RikVN / DSI

Code for the DSI experiments in the MaCoCu project

Geek Repo:Geek Repo

Github PK Tool:Github PK Tool

DSI classification

Code for the DSI experiments in the MaCoCu project. Corresponding paper will soon be available.

First, create a Conda environment for this project:

conda create -n dsi python=3.7
conda activate dsi

And install the requirements:

pip install -r requirements.txt

Data

If you are only interested in doing DSI classification, you can just download the data:

wget "https://www.let.rug.nl/rikvannoord/DSI/v1.zip"
unzip v1.zip

If you want to preprocess your own set of sentences (in $FILE) exactly the way we did, do the following:

./src/preprocess.sh $FILE

However: if you are only interested in using our trained models, you do not want to do this.

This does all sorts of filtering that you probably do not want, such as removing sentences smaller and larger than a certain length.

In that case, we still recommend doing the normalization step (as that is what the model expects). Run the following:

python src/clean_data.py -i $FILE -o ${FILE}.clean --only_normalize

Using a trained model

First, download our pretrained models and put them in a models folder:

./src/setup_models.sh

Our best English model is based on DeBERTa-v3, while the multi-lingual model is based on XLM-R. Note that we evaluated the latter model on Spanish and Dutch, but it will work on all languages in XLM-R.

Then simply run the parsing script by specifying the language, the model and the sentence file, say for English:

python src/lm_parse.py -l en -m models/en_model/ -s ${FILE}.clean

And for Spanish or Dutch (or any other language in XLM-R):

python src/lm_parse.py -l es -m models/ml_model/ -s ${FILE}.clean

You can find the final predictions in ${FILE}.clean.pred, and the softmax probabilities in ${FILE}.clean.pred.prob.

Selecting predictions

Now that you have the predicted probabilities, you can select your own threshold for including sentences in your data set. You can use src/select_preds.py for this.

For selecting all sentences with a probability of >= 0.5 for all DSIs:

mkdir -p out
python src/select_preds.py -p ${FILE}.clean.pred.prob -s ${FILE}.clean -o out/ -min 0.5

The out/ folder now contains the files per DSI, .txt for just the texts and .info for tab-separated file with all info as well.

If we are only interested in e-health and e-justice, we can do this:

python src/select_preds.py -p ${FILE}.clean.pred.prob -s ${FILE}.clean -o out/ -min 0.5 -d e-health e-justice

If you just want to get a sense of how many docs you would get for each DSI, you can print a stats table like this:

python src/select_preds.py -p ${FILE}.clean.pred.prob

Training your own finetuned LM

For training your own model you have to specify configuration files. They work together with the configs/default.sh file, containing all default settings. In your own configuration file, you can override certain settings by simply including them there.

For example, check out configs/en_test.sh. This trains a bert-base model on the English data, and evaluates on the English dev set. Since it's just a test, we specify that we downsample each category to 200 instances, and only train for 1 epoch. You can run it like this:

mkdir -p exps
./src/train_lm.sh configs/en_test.sh

You can find all experimental files in exps/en_test/, including log files, output files, the trained models and evaluation files.

For Spanish and Dutch, an example is added for doing zero-shot classification with a multi-lingual LM: configs/ml_test.sh.

First, we create a dev set that is a combination of both the Spanish and Dutch sets:

mkdir -p v1/es-nl/
cat v1/es/dev v1/nl/dev > v1/es-nl/dev
shuf v1/es-nl/dev > v1/es-nl/dev.shuf

Then we simply train the model with the configuration file again, and evaluate on both the Spanish and Dutch dev sets individually:

./src/train_lm.sh configs/ml_test.sh

If you want to train the exact same models we did, use the config files configs/en_best.sh or configs/ml_best.sh. You will have to do this on GPU and it will take 2 to 3 days.

Our train script automatically evaluates on the specified dev/test sets, but you can also run this separately, and plot a confusion matrix:

python src/eval.py -g $GOLD_FILE -p $PRED_FILE -c cm.png

If you want to evaluate on Spanish or Dutch, you'd likely want to fix how the eval script calculates the macro-average, as not all categories are present in the dev/test sets. Save the classification report first (in clf.txt), and run this:

python src/fix_clf_report.py -i clf.txt

Baseline models

You can also run a basic classifier by running the following (downsample to speed up):

python src/basic_classifiers.py -i v1/en/train -t v1/en/dev -tf -d 3000

This train a LinearSVM with unigrams and bigrams using a af TF-IDF vectorizer.

Note that there are a couple of important command line options to set, you can check them out by adding -h.

For example, if you want to see the best features:

python src/basic_classifiers.py -i v1/en/train -t v1/en/dev -tf -d 3000 --features

About

Code for the DSI experiments in the MaCoCu project


Languages

Language:Python 91.9%Language:Shell 8.1%