Unverified Commit 621e7a25 authored by Thomas Wolf's avatar Thomas Wolf Committed by GitHub
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Merge pull request #1275 from stecklin/ner-fine-tuning

Implement fine-tuning BERT on CoNLL-2003 named entity recognition task
parents 80889a02 c55badce
......@@ -8,8 +8,9 @@ similar API between the different models.
| [Language Model fine-tuning](#language-model-fine-tuning) | Fine-tuning the library models for language modeling on a text dataset. Causal language modeling for GPT/GPT-2, masked language modeling for BERT/RoBERTa. |
| [Language Generation](#language-generation) | Conditional text generation using the auto-regressive models of the library: GPT, GPT-2, Transformer-XL and XLNet. |
| [GLUE](#glue) | Examples running BERT/XLM/XLNet/RoBERTa on the 9 GLUE tasks. Examples feature distributed training as well as half-precision. |
| [SQuAD](#squad) | Using BERT for question answering, examples with distributed training. |
| [SQuAD](#squad) | Using BERT/XLM/XLNet/RoBERTa for question answering, examples with distributed training. |
| [Multiple Choice](#multiple-choice) | Examples running BERT/XLNet/RoBERTa on the SWAG/RACE/ARC tasks.
| [Named Entity Recognition](#named-entity-recognition) | Using BERT for Named Entity Recognition (NER) on the CoNLL 2003 dataset, examples with distributed training. |
## Language model fine-tuning
......@@ -390,3 +391,103 @@ exact_match = 86.91
This fine-tuneds model is available as a checkpoint under the reference
`bert-large-uncased-whole-word-masking-finetuned-squad`.
## Named Entity Recognition
Based on the script [`run_ner.py`](https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/blob/master/examples/run_ner.py).
This example fine-tune Bert Multilingual on GermEval 2014 (German NER).
Details and results for the fine-tuning provided by @stefan-it.
### Data (Download and pre-processing steps)
Data can be obtained from the [GermEval 2014](https://sites.google.com/site/germeval2014ner/data) shared task page.
Here are the commands for downloading and pre-processing train, dev and test datasets. The original data format has four (tab-separated) columns, in a pre-processing step only the two relevant columns (token and outer span NER annotation) are extracted:
```bash
curl -L 'https://sites.google.com/site/germeval2014ner/data/NER-de-train.tsv?attredirects=0&d=1' \
| grep -v "^#" | cut -f 2,3 | tr '\t' ' ' > train.txt.tmp
curl -L 'https://sites.google.com/site/germeval2014ner/data/NER-de-dev.tsv?attredirects=0&d=1' \
| grep -v "^#" | cut -f 2,3 | tr '\t' ' ' > dev.txt.tmp
curl -L 'https://sites.google.com/site/germeval2014ner/data/NER-de-test.tsv?attredirects=0&d=1' \
| grep -v "^#" | cut -f 2,3 | tr '\t' ' ' > test.txt.tmp
```
The GermEval 2014 dataset contains some strange "control character" tokens like `'\x96', '\u200e', '\x95', '\xad' or '\x80'`. One problem with these tokens is, that `BertTokenizer` returns an empty token for them, resulting in misaligned `InputExample`s. I wrote a script that a) filters these tokens and b) splits longer sentences into smaller ones (once the max. subtoken length is reached).
```bash
wget "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/stefan-it/fine-tuned-berts-seq/master/scripts/preprocess.py"
```
Let's define some variables that we need for further pre-processing steps and training the model:
```bash
export MAX_LENGTH=128
export BERT_MODEL=bert-base-multilingual-cased
```
Run the pre-processing script on training, dev and test datasets:
```bash
python3 preprocess.py train.txt.tmp $BERT_MODEL $MAX_LENGTH > train.txt
python3 preprocess.py dev.txt.tmp $BERT_MODEL $MAX_LENGTH > dev.txt
python3 preprocess.py test.txt.tmp $BERT_MODEL $MAX_LENGTH > test.txt
```
The GermEval 2014 dataset has much more labels than CoNLL-2002/2003 datasets, so an own set of labels must be used:
```bash
cat train.txt dev.txt test.txt | cut -d " " -f 2 | grep -v "^$"| sort | uniq > labels.txt
```
### Training
Additional environment variables must be set:
```bash
export OUTPUT_DIR=germeval-model
export BATCH_SIZE=32
export NUM_EPOCHS=3
export SAVE_STEPS=750
export SEED=1
```
To start training, just run:
```bash
python3 run_ner.py --data_dir ./ \
--model_type bert \
--labels ./labels.txt \
--model_name_or_path $BERT_MODEL \
--output_dir $OUTPUT_DIR \
--max_seq_length $MAX_LENGTH \
--num_train_epochs $NUM_EPOCHS \
--per_gpu_train_batch_size $BATCH_SIZE \
--save_steps $SAVE_STEPS \
--seed $SEED \
--do_train \
--do_eval \
--do_predict
```
If your GPU supports half-precision training, just add the `--fp16` flag. After training, the model will be both evaluated on development and test datasets.
