CBOW v.s. skip-gram: why invert context and target words?

被刻印的时光 ゝ 提交于 2019-12-02 14:18:27
Serhiy

Here is my oversimplified and rather naive understanding of the difference:

As we know, CBOW is learning to predict the word by the context. Or maximize the probability of the target word by looking at the context. And this happens to be a problem for rare words. For example, given the context yesterday was a really [...] day CBOW model will tell you that most probably the word is beautiful or nice. Words like delightful will get much less attention of the model, because it is designed to predict the most probable word. This word will be smoothed over a lot of examples with more frequent words.

On the other hand, the skip-gram model is designed to predict the context. Given the word delightful it must understand it and tell us that there is a huge probability that the context is yesterday was really [...] day, or some other relevant context. With skip-gram the word delightful will not try to compete with the word beautiful but instead, delightful+context pairs will be treated as new observations.

UPDATE

Thanks to @0xF for sharing this article

According to Mikolov

Skip-gram: works well with small amount of the training data, represents well even rare words or phrases.

CBOW: several times faster to train than the skip-gram, slightly better accuracy for the frequent words

One more addition to the subject is found here:

In the "skip-gram" mode alternative to "CBOW", rather than averaging the context words, each is used as a pairwise training example. That is, in place of one CBOW example such as [predict 'ate' from average('The', 'cat', 'the', 'mouse')], the network is presented with four skip-gram examples [predict 'ate' from 'The'], [predict 'ate' from 'cat'], [predict 'ate' from 'the'], [predict 'ate' from 'mouse']. (The same random window-reduction occurs, so half the time that would just be two examples, of the nearest words.)

It has to do with what exactly you're calculating at any given point. The difference will become clearer if you start to look at models that incorporate a larger context for each probability calculation.

In skip-gram, you're calculating the context word(s) from the word at the current position in the sentence; you're "skipping" the current word (and potentially a bit of the context) in your calculation. The result can be more than one word (but not if your context window is just one word long).

In CBOW, you're calculating the current word from the context word(s), so you will only ever have one word as a result.

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!