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505 lines
22 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Embeddings, Transformers and Transfer Learning
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teaser: Using transformer embeddings like BERT in spaCy
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menu:
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- ['Embedding Layers', 'embedding-layers']
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- ['Transformers', 'transformers']
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- ['Static Vectors', 'static-vectors']
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- ['Pretraining', 'pretraining']
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next: /usage/training
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---
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spaCy supports a number of **transfer and multi-task learning** workflows that
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can often help improve your pipeline's efficiency or accuracy. Transfer learning
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refers to techniques such as word vector tables and language model pretraining.
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These techniques can be used to import knowledge from raw text into your
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pipeline, so that your models are able to generalize better from your annotated
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examples.
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You can convert **word vectors** from popular tools like
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[FastText](https://fasttext.cc) and [Gensim](https://radimrehurek.com/gensim),
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or you can load in any pretrained **transformer model** if you install
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[`spacy-transformers`](https://github.com/explosion/spacy-transformers). You can
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also do your own language model pretraining via the
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[`spacy pretrain`](/api/cli#pretrain) command. You can even **share** your
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transformer or other contextual embedding model across multiple components,
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which can make long pipelines several times more efficient. To use transfer
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learning, you'll need at least a few annotated examples for what you're trying
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to predict. Otherwise, you could try using a "one-shot learning" approach using
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[vectors and similarity](/usage/linguistic-features#vectors-similarity).
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<Accordion title="What’s the difference between word vectors and language models?" id="vectors-vs-language-models">
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The key difference between [word vectors](#word-vectors) and contextual language
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models such as [transformers](#transformers) is that word vectors model
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**lexical types**, rather than _tokens_. If you have a list of terms with no
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context around them, a transformer model like BERT can't really help you. BERT
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is designed to understand language **in context**, which isn't what you have. A
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word vectors table will be a much better fit for your task. However, if you do
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have words in context — whole sentences or paragraphs of running text — word
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vectors will only provide a very rough approximation of what the text is about.
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Word vectors are also very computationally efficient, as they map a word to a
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vector with a single indexing operation. Word vectors are therefore useful as a
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way to **improve the accuracy** of neural network models, especially models that
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are small or have received little or no pretraining. In spaCy, word vector
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tables are only used as **static features**. spaCy does not backpropagate
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gradients to the pretrained word vectors table. The static vectors table is
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usually used in combination with a smaller table of learned task-specific
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embeddings.
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</Accordion>
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<Accordion title="When should I add word vectors to my model?">
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Word vectors are not compatible with most [transformer models](#transformers),
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but if you're training another type of NLP network, it's almost always worth
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adding word vectors to your model. As well as improving your final accuracy,
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word vectors often make experiments more consistent, as the accuracy you reach
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will be less sensitive to how the network is randomly initialized. High variance
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due to random chance can slow down your progress significantly, as you need to
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run many experiments to filter the signal from the noise.
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Word vector features need to be enabled prior to training, and the same word
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vectors table will need to be available at runtime as well. You cannot add word
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vector features once the model has already been trained, and you usually cannot
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replace one word vectors table with another without causing a significant loss
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of performance.
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</Accordion>
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## Shared embedding layers {#embedding-layers}
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spaCy lets you share a single transformer or other token-to-vector ("tok2vec")
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embedding layer between multiple components. You can even update the shared layer,
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performing **multi-task learning**. Reusing the tok2vec layer between components
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can make your pipeline run a lot faster and result in much
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smaller models. However, it can make the pipeline less modular and make it more
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difficult to swap components or retrain parts of the pipeline. Multi-task
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learning can affect your accuracy (either positively or negatively), and may
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require some retuning of your hyper-parameters.
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![Pipeline components using a shared embedding component vs. independent embedding layers](../images/tok2vec.svg)
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| Shared | Independent |
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| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| ✅ **smaller:** models only need to include a single copy of the embeddings | ❌ **larger:** models need to include the embeddings for each component |
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| ✅ **faster:** embed the documents once for your whole pipeline | ❌ **slower:** rerun the embedding for each component |
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| ❌ **less composable:** all components require the same embedding component in the pipeline | ✅ **modular:** components can be moved and swapped freely |
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You can share a single transformer or other tok2vec model between multiple components
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by adding a [`Transformer`](/api/transformer) or [`Tok2Vec`](/api/tok2vec) component
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near the start of your pipeline. Components later in the pipeline can "connect"
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to it by including a **listener layer** like [Tok2VecListener](/api/architectures#Tok2VecListener)
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within their model.
