Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
ALBERT: A L ITE BERT FOR S ELF - SUPERVISED
L EARNING OF L ANGUAGE R EPRESENTATIONS
Zhenzhong Lan1 Mingda Chen2∗ Sebastian Goodman1 Kevin Gimpel2
Piyush Sharma1 Radu Soricut1
1
Google Research 2
Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago
{lanzhzh, seabass, piyushsharma, rsoricut}@google.com
{mchen, kgimpel}@ttic.edu
arXiv:1909.11942v6 [cs.CL] 9 Feb 2020
A BSTRACT
Increasing model size when pretraining natural language representations often re-
sults in improved performance on downstream tasks. However, at some point fur-
ther model increases become harder due to GPU/TPU memory limitations and
longer training times. To address these problems, we present two parameter-
reduction techniques to lower memory consumption and increase the training
speed of BERT (Devlin et al., 2019). Comprehensive empirical evidence shows
that our proposed methods lead to models that scale much better compared to
the original BERT. We also use a self-supervised loss that focuses on modeling
inter-sentence coherence, and show it consistently helps downstream tasks with
multi-sentence inputs. As a result, our best model establishes new state-of-the-art
results on the GLUE, RACE, and SQuAD benchmarks while having fewer param-
eters compared to BERT-large. The code and the pretrained models are available
at https://github.com/google-research/ALBERT.
1 I NTRODUCTION
Full network pre-training (Dai & Le, 2015; Radford et al., 2018; Devlin et al., 2019; Howard &
Ruder, 2018) has led to a series of breakthroughs in language representation learning. Many non-
trivial NLP tasks, including those that have limited training data, have greatly benefited from these
pre-trained models. One of the most compelling signs of these breakthroughs is the evolution of ma-
chine performance on a reading comprehension task designed for middle and high-school English
exams in China, the RACE test (Lai et al., 2017): the paper that originally describes the task and for-
mulates the modeling challenge reports then state-of-the-art machine accuracy at 44.1%; the latest
published result reports their model performance at 83.2% (Liu et al., 2019); the work we present
here pushes it even higher to 89.4%, a stunning 45.3% improvement that is mainly attributable to
our current ability to build high-performance pretrained language representations.
Evidence from these improvements reveals that a large network is of crucial importance for achiev-
ing state-of-the-art performance (Devlin et al., 2019; Radford et al., 2019). It has become common
practice to pre-train large models and distill them down to smaller ones (Sun et al., 2019; Turc et al.,
2019) for real applications. Given the importance of model size, we ask: Is having better NLP
models as easy as having larger models?
An obstacle to answering this question is the memory limitations of available hardware. Given that
current state-of-the-art models often have hundreds of millions or even billions of parameters, it is
easy to hit these limitations as we try to scale our models. Training speed can also be significantly
hampered in distributed training, as the communication overhead is directly proportional to the
number of parameters in the model.
Existing solutions to the aforementioned problems include model parallelization (Shazeer et al.,
2018; Shoeybi et al., 2019) and clever memory management (Chen et al., 2016; Gomez et al., 2017).
∗
Work done as an intern at Google Research, driving data processing and downstream task evaluations.
1
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
These solutions address the memory limitation problem, but not the communication overhead. In
this paper, we address all of the aforementioned problems, by designing A Lite BERT (ALBERT)
architecture that has significantly fewer parameters than a traditional BERT architecture.
ALBERT incorporates two parameter reduction techniques that lift the major obstacles in scaling
pre-trained models. The first one is a factorized embedding parameterization. By decomposing
the large vocabulary embedding matrix into two small matrices, we separate the size of the hidden
layers from the size of vocabulary embedding. This separation makes it easier to grow the hidden
size without significantly increasing the parameter size of the vocabulary embeddings. The second
technique is cross-layer parameter sharing. This technique prevents the parameter from growing
with the depth of the network. Both techniques significantly reduce the number of parameters for
BERT without seriously hurting performance, thus improving parameter-efficiency. An ALBERT
configuration similar to BERT-large has 18x fewer parameters and can be trained about 1.7x faster.
The parameter reduction techniques also act as a form of regularization that stabilizes the training
and helps with generalization.
To further improve the performance of ALBERT, we also introduce a self-supervised loss for
sentence-order prediction (SOP). SOP primary focuses on inter-sentence coherence and is designed
to address the ineffectiveness (Yang et al., 2019; Liu et al., 2019) of the next sentence prediction
(NSP) loss proposed in the original BERT.
