--- language: avk language_name: AVK language_family: constructed_other tags: - wikilangs - nlp - tokenizer - embeddings - n-gram - markov - wikipedia - monolingual - family-constructed_other license: mit library_name: wikilangs pipeline_tag: feature-extraction datasets: - omarkamali/wikipedia-monthly dataset_info: name: wikipedia-monthly description: Monthly snapshots of Wikipedia articles across 300+ languages metrics: - name: best_compression_ratio type: compression value: 4.125 - name: best_isotropy type: isotropy value: 0.8585 - name: vocabulary_size type: vocab value: 60886 generated: 2025-12-27 --- # AVK - Wikilangs Models ## Comprehensive Research Report & Full Ablation Study This repository contains NLP models trained and evaluated by Wikilangs, specifically on **AVK** Wikipedia data. We analyze tokenizers, n-gram models, Markov chains, vocabulary statistics, and word embeddings. ## 📋 Repository Contents ### Models & Assets - Tokenizers (8k, 16k, 32k, 64k) - N-gram models (2, 3, 4-gram) - Markov chains (context of 1, 2, 3 and 4) - Subword N-gram and Markov chains - Embeddings in various sizes and dimensions - Language Vocabulary - Language Statistics ![Performance Dashboard](visualizations/performance_dashboard.png) ### Analysis and Evaluation - [1. Tokenizer Evaluation](#1-tokenizer-evaluation) - [2. N-gram Model Evaluation](#2-n-gram-model-evaluation) - [3. Markov Chain Evaluation](#3-markov-chain-evaluation) - [4. Vocabulary Analysis](#4-vocabulary-analysis) - [5. Word Embeddings Evaluation](#5-word-embeddings-evaluation) - [6. Summary & Recommendations](#6-summary--recommendations) - [Metrics Glossary](#appendix-metrics-glossary--interpretation-guide) - [Visualizations Index](#visualizations-index) --- ## 1. Tokenizer Evaluation ![Tokenizer Compression](visualizations/tokenizer_compression.png) ### Results | Vocab Size | Compression | Avg Token Len | UNK Rate | Total Tokens | |------------|-------------|---------------|----------|--------------| | **8k** | 3.392x | 3.33 | 0.1692% | 332,130 | | **16k** | 3.661x | 3.60 | 0.1827% | 307,678 | | **32k** | 3.908x | 3.84 | 0.1950% | 288,266 | | **64k** | 4.125x 🏆 | 4.06 | 0.2058% | 273,051 | ### Tokenization Examples Below are sample sentences tokenized with each vocabulary size: **Sample 1:** `Loma:TezaLoma:Rovulegan liwot` | Vocab | Tokens | Count | |-------|--------|-------| | 8k | `▁loma : te zal oma : rov ul eg an ... (+1 more)` | 11 | | 16k | `▁loma : tezaloma : rov ul eg an ▁liwot` | 9 | | 32k | `▁loma : tezaloma : rovulegan ▁liwot` | 6 | | 64k | `▁loma : tezaloma : rovulegan ▁liwot` | 6 | **Sample 2:** `Bifa Afrika Amerika Asia Europa Oceania Koblira Awalkera L...` | Vocab | Tokens | Count | |-------|--------|-------| | 8k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+7 more)` | 17 | | 16k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+7 more)` | 17 | | 32k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+7 more)` | 17 | | 64k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+7 more)` | 17 | **Sample 3:** `Bifa Afrika Amerika Asia Europa Oceania Koblira Awalkera L...` | Vocab | Tokens | Count | |-------|--------|-------| | 8k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+6 more)` | 16 | | 16k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+6 more)` | 16 | | 32k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+6 more)` | 16 | | 64k | `▁bifa ▁afrika ▁amerika ▁asia ▁europa ▁oceania ▁koblira ▁awalkera ▁loma : ... (+6 more)` | 16 | ### Key Findings - **Best Compression:** 64k achieves 4.125x compression - **Lowest UNK Rate:** 8k with 0.1692% unknown tokens - **Trade-off:** Larger vocabularies improve compression but increase model size - **Recommendation:** 32k vocabulary provides optimal balance for production use --- ## 2. N-gram Model Evaluation ![N-gram Perplexity](visualizations/ngram_perplexity.png) ![N-gram Coverage](visualizations/ngram_coverage.png) ### Results | N-gram | Perplexity | Entropy | Unique N-grams | Top-100 Coverage | Top-1000 Coverage | |--------|------------|---------|----------------|------------------|-------------------| | **2-gram** | 3,356 🏆 | 11.71 | 88,920 | 38.8% | 64.9% | | **2-gram** | 346 🏆 | 8.43 | 4,094 | 58.9% | 99.3% | | **3-gram** | 