Updated model with better training and evaluation. Test and val data included as pickle files. Older Legacy files were removed to avoid confusion.
79be72d
pipeline_tag: sentence-similarity | |
language: | |
- en | |
tags: | |
- linktransformer | |
- sentence-transformers | |
- sentence-similarity | |
- tabular-classification | |
# {MODEL_NAME} | |
This is a [LinkTransformer](https://linktransformer.github.io/) model. At its core this model this is a sentence transformer model [sentence-transformers](https://www.SBERT.net) model- it just wraps around the class. | |
It is designed for quick and easy record linkage (entity-matching) through the LinkTransformer package. The tasks include clustering, deduplication, linking, aggregation and more. | |
Notwithstanding that, it can be used for any sentence similarity task within the sentence-transformers framework as well. | |
It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768 dimensional dense vector space and can be used for tasks like clustering or semantic search. | |
Take a look at the documentation of [sentence-transformers](https://www.sbert.net/index.html) if you want to use this model for more than what we support in our applications. | |
This model has been fine-tuned on the model : multi-qa-mpnet-base-dot-v1. It is pretrained for the language : - en. | |
This model was trained on a dataset prepared by linking product classifications from [UN stats](https://unstats.un.org/unsd/classifications/Econ). | |
This model is designed to link different products to their coarse product classification - trained on variation brought on by product level correspondance. It was trained for 50 epochs using other defaults that can be found in the repo's LinkTransformer config file - LT_training_config.json | |
## Usage (LinkTransformer) | |
Using this model becomes easy when you have [LinkTransformer](https://github.com/dell-research-harvard/linktransformer) installed: | |
``` | |
pip install -U linktransformer | |
``` | |
Then you can use the model like this: | |
```python | |
import linktransformer as lt | |
import pandas as pd | |
##Load the two dataframes that you want to link. For example, 2 dataframes with company names that are written differently | |
df1=pd.read_csv("data/df1.csv") ###This is the left dataframe with key CompanyName for instance | |
df2=pd.read_csv("data/df2.csv") ###This is the right dataframe with key CompanyName for instance | |
###Merge the two dataframes on the key column! | |
df_merged = lt.merge(df1, df2, on="CompanyName", how="inner") | |
##Done! The merged dataframe has a column called "score" that contains the similarity score between the two company names | |
``` | |
## Training your own LinkTransformer model | |
Any Sentence Transformers can be used as a backbone by simply adding a pooling layer. Any other transformer on HuggingFace can also be used by specifying the option add_pooling_layer==True | |
The model was trained using SupCon loss. | |
Usage can be found in the package docs. | |
The training config can be found in the repo with the name LT_training_config.json | |
To replicate the training, you can download the file and specify the path in the config_path argument of the training function. You can also override the config by specifying the training_args argument. | |
Here is an example. | |
```python | |
##Consider the example in the paper that has a dataset of Mexican products and their tariff codes from 1947 and 1948 and we want train a model to link the two tariff codes. | |
saved_model_path = train_model( | |
model_path="hiiamsid/sentence_similarity_spanish_es", | |
dataset_path=dataset_path, | |
left_col_names=["description47"], | |
right_col_names=['description48'], | |
left_id_name=['tariffcode47'], | |
right_id_name=['tariffcode48'], | |
log_wandb=False, | |
config_path=LINKAGE_CONFIG_PATH, | |
training_args={"num_epochs": 1} | |
) | |
``` | |
You can also use this package for deduplication (clusters a df on the supplied key column). Merging a fine class (like product) to a coarse class (like HS code) is also possible. | |
Read our paper and the documentation for more! | |
## Evaluation Results | |
<!--- Describe how your model was evaluated --> | |
You can evaluate the model using the [LinkTransformer](https://github.com/dell-research-harvard/linktransformer) package's inference functions. | |
We have provided a few datasets in the package for you to try out. We plan to host more datasets on Huggingface and our website (Coming soon) that you can take a look at. | |
## Training | |
The model was trained with the parameters: | |
**DataLoader**: | |
`torch.utils.data.dataloader.DataLoader` of length 126 with parameters: | |
``` | |
{'batch_size': 64, 'sampler': 'torch.utils.data.dataloader._InfiniteConstantSampler', 'batch_sampler': 'torch.utils.data.sampler.BatchSampler'} | |
``` | |
**Loss**: | |
`linktransformer.modified_sbert.losses.SupConLoss_wandb` | |
Parameters of the fit()-Method: | |
``` | |
{ | |
"epochs": 50, | |
"evaluation_steps": 32, | |
"evaluator": "sentence_transformers.evaluation.SequentialEvaluator.SequentialEvaluator", | |
"max_grad_norm": 1, | |
"optimizer_class": "<class 'torch.optim.adamw.AdamW'>", | |
"optimizer_params": { | |
"lr": 2e-05 | |
}, | |
"scheduler": "WarmupLinear", | |
"steps_per_epoch": null, | |
"warmup_steps": 6300, | |
"weight_decay": 0.01 | |
} | |
``` | |
LinkTransformer( | |
(0): Transformer({'max_seq_length': 512, 'do_lower_case': False}) with Transformer model: MPNetModel | |
(1): Pooling({'word_embedding_dimension': 768, 'pooling_mode_cls_token': True, 'pooling_mode_mean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_max_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_sqrt_len_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_weightedmean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_lasttoken': False}) | |
) | |
``` | |
## Citing & Authors | |
``` | |
@misc{arora2023linktransformer, | |
title={LinkTransformer: A Unified Package for Record Linkage with Transformer Language Models}, | |
author={Abhishek Arora and Melissa Dell}, | |
year={2023}, | |
eprint={2309.00789}, | |
archivePrefix={arXiv}, | |
primaryClass={cs.CL} | |
} | |
``` |