--- title: README emoji: 🏃 colorFrom: gray colorTo: purple sdk: static pinned: false license: mit tags: - oxford-legacy --- # Model Description ClinicalMobileBERT is the result of training the [BioMobileBERT](https://huggingface.co/nlpie/bio-mobilebert) model in a continual learning scenario for 3 epochs using a total batch size of 192 on the MIMIC-III notes dataset. # Initialisation We initialise our model with the pre-trained checkpoints of the [BioMobileBERT](https://huggingface.co/nlpie/bio-mobilebert) model available on Huggingface. # Architecture MobileBERT uses a 128-dimensional embedding layer followed by 1D convolutions to up-project its output to the desired hidden dimension expected by the transformer blocks. For each of these blocks, MobileBERT uses linear down-projection at the beginning of the transformer block and up-projection at its end, followed by a residual connection originating from the input of the block before down-projection. Because of these linear projections, MobileBERT can reduce the hidden size and hence the computational cost of multi-head attention and feed-forward blocks. This model additionally incorporates up to four feed-forward blocks in order to enhance its representation learning capabilities. Thanks to the strategically placed linear projections, a 24-layer MobileBERT (which is used in this work) has around 25M parameters. # Citation If you use this model, please consider citing the following paper: ```bibtex @article{rohanian2023lightweight, title={Lightweight transformers for clinical natural language processing}, author={Rohanian, Omid and Nouriborji, Mohammadmahdi and Jauncey, Hannah and Kouchaki, Samaneh and Nooralahzadeh, Farhad and Clifton, Lei and Merson, Laura and Clifton, David A and ISARIC Clinical Characterisation Group and others}, journal={Natural Language Engineering}, pages={1--28}, year={2023}, publisher={Cambridge University Press} } ``` # Support If this model helps your work, you can keep the project running with a one-off or monthly contribution: https://github.com/sponsors/nlpie-research