Sentence-BERT: Sentence Embeddings using Siamese BERT-Networks
Paper • 1908.10084 • Published • 13
How to use Shipmaster1/minilm-youtube-adapter with PEFT:
Task type is invalid.
How to use Shipmaster1/minilm-youtube-adapter with sentence-transformers:
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
model = SentenceTransformer("Shipmaster1/minilm-youtube-adapter")
sentences = [
"What are some benefits of having a standard like MCP in place for applications leveraging context and context learning, especially in terms of making investment decisions easier for the higher-level executive team?",
"Venus back in the 70s, but it got stuck in Earth's orbit and has been on a crash course ever since. But Ready says you shouldn't be worried about it hitting you. the the hope is that most of it will burn down in the earth's atmosphere and then even if something makes it down, it'll fall in the ocean",
"project so I know that Vibe coding is kind of like it's about disassociating from you know needing to think about these things but there is still an excit an exciting viby part of like what do I want my project to look like what do I want my starting point to to be what stack do I want to these",
"investment from your higher level exec team a little bit easier knowing that there's a standard on the horizon here. uh MCP really provides those standard rules for applications that are leveraging context and context learning etc etc remember we got stateful means it's aware of previous stuff that"
]
embeddings = model.encode(sentences)
similarities = model.similarity(embeddings, embeddings)
print(similarities.shape)
# [4, 4]This is a sentence-transformers model finetuned from sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2. It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 384-dimensional dense vector space and can be used for semantic textual similarity, semantic search, paraphrase mining, text classification, clustering, and more.
SentenceTransformer(
(0): Transformer({'max_seq_length': 512, 'do_lower_case': False}) with Transformer model: PeftModelForFeatureExtraction
(1): Pooling({'word_embedding_dimension': 384, 'pooling_mode_cls_token': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_tokens': True, 'pooling_mode_max_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_sqrt_len_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_weightedmean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_lasttoken': False, 'include_prompt': True})
)
First install the Sentence Transformers library:
pip install -U sentence-transformers
Then you can load this model and run inference.
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
# Download from the 🤗 Hub
model = SentenceTransformer("sentence_transformers_model_id")
# Run inference
sentences = [
'Can you show me an example of an application that is widely used and impactful at a global scale?',
"here's one example of that that's actually you know hitting scale being useful all over the place kind of at the application layer again in a real kind of impactful way around the world so you know if you if you kind of were one of these people before that was like oh you know pip is so stupid you",
"Until You Exit play mode this repeating command will Loop in what's called a constant update function the update function continually tells your game object what to do on repeat if I say move right in the x-axis one unit over and over and over and over and over and over again the object will slowly",
]
embeddings = model.encode(sentences)
print(embeddings.shape)
# [3, 384]
# Get the similarity scores for the embeddings
similarities = model.similarity(embeddings, embeddings)
print(similarities.shape)
# [3, 3]
sentence_0 and sentence_1| sentence_0 | sentence_1 | |
|---|---|---|
| type | string | string |
| details |
|
|
| sentence_0 | sentence_1 |
|---|---|
What are the benefits of using UV over VN and P in poetry creation, as supported by testing with students? |
know poetry rules you know I use VN you know I don't use P you know it's like whatever all of this stuff you know to to us is like well how about you just go and pick up UV today because it really is like that much better and faster and we found even with our students testing and this is testing |
What are the key components of a best practice prompt in terms of clear instructions, relevant examples, input and output details, and setting expectations? |