6,742 | 12.72 | 180,799 | 34.6% | 57.5% | | **3-gram** | 2,400 | 11.23 | 30,298 | 24.5% | 70.5% | | **4-gram** | 13,085 | 13.68 | 334,115 | 31.4% | 50.6% | | **4-gram** | 8,768 | 13.10 | 165,638 | 16.2% | 48.8% | ### Top 5 N-grams by Size **2-grams:** | Rank | N-gram | Count | |------|--------|-------| | 1 | `vuest -` | 137,464 | | 2 | `) vuest` | 137,409 | | 3 | `- :` | 137,400 | | 4 | `( en` | 136,694 | | 5 | `en )` | 126,393 | **3-grams:** | Rank | N-gram | Count | |------|--------|-------| | 1 | `) vuest -` | 137,409 | | 2 | `vuest - :` | 137,400 | | 3 | `en ) vuest` | 124,379 | | 4 | `( en )` | 123,735 | | 5 | `) ( en` | 67,196 | **4-grams:** | Rank | N-gram | Count | |------|--------|-------| | 1 | `) vuest - :` | 137,400 | | 2 | `en ) vuest -` | 124,379 | | 3 | `( en ) vuest` | 121,727 | | 4 | `) ( en )` | 54,244 | | 5 | `species of the world` | 25,857 | ### Key Findings - **Best Perplexity:** 2-gram with 346 - **Entropy Trend:** Decreases with larger n-grams (more predictable) - **Coverage:** Top-1000 patterns cover ~49% of corpus - **Recommendation:** 4-gram or 5-gram for best predictive performance --- ## 3. Markov Chain Evaluation ![Markov Entropy](visualizations/markov_entropy.png) ![Markov Branching](visualizations/markov_branching.png) ### Results | Context | Avg Entropy | Perplexity | Branching Factor | Unique Contexts | Predictability | |---------|-------------|------------|------------------|-----------------|----------------| | **1** | 0.7348 | 1.664 | 4.95 | 126,229 | 26.5% | | **1** | 1.1169 | 2.169 | 9.23 | 906 | 0.0% | | **2** | 0.3179 | 1.247 | 1.83 | 623,886 | 68.2% | | **2** | 1.0082 | 2.011 | 6.31 | 8,363 | 0.0% | | **3** | 0.1523 | 1.111 | 1.34 | 1,136,410 | 84.8% | | **3** | 0.8558 | 1.810 | 4.58 | 52,772 | 14.4% | | **4** | 0.1022 🏆 | 1.073 | 1.23 | 1,523,485 | 89.8% | | **4** | 0.7129 🏆 | 1.639 | 3.05 | 241,547 | 28.7% | ### Generated Text Samples Below are text samples generated from each Markov chain model: **Context Size 1:** 1. `( kishida , 1814 taneon zo pimtayar . vincent van gogh nederlandaf lingesik bak muvugal ,` 2. `) vuest - : prionailurus bengalensis ( ukraina gan wagner , fr ) ( kotava winugaf` 3. `: pteropus temminckii temminckii ) vuest - : crocidura mariquensis shortridgei ) vuest - align :` **Context Size 2:** 1. `vuest - : catalogue of life web project : macrotus waterhousii waterhousii ( gray , 1863 )` 2. `) vuest - : uicn : katca dymecodon pilirostris ) dene wikispecies kotavafa vuestesa xantaza kotava w...` 3. `- : itis : caracal caracal ) ( en , fr ) vuest - : alan p` **Context Size 3:** 1. `) vuest - : tree of life web project : rattus palmarum ( zelebor , 1869 ) (` 2. `vuest - : uicn : katca penthetor lucasi ( dobson , 1880 ) elmol ( dymecodon pilirostris )` 3. `en ) vuest - : paleobiology database : thomomys bottae nanus ( hall , 1941 ) ratsikisol (` **Context Size 4:** 1. `) vuest - : ncbi : simias ara vuestexa tekudol ( nasalis larvatus ) dene wikispecies kotavafa vueste...` 2. `en ) vuest - : tree of life web project : sorex trowbridgii ( en ) vuest - :` 3. `( en ) vuest - : tree of life web project : aepyceros melampus rendilis ( lönnberg , 1912` ### Key Findings - **Best Predictability:** Context-4 with 89.8% predictability - **Branching Factor:** Decreases with context size (more deterministic) - **Memory Trade-off:** Larger contexts require more storage (241,547 contexts) - **Recommendation:** Context-3 or Context-4 for text generation --- ## 4. Vocabulary Analysis ![Zipf's Law](visualizations/zipf_law.png) ![Top Words](visualizations/top20_words.png) ![Coverage Curve](visualizations/vocab_coverage.png) ### Statistics | Metric | Value | |--------|-------| | Vocabulary Size | 60,886 | | Total Tokens | 4,116,931 | | Mean Frequency | 67.62 | | Median Frequency | 6 | | Frequency Std Dev | 1162.11 | ### Most Common Words | Rank | Word | Frequency | |------|------|-----------| | 1 | en | 140,161 | | 2 | vuest | 137,464 | | 3 | ke | 96,689 | | 4 | of | 56,680 | | 5 | tir | 40,544 | | 6 | is | 40,292 | | 7 | va | 36,873 | | 8 | katca | 36,170 | | 9 | koe | 30,224 | | 10 | bak | 28,949 | ### Least Common Words (from vocabulary) | Rank | Word | Frequency | |------|------|-----------| | 1 | tageltaf | 2 | | 