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![Pipeline components listening to shared embedding component](../images/tok2vec-listener.svg)
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At the beginning of training, the [`Tok2Vec`](/api/tok2vec) component will grab
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a reference to the relevant listener layers in the rest of your pipeline. When
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it processes a batch of documents, it will pass forward its predictions to the
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listeners, allowing the listeners to **reuse the predictions** when they are
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eventually called. A similar mechanism is used to pass gradients from the
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listeners back to the model. The [`Transformer`](/api/transformer) component and
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[TransformerListener](/api/architectures#TransformerListener) layer do the same
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thing for transformer models, but the `Transformer` component will also save the
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transformer outputs to the `doc._.trf_data` extension attribute, giving you
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access to them after the pipeline has finished running.
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<!-- TODO: show example of implementation via config, side by side -->
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<!-- TODO: Once rehearsal is tested, mention it here. -->
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## Using transformer models {#transformers}
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Transformers are a family of neural network architectures that compute **dense,
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context-sensitive representations** for the tokens in your documents. Downstream
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models in your pipeline can then use these representations as input features to
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**improve their predictions**. You can connect multiple components to a single
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transformer model, with any or all of those components giving feedback to the
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transformer to fine-tune it to your tasks. spaCy's transformer support
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interoperates with [PyTorch](https://pytorch.org) and the
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[HuggingFace `transformers`](https://huggingface.co/transformers/) library,
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giving you access to thousands of pretrained models for your pipelines. There
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are many [great guides](http://jalammar.github.io/illustrated-transformer/) to
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transformer models, but for practical purposes, you can simply think of them as
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a drop-in replacement that let you achieve **higher accuracy** in exchange for
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**higher training and runtime costs**.
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### Setup and installation {#transformers-installation}
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> #### System requirements
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>
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> We recommend an NVIDIA **GPU** with at least **10GB of memory** in order to
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> work with transformer models. Make sure your GPU drivers are up to date and
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> you have **CUDA v9+** installed.
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> The exact requirements will depend on the transformer model. Training a
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> transformer-based model without a GPU will be too slow for most practical
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> purposes.
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>
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> Provisioning a new machine will require about **5GB** of data to be
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> downloaded: 3GB CUDA runtime, 800MB PyTorch, 400MB CuPy, 500MB weights, 200MB
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> spaCy and dependencies.
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Once you have CUDA installed, you'll need to install two pip packages,
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[`cupy`](https://docs.cupy.dev/en/stable/install.html) and
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[`spacy-transformers`](https://github.com/explosion/spacy-transformers). `cupy`
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is just like `numpy`, but for GPU. The best way to install it is to choose a
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wheel that matches the version of CUDA you're using. You may also need to set
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the `CUDA_PATH` environment variable if your CUDA runtime is installed in a
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non-standard location. Putting it all together, if you had installed CUDA 10.2
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in `/opt/nvidia/cuda`, you would run:
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```bash
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### Installation with CUDA
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$ export CUDA_PATH="/opt/nvidia/cuda"
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$ pip install cupy-cuda102
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$ pip install spacy-transformers
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```
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### Runtime usage {#transformers-runtime}
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Transformer models can be used as **drop-in replacements** for other types of
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neural networks, so your spaCy pipeline can include them in a way that's
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completely invisible to the user. Users will download, load and use the model in
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the standard way, like any other spaCy pipeline. Instead of using the
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transformers as subnetworks directly, you can also use them via the
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[`Transformer`](/api/transformer) pipeline component.
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![The processing pipeline with the transformer component](../images/pipeline_transformer.svg)
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The `Transformer` component sets the
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[`Doc._.trf_data`](/api/transformer#custom_attributes) extension attribute,
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which lets you access the transformers outputs at runtime.