As a result of these design decisions, we are able to scale up to much larger ALBERT configurations
that still have fewer parameters than BERT-large but achieve significantly better performance. We
establish new state-of-the-art results on the well-known GLUE, SQuAD, and RACE benchmarks
for natural language understanding. Specifically, we push the RACE accuracy to 89.4%, the GLUE
benchmark to 89.4, and the F1 score of SQuAD 2.0 to 92.2.
2 R ELATED WORK
2.1 S CALING U P R EPRESENTATION L EARNING FOR NATURAL L ANGUAGE
Learning representations of natural language has been shown to be useful for a wide range of NLP
tasks and has been widely adopted (Mikolov et al., 2013; Le & Mikolov, 2014; Dai & Le, 2015; Pe-
ters et al., 2018; Devlin et al., 2019; Radford et al., 2018; 2019). One of the most significant changes
in the last two years is the shift from pre-training word embeddings, whether standard (Mikolov
et al., 2013; Pennington et al., 2014) or contextualized (McCann et al., 2017; Peters et al., 2018),
to full-network pre-training followed by task-specific fine-tuning (Dai & Le, 2015; Radford et al.,
2018; Devlin et al., 2019). In this line of work, it is often shown that larger model size improves
performance. For example, Devlin et al. (2019) show that across three selected natural language
understanding tasks, using larger hidden size, more hidden layers, and more attention heads always
leads to better performance. However, they stop at a hidden size of 1024, presumably because of the
model size and computation cost problems.
It is difficult to experiment with large models due to computational constraints, especially in terms
of GPU/TPU memory limitations. Given that current state-of-the-art models often have hundreds of
millions or even billions of parameters, we can easily hit memory limits. To address this issue, Chen
et al. (2016) propose a method called gradient checkpointing to reduce the memory requirement to be
sublinear at the cost of an extra forward pass. Gomez et al. (2017) propose a way to reconstruct each
layer’s activations from the next layer so that they do not need to store the intermediate activations.
Both methods reduce the memory consumption at the cost of speed. Raffel et al. (2019) proposed
to use model parallelization to train a giant model. In contrast, our parameter-reduction techniques
reduce memory consumption and increase training speed.
2.2 C ROSS - LAYER PARAMETER SHARING
The idea of sharing parameters across layers has been previously explored with the Transformer
architecture (Vaswani et al., 2017), but this prior work has focused on training for standard encoder-
decoder tasks rather than the pretraining/finetuning setting. Different from our observations, De-
hghani et al. (2018) show that networks with cross-layer parameter sharing (Universal Transformer,
UT) get better performance on language modeling and subject-verb agreement than the standard
2
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
transformer. Very recently, Bai et al. (2019) propose a Deep Equilibrium Model (DQE) for trans-
former networks and show that DQE can reach an equilibrium point for which the input embedding
and the output embedding of a certain layer stay the same. Our observations show that our em-
beddings are oscillating rather than converging. Hao et al. (2019) combine a parameter-sharing
transformer with the standard one, which further increases the number of parameters of the standard
transformer.
2.3 S ENTENCE O RDERING O BJECTIVES
ALBERT uses a pretraining loss based on predicting the ordering of two consecutive segments
of text. Several researchers have experimented with pretraining objectives that similarly relate to
discourse coherence. Coherence and cohesion in discourse have been widely studied and many
phenomena have been identified that connect neighboring text segments (Hobbs, 1979; Halliday &
Hasan, 1976; Grosz et al., 1995). Most objectives found effective in practice are quite simple. Skip-
thought (Kiros et al., 2015) and FastSent (Hill et al., 2016) sentence embeddings are learned by using
an encoding of a sentence to predict words in neighboring sentences. Other objectives for sentence
embedding learning include predicting future sentences rather than only neighbors (Gan et al., 2017)
and predicting explicit discourse markers (Jernite et al., 2017; Nie et al., 2019). Our loss is most
similar to the sentence ordering objective of Jernite et al. (2017), where sentence embeddings are
learned in order to determine the ordering of two consecutive sentences. Unlike most of the above
work, however, our loss is defined on textual segments rather than sentences. BERT (Devlin et al.,
2019) uses a loss based on predicting whether the second segment in a pair has been swapped
with a segment from another document. We compare to this loss in our experiments and find that
sentence ordering is a more challenging pretraining task and more useful for certain downstream
tasks. Concurrently to our work, Wang et al. (2019) also try to predict the order of two consecutive
segments of text, but they combine it with the original next sentence prediction in a three-way
classification task rather than empirically comparing the two.
3 T HE E LEMENTS OF ALBERT
In this section, we present the design decisions for ALBERT and provide quantified comparisons
against corresponding configurations of the original BERT architecture (Devlin et al., 2019).
