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license: apache-2.0 |
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<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/63ea0de943d976de6e4e54fb/-zXQ3G2iKCCAq6x8gPGm7.png" width="300" class="left"><img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/63ea0de943d976de6e4e54fb/r1vY_i4DmL5shXAm_CMs9.png" width="400" class="center"> |
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This is the Repo for the paper: [BARTScore: Evaluating Generated Text as Text Generation](https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.11520) |
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## Updates |
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- 2021.09.29 Paper gets accepted to NeurIPS 2021 :tada: |
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- 2021.08.18 Release code |
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- 2021.06.28 Release online evaluation [Demo](http://bartscore.sh/) |
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- 2021.06.25 Release online Explainable Leaderboard for [Meta-evaluation](http://explainaboard.nlpedia.ai/leaderboard/task-meval/index.php) |
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- 2021.06.22 Code will be released soon |
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## Background |
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There is a recent trend that leverages neural models for automated evaluation in different ways, as shown in Fig.1. |
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<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/63ea0de943d976de6e4e54fb/jfRv5wmLud1uYivH4ZG6c.png" width=650 class="left"> |
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(a) **Evaluation as matching task.** Unsupervised matching metrics aim to measure the semantic equivalence between the reference and hypothesis by using a token-level matching functions in distributed representation space (e.g. BERT) or discrete string space (e.g. ROUGE). |
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(b) **Evaluation as regression task.** Regression-based metrics (e.g. BLEURT) introduce a parameterized regression layer, which would be learned in a supervised fashion to accurately predict human judgments. |
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(c) **Evaluation as ranking task.** Ranking-based metrics (e.g. COMET) aim to learn a scoring function that assigns a higher score to better hypotheses than to worse ones. |
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(d) **Evaluation as generation task.** In this work, we formulate evaluating generated text as a text generation task from pre-trained language models. |
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## Our Work |
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Basic requirements for all the libraries are in the `requirements.txt.` |
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### Direct use |
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Our trained BARTScore (on ParaBank2) can be downloaded [here](https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_7JfF7KOInb7ZrxKHIigTMR4ChVET01m/view?usp=sharing). Example usage is shown below. |
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```python |
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# To use the CNNDM version BARTScore |
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>>> from bart_score import BARTScorer |
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>>> bart_scorer = BARTScorer(device='cuda:0', checkpoint='facebook/bart-large-cnn') |
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>>> bart_scorer.score(['This is interesting.'], ['This is fun.'], batch_size=4) # generation scores from the first list of texts to the second list of texts. |
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[out] |
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[-2.510652780532837] |
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# To use our trained ParaBank version BARTScore |
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>>> from bart_score import BARTScorer |
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>>> bart_scorer = BARTScorer(device='cuda:0', checkpoint='facebook/bart-large-cnn') |
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>>> bart_scorer.load(path='bart.pth') |
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>>> bart_scorer.score(['This is interesting.'], ['This is fun.'], batch_size=4) |
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[out] |
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[-2.336203098297119] |
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``` |
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We also provide multi-reference support. Please make sure you have the same number of references for each test sample. The usage is shown below. |
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```python |
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>>> from bart_score import BARTScorer |
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>>> bart_scorer = BARTScorer(device='cuda:0', checkpoint='facebook/bart-large-cnn') |
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>>> srcs = ["I'm super happy today.", "This is a good idea."] |
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>>> tgts = [["I feel good today.", "I feel sad today."], ["Not bad.", "Sounds like a good idea."]] # List[List of references for each test sample] |
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>>> bart_scorer.multi_ref_score(srcs, tgts, agg="max", batch_size=4) # agg means aggregation, can be mean or max |
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[out] |
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[-2.5008113384246826, -1.626236081123352] |
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``` |
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### Reproduce |
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To reproduce the results for each task, please see the `README.md` in each folder: `D2T` (data-to-text), `SUM` (summarization), `WMT` (machine translation). Once you get the scored pickle file in the right path (in each dataset folder), you can use them to conduct analysis. |
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For analysis, we provide `SUMStat`, `D2TStat` and `WMTStat` in `analysis.py` that can conveniently run analysis. An example of using `SUMStat` is shown below. Detailed usage can refer to `analysis.ipynb`. |
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```python |
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>>> from analysis import SUMStat |
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>>> stat = SUMStat('SUM/REALSumm/final_p.pkl') |
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>>> stat.evaluate_summary('litepyramid_recall') |
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[out] |
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Human metric: litepyramid_recall |
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metric spearman kendalltau |
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------------------------------------------------- ---------- ------------ |
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rouge1_r 0.497526 0.407974 |
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bart_score_cnn_hypo_ref_de_id est 0.49539 0.392728 |
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bart_score_cnn_hypo_ref_de_Videlicet 0.491011 0.388237 |
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... |
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``` |
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### Train your custom BARTScore |
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If you want to train your custom BARTScore with paired data, we provide the scripts and detailed instructions in the `train` folder. Once you got your trained model (for example, `my_bartscore` folder). You can use your custom BARTScore as shown below. |
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```python |
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>>> from bart_score import BARTScorer |
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>>> bart_scorer = BARTScorer(device='cuda:0', checkpoint='my_bartscore') |
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>>> bart_scorer.score(['This is interesting.'], ['This is fun.']) |
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``` |
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### Notes on use |
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Since we are using the average log-likelihood for target tokens, the calculated scores will be smaller than 0 (the probability is between 0 and 1, so the log of it should be negative). The higher the log-likelihood, the higher the probability. |
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To give an example, if SummaryA gets a score of -1 while SummaryB gets a score of -100, this means that the model thinks SummaryA is better than summaryB. |
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## Bib |
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Please cite our work if you find it useful. |
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``` |
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@inproceedings{NEURIPS2021_e4d2b6e6, |
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author = {Yuan, Weizhe and Neubig, Graham and Liu, Pengfei}, |
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booktitle = {Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems}, |
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editor = {M. Ranzato and A. Beygelzimer and Y. Dauphin and P.S. Liang and J. Wortman Vaughan}, |
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pages = {27263--27277}, |
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publisher = {Curran Associates, Inc.}, |
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title = {BARTScore: Evaluating Generated Text as Text Generation}, |
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url = {https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper/2021/file/e4d2b6e6fdeca3e60e0f1a62fee3d9dd-Paper.pdf}, |
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volume = {34}, |
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year = {2021} |
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} |
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``` |
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WARNING: This isn't the original owner's repository |
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[The original repository](https://github.com/neulab/BARTScore) |
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