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```cli
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$ python -m spacy download en_core_trf_lg
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```
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```python
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### Example
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import spacy
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from thinc.api import use_pytorch_for_gpu_memory, require_gpu
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# Use the GPU, with memory allocations directed via PyTorch.
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# This prevents out-of-memory errors that would otherwise occur from competing
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# memory pools.
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use_pytorch_for_gpu_memory()
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require_gpu(0)
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nlp = spacy.load("en_core_trf_lg")
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for doc in nlp.pipe(["some text", "some other text"]):
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tokvecs = doc._.trf_data.tensors[-1]
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```
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You can also customize how the [`Transformer`](/api/transformer) component sets
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annotations onto the [`Doc`](/api/doc), by customizing the `annotation_setter`.
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This callback will be called with the raw input and output data for the whole
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batch, along with the batch of `Doc` objects, allowing you to implement whatever
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you need. The annotation setter is called with a batch of [`Doc`](/api/doc)
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objects and a [`FullTransformerBatch`](/api/transformer#fulltransformerbatch)
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containing the transformers data for the batch.
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```python
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def custom_annotation_setter(docs, trf_data):
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# TODO:
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...
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nlp = spacy.load("en_core_trf_lg")
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nlp.get_pipe("transformer").annotation_setter = custom_annotation_setter
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doc = nlp("This is a text")
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print() # TODO:
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```
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### Training usage {#transformers-training}
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The recommended workflow for training is to use spaCy's
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[config system](/usage/training#config), usually via the
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[`spacy train`](/api/cli#train) command. The training config defines all
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component settings and hyperparameters in one place and lets you describe a tree
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of objects by referring to creation functions, including functions you register
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yourself. For details on how to get started with training your own model, check
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out the [training quickstart](/usage/training#quickstart).
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<!-- TODO:
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<Project id="en_core_trf_lg">
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The easiest way to get started is to clone a transformers-based project
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template. Swap in your data, edit the settings and hyperparameters and train,
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evaluate, package and visualize your model.
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</Project>
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-->
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The `[components]` section in the [`config.cfg`](/api/data-formats#config)
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describes the pipeline components and the settings used to construct them,
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including their model implementation. Here's a config snippet for the
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[`Transformer`](/api/transformer) component, along with matching Python code. In
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this case, the `[components.transformer]` block describes the `transformer`
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component:
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> #### Python equivalent
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>
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> ```python
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> from spacy_transformers import Transformer, TransformerModel
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> from spacy_transformers.annotation_setters import null_annotation_setter
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> from spacy_transformers.span_getters import get_doc_spans
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>
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> trf = Transformer(
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> nlp.vocab,
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> TransformerModel(
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> "bert-base-cased",
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> get_spans=get_doc_spans,
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> tokenizer_config={"use_fast": True},
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> ),
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> annotation_setter=null_annotation_setter,
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> max_batch_items=4096,
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> )
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> ```
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```ini
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### config.cfg (excerpt)
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[components.transformer]
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factory = "transformer"
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max_batch_items = 4096
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[components.transformer.model]
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@architectures = "spacy-transformers.TransformerModel.v1"
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name = "bert-base-cased"
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tokenizer_config = {"use_fast": true}
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[components.transformer.model.get_spans]
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@span_getters = "doc_spans.v1"
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[components.transformer.annotation_setter]
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@annotation_setters = "spacy-transformers.null_annotation_setter.v1"
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```
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The `[components.transformer.model]` block describes the `model` argument passed
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to the transformer component. It's a Thinc
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[`Model`](https://thinc.ai/docs/api-model) object that will be passed into the
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component. Here, it references the function
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[spacy-transformers.TransformerModel.v1](/api/architectures#TransformerModel)
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registered in the [`architectures` registry](/api/top-level#registry). If a key
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in a block starts with `@`, it's **resolved to a function** and all other
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settings are passed to the function as arguments. In this case, `name`,
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`tokenizer_config` and `get_spans`.
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`get_spans` is a function that takes a batch of `Doc` object and returns lists
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of potentially overlapping `Span` objects to process by the transformer. Several
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[built-in functions](/api/transformer#span-getters) are available – for example,
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to process the whole document or individual sentences. When the config is
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resolved, the function is created and passed into the model as an argument.