3.1 M ODEL ARCHITECTURE CHOICES
The backbone of the ALBERT architecture is similar to BERT in that it uses a transformer en-
coder (Vaswani et al., 2017) with GELU nonlinearities (Hendrycks & Gimpel, 2016). We follow the
BERT notation conventions and denote the vocabulary embedding size as E, the number of encoder
layers as L, and the hidden size as H. Following Devlin et al. (2019), we set the feed-forward/filter
size to be 4H and the number of attention heads to be H/64.
There are three main contributions that ALBERT makes over the design choices of BERT.
Factorized embedding parameterization. In BERT, as well as subsequent modeling improve-
ments such as XLNet (Yang et al., 2019) and RoBERTa (Liu et al., 2019), the WordPiece embedding
size E is tied with the hidden layer size H, i.e., E ≡ H. This decision appears suboptimal for both
modeling and practical reasons, as follows.
From a modeling perspective, WordPiece embeddings are meant to learn context-independent repre-
sentations, whereas hidden-layer embeddings are meant to learn context-dependent representations.
As experiments with context length indicate (Liu et al., 2019), the power of BERT-like represen-
tations comes from the use of context to provide the signal for learning such context-dependent
representations. As such, untying the WordPiece embedding size E from the hidden layer size H
allows us to make a more efficient usage of the total model parameters as informed by modeling
needs, which dictate that H E.
From a practical perspective, natural language processing usually require the vocabulary size V to
be large.1 If E ≡ H, then increasing H increases the size of the embedding matrix, which has size
1
Similar to BERT, all the experiments in this paper use a vocabulary size V of 30,000.
3
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
V × E. This can easily result in a model with billions of parameters, most of which are only updated
sparsely during training.
Therefore, for ALBERT we use a factorization of the embedding parameters, decomposing them
into two smaller matrices. Instead of projecting the one-hot vectors directly into the hidden space of
size H, we first project them into a lower dimensional embedding space of size E, and then project
it to the hidden space. By using this decomposition, we reduce the embedding parameters from
O(V × H) to O(V × E + E × H). This parameter reduction is significant when H E. We
choose to use the same E for all word pieces because they are much more evenly distributed across
documents compared to whole-word embedding, where having different embedding size (Grave
et al. (2017); Baevski & Auli (2018); Dai et al. (2019) ) for different words is important.
Cross-layer parameter sharing. For ALBERT, we propose cross-layer parameter sharing as an-
other way to improve parameter efficiency. There are multiple ways to share parameters, e.g., only
sharing feed-forward network (FFN) parameters across layers, or only sharing attention parameters.
The default decision for ALBERT is to share all parameters across layers. All our experiments
use this default decision unless otherwise specified. We compare this design decision against other
strategies in our experiments in Sec. 4.5.
Similar strategies have been explored by Dehghani et al. (2018) (Universal Transformer, UT) and
Bai et al. (2019) (Deep Equilibrium Models, DQE) for Transformer networks. Different from our
observations, Dehghani et al. (2018) show that UT outperforms a vanilla Transformer. Bai et al.
(2019) show that their DQEs reach an equilibrium point for which the input and output embedding
of a certain layer stay the same. Our measurement on the L2 distances and cosine similarity show
that our embeddings are oscillating rather than converging.
18 45
16 BERT-large 40 BERT-large
Cosine Similarity (Degree)
14 ALBERT-large 35 ALBERT-large
12 30
L2 distance
10 25
8 20
6 15
4 10
2 5
0 0
0 5 10 15 20 25 0 5 10 15 20 25
Layer ID Layer ID
Figure 1: The L2 distances and cosine similarity (in terms of degree) of the input and output embed-
ding of each layer for BERT-large and ALBERT-large.
Figure 1 shows the L2 distances and cosine similarity of the input and output embeddings for each
layer, using BERT-large and ALBERT-large configurations (see Table 1). We observe that the tran-
sitions from layer to layer are much smoother for ALBERT than for BERT. These results show that
weight-sharing has an effect on stabilizing network parameters. Although there is a drop for both
metrics compared to BERT, they nevertheless do not converge to 0 even after 24 layers. This shows
that the solution space for ALBERT parameters is very different from the one found by DQE.
Inter-sentence coherence loss. In addition to the masked language modeling (MLM) loss (De-
vlin et al., 2019), BERT uses an additional loss called next-sentence prediction (NSP). NSP is a
binary classification loss for predicting whether two segments appear consecutively in the original
text, as follows: positive examples are created by taking consecutive segments from the training
corpus; negative examples are created by pairing segments from different documents; positive and
negative examples are sampled with equal probability. The NSP objective was designed to improve
performance on downstream tasks, such as natural language inference, that require reasoning about
the relationship between sentence pairs. However, subsequent studies (Yang et al., 2019; Liu et al.,
2019) found NSP’s impact unreliable and decided to eliminate it, a decision supported by an im-
provement in downstream task performance across several tasks.
