https://arxiv.org/abs/1907.11692
RoBERTa iterates on BERT's pretraining procedure, including training the model longer, with bigger batches over more data; removing the next sentence prediction objective; training on longer sequences; and dynamically changing the masking pattern applied to the training data. See the associated paper for more details.
- January 2020: Italian model (UmBERTo) is available from Musixmatch Research: UmBERTo.
- November 2019: French model (CamemBERT) is available: CamemBERT.
- November 2019: Multilingual encoder (XLM-RoBERTa) is available: XLM-R.
- September 2019: TensorFlow and TPU support via the transformers library.
- August 2019: RoBERTa is now supported in the pytorch-transformers library.
- August 2019: Added tutorial for finetuning on WinoGrande.
- August 2019: Added tutorial for pretraining RoBERTa using your own data.
Model | Description | # params | Download |
---|---|---|---|
roberta.base |
RoBERTa using the BERT-base architecture | 125M | roberta.base.tar.gz |
roberta.large |
RoBERTa using the BERT-large architecture | 355M | roberta.large.tar.gz |
roberta.large.mnli |
roberta.large finetuned on MNLI |
355M | roberta.large.mnli.tar.gz |
roberta.large.wsc |
roberta.large finetuned on WSC |
355M | roberta.large.wsc.tar.gz |
GLUE (Wang et al., 2019) (dev set, single model, single-task finetuning)
Model | MNLI | QNLI | QQP | RTE | SST-2 | MRPC | CoLA | STS-B |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
roberta.base |
87.6 | 92.8 | 91.9 | 78.7 | 94.8 | 90.2 | 63.6 | 91.2 |
roberta.large |
90.2 | 94.7 | 92.2 | 86.6 | 96.4 | 90.9 | 68.0 | 92.4 |
roberta.large.mnli |
90.2 | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
SuperGLUE (Wang et al., 2019) (dev set, single model, single-task finetuning)
Model | BoolQ | CB | COPA | MultiRC | RTE | WiC | WSC |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
roberta.large |
86.9 | 98.2 | 94.0 | 85.7 | 89.5 | 75.6 | - |
roberta.large.wsc |
- | - | - | - | - | - | 91.3 |
SQuAD (Rajpurkar et al., 2018) (dev set, no additional data used)
Model | SQuAD 1.1 EM/F1 | SQuAD 2.0 EM/F1 |
---|---|---|
roberta.large |
88.9/94.6 | 86.5/89.4 |
RACE (Lai et al., 2017) (test set)
Model | Accuracy | Middle | High |
---|---|---|---|
roberta.large |
83.2 | 86.5 | 81.3 |
HellaSwag (Zellers et al., 2019) (test set)
Model | Overall | In-domain | Zero-shot | ActivityNet | WikiHow |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
roberta.large |
85.2 | 87.3 | 83.1 | 74.6 | 90.9 |
Commonsense QA (Talmor et al., 2019) (test set)
Model | Accuracy |
---|---|
roberta.large (single model) |
72.1 |
roberta.large (ensemble) |
72.5 |
Winogrande (Sakaguchi et al., 2019) (test set)
Model | Accuracy |
---|---|
roberta.large |
78.1 |
XNLI (Conneau et al., 2018) (TRANSLATE-TEST)
Model | en | fr | es | de | el | bg | ru | tr | ar | vi | th | zh | hi | sw | ur |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
roberta.large.mnli |
91.3 | 82.91 | 84.27 | 81.24 | 81.74 | 83.13 | 78.28 | 76.79 | 76.64 | 74.17 | 74.05 | 77.5 | 70.9 | 66.65 | 66.81 |
import torch
roberta = torch.hub.load('pytorch/fairseq', 'roberta.large')
roberta.eval() # disable dropout (or leave in train mode to finetune)
# Download roberta.large model
wget https://dl.fbaipublicfiles.com/fairseq/models/roberta.large.tar.gz
tar -xzvf roberta.large.tar.gz
# Load the model in fairseq
from fairseq.models.roberta import RobertaModel
roberta = RobertaModel.from_pretrained('/path/to/roberta.large', checkpoint_file='model.pt')
roberta.eval() # disable dropout (or leave in train mode to finetune)
tokens = roberta.encode('Hello world!')
assert tokens.tolist() == [0, 31414, 232, 328, 2]
roberta.decode(tokens) # 'Hello world!'
