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Mastering Transformers

You're reading from   Mastering Transformers Build state-of-the-art models from scratch with advanced natural language processing techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801077651
Length 374 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Savaş Yıldırım Savaş Yıldırım
Author Profile Icon Savaş Yıldırım
Savaş Yıldırım
Meysam Asgari- Chenaghlu Meysam Asgari- Chenaghlu
Author Profile Icon Meysam Asgari- Chenaghlu
Meysam Asgari- Chenaghlu
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction – Recent Developments in the Field, Installations, and Hello World Applications
2. Chapter 1: From Bag-of-Words to the Transformer FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: A Hands-On Introduction to the Subject 4. Section 2: Transformer Models – From Autoencoding to Autoregressive Models
5. Chapter 3: Autoencoding Language Models 6. Chapter 4:Autoregressive and Other Language Models 7. Chapter 5: Fine-Tuning Language Models for Text Classification 8. Chapter 6: Fine-Tuning Language Models for Token Classification 9. Chapter 7: Text Representation 10. Section 3: Advanced Topics
11. Chapter 8: Working with Efficient Transformers 12. Chapter 9:Cross-Lingual and Multilingual Language Modeling 13. Chapter 10: Serving Transformer Models 14. Chapter 11: Attention Visualization and Experiment Tracking 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Cross-lingual classification

So far, you have learned that cross-lingual models are capable of understanding different languages in semantic vector space where similar sentences, regardless of their language, are close in terms of vector distance. But how it is possible to use this capability in use cases where we have few samples available?

For example, you are trying to develop an intent classification for a chatbot in which there are few samples or no samples available for the second language; but for the first language—let's say English—you do have enough samples. In such cases, it is possible to freeze the cross-lingual model itself and just train a classifier for the task. A trained classifier can be tested on a second language instead of the language it is trained on.

In this section, you will learn how to train a cross-lingual model in English for text classification and test it in other languages. We have selected a very low-resource language known...

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