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<Infobox variant="warning">
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Remember that the `config.cfg` used for training should contain **no missing
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values** and requires all settings to be defined. You don't want any hidden
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defaults creeping in and changing your results! spaCy will tell you if settings
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are missing, and you can run
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[`spacy init fill-config`](/api/cli#init-fill-config) to automatically fill in
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all defaults.
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</Infobox>
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### Customizing the settings {#transformers-training-custom-settings}
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To change any of the settings, you can edit the `config.cfg` and re-run the
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training. To change any of the functions, like the span getter, you can replace
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the name of the referenced function – e.g. `@span_getters = "sent_spans.v1"` to
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process sentences. You can also register your own functions using the
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`span_getters` registry:
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> #### config.cfg
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>
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> ```ini
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> [components.transformer.model.get_spans]
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> @span_getters = "custom_sent_spans"
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> ```
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```python
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### code.py
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import spacy_transformers
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@spacy_transformers.registry.span_getters("custom_sent_spans")
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def configure_custom_sent_spans():
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# TODO: write custom example
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def get_sent_spans(docs):
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return [list(doc.sents) for doc in docs]
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return get_sent_spans
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```
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To resolve the config during training, spaCy needs to know about your custom
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function. You can make it available via the `--code` argument that can point to
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a Python file. For more details on training with custom code, see the
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[training documentation](/usage/training#custom-code).
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```cli
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python -m spacy train ./config.cfg --code ./code.py
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```
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### Customizing the model implementations {#training-custom-model}
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The [`Transformer`](/api/transformer) component expects a Thinc
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[`Model`](https://thinc.ai/docs/api-model) object to be passed in as its `model`
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argument. You're not limited to the implementation provided by
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`spacy-transformers` – the only requirement is that your registered function
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must return an object of type ~~Model[List[Doc], FullTransformerBatch]~~: that
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is, a Thinc model that takes a list of [`Doc`](/api/doc) objects, and returns a
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[`FullTransformerBatch`](/api/transformer#fulltransformerbatch) object with the
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transformer data.
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The same idea applies to task models that power the **downstream components**.
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Most of spaCy's built-in model creation functions support a `tok2vec` argument,
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which should be a Thinc layer of type ~~Model[List[Doc], List[Floats2d]]~~. This
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is where we'll plug in our transformer model, using the
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[Tok2VecListener](/api/architectures#Tok2VecListener) layer, which sneakily
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delegates to the `Transformer` pipeline component.
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```ini
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### config.cfg (excerpt) {highlight="12"}
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[components.ner]
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factory = "ner"
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[nlp.pipeline.ner.model]
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@architectures = "spacy.TransitionBasedParser.v1"
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nr_feature_tokens = 3
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hidden_width = 128
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maxout_pieces = 3
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use_upper = false
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[nlp.pipeline.ner.model.tok2vec]
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@architectures = "spacy-transformers.Tok2VecListener.v1"
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grad_factor = 1.0
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[nlp.pipeline.ner.model.tok2vec.pooling]
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@layers = "reduce_mean.v1"
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```
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The [Tok2VecListener](/api/architectures#Tok2VecListener) layer expects a
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[pooling layer](https://thinc.ai/docs/api-layers#reduction-ops) as the argument
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`pooling`, which needs to be of type ~~Model[Ragged, Floats2d]~~. This layer
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determines how the vector for each spaCy token will be computed from the zero or
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more source rows the token is aligned against. Here we use the
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[`reduce_mean`](https://thinc.ai/docs/api-layers#reduce_mean) layer, which
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averages the wordpiece rows. We could instead use
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[`reduce_max`](https://thinc.ai/docs/api-layers#reduce_max), or a custom
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function you write yourself.
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You can have multiple components all listening to the same transformer model,
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and all passing gradients back to it. By default, all of the gradients will be
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**equally weighted**. You can control this with the `grad_factor` setting, which
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lets you reweight the gradients from the different listeners. For instance,
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setting `grad_factor = 0` would disable gradients from one of the listeners,
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while `grad_factor = 2.0` would multiply them by 2. This is similar to having a
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custom learning rate for each component. Instead of a constant, you can also
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provide a schedule, allowing you to freeze the shared parameters at the start of
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training.