We conjecture that the main reason behind NSP’s ineffectiveness is its lack of difficulty as a task,
as compared to MLM. As formulated, NSP conflates topic prediction and coherence prediction in a
4
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
Model Parameters Layers Hidden Embedding Parameter-sharing
base 108M 12 768 768 False
BERT large 334M 24 1024 1024 False
base 12M 12 768 128 True
large 18M 24 1024 128 True
ALBERT
xlarge 60M 24 2048 128 True
xxlarge 235M 12 4096 128 True
Table 1: The configurations of the main BERT and ALBERT models analyzed in this paper.
single task2 . However, topic prediction is easier to learn compared to coherence prediction, and also
overlaps more with what is learned using the MLM loss.
We maintain that inter-sentence modeling is an important aspect of language understanding, but we
propose a loss based primarily on coherence. That is, for ALBERT, we use a sentence-order pre-
diction (SOP) loss, which avoids topic prediction and instead focuses on modeling inter-sentence
coherence. The SOP loss uses as positive examples the same technique as BERT (two consecu-
tive segments from the same document), and as negative examples the same two consecutive seg-
ments but with their order swapped. This forces the model to learn finer-grained distinctions about
discourse-level coherence properties. As we show in Sec. 4.6, it turns out that NSP cannot solve the
SOP task at all (i.e., it ends up learning the easier topic-prediction signal, and performs at random-
baseline level on the SOP task), while SOP can solve the NSP task to a reasonable degree, pre-
sumably based on analyzing misaligned coherence cues. As a result, ALBERT models consistently
improve downstream task performance for multi-sentence encoding tasks.
3.2 M ODEL SETUP
We present the differences between BERT and ALBERT models with comparable hyperparameter
settings in Table 1. Due to the design choices discussed above, ALBERT models have much smaller
parameter size compared to corresponding BERT models.
For example, ALBERT-large has about 18x fewer parameters compared to BERT-large, 18M ver-
sus 334M. An ALBERT-xlarge configuration with H = 2048 has only 60M parameters and an
ALBERT-xxlarge configuration with H = 4096 has 233M parameters, i.e., around 70% of BERT-
large’s parameters. Note that for ALBERT-xxlarge, we mainly report results on a 12-layer network
because a 24-layer network (with the same configuration) obtains similar results but is computation-
ally more expensive.
This improvement in parameter efficiency is the most important advantage of ALBERT’s design
choices. Before we can quantify this advantage, we need to introduce our experimental setup in
more detail.
4 E XPERIMENTAL R ESULTS
4.1 E XPERIMENTAL S ETUP
To keep the comparison as meaningful as possible, we follow the BERT (Devlin et al., 2019) setup in
using the B OOK C ORPUS (Zhu et al., 2015) and English Wikipedia (Devlin et al., 2019) for pretrain-
ing baseline models. These two corpora consist of around 16GB of uncompressed text. We format
our inputs as “[CLS] x1 [SEP] x2 [SEP]”, where x1 = x1,1 , x1,2 · · · and x2 = x1,1 , x1,2 · · · are
two segments.3 We always limit the maximum input length to 512, and randomly generate input
sequences shorter than 512 with a probability of 10%. Like BERT, we use a vocabulary size of
30,000, tokenized using SentencePiece (Kudo & Richardson, 2018) as in XLNet (Yang et al., 2019).
2
Since a negative example is constructed using material from a different document, the negative-example
segment is misaligned both from a topic and from a coherence perspective.
3
A segment is usually comprised of more than one natural sentence, which has been shown to benefit
performance by Liu et al. (2019).
5
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
We generate masked inputs for the MLM targets using n-gram masking (Joshi et al., 2019), with the
length of each n-gram mask selected randomly. The probability for the length n is given by
1/n
p(n) = PN
k=1 1/k
We set the maximum length of n-gram (i.e., n) to be 3 (i.e., the MLM target can consist of up to a
3-gram of complete words, such as “White House correspondents”).
All the model updates use a batch size of 4096 and a L AMB optimizer with learning rate
0.00176 (You et al., 2019). We train all models for 125,000 steps unless otherwise specified. Train-
ing was done on Cloud TPU V3. The number of TPUs used for training ranged from 64 to 512,
depending on model size.
The experimental setup described in this section is used for all of our own versions of BERT as well
as ALBERT models, unless otherwise specified.
