CLOct 21, 2023
Transductive Learning for Textual Few-Shot Classification in API-based Embedding ModelsPierre Colombo, Victor Pellegrain, Malik Boudiaf et al.
Proprietary and closed APIs are becoming increasingly common to process natural language, and are impacting the practical applications of natural language processing, including few-shot classification. Few-shot classification involves training a model to perform a new classification task with a handful of labeled data. This paper presents three contributions. First, we introduce a scenario where the embedding of a pre-trained model is served through a gated API with compute-cost and data-privacy constraints. Second, we propose a transductive inference, a learning paradigm that has been overlooked by the NLP community. Transductive inference, unlike traditional inductive learning, leverages the statistics of unlabeled data. We also introduce a new parameter-free transductive regularizer based on the Fisher-Rao loss, which can be used on top of the gated API embeddings. This method fully utilizes unlabeled data, does not share any label with the third-party API provider and could serve as a baseline for future research. Third, we propose an improved experimental setting and compile a benchmark of eight datasets involving multiclass classification in four different languages, with up to 151 classes. We evaluate our methods using eight backbone models, along with an episodic evaluation over 1,000 episodes, which demonstrate the superiority of transductive inference over the standard inductive setting.
LGOct 15, 2021
StreaMulT: Streaming Multimodal Transformer for Heterogeneous and Arbitrary Long Sequential DataVictor Pellegrain, Myriam Tami, Michel Batteux et al.
The increasing complexity of Industry 4.0 systems brings new challenges regarding predictive maintenance tasks such as fault detection and diagnosis. A corresponding and realistic setting includes multi-source data streams from different modalities, such as sensors measurements time series, machine images, textual maintenance reports, etc. These heterogeneous multimodal streams also differ in their acquisition frequency, may embed temporally unaligned information and can be arbitrarily long, depending on the considered system and task. Whereas multimodal fusion has been largely studied in a static setting, to the best of our knowledge, there exists no previous work considering arbitrarily long multimodal streams alongside with related tasks such as prediction across time. Thus, in this paper, we first formalize this paradigm of heterogeneous multimodal learning in a streaming setting as a new one. To tackle this challenge, we propose StreaMulT, a Streaming Multimodal Transformer relying on cross-modal attention and on a memory bank to process arbitrarily long input sequences at training time and run in a streaming way at inference. StreaMulT improves the state-of-the-art metrics on CMU-MOSEI dataset for Multimodal Sentiment Analysis task, while being able to deal with much longer inputs than other multimodal models. The conducted experiments eventually highlight the importance of the textual embedding layer, questioning recent improvements in Multimodal Sentiment Analysis benchmarks.