Taking Notes on the Fly Helps BERT Pre-training
This addresses a bottleneck in NLP pre-training efficiency for researchers and practitioners, offering a novel method to improve data utilization, though it is incremental as it builds on existing models like BERT and ELECTRA.
The paper tackles the inefficiency of unsupervised language pre-training due to rare words with poorly optimized embeddings by proposing Taking Notes on the Fly (TNF), which uses cross-sentence information to enhance semantics, resulting in 60% less training time to reach the same performance and improved downstream task scores.
How to make unsupervised language pre-training more efficient and less resource-intensive is an important research direction in NLP. In this paper, we focus on improving the efficiency of language pre-training methods through providing better data utilization. It is well-known that in language data corpus, words follow a heavy-tail distribution. A large proportion of words appear only very few times and the embeddings of rare words are usually poorly optimized. We argue that such embeddings carry inadequate semantic signals, which could make the data utilization inefficient and slow down the pre-training of the entire model. To mitigate this problem, we propose Taking Notes on the Fly (TNF), which takes notes for rare words on the fly during pre-training to help the model understand them when they occur next time. Specifically, TNF maintains a note dictionary and saves a rare word's contextual information in it as notes when the rare word occurs in a sentence. When the same rare word occurs again during training, the note information saved beforehand can be employed to enhance the semantics of the current sentence. By doing so, TNF provides better data utilization since cross-sentence information is employed to cover the inadequate semantics caused by rare words in the sentences. We implement TNF on both BERT and ELECTRA to check its efficiency and effectiveness. Experimental results show that TNF's training time is $60\%$ less than its backbone pre-training models when reaching the same performance. When trained with the same number of iterations, TNF outperforms its backbone methods on most of downstream tasks and the average GLUE score. Source code is attached in the supplementary material.