Non-Linguistic Supervision for Contrastive Learning of Sentence Embeddings
This work addresses the need for better semantic sentence representations in NLP, offering a language-agnostic approach that is incremental by extending existing contrastive learning methods.
The paper tackles the problem of improving sentence embedding quality by training Transformer-based encoders with multi-modal multi-task losses using unpaired non-linguistic data like images or audio, resulting in higher quality embeddings as shown on 7 semantic textual similarity benchmarks.
Semantic representation learning for sentences is an important and well-studied problem in NLP. The current trend for this task involves training a Transformer-based sentence encoder through a contrastive objective with text, i.e., clustering sentences with semantically similar meanings and scattering others. In this work, we find the performance of Transformer models as sentence encoders can be improved by training with multi-modal multi-task losses, using unpaired examples from another modality (e.g., sentences and unrelated image/audio data). In particular, besides learning by the contrastive loss on text, our model clusters examples from a non-linguistic domain (e.g., visual/audio) with a similar contrastive loss at the same time. The reliance of our framework on unpaired non-linguistic data makes it language-agnostic, enabling it to be widely applicable beyond English NLP. Experiments on 7 semantic textual similarity benchmarks reveal that models trained with the additional non-linguistic (images/audio) contrastive objective lead to higher quality sentence embeddings. This indicates that Transformer models are able to generalize better by doing a similar task (i.e., clustering) with unpaired examples from different modalities in a multi-task fashion.