4.2 E VALUATION B ENCHMARKS
4.2.1 I NTRINSIC E VALUATION
To monitor the training progress, we create a development set based on the development sets from
SQuAD and RACE using the same procedure as in Sec. 4.1. We report accuracies for both MLM and
sentence classification tasks. Note that we only use this set to check how the model is converging;
it has not been used in a way that would affect the performance of any downstream evaluation, such
as via model selection.
4.2.2 D OWNSTREAM E VALUATION
Following Yang et al. (2019) and Liu et al. (2019), we evaluate our models on three popular bench-
marks: The General Language Understanding Evaluation (GLUE) benchmark (Wang et al., 2018),
two versions of the Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD; Rajpurkar et al., 2016; 2018),
and the ReAding Comprehension from Examinations (RACE) dataset (Lai et al., 2017). For com-
pleteness, we provide description of these benchmarks in Appendix A.3. As in (Liu et al., 2019),
we perform early stopping on the development sets, on which we report all comparisons except for
our final comparisons based on the task leaderboards, for which we also report test set results. For
GLUE datasets that have large variances on the dev set, we report median over 5 runs.
4.3 OVERALL C OMPARISON BETWEEN BERT AND ALBERT
We are now ready to quantify the impact of the design choices described in Sec. 3, specifically the
ones around parameter efficiency. The improvement in parameter efficiency showcases the most
important advantage of ALBERT’s design choices, as shown in Table 2: with only around 70% of
BERT-large’s parameters, ALBERT-xxlarge achieves significant improvements over BERT-large, as
measured by the difference on development set scores for several representative downstream tasks:
SQuAD v1.1 (+1.9%), SQuAD v2.0 (+3.1%), MNLI (+1.4%), SST-2 (+2.2%), and RACE (+8.4%).
Another interesting observation is the speed of data throughput at training time under the same train-
ing configuration (same number of TPUs). Because of less communication and fewer computations,
ALBERT models have higher data throughput compared to their corresponding BERT models. If we
use BERT-large as the baseline, we observe that ALBERT-large is about 1.7 times faster in iterating
through the data while ALBERT-xxlarge is about 3 times slower because of the larger structure.
Next, we perform ablation experiments that quantify the individual contribution of each of the design
choices for ALBERT.
4.4 FACTORIZED E MBEDDING PARAMETERIZATION
Table 3 shows the effect of changing the vocabulary embedding size E using an ALBERT-base
configuration setting (see Table 1), using the same set of representative downstream tasks. Under
the non-shared condition (BERT-style), larger embedding sizes give better performance, but not by
6
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
Model Parameters SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg Speedup
base 108M 90.4/83.2 80.4/77.6 84.5 92.8 68.2 82.3 4.7x
BERT large 334M 92.2/85.5 85.0/82.2 86.6 93.0 73.9 85.2 1.0
base 12M 89.3/82.3 80.0/77.1 81.6 90.3 64.0 80.1 5.6x
large 18M 90.6/83.9 82.3/79.4 83.5 91.7 68.5 82.4 1.7x
ALBERT
xlarge 60M 92.5/86.1 86.1/83.1 86.4 92.4 74.8 85.5 0.6x
xxlarge 235M 94.1/88.3 88.1/85.1 88.0 95.2 82.3 88.7 0.3x
Table 2: Dev set results for models pretrained over B OOK C ORPUS and Wikipedia for 125k steps.
Here and everywhere else, the Avg column is computed by averaging the scores of the downstream
tasks to its left (the two numbers of F1 and EM for each SQuAD are first averaged).
much. Under the all-shared condition (ALBERT-style), an embedding of size 128 appears to be the
best. Based on these results, we use an embedding size E = 128 in all future settings, as a necessary
step to do further scaling.
Model E Parameters SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
64 87M 89.9/82.9 80.1/77.8 82.9 91.5 66.7 81.3
ALBERT
base 128 89M 89.9/82.8 80.3/77.3 83.7 91.5 67.9 81.7
not-shared 256 93M 90.2/83.2 80.3/77.4 84.1 91.9 67.3 81.8
768 108M 90.4/83.2 80.4/77.6 84.5 92.8 68.2 82.3
64 10M 88.7/81.4 77.5/74.8 80.8 89.4 63.5 79.0
ALBERT
base 128 12M 89.3/82.3 80.0/77.1 81.6 90.3 64.0 80.1
all-shared 256 16M 88.8/81.5 79.1/76.3 81.5 90.3 63.4 79.6
768 31M 88.6/81.5 79.2/76.6 82.0 90.6 63.3 79.8
Table 3: The effect of vocabulary embedding size on the performance of ALBERT-base.