### Evaluation
Evaluation on development dataset outputs the following for our example:
```bash
10/04/2019 00:42:06 - INFO - __main__ - ***** Eval results *****
10/04/2019 00:42:06 - INFO - __main__ - f1 = 0.8623348017621146
10/04/2019 00:42:06 - INFO - __main__ - loss = 0.07183869666975543
10/04/2019 00:42:06 - INFO - __main__ - precision = 0.8467916366258111
10/04/2019 00:42:06 - INFO - __main__ - recall = 0.8784592370979806
```
On the test dataset the following results could be achieved:
```bash
10/04/2019 00:42:42 - INFO - __main__ - ***** Eval results *****
10/04/2019 00:42:42 - INFO - __main__ - f1 = 0.8614389652384803
10/04/2019 00:42:42 - INFO - __main__ - loss = 0.07064602487454782
10/04/2019 00:42:42 - INFO - __main__ - precision = 0.8604651162790697
10/04/2019 00:42:42 - INFO - __main__ - recall = 0.8624150210424085
```
tensorboardX
scikit-learn
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scikit-learn
seqeval
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# coding=utf-8
# Copyright 2018 The Google AI Language Team Authors and The HuggingFace Inc. team.
# Copyright (c) 2018, NVIDIA CORPORATION. All rights reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
""" Named entity recognition fine-tuning: utilities to work with CoNLL-2003 task. """
from __future__ import absolute_import, division, print_function
import logging
import os
from io import open
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
class InputExample(object):
"""A single training/test example for token classification."""
def __init__(self, guid, words, labels):
"""Constructs a InputExample.
Args:
guid: Unique id for the example.
words: list. The words of the sequence.
labels: (Optional) list. The labels for each word of the sequence. This should be
specified for train and dev examples, but not for test examples.
"""
self.guid = guid
self.words = words
self.labels = labels
class InputFeatures(object):
"""A single set of features of data."""
def __init__(self, input_ids, input_mask, segment_ids, label_ids):
self.input_ids = input_ids
self.input_mask = input_mask
self.segment_ids = segment_ids
self.label_ids = label_ids
def read_examples_from_file(data_dir, mode):
file_path = os.path.join(data_dir, "{}.txt".format(mode))
guid_index = 1
examples = []
with open(file_path, encoding="utf-8") as f:
words = []
labels = []
for line in f:
if line.startswith("-DOCSTART-") or line == "" or line == "\n":
if words:
examples.append(InputExample(guid="{}-{}".format(mode, guid_index),
words=words,
labels=labels))
guid_index += 1
words = []
labels = []
else:
splits = line.split(" ")
words.append(splits[0])
if len(splits) > 1:
labels.append(splits[-1].replace("\n", ""))
else:
# Examples could have no label for mode = "test"
labels.append("O")
if words:
examples.append(InputExample(guid="%s-%d".format(mode, guid_index),
words=words,
labels=labels))
return examples
def convert_examples_to_features(examples,
label_list,
max_seq_length,
tokenizer,
cls_token_at_end=False,
cls_token="[CLS]",
cls_token_segment_id=1,
sep_token="[SEP]",
sep_token_extra=False,
pad_on_left=False,
pad_token=0,
pad_token_segment_id=0,
pad_token_label_id=-1,
sequence_a_segment_id=0,
mask_padding_with_zero=True):
""" Loads a data file into a list of `InputBatch`s
`cls_token_at_end` define the location of the CLS token:
- False (Default, BERT/XLM pattern): [CLS] + A + [SEP] + B + [SEP]
- True (XLNet/GPT pattern): A + [SEP] + B + [SEP] + [CLS]
`cls_token_segment_id` define the segment id associated to the CLS token (0 for BERT, 2 for XLNet)
"""
label_map = {label: i for i, label in enumerate(label_list)}
features = []
for (ex_index, example) in enumerate(examples):
if ex_index % 10000 == 0:
logger.info("Writing example %d of %d", ex_index, len(examples))
tokens = []
label_ids = []
for word, label in zip(example.words, example.labels):
word_tokens = tokenizer.tokenize(word)
tokens.extend(word_tokens)
# Use the real label id for the first token of the word, and padding ids for the remaining tokens
label_ids.extend([label_map[label]] + [pad_token_label_id] * (len(word_tokens) - 1))
