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# Brief Model Description
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The **miCSE** language model is trained for sentence similarity computation. Training the model imposes alignment between the attention pattern of different views (embeddings of augmentations) during contrastive learning. Learning sentence embeddings with **miCSE** entails enforcing the syntactic consistency across augmented views for every single sentence, making contrastive self-supervised learning more sample efficient. This is achieved by regularizing the attention distribution. Regularizing the attention space enables learning representation in self-supervised fashion even when the _training corpus is comparatively small_. This is particularly interesting for _real-world applications_, where training data is significantly smaller thank Wikipedia.
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The model intended to be used for encoding sentences or short paragraphs. Given an input text, the model produces a vector embedding capturing the semantics. Sentence representations correspond to embedding of the _**[CLS]**_ token. The embedding can be used for numerous tasks such as **retrieval**,**sentence similarity** comparison (see example 1) or **clustering** (see example 2).
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# Brief Model Description
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The **miCSE** language model is trained for sentence similarity computation. Training the model imposes alignment between the attention pattern of different views (embeddings of augmentations) during contrastive learning. Learning sentence embeddings with **miCSE** entails enforcing the syntactic consistency across augmented views for every single sentence, making contrastive self-supervised learning more sample efficient. This is achieved by regularizing the attention distribution. Regularizing the attention space enables learning representation in self-supervised fashion even when the _training corpus is comparatively small_. This is particularly interesting for _real-world applications_, where training data is significantly smaller thank Wikipedia.
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# Model Use Cases
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The model intended to be used for encoding sentences or short paragraphs. Given an input text, the model produces a vector embedding capturing the semantics. Sentence representations correspond to embedding of the _**[CLS]**_ token. The embedding can be used for numerous tasks such as **retrieval**,**sentence similarity** comparison (see example 1) or **clustering** (see example 2).
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