4.5 C ROSS - LAYER PARAMETER SHARING
Table 4 presents experiments for various cross-layer parameter-sharing strategies, using an
ALBERT-base configuration (Table 1) with two embedding sizes (E = 768 and E = 128). We
compare the all-shared strategy (ALBERT-style), the not-shared strategy (BERT-style), and inter-
mediate strategies in which only the attention parameters are shared (but not the FNN ones) or only
the FFN parameters are shared (but not the attention ones).
The all-shared strategy hurts performance under both conditions, but it is less severe for E = 128 (-
1.5 on Avg) compared to E = 768 (-2.5 on Avg). In addition, most of the performance drop appears
to come from sharing the FFN-layer parameters, while sharing the attention parameters results in no
drop when E = 128 (+0.1 on Avg), and a slight drop when E = 768 (-0.7 on Avg).
There are other strategies of sharing the parameters cross layers. For example, We can divide the L
layers into N groups of size M , and each size-M group shares parameters. Overall, our experimen-
tal results shows that the smaller the group size M is, the better the performance we get. However,
decreasing group size M also dramatically increase the number of overall parameters. We choose
all-shared strategy as our default choice.
Model Parameters SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
all-shared 31M 88.6/81.5 79.2/76.6 82.0 90.6 63.3 79.8
ALBERT
base shared-attention 83M 89.9/82.7 80.0/77.2 84.0 91.4 67.7 81.6
E=768 shared-FFN 57M 89.2/82.1 78.2/75.4 81.5 90.8 62.6 79.5
not-shared 108M 90.4/83.2 80.4/77.6 84.5 92.8 68.2 82.3
all-shared 12M 89.3/82.3 80.0/77.1 82.0 90.3 64.0 80.1
ALBERT
base shared-attention 64M 89.9/82.8 80.7/77.9 83.4 91.9 67.6 81.7
E=128 shared-FFN 38M 88.9/81.6 78.6/75.6 82.3 91.7 64.4 80.2
not-shared 89M 89.9/82.8 80.3/77.3 83.2 91.5 67.9 81.6
Table 4: The effect of cross-layer parameter-sharing strategies, ALBERT-base configuration.
7
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
4.6 S ENTENCE ORDER PREDICTION (SOP)
We compare head-to-head three experimental conditions for the additional inter-sentence loss: none
(XLNet- and RoBERTa-style), NSP (BERT-style), and SOP (ALBERT-style), using an ALBERT-
base configuration. Results are shown in Table 5, both over intrinsic (accuracy for the MLM, NSP,
and SOP tasks) and downstream tasks.
Intrinsic Tasks Downstream Tasks
SP tasks MLM NSP SOP SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
None 54.9 52.4 53.3 88.6/81.5 78.1/75.3 81.5 89.9 61.7 79.0
NSP 54.5 90.5 52.0 88.4/81.5 77.2/74.6 81.6 91.1 62.3 79.2
SOP 54.0 78.9 86.5 89.3/82.3 80.0/77.1 82.0 90.3 64.0 80.1
Table 5: The effect of sentence-prediction loss, NSP vs. SOP, on intrinsic and downstream tasks.
The results on the intrinsic tasks reveal that the NSP loss brings no discriminative power to the SOP
task (52.0% accuracy, similar to the random-guess performance for the “None” condition). This
allows us to conclude that NSP ends up modeling only topic shift. In contrast, the SOP loss does
solve the NSP task relatively well (78.9% accuracy), and the SOP task even better (86.5% accuracy).
Even more importantly, the SOP loss appears to consistently improve downstream task performance
for multi-sentence encoding tasks (around +1% for SQuAD1.1, +2% for SQuAD2.0, +1.7% for
RACE), for an Avg score improvement of around +1%.
4.7 W HAT IF WE TRAIN FOR THE SAME AMOUNT OF TIME ?
The speed-up results in Table 2 indicate that data-throughput for BERT-large is about 3.17x higher
compared to ALBERT-xxlarge. Since longer training usually leads to better performance, we per-
form a comparison in which, instead of controlling for data throughput (number of training steps),
we control for the actual training time (i.e., let the models train for the same number of hours). In
Table 6, we compare the performance of a BERT-large model after 400k training steps (after 34h
of training), roughly equivalent with the amount of time needed to train an ALBERT-xxlarge model
with 125k training steps (32h of training).
Models Steps Time SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
BERT-large 400k 34h 93.5/87.4 86.9/84.3 87.8 94.6 77.3 87.2
ALBERT-xxlarge 125k 32h 94.0/88.1 88.3/85.3 87.8 95.4 82.5 88.7
Table 6: The effect of controlling for training time, BERT-large vs ALBERT-xxlarge configurations.
After training for roughly the same amount of time, ALBERT-xxlarge is significantly better than
BERT-large: +1.5% better on Avg, with the difference on RACE as high as +5.2%.