2 | l4 | 2 | | 3 | l5 | 2 | | 4 | l6 | 2 | | 5 | l8 | 2 | | 6 | fakaf | 2 | | 7 | docs | 2 | | 8 | 814359978 | 2 | | 9 | rozuxa | 2 | | 10 | eaksat | 2 | ### Zipf's Law Analysis | Metric | Value | |--------|-------| | Zipf Coefficient | 1.1598 | | R² (Goodness of Fit) | 0.995097 | | Adherence Quality | **excellent** | ### Coverage Analysis | Top N Words | Coverage | |-------------|----------| | Top 100 | 46.2% | | Top 1,000 | 71.1% | | Top 5,000 | 86.2% | | Top 10,000 | 91.0% | ### Key Findings - **Zipf Compliance:** R²=0.9951 indicates excellent adherence to Zipf's law - **High Frequency Dominance:** Top 100 words cover 46.2% of corpus - **Long Tail:** 50,886 words needed for remaining 9.0% coverage --- ## 5. Word Embeddings Evaluation ![Embedding Isotropy](visualizations/embedding_isotropy.png) ![Similarity Matrix](visualizations/embedding_similarity.png) ![t-SNE Words](visualizations/tsne_words.png) ![t-SNE Sentences](visualizations/tsne_sentences.png) ### Model Comparison | Model | Vocab Size | Dimension | Avg Norm | Std Norm | Isotropy | |-------|------------|-----------|----------|----------|----------| | **mono_32d** | 50,177 | 32 | 5.680 | 1.138 | 0.8585 🏆 | | **mono_64d** | 50,177 | 64 | 6.303 | 1.051 | 0.8386 | | **mono_128d** | 50,177 | 128 | 6.840 | 0.972 | 0.7221 | | **embeddings_enhanced** | 0 | 0 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.0000 | ### Key Findings - **Best Isotropy:** mono_32d with 0.8585 (more uniform distribution) - **Dimension Trade-off:** Higher dimensions capture more semantics but reduce isotropy - **Vocabulary Coverage:** All models cover 50,177 words - **Recommendation:** 100d for balanced semantic capture and efficiency --- ## 6. Summary & Recommendations ![Performance Dashboard](visualizations/performance_dashboard.png) ### Production Recommendations | Component | Recommended | Rationale | |-----------|-------------|-----------| | Tokenizer | **32k BPE** | Best compression (4.13x) with low UNK rate | | N-gram | **5-gram** | Lowest perplexity (346) | | Markov | **Context-4** | Highest predictability (89.8%) | | Embeddings | **100d** | Balanced semantic capture and isotropy | --- ## Appendix: Metrics Glossary & Interpretation Guide This section provides definitions, intuitions, and guidance for interpreting the metrics used throughout this report. ### Tokenizer Metrics **Compression Ratio** > *Definition:* The ratio of characters to tokens (chars/token). Measures how efficiently the tokenizer represents text. > > *Intuition:* Higher compression means fewer tokens needed to represent the same text, reducing sequence lengths for downstream models. A 3x compression means ~3 characters per token on average. > > *What to seek:* Higher is generally better for efficiency, but extremely high compression may indicate overly aggressive merging that loses morphological information. **Average Token Length (Fertility)** > *Definition:* Mean number of characters per token produced by the tokenizer. > > *Intuition:* Reflects the granularity of tokenization. Longer tokens capture more context but may struggle with rare words; shorter tokens are more flexible but increase sequence length. > > *What to seek:* Balance between 2-5 characters for most languages. Arabic/morphologically-rich languages may benefit from slightly longer tokens. **Unknown Token Rate (OOV Rate)** > *Definition:* Percentage of tokens that map to the unknown/UNK token, indicating words the tokenizer cannot represent. > > *Intuition:* Lower OOV means better vocabulary coverage. High OOV indicates the tokenizer encounters many unseen character sequences. > > *What to seek:* Below 1% is excellent; below 5% is acceptable. BPE tokenizers typically achieve very low OOV due to subword fallback. ### N-gram Model Metrics **Perplexity** > *Definition:* Measures how "surprised" the model is by test data. Mathematically: 2^(cross-entropy). Lower values indicate better prediction. > > *Intuition:* If perplexity is 100, the model is as uncertain as if choosing uniformly among 100 options at each step. A perplexity of 10 means effectively choosing among 10 equally likely options. > > *What to seek:* Lower is better. Perplexity decreases with larger n-grams (more context). Values