Book Image

Natural Language Processing with TensorFlow - Second Edition

By : Thushan Ganegedara
2 (1)
Book Image

Natural Language Processing with TensorFlow - Second Edition

2 (1)
By: Thushan Ganegedara

Overview of this book

Learning how to solve natural language processing (NLP) problems is an important skill to master due to the explosive growth of data combined with the demand for machine learning solutions in production. Natural Language Processing with TensorFlow, Second Edition, will teach you how to solve common real-world NLP problems with a variety of deep learning model architectures. The book starts by getting readers familiar with NLP and the basics of TensorFlow. Then, it gradually teaches you different facets of TensorFlow 2.x. In the following chapters, you then learn how to generate powerful word vectors, classify text, generate new text, and generate image captions, among other exciting use-cases of real-world NLP. TensorFlow has evolved to be an ecosystem that supports a machine learning workflow through ingesting and transforming data, building models, monitoring, and productionization. We will then read text directly from files and perform the required transformations through a TensorFlow data pipeline. We will also see how to use a versatile visualization tool known as TensorBoard to visualize our models. By the end of this NLP book, you will be comfortable with using TensorFlow to build deep learning models with many different architectures, and efficiently ingest data using TensorFlow Additionally, you’ll be able to confidently use TensorFlow throughout your machine learning workflow.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
12
Other Books You May Enjoy
13
Index

Understanding BERT

BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representation from Transformers) is a Transformer model among a plethora of Transformer models that have come to light over the past few years.

BERT was introduced in the paper BERT: Pre-training of Deep Bidirectional Transformers for Language Understanding by Delvin et al. (https://arxiv.org/pdf/1810.04805.pdf). The Transformer models are divided into two main factions:

  • Encoder-based models
  • Decoder-based (autoregressive) models

In other words, either the encoder or the decoder part of the Transformer provides the foundation for these models, compared to using both the encoder and the decoder. The main difference between the two is how attention is used. Encoder-based models use bidirectional attention, whereas decoder-based models use autoregressive (that is, left to right) attention.

BERT is an encoder-based Transformer model. It takes an input sequence (a collection of tokens) and produces an encoded...