Not an official Google product.
BigBird, is a sparse-attention based transformer which extends Transformer based models, such as BERT to much longer sequences. Moreover, BigBird comes along with a theoretical understanding of the capabilities of a complete transformer that the sparse model can handle.
As a consequence of the capability to handle longer context, BigBird drastically improves performance on various NLP tasks such as question answering and summarization.
More details and comparisons can be found in our presentation.
If you find this useful, please cite our NeurIPS 2020 paper:
@article{zaheer2020bigbird,
title={Big bird: Transformers for longer sequences},
author={Zaheer, Manzil and Guruganesh, Guru and Dubey, Kumar Avinava and Ainslie, Joshua and Alberti, Chris and Ontanon, Santiago and Pham, Philip and Ravula, Anirudh and Wang, Qifan and Yang, Li and others},
journal={Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems},
volume={33},
year={2020}
}
The most important directory is core
.
There are three main files in core
.
- attention.py: Contains BigBird linear attention mechanism
- encoder.py: Contains the main long sequence encoder stack
- modeling.py: Contains packaged BERT and seq2seq transformer models with BigBird attention
A quick fine-tuning demonstration for text classification is provided in imdb.ipynb
Please create a project first and create an instance in a zone which has quota as follows
gcloud compute instances create \
bigbird \
--zone=europe-west4-a \
--machine-type=n1-standard-16 \
--boot-disk-size=50GB \
--image-project=ml-images \
--image-family=tf-2-3-1 \
--maintenance-policy TERMINATE \
--restart-on-failure \
--scopes=cloud-platform
gcloud compute tpus create \
bigbird \
--zone=europe-west4-a \
--accelerator-type=v3-32 \
--version=2.3.1
gcloud compute ssh --zone "europe-west4-a" "bigbird"
For illustration we used instance name bigbird
and zone europe-west4-a
, but feel free to change them.
More details about creating Google Cloud TPU can be found in online documentations.
git clone https://github.com/google-research/bigbird.git
cd bigbird
pip3 install -e .
You can find pretrained and fine-tuned checkpoints in our Google Cloud Storage Bucket.
Optionally, you can download them using gsutil
as
mkdir -p bigbird/ckpt
gsutil cp -r gs://bigbird-transformer/ bigbird/ckpt/
The storage bucket contains:
- pretrained BERT model for base(
bigbr_base
) and large (bigbr_large
) size. It correspond to BERT/RoBERTa-like encoder only models. Following original BERT and RoBERTa implementation they are transformers with post-normalization, i.e. layer norm is happening after the attention layer. However, following Rothe et al, we can use them partially in encoder-decoder fashion by coupling the encoder and decoder parameters, as illustrated in bigbird/summarization/roberta_base.sh launch script. - pretrained Pegasus Encoder-Decoder Transformer in large size(
bigbp_large
). Again following original implementation of Pegasus, they are transformers with pre-normalization. They have full set of separate encoder-decoder weights. Also for long document summarization datasets, we have converted Pegasus checkpoints (model.ckpt-0
) for each dataset and also provided fine-tuned checkpoints (model.ckpt-300000
) which works on longer documents. - fine-tuned
tf.SavedModel
for long document summarization which can be directly be used for prediction and evaluation as illustrated in the colab nootebook.
For quickly starting with BigBird, one can start by running the classification experiment code in classifier
directory.
To run the code simply execute
export GCP_PROJECT_NAME=bigbird-project # Replace by your project name
export GCP_EXP_BUCKET=gs://bigbird-transformer-training/ # Replace
sh -x bigbird/classifier/base_size.sh
To directly use the encoder instead of say BERT model, we can use the following code.
from bigbird.core import modeling
bigb_encoder = modeling.BertModel(...)
It can easily replace BERT's encoder.
Alternatively, one can also try playing with layers of BigBird encoder
from bigbird.core import encoder
only_layers = encoder.EncoderStack(...)
All the flags and config are explained in
core/flags.py
. Here we explain
some of the important config paramaters.
attention_type
is used to select the type of attention we would use. Setting
it to block_sparse
runs the BigBird attention module.
flags.DEFINE_enum(
"attention_type", "block_sparse",
["original_full", "simulated_sparse", "block_sparse"],
"Selecting attention implementation. "
"'original_full': full attention from original bert. "
"'simulated_sparse': simulated sparse attention. "
"'block_sparse': blocked implementation of sparse attention.")
block_size
is used to define the size of blocks, whereas num_rand_blocks
is
used to set the number of random blocks. The code currently uses window size of
3 blocks and 2 global blocks. The current code only supports static tensors.
Important points to note:
- Hidden dimension should be divisible by the number of heads.
- Currently the code only handles tensors of static shape as it is primarily designed for TPUs which only works with statically shaped tensors.
- For sequene length less than 1024, using
original_full
is advised as there is no benefit in using sparse BigBird attention.