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## Static vectors {#static-vectors}
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<!-- TODO: write -->
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### Using word vectors in your models {#word-vectors-models}
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Many neural network models are able to use word vector tables as additional
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features, which sometimes results in significant improvements in accuracy.
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spaCy's built-in embedding layer,
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[MultiHashEmbed](/api/architectures#MultiHashEmbed), can be configured to use
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word vector tables using the `also_use_static_vectors` flag. This setting is
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also available on the [MultiHashEmbedCNN](/api/architectures#MultiHashEmbedCNN)
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layer, which builds the default token-to-vector encoding architecture.
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```ini
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[tagger.model.tok2vec.embed]
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@architectures = "spacy.MultiHashEmbed.v1"
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width = 128
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rows = 7000
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also_embed_subwords = true
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also_use_static_vectors = true
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```
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<Infobox title="How it works" emoji="💡">
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The configuration system will look up the string `"spacy.MultiHashEmbed.v1"` in
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the `architectures` [registry](/api/top-level#registry), and call the returned
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object with the rest of the arguments from the block. This will result in a call
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to the
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[`MultiHashEmbed`](https://github.com/explosion/spacy/tree/develop/spacy/ml/models/tok2vec.py)
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function, which will return a [Thinc](https://thinc.ai) model object with the
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type signature ~~Model[List[Doc], List[Floats2d]]~~. Because the embedding layer
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takes a list of `Doc` objects as input, it does not need to store a copy of the
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vectors table. The vectors will be retrieved from the `Doc` objects that are
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passed in, via the `doc.vocab.vectors` attribute. This part of the process is
|
||
handled by the [StaticVectors](/api/architectures#StaticVectors) layer.
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
#### Creating a custom embedding layer {#custom-embedding-layer}
|
||
|
||
The [MultiHashEmbed](/api/architectures#StaticVectors) layer is spaCy's
|
||
recommended strategy for constructing initial word representations for your
|
||
neural network models, but you can also implement your own. You can register any
|
||
function to a string name, and then reference that function within your config
|
||
(see the [training docs](/usage/training) for more details). To try this out,
|
||
you can save the following little example to a new Python file:
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
from spacy.ml.staticvectors import StaticVectors
|
||
from spacy.util import registry
|
||
|
||
print("I was imported!")
|
||
|
||
@registry.architectures("my_example.MyEmbedding.v1")
|
||
def MyEmbedding(output_width: int) -> Model[List[Doc], List[Floats2d]]:
|
||
print("I was called!")
|
||
return StaticVectors(nO=output_width)
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
If you pass the path to your file to the [`spacy train`](/api/cli#train) command
|
||
using the `--code` argument, your file will be imported, which means the
|
||
decorator registering the function will be run. Your function is now on equal
|
||
footing with any of spaCy's built-ins, so you can drop it in instead of any
|
||
other model with the same input and output signature. For instance, you could
|
||
use it in the tagger model as follows:
|
||
|
||
```ini
|
||
[tagger.model.tok2vec.embed]
|
||
@architectures = "my_example.MyEmbedding.v1"
|
||
output_width = 128
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Now that you have a custom function wired into the network, you can start
|
||
implementing the logic you're interested in. For example, let's say you want to
|
||
try a relatively simple embedding strategy that makes use of static word
|
||
vectors, but combines them via summation with a smaller table of learned
|
||
embeddings.
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
from thinc.api import add, chain, remap_ids, Embed
|
||
from spacy.ml.staticvectors import StaticVectors
|
||
|
||
@registry.architectures("my_example.MyEmbedding.v1")
|
||
def MyCustomVectors(
|
||
output_width: int,
|
||
vector_width: int,
|
||
embed_rows: int,
|
||
key2row: Dict[int, int]
|
||
) -> Model[List[Doc], List[Floats2d]]:
|
||
return add(
|
||
StaticVectors(nO=output_width),
|
||
chain(
|
||
FeatureExtractor(["ORTH"]),
|
||
remap_ids(key2row),
|
||
Embed(nO=output_width, nV=embed_rows)
|
||
)
|
||
)
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## Pretraining {#pretraining}
|
||
|
||
<!-- TODO: write -->
|