nuner-v1_ontonotes5 / README.md
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metadata
license: apache-2.0
base_model: numind/NuNER-v1.0
tags:
  - token-classification
  - ner
  - named-entity-recognition
metrics:
  - precision
  - recall
  - f1
  - accuracy
model-index:
  - name: nuner-v1_ontonotes5
    results:
      - task:
          type: token-classification
          name: Named Entity Recognition
        dataset:
          name: OntoNotes5
          type: tner/ontonotes5
          split: eval
        metrics:
          - type: f1
            value: 0.890930568316052
            name: F1
          - type: precision
            value: 0.8777586206896552
            name: Precision
          - type: recall
            value: 0.9045038642622368
            name: Recall
          - type: accuracy
            value: 0.9818887790313181
            name: Accuracy
datasets:
  - tner/ontonotes5
language:
  - en
library_name: transformers
pipeline_tag: token-classification
widget:
  - text: >-
      Concern and scepticism surround Niger uranium mining waste storage plans.
      Towering mounds dot the desert landscape in northern Niger's Arlit region,
      but they are heaps of partially radioactive waste left from four decades
      of operations at one of the world's biggest uranium mines. An ambitious
      10-year scheme costing $160 million is underway to secure the waste and
      avoid risks to health and the environment, but many local people are
      worried or sceptical. France's nuclear giant Areva, now called Orano,
      worked the area under a subsidiary, the Akouta Mining Company (Cominak).
      Cominak closed the site in 2021 after extracting 75,000 tonnes of uranium,
      much of which went to fuelling the scores of nuclear reactors that provide
      the backbone of France's electricity supply. Cominak's director general
      Mahaman Sani Abdoulaye showcased the rehabilitation project to the first
      French journalists to visit the site since 2010, when seven Areva
      employees were kidnapped by jihadists.
  - text: >-
      SE Michigan counties allege insulin gouging; Localities file lawsuit
      against pharmaceutical makers. Four metro Detroit counties filed federal
      lawsuits Wednesday against some of the nation's biggest pharmaceutical
      manufacturers and pharmacy benefit managers alleging illegal price fixing
      for insulin products. Macomb, Monroe, Wayne and Washtenaw counties filed
      the lawsuits in U.S. District Court in New Jersey against more than a
      dozen companies, including Lilly, Sanofi Aventis, Novo Nordisk, Express
      Scripts, Optum Rx and CVS Caremark, per their attorneys. "These are the
      first such lawsuits that have been filed in the state of Michigan and
      probably more to come," said attorney Melvin Butch Hollowell of the Miller
      Law Firm. He described the allegations during a news conference, saying
      that nationally "the pharmacies and manufacturers get together. They
      control about 90% of the market each, of the insulin market. They talk to
      each other secretly. And they jack up the prices through anticompetitive
      means. And what we've seen is over the past 20 years, when we talk about
      jacking up the prices, they jack them up 1,500% in the last 20 years.
      1,500%."
  - text: >-
      Foreign governments may be spying on your smartphone notifications,
      senator says. Washington (CNN) — Foreign governments have reportedly
      attempted to spy on iPhone and Android users through the mobile app
      notifications they receive on their smartphones - and the US government
      has forced Apple and Google to keep quiet about it, according to a top US
      senator. Through legal demands sent to the tech giants, governments have
      allegedly tried to force Apple and Google to turn over sensitive
      information that could include the contents of a notification - such as
      previews of a text message displayed on a lock screen, or an update about
      app activity, Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden said in a new report.
      Wyden's report reflects the latest example of long-running tensions
      between tech companies and governments over law enforcement demands, which
      have stretched on for more than a decade. Governments around the world
      have particularly battled with tech companies over encryption, which
      provides critical protections to users and businesses while in some cases
      preventing law enforcement from pursuing investigations into messages sent
      over the internet.
  - text: >-
      Tech giants ‘could severely disable UK spooks from stopping online harms’.
      Silicon Valley tech giants’ actions could “severely disable” UK spooks
      from preventing harm caused by online paedophiles and fraudsters, Suella
      Braverman  has suggested. The Conservative former home secretary named
      Facebook owner Meta , and Apple, and their use of technologies such as
      end-to-end encryption as a threat to attempts to tackle digital crimes.
      She claimed the choice to back these technologies without “safeguards”
      could “enable and indeed facilitate some of the worst atrocities that our
      brave men and women in law enforcement agencies deal with every day”, as
      MPs  began considering changes to investigatory powers laws. The
      Investigatory Powers (Amendment) Bill  includes measures to make it easier
      for agencies to examine and retain bulk datasets, such as publicly
      available online telephone records, and would allow intelligence agencies
      to use internet connection records to aid detection of their targets. We
      know that the terrorists, the serious organised criminals, and fraudsters,
      and the online paedophiles, all take advantage of the dark web and
      encrypted spaces
  - text: >-
      Camargo Corrêa asks Toffoli to suspend the fine agreed with Lava Jato. The
      Camargo Corrêa group has asked Justice Dias Toffoli to suspend the R$1.4
      billion fine it agreed to pay in its leniency agreement under Operation
      Car Wash. The company asked for an extension of the minister's decisions
      that benefited J&F and Odebrecht. Like the other companies, it claimed
      that it suffered undue pressure from members of the Federal Public
      Prosecutor's Office (MPF) to close the deal. Much of the request is based
      on messages exchanged between prosecutors from the Curitiba task force and
      former judge Sergio Moro - Camargo Corrêa requested full access to the
      material, seized in Operation Spoofing, which arrested the hackers who
      broke into cell phones. The dialogues, according to the group's defense,
      indicate that the executives did not freely agree to the deal, since they
      were the targets of lawsuits and pre-trial detentions.

numind/NuNER-v1.0 fine-tuned on OntoNotes5

This is a NuNER model fine-tuned on the OntoNotes5 dataset that can be used for Named Entity Recognition. NuNER model uses RoBERTa-base as the backbone encoder and it was trained on the NuNER dataset, which is a large and diverse dataset synthetically labeled by gpt-3.5-turbo-0301 of 1M sentences. This further pre-training phase allowed the generation of high quality token embeddings, a good starting point for fine-tuning on more specialized datasets.

