BigDocs: An Open and Permissively-Licensed Dataset for Training Multimodal Models on Document and Code Tasks
Abstract
Multimodal AI has the potential to significantly enhance document-understanding tasks, such as processing receipts, understanding workflows, extracting data from documents, and summarizing reports. Code generation tasks that require long-structured outputs can also be enhanced by multimodality. Despite this, their use in commercial applications is often limited due to limited access to training data and restrictive licensing, which hinders open access. To address these limitations, we introduce BigDocs-7.5M, a high-quality, open-access dataset comprising 7.5 million multimodal documents across 30 tasks. We use an efficient data curation process to ensure our data is high-quality and license-permissive. Our process emphasizes accountability, responsibility, and transparency through filtering rules, traceable metadata, and careful content analysis. Additionally, we introduce BigDocs-Bench, a benchmark suite with 10 novel tasks where we create datasets that reflect real-world use cases involving reasoning over Graphical User Interfaces (GUI) and code generation from images. Our experiments show that training with BigDocs-Bench improves average performance up to 25.8% over closed-source GPT-4o in document reasoning and structured output tasks such as Screenshot2HTML or Image2Latex generation. Finally, human evaluations showed a preference for outputs from models trained on BigDocs over GPT-4o. This suggests that BigDocs can help both academics and the open-source community utilize and improve AI tools to enhance multimodal capabilities and document reasoning. The project is hosted at https://bigdocs.github.io .
Community
Multimodal AI has the potential to enhance document-understanding significantly
in tasks, such as processing receipts, understanding workflows, extracting data from
documents, and summarizing reports. Code generation tasks that require long structured outputs can also be enhanced by multimodality. Despite this, their use in
commercial applications is often limited due to limited access to training data and
restrictive licensing, which hinders open access. To address these limitations, we introduce BigDocs-7.5M, a high-quality, open-access dataset comprising 7.5 million
multimodal documents across 30 tasks. We use an efficient data curation process
to ensure our data is high-quality and license-permissive. Our process emphasizes
accountability, responsibility, and transparency through filtering rules, traceable
metadata, and careful content analysis. Additionally, we introduce BigDocs-Bench,
a benchmark suite with 10 novel tasks where we create datasets that reflect real-world use cases involving reasoning over Graphical User Interfaces (GUI) and
code generation from images. Our experiments show that training with BigDocsBench improves average performance by up to 25.8% over closed-source GPT-4o
in document reasoning and structured output tasks such as Screenshot2HTML
or Image2Latex generation. Finally, human evaluations preferred
outputs from models trained on BigDocs over GPT-4o. This suggests that BigDocs
can help academics and the open-source community utilize and improve AI
tools to enhance multimodal capabilities and document reasoning. The project is
hosted at https://bigdocs.github.io.
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