_mapping:
tokens: tokens
ner_tags: tags
license: mit
---
# roberta-large-ner-english: model fine-tuned from roberta-large for NER task
## Introduction
[roberta-large-ner-english] is an english NER model that was fine-tuned from roberta-large on conll2003 dataset.
Model was validated on emails/chat data and outperformed other models on this type of data specifically.
In particular the model seems to work better on entity that don't start with an upper case.
## Training data
Training data was classified as follow:
Abbreviation|Description
-|-
O |Outside of a named entity
MISC |Miscellaneous entity
PER |Person’s name
ORG |Organization
LOC |Location
In order to simplify, the prefix B- or I- from original conll2003 was removed.
I used the train and test dataset from original conll2003 for training and the "validation" dataset for validation. This resulted in a dataset of size:
Train | Validation
-|-
17494 | 3250
## How to use roberta-large-ner-english with HuggingFace
##### Load roberta-large-ner-english and its sub-word tokenizer :
```python
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForTokenClassification
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("Jean-Baptiste/roberta-large-ner-english")
model = AutoModelForTokenClassification.from_pretrained("Jean-Baptiste/roberta-large-ner-english")
##### Process text sample (from wikipedia)
from transformers import pipeline
nlp = pipeline('ner', model=model, tokenizer=tokenizer, aggregation_strategy="simple")
nlp("Apple was founded in 1976 by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne to develop and sell Wozniak's Apple I personal computer")
[{'entity_group': 'ORG',
'score': 0.99381506,
'word': ' Apple',
'start': 0,
'end': 5},
{'entity_group': 'PER',
'score': 0.99970853,
'word': ' Steve Jobs',
'start': 29,
'end': 39},
{'entity_group': 'PER',
'score': 0.99981767,
'word': ' Steve Wozniak',
'start': 41,
'end': 54},
{'entity_group': 'PER',
'score': 0.99956465,
'word': ' Ronald Wayne',
'start': 59,
'end': 71},
{'entity_group': 'PER',
'score': 0.9997918,
'word': ' Wozniak',
'start': 92,
'end': 99},
{'entity_group': 'MISC',
'score': 0.99956393,
'word': ' Apple I',
'start': 102,
'end': 109}]
```
## Model performances
Model performances computed on conll2003 validation dataset (computed on the tokens predictions)
entity|precision|recall|f1
-|-|-|-
PER|0.9914|0.9927|0.9920
ORG|0.9627|0.9661|0.9644
LOC|0.9795|0.9862|0.9828
MISC|0.9292|0.9262|0.9277
Overall|0.9740|0.9766|0.9753
On private dataset (email, chat, informal discussion), computed on word predictions:
entity|precision|recall|f1
-|-|-|-
PER|0.8823|0.9116|0.8967
ORG|0.7694|0.7292|0.7487
LOC|0.8619|0.7768|0.8171
By comparison on the same private dataset, Spacy (en_core_web_trf-3.2.0) was giving:
entity|precision|recall|f1
-|-|-|-
PER|0.9146|0.8287|0.8695
ORG|0.7655|0.6437|0.6993
LOC|0.8727|0.6180|0.7236
For those who could be interested, here is a short article on how I used the results of this model to train a LSTM model for signature detection in emails:
https://medium.com/@jean-baptiste.polle/lstm-model-for-email-signature-detection-8e990384fefa