CamemBERT is a pretrained language model trained on 138GB of French text based on RoBERTa.
Also available in github.com/huggingface/transformers.
Model | #params | Download | Arch. | Training data |
---|---|---|---|---|
camembert / camembert-base |
110M | camembert-base.tar.gz | Base | OSCAR (138 GB of text) |
camembert-large |
335M | camembert-large.tar.gz | Large | CCNet (135 GB of text) |
camembert-base-ccnet |
110M | camembert-base-ccnet.tar.gz | Base | CCNet (135 GB of text) |
camembert-base-wikipedia-4gb |
110M | camembert-base-wikipedia-4gb.tar.gz | Base | Wikipedia (4 GB of text) |
camembert-base-oscar-4gb |
110M | camembert-base-oscar-4gb.tar.gz | Base | Subsample of OSCAR (4 GB of text) |
camembert-base-ccnet-4gb |
110M | camembert-base-ccnet-4gb.tar.gz | Base | Subsample of CCNet (4 GB of text) |
import torch
camembert = torch.hub.load('pytorch/fairseq', 'camembert')
camembert.eval() # disable dropout (or leave in train mode to finetune)
# Download camembert model
wget https://dl.fbaipublicfiles.com/fairseq/models/camembert.tar.gz
tar -xzvf camembert.tar.gz
# Load the model in fairseq
from fairseq.models.roberta import CamembertModel
camembert = CamembertModel.from_pretrained('/path/to/camembert')
camembert.eval() # disable dropout (or leave in train mode to finetune)
masked_line = 'Le camembert est <mask> :)'
camembert.fill_mask(masked_line, topk=3)
# [('Le camembert est délicieux :)', 0.4909118115901947, ' délicieux'),
# ('Le camembert est excellent :)', 0.10556942224502563, ' excellent'),
# ('Le camembert est succulent :)', 0.03453322499990463, ' succulent')]
# Extract the last layer's features
line = "J'aime le camembert !"
tokens = camembert.encode(line)
last_layer_features = camembert.extract_features(tokens)
assert last_layer_features.size() == torch.Size([1, 10, 768])
# Extract all layer's features (layer 0 is the embedding layer)
all_layers = camembert.extract_features(tokens, return_all_hiddens=True)
assert len(all_layers) == 13
assert torch.all(all_layers[-1] == last_layer_features)
If you use our work, please cite:
@inproceedings{martin2020camembert,
title={CamemBERT: a Tasty French Language Model},
author={Martin, Louis and Muller, Benjamin and Su{\'a}rez, Pedro Javier Ortiz and Dupont, Yoann and Romary, Laurent and de la Clergerie, {\'E}ric Villemonte and Seddah, Djam{\'e} and Sagot, Beno{\^\i}t},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics},
year={2020}
}