4.8 A DDITIONAL TRAINING DATA AND DROPOUT EFFECTS
The experiments done up to this point use only the Wikipedia and B OOK C ORPUS datasets, as in
(Devlin et al., 2019). In this section, we report measurements on the impact of the additional data
used by both XLNet (Yang et al., 2019) and RoBERTa (Liu et al., 2019).
Fig. 2a plots the dev set MLM accuracy under two conditions, without and with additional data, with
the latter condition giving a significant boost. We also observe performance improvements on the
downstream tasks in Table 7, except for the SQuAD benchmarks (which are Wikipedia-based, and
therefore are negatively affected by out-of-domain training material).
SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
No additional data 89.3/82.3 80.0/77.1 81.6 90.3 64.0 80.1
With additional data 88.8/81.7 79.1/76.3 82.4 92.8 66.0 80.8
Table 7: The effect of additional training data using the ALBERT-base configuration.
We also note that, even after training for 1M steps, our largest models still do not overfit to their
training data. As a result, we decide to remove dropout to further increase our model capacity. The
8
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
70.0 72.5
69.5 W/ Dropout
Dev accuracy (MLM) % Dev accuracy (MLM) %
72.0 W/O Dropout
69.0
68.5 71.5
68.0
67.5 71.0
67.0
W/O additional data 70.5
66.5 W additional data
66.0 70.0
35 40 45 50 55 90 100 110 120 130 140 150
Steps (1e4) Steps (1e4)
(a) Adding data (b) Removing dropout
Figure 2: The effects of adding data and removing dropout during training.
plot in Fig. 2b shows that removing dropout significantly improves MLM accuracy. Intermediate
evaluation on ALBERT-xxlarge at around 1M training steps (Table 8) also confirms that removing
dropout helps the downstream tasks. There is empirical (Szegedy et al., 2017) and theoretical (Li
et al., 2019) evidence showing that a combination of batch normalization and dropout in Convolu-
tional Neural Networks may have harmful results. To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to
show that dropout can hurt performance in large Transformer-based models. However, the underly-
ing network structure of ALBERT is a special case of the transformer and further experimentation
is needed to see if this phenomenon appears with other transformer-based architectures or not.
SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
With dropout 94.7/89.2 89.6/86.9 90.0 96.3 85.7 90.4
Without dropout 94.8/89.5 89.9/87.2 90.4 96.5 86.1 90.7
Table 8: The effect of removing dropout, measured for an ALBERT-xxlarge configuration.
4.9 C URRENT S TATE - OF - THE - ART ON NLU TASKS
The results we report in this section make use of the training data used by Devlin et al. (2019), as
well as the additional data used by Liu et al. (2019) and Yang et al. (2019). We report state-of-the-art
results under two settings for fine-tuning: single-model and ensembles. In both settings, we only do
single-task fine-tuning4 . Following Liu et al. (2019), on the development set we report the median
result over five runs.
Models MNLI QNLI QQP RTE SST MRPC CoLA STS WNLI Avg
Single-task single models on dev
BERT-large 86.6 92.3 91.3 70.4 93.2 88.0 60.6 90.0 - -
XLNet-large 89.8 93.9 91.8 83.8 95.6 89.2 63.6 91.8 - -
RoBERTa-large 90.2 94.7 92.2 86.6 96.4 90.9 68.0 92.4 - -
ALBERT (1M) 90.4 95.2 92.0 88.1 96.8 90.2 68.7 92.7 - -
ALBERT (1.5M) 90.8 95.3 92.2 89.2 96.9 90.9 71.4 93.0 - -
Ensembles on test (from leaderboard as of Sept. 16, 2019)
ALICE 88.2 95.7 90.7 83.5 95.2 92.6 69.2 91.1 80.8 87.0
MT-DNN 87.9 96.0 89.9 86.3 96.5 92.7 68.4 91.1 89.0 87.6
XLNet 90.2 98.6 90.3 86.3 96.8 93.0 67.8 91.6 90.4 88.4
RoBERTa 90.8 98.9 90.2 88.2 96.7 92.3 67.8 92.2 89.0 88.5
Adv-RoBERTa 91.1 98.8 90.3 88.7 96.8 93.1 68.0 92.4 89.0 88.8
ALBERT 91.3 99.2 90.5 89.2 97.1 93.4 69.1 92.5 91.8 89.4
Table 9: State-of-the-art results on the GLUE benchmark. For single-task single-model results, we
report ALBERT at 1M steps (comparable to RoBERTa) and at 1.5M steps. The ALBERT ensemble
uses models trained with 1M, 1.5M, and other numbers of steps.