vary widely by language and corpus size. **Entropy** > *Definition:* Average information content (in bits) needed to encode the next token given the context. Related to perplexity: perplexity = 2^entropy. > > *Intuition:* High entropy means high uncertainty/randomness; low entropy means predictable patterns. Natural language typically has entropy between 1-4 bits per character. > > *What to seek:* Lower entropy indicates more predictable text patterns. Entropy should decrease as n-gram size increases. **Coverage (Top-K)** > *Definition:* Percentage of corpus occurrences explained by the top K most frequent n-grams. > > *Intuition:* High coverage with few patterns indicates repetitive/formulaic text; low coverage suggests diverse vocabulary usage. > > *What to seek:* Depends on use case. For language modeling, moderate coverage (40-60% with top-1000) is typical for natural text. ### Markov Chain Metrics **Average Entropy** > *Definition:* Mean entropy across all contexts, measuring average uncertainty in next-word prediction. > > *Intuition:* Lower entropy means the model is more confident about what comes next. Context-1 has high entropy (many possible next words); Context-4 has low entropy (few likely continuations). > > *What to seek:* Decreasing entropy with larger context sizes. Very low entropy (<0.1) indicates highly deterministic transitions. **Branching Factor** > *Definition:* Average number of unique next tokens observed for each context. > > *Intuition:* High branching = many possible continuations (flexible but uncertain); low branching = few options (predictable but potentially repetitive). > > *What to seek:* Branching factor should decrease with context size. Values near 1.0 indicate nearly deterministic chains. **Predictability** > *Definition:* Derived metric: (1 - normalized_entropy) × 100%. Indicates how deterministic the model's predictions are. > > *Intuition:* 100% predictability means the next word is always certain; 0% means completely random. Real text falls between these extremes. > > *What to seek:* Higher predictability for text generation quality, but too high (>98%) may produce repetitive output. ### Vocabulary & Zipf's Law Metrics **Zipf's Coefficient** > *Definition:* The slope of the log-log plot of word frequency vs. rank. Zipf's law predicts this should be approximately -1. > > *Intuition:* A coefficient near -1 indicates the corpus follows natural language patterns where a few words are very common and most words are rare. > > *What to seek:* Values between -0.8 and -1.2 indicate healthy natural language distribution. Deviations may suggest domain-specific or artificial text. **R² (Coefficient of Determination)** > *Definition:* Measures how well the linear fit explains the frequency-rank relationship. Ranges from 0 to 1. > > *Intuition:* R² near 1.0 means the data closely follows Zipf's law; lower values indicate deviation from expected word frequency patterns. > > *What to seek:* R² > 0.95 is excellent; > 0.99 indicates near-perfect Zipf adherence typical of large natural corpora. **Vocabulary Coverage** > *Definition:* Cumulative percentage of corpus tokens accounted for by the top N words. > > *Intuition:* Shows how concentrated word usage is. If top-100 words cover 50% of text, the corpus relies heavily on common words. > > *What to seek:* Top-100 covering 30-50% is typical. Higher coverage indicates more repetitive text; lower suggests richer vocabulary. ### Word Embedding Metrics **Isotropy** > *Definition:* Measures how uniformly distributed vectors are in the embedding space. Computed as the ratio of minimum to maximum singular values. > > *Intuition:* High isotropy (near 1.0) means vectors spread evenly in all directions; low isotropy means vectors cluster in certain directions, reducing expressiveness. > > *What to seek:* Higher isotropy generally indicates better-quality embeddings. Values > 0.1 are reasonable; > 0.3 is good. Lower-dimensional embeddings tend to have higher isotropy. **Average Norm** > *Definition:* Mean magnitude (L2 norm) of word vectors in the embedding space. > > *Intuition:* Indicates the typical "length" of vectors. Consistent norms suggest stable training; high variance may indicate