composed of exactly what you would expect a best practice prompt to be composed of clear and Specific Instructions examples given that are exactly relevant to what you're trying to do details about the input details about the output setting expectation in the prompt this is very very similar to many |
"What considerations should be made regarding the maturity level and ease of setting up a cursor for safe and secure usage, especially for work-related tasks?" |
and and all this so so you know when we really think about cursor and setting it up so we can you know be safe be secure do stuff maybe for our job not just for fun and Vibes on the weekend you know H how do you how do you think about you know the the maturity level of this and how easy it is for |
MultipleNegativesRankingLoss with these parameters:{
"scale": 20.0,
"similarity_fct": "cos_sim"
}
per_device_train_batch_size: 16per_device_eval_batch_size: 16num_train_epochs: 2multi_dataset_batch_sampler: round_robinoverwrite_output_dir: Falsedo_predict: Falseeval_strategy: noprediction_loss_only: Trueper_device_train_batch_size: 16per_device_eval_batch_size: 16per_gpu_train_batch_size: Noneper_gpu_eval_batch_size: Nonegradient_accumulation_steps: 1eval_accumulation_steps: Nonetorch_empty_cache_steps: Nonelearning_rate: 5e-05weight_decay: 0.0adam_beta1: 0.9adam_beta2: 0.999adam_epsilon: 1e-08max_grad_norm: 1num_train_epochs: 2max_steps: -1lr_scheduler_type: linearlr_scheduler_kwargs: {}warmup_ratio: 0.0warmup_steps: 0log_level: passivelog_level_replica: warninglog_on_each_node: Truelogging_nan_inf_filter: Truesave_safetensors: Truesave_on_each_node: Falsesave_only_model: Falserestore_callback_states_from_checkpoint: Falseno_cuda: Falseuse_cpu: Falseuse_mps_device: Falseseed: 42data_seed: Nonejit_mode_eval: Falseuse_ipex: Falsebf16: Falsefp16: Falsefp16_opt_level: O1half_precision_backend: autobf16_full_eval: Falsefp16_full_eval: Falsetf32: Nonelocal_rank: 0ddp_backend: Nonetpu_num_cores: Nonetpu_metrics_debug: Falsedebug: []dataloader_drop_last: Falsedataloader_num_workers: 0dataloader_prefetch_factor: Nonepast_index: -1disable_tqdm: Falseremove_unused_columns: Truelabel_names: Noneload_best_model_at_end: Falseignore_data_skip: Falsefsdp: []fsdp_min_num_params: 0fsdp_config: {'min_num_params': 0, 'xla': False, 'xla_fsdp_v2': False, 'xla_fsdp_grad_ckpt': False}tp_size: 0fsdp_transformer_layer_cls_to_wrap: Noneaccelerator_config: {'split_batches': False, 'dispatch_batches': None, 'even_batches': True, 'use_seedable_sampler': True, 'non_blocking': False, 'gradient_accumulation_kwargs': None}deepspeed: Nonelabel_smoothing_factor: 0.0optim: adamw_torchoptim_args: Noneadafactor: Falsegroup_by_length: Falselength_column_name: lengthddp_find_unused_parameters: Noneddp_bucket_cap_mb: Noneddp_broadcast_buffers: Falsedataloader_pin_memory: Truedataloader_persistent_workers: Falseskip_memory_metrics: Trueuse_legacy_prediction_loop: Falsepush_to_hub: Falseresume_from_checkpoint: Nonehub_model_id: Nonehub_strategy: every_savehub_private_repo: Nonehub_always_push: Falsegradient_checkpointing: Falsegradient_checkpointing_kwargs: Noneinclude_inputs_for_metrics: Falseinclude_for_metrics: []eval_do_concat_batches: Truefp16_backend: autopush_to_hub_model_id: Nonepush_to_hub_organization: Nonemp_parameters: auto_find_batch_size: Falsefull_determinism: Falsetorchdynamo: Noneray_scope: lastddp_timeout: 1800torch_compile: Falsetorch_compile_backend: Nonetorch_compile_mode: Noneinclude_tokens_per_second: Falseinclude_num_input_tokens_seen: Falseneftune_noise_alpha: Noneoptim_target_modules: Nonebatch_eval_metrics: Falseeval_on_start: Falseuse_liger_kernel: Falseeval_use_gather_object: Falseaverage_tokens_across_devices: Falseprompts: Nonebatch_sampler: batch_samplermulti_dataset_batch_sampler: round_robin@inproceedings{reimers-2019-sentence-bert,
title = "Sentence-BERT: Sentence Embeddings using Siamese BERT-Networks",
author = "Reimers, Nils and Gurevych, Iryna",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2019 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing",
month = "11",
year = "2019",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.10084",
}
@misc{henderson2017efficient,
title={Efficient Natural Language Response Suggestion for Smart Reply},
author={Matthew Henderson and Rami Al-Rfou and Brian Strope and Yun-hsuan Sung and Laszlo Lukacs and Ruiqi Guo and Sanjiv Kumar and Balint Miklos and Ray Kurzweil},
year={2017},
eprint={1705.00652},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}
Base model
sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2