Model Details

The model was fine-tuned as a regular BERT-based model for NER task using HuggingFace Trainer class.

Model labels

Entity Types: CARDINAL, DATE, PERSON, NORP, GPE, LAW, PERCENT, ORDINAL, MONEY, WORK_OF_ART, FAC, TIME, QUANTITY, PRODUCT, LANGUAGE, ORG, LOC, EVENT

Uses

Direct Use for Inference

>>> from transformers import pipeline

>>> text = """Foreign governments may be spying on your smartphone notifications, senator says. Washington (CNN) — Foreign governments have reportedly attempted to spy on iPhone and Android users through the mobile app notifications they receive on their smartphones - and the US government has forced Apple and Google to keep quiet about it, according to a top US senator. Through legal demands sent to the tech giants, governments have allegedly tried to force Apple and Google to turn over sensitive information that could include the contents of a notification - such as previews of a text message displayed on a lock screen, or an update about app activity, Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden said in a new report. Wyden's report reflects the latest example of long-running tensions between tech companies and governments over law enforcement demands, which have stretched on for more than a decade. Governments around the world have particularly battled with tech companies over encryption, which provides critical protections to users and businesses while in some cases preventing law enforcement from pursuing investigations into messages sent over the internet."""

>>> classifier = pipeline(
    "ner",
    model="guishe/nuner-v1_ontonotes5",
    grouped_entities=True
)
>>> classifier(text)

[{'entity_group': 'GPE',
  'score': 0.99179757,
  'word': ' Washington',
  'start': 82,
  'end': 92},
 {'entity_group': 'ORG',
  'score': 0.9535868,
  'word': 'CNN',
  'start': 94,
  'end': 97},
 {'entity_group': 'PRODUCT',
  'score': 0.6833637,
  'word': ' iPhone',
  'start': 157,
  'end': 163},
 {'entity_group': 'PRODUCT',
  'score': 0.5540275,
  'word': ' Android',
  'start': 168,
  'end': 175},
 {'entity_group': 'GPE',
  'score': 0.98848885,
  'word': ' US',
  'start': 263,
  'end': 265},
 {'entity_group': 'ORG',
  'score': 0.9939406,
  'word': ' Apple',
  'start': 288,
  'end': 293},
 {'entity_group': 'ORG',
  'score': 0.9933014,
  'word': ' Google',
  'start': 298,
  'end': 304},
 {'entity_group': 'GPE',
  'score': 0.99083686,
  'word': ' US',
  'start': 348,
  'end': 350},
 {'entity_group': 'ORG',
  'score': 0.99349517,
  'word': ' Apple',
  'start': 449,
  'end': 454},
 {'entity_group': 'ORG',
  'score': 0.99239254,
  'word': ' Google',
  'start': 459,
  'end': 465},
 {'entity_group': 'GPE',
  'score': 0.99598336,
  'word': ' Oregon',
  'start': 649,
  'end': 655},
 {'entity_group': 'NORP',
  'score': 0.99030787,
  'word': ' Democratic',
  'start': 656,
  'end': 666},
 {'entity_group': 'PERSON',
  'score': 0.9957912,
  'word': ' Ron Wyden',
  'start': 672,
  'end': 681},
 {'entity_group': 'PERSON',
  'score': 0.83941424,
  'word': ' Wyden',
  'start': 704,
  'end': 709},
 {'entity_group': 'DATE',
  'score': 0.87746465,
  'word': ' more than a decade',
  'start': 869,
  'end': 887}]

Training Details

Training hyperparameters

The following hyperparameters were used during training:

  • learning_rate: 5e-05
  • train_batch_size: 32
  • eval_batch_size: 32
  • seed: 42
  • gradient_accumulation_steps: 2
  • total_train_batch_size: 64
  • optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
  • lr_scheduler_type: linear
  • lr_scheduler_warmup_ratio: 0.1
  • num_epochs: 4

Training results

Training Loss Epoch Step Validation Loss Precision Recall F1 Accuracy
0.0781 1.0 936 0.0754 0.8392 0.8843 0.8612 0.9778
0.049 2.0 1873 0.0685 0.8597 0.8935 0.8763 0.9794
0.0357 3.0 2809 0.0714 0.8608 0.9016 0.8807 0.9806
0.027 4.0 3744 0.0728 0.8712 0.9000 0.8853 0.9811

Framework versions

  • Transformers 4.36.0

  • Pytorch 2.0.0+cu117

  • Datasets 2.18.0

  • Tokenizers 0.15.2

  • Citation

BibTeX

@misc{bogdanov2024nuner,
      title={NuNER: Entity Recognition Encoder Pre-training via LLM-Annotated Data}, 
      author={Sergei Bogdanov and Alexandre Constantin and Timothée Bernard and Benoit Crabbé and Etienne Bernard},
      year={2024},
      eprint={2402.15343},
      archivePrefix={arXiv},
      primaryClass={cs.CL}
}