This is the proposition segmentation model from "Sub-Sentence Encoder: Contrastive Learning of Propositional Semantic Representations" by Chen et. al. 2023.
What does the model do?
It splits a complex, long-form sentence into a list of propositions -- i.e. self-contained, atomic pieces of meaning in the sentence. For example, the following sentence --
"Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker featuring Count Dracula as the protagonist."
will be split into --
['Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker.', 'Count Dracula is the protagonist of Dracula.']
Usage
The prompt to the model is formatted like: segment sentence: {input_sentence}
.
For each sentence, the model will output the propositions concatenated by [sep]
as a string.
For example, if we use the following example code to segment "Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker featuring Count Dracula as the protagonist."
.
The model output will be ['Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker.[sep]Count Dracula is the protagonist of Dracula.']
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForSeq2SeqLM
gen_kwargs = {
"length_penalty": 0,
"max_new_tokens": 256,
"min_length": 10,
"no_repeat_ngram_size": 0,
"num_beams": 1,
}
SEGMENT5_PROMPT = "segment sentence: {}"
SEGMENT5_SEP_TOKEN = "[sep]"
model = AutoModelForSeq2SeqLM.from_pretrained("sihaochen/SegmenT5-large")
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("sihaochen/SegmenT5-large")
model.eval()
# define an example input sentence
example_sentence = "Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker featuring Count Dracula as the protagonist."
example_input = SEGMENT5_PROMPT.format(example_sentence)
input_ids = tokenizer(example_input,
return_tensors="pt",
padding="max_length",
max_length=512,
truncation=True).input_ids
logits = model.generate(input_ids, **gen_kwargs)
outputs = tokenizer.batch_decode(logits, skip_special_tokens=True)
output = outputs[0].split(SEGMENT5_SEP_TOKEN)
print(output)
# Output: ['Dracula is a novel by Bram Stoker.', 'Count Dracula is the protagonist of Dracula.']
Sub-Sentence Encoder
For model checkpoints + code for the sub-sentence encoders, checkout: https://github.com/schen149/sub-sentence-encoder/
Citation
@article{chen2023subsentence,
title={Sub-Sentence Encoder: Contrastive Learning of Propositional Semantic Representations},
author={Sihao Chen and Hongming Zhang and Tong Chen and Ben Zhou and Wenhao Yu and Dian Yu and Baolin Peng and Hongwei Wang and Dan Roth and Dong Yu},
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2311.04335},
year={2023},
URL = {https://arxiv.org/pdf/2311.04335.pdf}
}
- Downloads last month
- 63