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Massive Text Embedding Benchmark

Project description

Massive Text Embedding Benchmark

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Installation | Usage | Leaderboard | Documentation | Citing

Installation

pip install mteb

Usage

import mteb
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer

# Define the sentence-transformers model name
model_name = "average_word_embeddings_komninos"
# or directly from huggingface:
# model_name = "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2"

model = SentenceTransformer(model_name)
tasks = mteb.get_tasks(tasks=["Banking77Classification"])
evaluation = mteb.MTEB(tasks=tasks)
results = evaluation.run(model, output_folder=f"results/{model_name}")
  • Using CLI
mteb available_tasks

mteb run -m sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2 \
    -t Banking77Classification  \
    --verbosity 3

# if nothing is specified default to saving the results in the results/{model_name} folder
  • Using multiple GPUs in parallel can be done by just having a custom encode function that distributes the inputs to multiple GPUs like e.g. here or here.

Advanced Usage (click to unfold)

Advanced Usage

Dataset selection

Datasets can be selected by providing the list of datasets, but also

  • by their task (e.g. "Clustering" or "Classification")
tasks = mteb.get_tasks(task_types=["Clustering", "Retrieval"]) # Only select clustering and retrieval tasks
  • by their categories e.g. "s2s" (sentence to sentence) or "p2p" (paragraph to paragraph)
tasks = mteb.get_tasks(categories=["s2s", "p2p"]) # Only select sentence2sentence and paragraph2paragraph datasets
  • by their languages
tasks = mteb.get_tasks(languages=["eng", "deu"]) # Only select datasets which contain "eng" or "deu" (iso 639-3 codes)

You can also specify which languages to load for multilingual/cross-lingual tasks like below:

import mteb

tasks = [
    mteb.get_task("AmazonReviewsClassification", languages = ["eng", "fra"]),
    mteb.get_task("BUCCBitextMining", languages = ["deu"]), # all subsets containing "deu"
]

# or you can select specific huggingface subsets like this:
from mteb.tasks import AmazonReviewsClassification, BUCCBitextMining

evaluation = mteb.MTEB(tasks=[
        AmazonReviewsClassification(hf_subsets=["en", "fr"]) # Only load "en" and "fr" subsets of Amazon Reviews
        BUCCBitextMining(hf_subsets=["de-en"]), # Only load "de-en" subset of BUCC
])
# for an example of a HF subset see "Subset" in the dataset viewer at: https://huggingface.co/datasets/mteb/bucc-bitext-mining

There are also presets available for certain task collections, e.g. to select the 56 English datasets that form the "Overall MTEB English leaderboard":

from mteb import MTEB_MAIN_EN
evaluation = mteb.MTEB(tasks=MTEB_MAIN_EN, task_langs=["en"])

Passing in encode arguments

To pass in arguments to the model's encode function, you can use the encode keyword arguments (encode_kwargs):

evaluation.run(model, encode_kwargs={"batch_size": 32}

Evaluation split

You can evaluate only on test splits of all tasks by doing the following:

evaluation.run(model, eval_splits=["test"])

Note that the public leaderboard uses the test splits for all datasets except MSMARCO, where the "dev" split is used.

Using a custom model

Models should implement the following interface, implementing an encode function taking as inputs a list of sentences, and returning a list of embeddings (embeddings can be np.array, torch.tensor, etc.). For inspiration, you can look at the mteb/mtebscripts repo used for running diverse models via SLURM scripts for the paper.

class MyModel():
    def encode(
        self, sentences: list[str], **kwargs: Any
    ) -> torch.Tensor | np.ndarray:
        """Encodes the given sentences using the encoder.

        Args:
            sentences: The sentences to encode.
            **kwargs: Additional arguments to pass to the encoder.

        Returns:
            The encoded sentences.
        """
        pass

model = MyModel()
tasks = mteb.get_task("Banking77Classification")
evaluation = MTEB(tasks=tasks)
evaluation.run(model)

If you'd like to use different encoding functions for query and corpus when evaluating on Retrieval or Reranking tasks, you can add separate methods for encode_queries and encode_corpus. If these methods exist, they will be automatically used for those tasks. You can refer to the DRESModel at mteb/evaluation/evaluators/RetrievalEvaluator.py for an example of these functions.

class MyModel():
    def encode_queries(self, queries: list[str], **kwargs) -> list[np.ndarray] | list[torch.Tensor]:
        """
        Returns a list of embeddings for the given sentences.
        Args:
            queries: List of sentences to encode

        Returns:
            List of embeddings for the given sentences
        """
        pass

    def encode_corpus(self, corpus: list[str] | list[dict[str, str]], **kwargs) -> list[np.ndarray] | list[torch.Tensor]:
        """
        Returns a list of embeddings for the given sentences.
        Args:
            corpus: List of sentences to encode
                or list of dictionaries with keys "title" and "text"

        Returns:
            List of embeddings for the given sentences
        """
        pass

Evaluating on a custom dataset

To evaluate on a custom task, you can run the following code on your custom task. See how to add a new task, for how to create a new task in MTEB.

from mteb import MTEB
from mteb.abstasks.AbsTaskReranking import AbsTaskReranking
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer


class MyCustomTask(AbsTaskReranking):
    ...

model = SentenceTransformer("average_word_embeddings_komninos")
evaluation = MTEB(tasks=[MyCustomTask()])
evaluation.run(model)

Documentation

Documentation
📋 Tasks  Overview of available tasks
📈 Leaderboard The interactive leaderboard of the benchmark
🤖 Adding a model Information related to how to submit a model to the leaderboard
👩‍🔬 Reproducible workflows Information related to how to reproduce and create reproducible workflows with MTEB
👩‍💻 Adding a dataset How to add a new task/dataset to MTEB
👩‍💻 Adding a leaderboard tab How to add a new leaderboard tab to MTEB
🤝 Contributing How to contribute to MTEB and set it up for development
🌐 MMTEB An open-source effort to extend MTEB to cover a broad set of languages

Citing

MTEB was introduced in "MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark", feel free to cite:

@article{muennighoff2022mteb,
  doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2210.07316},
  url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.07316},
  author = {Muennighoff, Niklas and Tazi, Nouamane and Magne, Lo{\"\i}c and Reimers, Nils},
  title = {MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark},
  publisher = {arXiv},
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2210.07316},  
  year = {2022}
}

You may also want to read and cite the amazing work that has extended MTEB & integrated new datasets:

For works that have used MTEB for benchmarking, you can find them on the leaderboard.

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