AnalogyArcade / README.md
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A newer version of the Gradio SDK is available: 5.5.0

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metadata
title: AnalogyArcade
emoji: πŸ†
colorFrom: blue
colorTo: yellow
sdk: gradio
sdk_version: 4.8.0
app_file: app.py
pinned: false

Check out the configuration reference at https://huggingface.co/docs/hub/spaces-config-reference

Model Types

Baseline

For my dataset, I made use of relbert/analogy_questions on huggingface, which has all data in the format of:

"stem": ["raphael", "painter"],
"answer": 2,
"choice": [["andersen", "plato"],
          ["reading", "berkshire"],
          ["marx", "philosopher"],
          ["tolstoi", "edison"]]

For a baseline, if I were to do a random selection for answer to train the system on (so the stem analogy is compared to a random choice among the answers), then there would only be a 25% baseline for correct categorization and comparison.

Bag-of-Words Model

For comparison, I made use of my previously trained bag-of-words model from our previous project.

Fine-Tuning

Dataset

analogy questions dataset

This database uses a text with label format, with each label being an integer between 0 and 3, relating to the 4 main categories of the news: World (0), Sports (1), Business (2), Sci/Tech (3).

I chose this one because of the larger variety of categories compared to sentiment databases, with the themes/categories theoretically being more closely related to analogies. I also chose ag_news because, as a news source, it should avoid slang and other potential hiccups that databases using tweets or general reviews will have.

Pre-trained model

sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2

Because my focus is on using embeddings to evaluate analogies for the AnalogyArcade, I focused my model search for those in the sentence-transformers category, as they are readily made for embedding usage. I chose all-MiniLM-L6-v2 because of its high usage and good reviews: it is a well trained model but smaller and more efficient than its previous version.

In-Context

User Guide

Introduction

Usage

Documentation

Experiments

Limitations