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Getting Started with Google BERT

You're reading from   Getting Started with Google BERT Build and train state-of-the-art natural language processing models using BERT

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838821593
Length 352 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Sudharsan Ravichandiran Sudharsan Ravichandiran
Author Profile Icon Sudharsan Ravichandiran
Sudharsan Ravichandiran
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1 - Starting Off with BERT
2. A Primer on Transformers FREE CHAPTER 3. Understanding the BERT Model 4. Getting Hands-On with BERT 5. Section 2 - Exploring BERT Variants
6. BERT Variants I - ALBERT, RoBERTa, ELECTRA, and SpanBERT 7. BERT Variants II - Based on Knowledge Distillation 8. Section 3 - Applications of BERT
9. Exploring BERTSUM for Text Summarization 10. Applying BERT to Other Languages 11. Exploring Sentence and Domain-Specific BERT 12. Working with VideoBERT, BART, and More 13. Assessments 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

How multilingual is multilingual BERT?

In the previous section, we learned about M-BERT. We learned that M-BERT is trained on the Wikipedia text of 104 different languages. We also evaluated M-BERT by fine-tuning it on the XNLI dataset. But how multilingual is our M-BERT? How is a single model able to transfer knowledge across multiple languages? To understand this, in this section, let's investigate the multilingual ability of M-BERT in more detail.

Effect of vocabulary overlap

We learned that M-BERT is trained on the Wikipedia text of 104 languages and that it consists of a shared vocabulary of 110k tokens. In this section, let's investigate whether the multilingual knowledge transfer of M-BERT depends on the vocabulary overlap.

We learned that M-BERT is good at zero-shot transfer, that is, we can fine-tune M-BERT in one language and use the fine-tuned M-BERT model in other languages. Let's say we are performing an NER task. Suppose we fine-tune M-BERT for the NER task...

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