Book Image

Mastering Transformers

By : Savaş Yıldırım, Meysam Asgari- Chenaghlu
Book Image

Mastering Transformers

By: Savaş Yıldırım, Meysam Asgari- Chenaghlu

Overview of this book

Transformer-based language models have dominated natural language processing (NLP) studies and have now become a new paradigm. With this book, you'll learn how to build various transformer-based NLP applications using the Python Transformers library. The book gives you an introduction to Transformers by showing you how to write your first hello-world program. You'll then learn how a tokenizer works and how to train your own tokenizer. As you advance, you'll explore the architecture of autoencoding models, such as BERT, and autoregressive models, such as GPT. You'll see how to train and fine-tune models for a variety of natural language understanding (NLU) and natural language generation (NLG) problems, including text classification, token classification, and text representation. This book also helps you to learn efficient models for challenging problems, such as long-context NLP tasks with limited computational capacity. You'll also work with multilingual and cross-lingual problems, optimize models by monitoring their performance, and discover how to deconstruct these models for interpretability and explainability. Finally, you'll be able to deploy your transformer models in a production environment. By the end of this NLP book, you'll have learned how to use Transformers to solve advanced NLP problems using advanced models.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Introduction – Recent Developments in the Field, Installations, and Hello World Applications
4
Section 2: Transformer Models – From Autoencoding to Autoregressive Models
10
Section 3: Advanced Topics

Summary

In this chapter, you learned about multilingual and cross-lingual language model pre-training and the difference between monolingual and multilingual pre-training. CLM and TLM were also covered, and you gained knowledge about them. You learned how it is possible to use cross-lingual models on various use cases, such as semantic search, plagiarism, and zero-shot text classification. You also learned how it is possible to train on a dataset from a language and test on a completely different language using cross-lingual models. Fine-tuning the performance of multilingual models was evaluated, and we concluded that some multilingual models can be a substitute for monolingual models, remarkably keeping performance loss to a minimum.

In the next chapter, you will learn how to deploy transformer models for real problems and train them for production at an industrial scale.