# Extract the last layer's features
last_layer_features = roberta.extract_features(tokens)
assert last_layer_features.size() == torch.Size([1, 5, 1024])
# Extract all layer's features (layer 0 is the embedding layer)
all_layers = roberta.extract_features(tokens, return_all_hiddens=True)
assert len(all_layers) == 25
assert torch.all(all_layers[-1] == last_layer_features)
# Download RoBERTa already finetuned for MNLI
roberta = torch.hub.load('pytorch/fairseq', 'roberta.large.mnli')
roberta.eval() # disable dropout for evaluation
# Encode a pair of sentences and make a prediction
tokens = roberta.encode('Roberta is a heavily optimized version of BERT.', 'Roberta is not very optimized.')
roberta.predict('mnli', tokens).argmax() # 0: contradiction
# Encode another pair of sentences
tokens = roberta.encode('Roberta is a heavily optimized version of BERT.', 'Roberta is based on BERT.')
roberta.predict('mnli', tokens).argmax() # 2: entailment
roberta.register_classification_head('new_task', num_classes=3)
logprobs = roberta.predict('new_task', tokens) # tensor([[-1.1050, -1.0672, -1.1245]], grad_fn=<LogSoftmaxBackward>)
import torch
from fairseq.data.data_utils import collate_tokens
roberta = torch.hub.load('pytorch/fairseq', 'roberta.large.mnli')
roberta.eval()
batch_of_pairs = [
['Roberta is a heavily optimized version of BERT.', 'Roberta is not very optimized.'],
['Roberta is a heavily optimized version of BERT.', 'Roberta is based on BERT.'],
['potatoes are awesome.', 'I like to run.'],
['Mars is very far from earth.', 'Mars is very close.'],
]
batch = collate_tokens(
[roberta.encode(pair[0], pair[1]) for pair in batch_of_pairs], pad_idx=1
)
logprobs = roberta.predict('mnli', batch)
print(logprobs.argmax(dim=1))
# tensor([0, 2, 1, 0])
roberta.cuda()
roberta.predict('new_task', tokens) # tensor([[-1.1050, -1.0672, -1.1245]], device='cuda:0', grad_fn=<LogSoftmaxBackward>)
RoBERTa can be used to fill <mask>
tokens in the input. Some examples from the
Natural Questions dataset:
roberta.fill_mask('The first Star wars movie came out in <mask>', topk=3)
# [('The first Star wars movie came out in 1977', 0.9504708051681519, ' 1977'), ('The first Star wars movie came out in 1978', 0.009986862540245056, ' 1978'), ('The first Star wars movie came out in 1979', 0.009574787691235542, ' 1979')]
roberta.fill_mask('Vikram samvat calender is official in <mask>', topk=3)
# [('Vikram samvat calender is official in India', 0.21878819167613983, ' India'), ('Vikram samvat calender is official in Delhi', 0.08547237515449524, ' Delhi'), ('Vikram samvat calender is official in Gujarat', 0.07556215673685074, ' Gujarat')]
roberta.fill_mask('<mask> is the common currency of the European Union', topk=3)
# [('Euro is the common currency of the European Union', 0.9456493854522705, 'Euro'), ('euro is the common currency of the European Union', 0.025748178362846375, 'euro'), ('€ is the common currency of the European Union', 0.011183084920048714, '€')]
RoBERTa can be used to disambiguate pronouns. First install spaCy and download the English-language model:
pip install spacy
python -m spacy download en_core_web_lg
Next load the roberta.large.wsc
model and call the disambiguate_pronoun
function. The pronoun should be surrounded by square brackets ([]
) and the
query referent surrounded by underscores (_
), or left blank to return the
predicted candidate text directly:
roberta = torch.hub.load('pytorch/fairseq', 'roberta.large.wsc', user_dir='examples/roberta/wsc')
roberta.cuda() # use the GPU (optional)
roberta.disambiguate_pronoun('The _trophy_ would not fit in the brown suitcase because [it] was too big.')
