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Hands-On Natural Language Processing with PyTorch 1.x

You're reading from   Hands-On Natural Language Processing with PyTorch 1.x Build smart, AI-driven linguistic applications using deep learning and NLP techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789802740
Length 276 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Thomas Dop Thomas Dop
Author Profile Icon Thomas Dop
Thomas Dop
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Essentials of PyTorch 1.x for NLP
2. Chapter 1: Fundamentals of Machine Learning and Deep Learning FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Getting Started with PyTorch 1.x for NLP 4. Section 2: Fundamentals of Natural Language Processing
5. Chapter 3: NLP and Text Embeddings 6. Chapter 4: Text Preprocessing, Stemming, and Lemmatization 7. Section 3: Real-World NLP Applications Using PyTorch 1.x
8. Chapter 5: Recurrent Neural Networks and Sentiment Analysis 9. Chapter 6: Convolutional Neural Networks for Text Classification 10. Chapter 7: Text Translation Using Sequence-to-Sequence Neural Networks 11. Chapter 8: Building a Chatbot Using Attention-Based Neural Networks 12. Chapter 9: The Road Ahead 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Theory of sequence-to-sequence models

Sequence-to-sequence models are very similar to the conventional neural network structures we have seen so far. The main difference is that for a model's output, we expect another sequence, rather than a binary or multi-class prediction. This is particularly useful in tasks such as translation, where we may wish to convert a whole sentence into another language.

In the following example, we can see that our English-to-Spanish translation maps word to word:

Figure 7.1 – English to Spanish translation

Figure 7.1 – English to Spanish translation

The first word in our input sentence maps nicely to the first word in our output sentence. If this were the case for all languages, we could simply pass each word in our sentence one by one through our trained model to get an output sentence, and there would be no need for any sequence-to-sequence modeling, as shown here:

Figure 7.2 – English-to-Spanish translation of words

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