# Account for [CLS] and [SEP] with "- 2" and with "- 3" for RoBERTa.
special_tokens_count = 3 if sep_token_extra else 2
if len(tokens) > max_seq_length - special_tokens_count:
tokens = tokens[:(max_seq_length - special_tokens_count)]
label_ids = label_ids[:(max_seq_length - special_tokens_count)]
# The convention in BERT is:
# (a) For sequence pairs:
# tokens: [CLS] is this jack ##son ##ville ? [SEP] no it is not . [SEP]
# type_ids: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1
# (b) For single sequences:
# tokens: [CLS] the dog is hairy . [SEP]
# type_ids: 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
#
# Where "type_ids" are used to indicate whether this is the first
# sequence or the second sequence. The embedding vectors for `type=0` and
# `type=1` were learned during pre-training and are added to the wordpiece
# embedding vector (and position vector). This is not *strictly* necessary
# since the [SEP] token unambiguously separates the sequences, but it makes
# it easier for the model to learn the concept of sequences.
#
# For classification tasks, the first vector (corresponding to [CLS]) is
# used as as the "sentence vector". Note that this only makes sense because
# the entire model is fine-tuned.
tokens += [sep_token]
label_ids += [pad_token_label_id]
if sep_token_extra:
# roberta uses an extra separator b/w pairs of sentences
tokens += [sep_token]
label_ids += [pad_token_label_id]
segment_ids = [sequence_a_segment_id] * len(tokens)
if cls_token_at_end:
tokens += [cls_token]
label_ids += [pad_token_label_id]
segment_ids += [cls_token_segment_id]
else:
tokens = [cls_token] + tokens
label_ids = [pad_token_label_id] + label_ids
segment_ids = [cls_token_segment_id] + segment_ids
input_ids = tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids(tokens)
# The mask has 1 for real tokens and 0 for padding tokens. Only real
# tokens are attended to.
input_mask = [1 if mask_padding_with_zero else 0] * len(input_ids)
# Zero-pad up to the sequence length.
padding_length = max_seq_length - len(input_ids)
if pad_on_left:
input_ids = ([pad_token] * padding_length) + input_ids
input_mask = ([0 if mask_padding_with_zero else 1] * padding_length) + input_mask
segment_ids = ([pad_token_segment_id] * padding_length) + segment_ids
label_ids = ([pad_token_label_id] * padding_length) + label_ids
else:
input_ids += ([pad_token] * padding_length)
input_mask += ([0 if mask_padding_with_zero else 1] * padding_length)
segment_ids += ([pad_token_segment_id] * padding_length)
label_ids += ([pad_token_label_id] * padding_length)
assert len(input_ids) == max_seq_length
assert len(input_mask) == max_seq_length
assert len(segment_ids) == max_seq_length
assert len(label_ids) == max_seq_length
if ex_index < 5:
logger.info("*** Example ***")
logger.info("guid: %s", example.guid)
logger.info("tokens: %s", " ".join([str(x) for x in tokens]))
logger.info("input_ids: %s", " ".join([str(x) for x in input_ids]))
logger.info("input_mask: %s", " ".join([str(x) for x in input_mask]))
logger.info("segment_ids: %s", " ".join([str(x) for x in segment_ids]))
logger.info("label_ids: %s", " ".join([str(x) for x in label_ids]))
features.append(
InputFeatures(input_ids=input_ids,
input_mask=input_mask,
segment_ids=segment_ids,
label_ids=label_ids))
return features
def get_labels(path):
if path:
with open(path, "r") as f:
labels = f.read().splitlines()
if "O" not in labels:
labels = ["O"] + labels
return labels
else:
return ["O", "B-MISC", "I-MISC", "B-PER", "I-PER", "B-ORG", "I-ORG", "B-LOC", "I-LOC"]
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