# True
roberta.disambiguate_pronoun('The trophy would not fit in the brown _suitcase_ because [it] was too big.')
# False
roberta.disambiguate_pronoun('The city councilmen refused the demonstrators a permit because [they] feared violence.')
# 'The city councilmen'
roberta.disambiguate_pronoun('The city councilmen refused the demonstrators a permit because [they] advocated violence.')
# 'demonstrators'
See the RoBERTA Winograd Schema Challenge (WSC) README for more details on how to train this model.
By default RoBERTa outputs one feature vector per BPE token. You can instead
realign the features to match spaCy's word-level tokenization
with the extract_features_aligned_to_words
method. This will compute a
weighted average of the BPE-level features for each word and expose them in
spaCy's Token.vector
attribute:
doc = roberta.extract_features_aligned_to_words('I said, "hello RoBERTa."')
assert len(doc) == 10
for tok in doc:
print('{:10}{} (...)'.format(str(tok), tok.vector[:5]))
# <s> tensor([-0.1316, -0.0386, -0.0832, -0.0477, 0.1943], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# I tensor([ 0.0559, 0.1541, -0.4832, 0.0880, 0.0120], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# said tensor([-0.1565, -0.0069, -0.8915, 0.0501, -0.0647], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# , tensor([-0.1318, -0.0387, -0.0834, -0.0477, 0.1944], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# " tensor([-0.0486, 0.1818, -0.3946, -0.0553, 0.0981], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# hello tensor([ 0.0079, 0.1799, -0.6204, -0.0777, -0.0923], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# RoBERTa tensor([-0.2339, -0.1184, -0.7343, -0.0492, 0.5829], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# . tensor([-0.1341, -0.1203, -0.1012, -0.0621, 0.1892], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# " tensor([-0.1341, -0.1203, -0.1012, -0.0621, 0.1892], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
# </s> tensor([-0.0930, -0.0392, -0.0821, 0.0158, 0.0649], grad_fn=<SliceBackward>) (...)
Example python code snippet to evaluate accuracy on the MNLI dev_matched
set.
label_map = {0: 'contradiction', 1: 'neutral', 2: 'entailment'}
ncorrect, nsamples = 0, 0
roberta.cuda()
roberta.eval()
with open('glue_data/MNLI/dev_matched.tsv') as fin:
fin.readline()
for index, line in enumerate(fin):
tokens = line.strip().split('\t')
sent1, sent2, target = tokens[8], tokens[9], tokens[-1]
tokens = roberta.encode(sent1, sent2)
prediction = roberta.predict('mnli', tokens).argmax().item()
prediction_label = label_map[prediction]
ncorrect += int(prediction_label == target)
nsamples += 1
print('| Accuracy: ', float(ncorrect)/float(nsamples))
# Expected output: 0.9060
- Finetuning on GLUE
- Finetuning on custom classification tasks (e.g., IMDB)
- Finetuning on Winograd Schema Challenge (WSC)
- Finetuning on Commonsense QA (CQA)
- Finetuning on SQuAD: coming soon
See the tutorial for pretraining RoBERTa using your own data.
@article{liu2019roberta,
title = {RoBERTa: A Robustly Optimized BERT Pretraining Approach},
author = {Yinhan Liu and Myle Ott and Naman Goyal and Jingfei Du and
Mandar Joshi and Danqi Chen and Omer Levy and Mike Lewis and
Luke Zettlemoyer and Veselin Stoyanov},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.11692},
year = {2019},
}