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polyai-models

Neural Models for Conversational AI

This repo shares models from PolyAI publications, including the ConveRT efficient dual-encoder model. These are shared as Tensorflow Hub modules, listed below. We also share example code and utility classes, though for many the Tensorflow Hub URLs will be enough.

Requirements

Using these models requires Tensorflow Hub and Tensorflow Text. In particular, Tensorflow Text provides ops that allow the model to directly work on text, requiring no pre-processing or tokenization from the user. We test using Tensorflow version 1.14 and Tensorflow Text version 0.6.0 (which is compatible with Tensorflow 1.14). A list of available versions can be found on the Tensorflow Text github repo.

Models

ConveRT

This is the ConveRT dual-encoder model, using subword representations and lighter-weight more efficient transformer-style blocks to encode text, as described in the ConveRT paper. It provides powerful representations for conversational data, and can also be used as a response ranker. The model costs under $100 to train from scratch, can be quantized to under 60MB, and is competitive with larger Transformer networks on conversational tasks. We share an unquantized version of the model, facilitating fine-tuning. Please get in touch if you are interested in using the quantized ConveRT model. The Tensorflow Hub url is:

module = tfhub.Module("http://models.poly-ai.com/convert/v1/model.tar.gz")

See the convert-examples.ipynb notebook for some examples of how to use this model.

TFHub signatures

default

Takes as input sentences, a string tensor of sentences to encode. Outputs 1024 dimensional vectors, giving a representation for each sentence. These are the output of the sqrt-N reduction in the shared tranformer encoder. These representations work well as input to classification models.

sentence_encodings = module(
  ["hello how are you?", "what is your name?", "thank you good bye"])

encode_context

Takes as input contexts, a string tensor of contexts to encode. Outputs 512 dimensional vectors, giving the context representation of each input. These are trained to have a high cosine-similarity with the response representations of good responses (from the encode_response signature)

context_encodings = module(
  ["hello how are you?", "what is your name?", "thank you good bye"],
  signature="encode_context")

encode_response

Takes as input responses, a string tensor of responses to encode. Outputs 512 dimensional vectors, giving the response representation of each input. These are trained to have a high cosine-similarity with the context representations of good corresponding contexts (from the encode_context signature)

response_encodings = module(
  ["i am well", "I am Matt", "bye!"],
  signature="encode_response")

encode_sequence

Takes as input sentences, a string tensor of sentences to encode. This outputs sequence encodings, a 3-tensor of shape [batch_size, max_sequence_length, 512], as well as the corresponding subword tokens, a utf8-encoded matrix of shape [batch_size, max_sequence_length]. The tokens matrix is padded with empty strings, which may help in masking the sequence tensor. The encoder_utils.py library has a few functions for dealing with these tokenizations, including a detokenization function, and a function that infers byte spans in the original strings.

output = module(
  ["i am well", "I am Matt", "bye!"],
  signature="encode_sequence", as_dict=True)
sequence_encodings = output['sequence_encoding']
tokens = output['tokens']

tokenize

Takes as input sentences, a string tensor of sentences to encode. This outputs the corresponding subword tokens, a utf8-encoded matrix of shape [batch_size, max_sequence_length]. The tokens matrix is padded with empty strings. Usually this process is internal to the network, but for some applications it may be useful to access the internal tokenization.

tokens = module(
  ["i am well", "I am Matt", "bye!"],
  signature="tokenize")

Multi-Context ConveRT

This is the multi-context ConveRT model from the ConveRT paper, that uses extra contexts from the conversational history to refine the context representations. This is an unquantized version of the model. The Tensorflow Hub url is:

module = tfhub.Module("http://models.poly-ai.com/multi_context_convert/v1/model.tar.gz")

TFHub signatures

This model has the same signatures as the ConveRT encoder, except for the encode_context signature that also takes the extra contexts as input. The extra contexts are the previous messages in the dialogue (typically at most 10) prior to the immediate context, and must be joined with spaces from most recent to oldest.

For example, consider the dialogue:

A: Hey! B: Hello how are you? A: Fine, strange weather recently right? B: Yeah

then the context representation is computed as:

context = ["Yeah"]
extra_context = ["Fine, strange weather recently right? Hello how are you? Hey!"]
context_encodings = module(
  {
    'context': context,
    'extra_context': extra_context,
  },
  signature="encode_context",
)

See encoder_client.py for code that computes these features.

ConveRT finetuned on Ubuntu

This is the multi-context ConveRT model, fine-tuned to the DSTC7 Ubuntu response ranking task. It has the exact same signatures as the extra context model, and has TFHub uri http://models.poly-ai.com/ubuntu_convert/v1/model.tar.gz. Note that this model requires prefixing the extra context features with "0: ", "1: ", "2: " etc.

The dstc7/evaluate_encoder.py script demonstrates using this encoder to reproduce the results from the ConveRT paper.

Keras layers

Keras layers for the above encoder models are implemented in encoder_layers.py. These may be useful for building a model that extends the encoder models, and/or fine-tuning them to your own data.

Encoder client

A python class EncoderClient is implemented in encoder_client.py, that gives a simple interface for encoding sentences, contexts, and responses with the above models. It takes python strings as input, and numpy matrices as output:

client = encoder_client.EncoderClient(
    "http://models.poly-ai.com/convert/v1/model.tar.gz")

# We will find good responses to the following context.    
context_encodings = client.encode_contexts(["What's your name?"])

# Let's rank the following responses as candidates.
candidate_responses = ["No thanks.", "I'm Matt.", "Hey.", "I have a dog."]
response_encodings = client.encode_responses(candidate_responses)

# The scores are computed using the dot product.
scores = response_encodings.dot(context_encodings.T).flatten()

# Output the top scoring response.
top_idx = scores.argmax()
print(f"Best response: {candidate_responses[top_idx]}, score: {scores[top_idx]:.3f}")

# This should print "Best response: I'm Matt., score: 0.377".

Internally it implements caching, deduplication, and batching, to help speed up encoding. Note that because it does batching internally, you can pass very large lists of sentences to encode without going out of memory.

Citations

@article{Henderson2019convert,
    title={{ConveRT}: Efficient and Accurate Conversational Representations from Transformers},
    author={Matthew Henderson and I{\~{n}}igo Casanueva and Nikola Mrk\v{s}i\'{c} and Pei-Hao Su and Tsung-Hsien and Ivan Vuli\'{c}},
    journal={CoRR},
    volume={abs/1911.03688},
    year={2019},
    url={http://arxiv.org/abs/1911.03688},
}

Development

Setting up an environment for development:

  • Create a python 3 virtual environment
python3 -m venv ./venv
  • Install the requirements
. venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
  • Run the unit tests
python -m unittest discover -p '*_test.py' .

Pull requests will trigger a CircleCI build that:

  • runs flake8 and isort
  • runs the unit tests

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