some words are undertrained. > > *What to seek:* Relatively consistent norms across models. The absolute value matters less than consistency (low std deviation). **Cosine Similarity** > *Definition:* Measures angular similarity between vectors, ranging from -1 (opposite) to 1 (identical direction). > > *Intuition:* Words with similar meanings should have high cosine similarity. This is the standard metric for semantic relatedness in embeddings. > > *What to seek:* Semantically related words should score > 0.5; unrelated words should be near 0. Synonyms often score > 0.7. **t-SNE Visualization** > *Definition:* t-Distributed Stochastic Neighbor Embedding - a dimensionality reduction technique that preserves local structure for visualization. > > *Intuition:* Clusters in t-SNE plots indicate groups of semantically related words. Spread indicates vocabulary diversity; tight clusters suggest semantic coherence. > > *What to seek:* Meaningful clusters (e.g., numbers together, verbs together). Avoid over-interpreting distances - t-SNE preserves local, not global, structure. ### General Interpretation Guidelines 1. **Compare within model families:** Metrics are most meaningful when comparing models of the same type (e.g., 8k vs 64k tokenizer). 2. **Consider trade-offs:** Better performance on one metric often comes at the cost of another (e.g., compression vs. OOV rate). 3. **Context matters:** Optimal values depend on downstream tasks. Text generation may prioritize different metrics than classification. 4. **Corpus influence:** All metrics are influenced by corpus characteristics. Wikipedia text differs from social media or literature. 5. **Language-specific patterns:** Morphologically rich languages (like Arabic) may show different optimal ranges than analytic languages. ### Visualizations Index | Visualization | Description | |---------------|-------------| | Tokenizer Compression | Compression ratios by vocabulary size | | Tokenizer Fertility | Average token length by vocabulary | | Tokenizer OOV | Unknown token rates | | Tokenizer Total Tokens | Total tokens by vocabulary | | N-gram Perplexity | Perplexity by n-gram size | | N-gram Entropy | Entropy by n-gram size | | N-gram Coverage | Top pattern coverage | | N-gram Unique | Unique n-gram counts | | Markov Entropy | Entropy by context size | | Markov Branching | Branching factor by context | | Markov Contexts | Unique context counts | | Zipf's Law | Frequency-rank distribution with fit | | Vocab Frequency | Word frequency distribution | | Top 20 Words | Most frequent words | | Vocab Coverage | Cumulative coverage curve | | Embedding Isotropy | Vector space uniformity | | Embedding Norms | Vector magnitude distribution | | Embedding Similarity | Word similarity heatmap | | Nearest Neighbors | Similar words for key terms | | t-SNE Words | 2D word embedding visualization | | t-SNE Sentences | 2D sentence embedding visualization | | Position Encoding | Encoding method comparison | | Model Sizes | Storage requirements | | Performance Dashboard | Comprehensive performance overview | --- ## About This Project ### Data Source Models trained on [wikipedia-monthly](https://huggingface.co/datasets/omarkamali/wikipedia-monthly) - a monthly snapshot of Wikipedia articles across 300+ languages. ### Project A project by **[Wikilangs](https://wikilangs.org)** - Open-source NLP models for every Wikipedia language. ### Maintainer [Omar Kamali](https://omarkamali.com) - [Omneity Labs](https://omneitylabs.com) ### Citation If you use these models in your research, please cite: ```bibtex @misc{wikilangs2025, author = {Kamali, Omar}, title = {Wikilangs: Open NLP Models for Wikipedia Languages}, year = {2025}, publisher = {HuggingFace}, url = {https://huggingface.co/wikilangs} institution = {Omneity Labs} } ``` ### License MIT License - Free for academic and commercial use. ### Links - 🌐 Website: [wikilangs.org](https://wikilangs.org) - 🤗 Models: [huggingface.co/wikilangs](https://huggingface.co/wikilangs) - 📊 Data: [wikipedia-monthly](https://huggingface.co/datasets/omarkamali/wikipedia-monthly) - 👤 Author: [Omar Kamali](https://huggingface.co/omarkamali) --- *Generated by Wikilangs Models Pipeline* *Report Date: 2025-12-27 20:44:59*