The single-model ALBERT configuration incorporates the best-performing settings discussed: an
ALBERT-xxlarge configuration (Table 1) using combined MLM and SOP losses, and no dropout.
4
Following Liu et al. (2019), we fine-tune for RTE, STS, and MRPC using an MNLI checkpoint.
9
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
The checkpoints that contribute to the final ensemble model are selected based on development set
performance; the number of checkpoints considered for this selection range from 6 to 17, depending
on the task. For the GLUE (Table 9) and RACE (Table 10) benchmarks, we average the model
predictions for the ensemble models, where the candidates are fine-tuned from different training
steps using the 12-layer and 24-layer architectures. For SQuAD (Table 10), we average the pre-
diction scores for those spans that have multiple probabilities; we also average the scores of the
“unanswerable” decision.
Both single-model and ensemble results indicate that ALBERT improves the state-of-the-art signif-
icantly for all three benchmarks, achieving a GLUE score of 89.4, a SQuAD 2.0 test F1 score of
92.2, and a RACE test accuracy of 89.4. The latter appears to be a particularly strong improvement,
a jump of +17.4% absolute points over BERT (Devlin et al., 2019; Clark et al., 2019), +7.6% over
XLNet (Yang et al., 2019), +6.2% over RoBERTa (Liu et al., 2019), and 5.3% over DCMI+ (Zhang
et al., 2019), an ensemble of multiple models specifically designed for reading comprehension tasks.
Our single model achieves an accuracy of 86.5%, which is still 2.4% better than the state-of-the-art
ensemble model.
Models SQuAD1.1 dev SQuAD2.0 dev SQuAD2.0 test RACE test (Middle/High)
Single model (from leaderboard as of Sept. 23, 2019)
BERT-large 90.9/84.1 81.8/79.0 89.1/86.3 72.0 (76.6/70.1)
XLNet 94.5/89.0 88.8/86.1 89.1/86.3 81.8 (85.5/80.2)
RoBERTa 94.6/88.9 89.4/86.5 89.8/86.8 83.2 (86.5/81.3)
UPM - - 89.9/87.2 -
XLNet + SG-Net Verifier++ - - 90.1/87.2 -
ALBERT (1M) 94.8/89.2 89.9/87.2 - 86.0 (88.2/85.1)
ALBERT (1.5M) 94.8/89.3 90.2/87.4 90.9/88.1 86.5 (89.0/85.5)
Ensembles (from leaderboard as of Sept. 23, 2019)
BERT-large 92.2/86.2 - - -
XLNet + SG-Net Verifier - - 90.7/88.2 -
UPM - - 90.7/88.2
XLNet + DAAF + Verifier - - 90.9/88.6 -
DCMN+ - - - 84.1 (88.5/82.3)
ALBERT 95.5/90.1 91.4/88.9 92.2/89.7 89.4 (91.2/88.6)
Table 10: State-of-the-art results on the SQuAD and RACE benchmarks.
5 D ISCUSSION
While ALBERT-xxlarge has less parameters than BERT-large and gets significantly better results, it
is computationally more expensive due to its larger structure. An important next step is thus to speed
up the training and inference speed of ALBERT through methods like sparse attention (Child et al.,
2019) and block attention (Shen et al., 2018). An orthogonal line of research, which could provide
additional representation power, includes hard example mining (Mikolov et al., 2013) and more
efficient language modeling training (Yang et al., 2019). Additionally, although we have convincing
evidence that sentence order prediction is a more consistently-useful learning task that leads to better
language representations, we hypothesize that there could be more dimensions not yet captured by
the current self-supervised training losses that could create additional representation power for the
resulting representations.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The authors would like to thank Beer Changpinyo, Nan Ding, Noam Shazeer, and Tomer Levinboim
for discussion and providing useful feedback on the project; Omer Levy and Naman Goyal for
clarifying experimental setup for RoBERTa; Zihang Dai for clarifying XLNet; Brandon Norick,
Emma Strubell, Shaojie Bai, Chas Leichner, and Sachin Mehta for providing useful feedback on the
paper; Jacob Devlin for providing the English and multilingual version of training data; Liang Xu,
Chenjie Cao and the CLUE community for providing the training data and evaluation benechmark
of the Chinese version of ALBERT models.
10
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
R EFERENCES
Alexei Baevski and Michael Auli. Adaptive input representations for neural language modeling.
arXiv preprint arXiv:1809.10853, 2018.
Shaojie Bai, J. Zico Kolter, and Vladlen Koltun. Deep equilibrium models. In Neural Information
Processing Systems (NeurIPS), 2019.
Roy Bar-Haim, Ido Dagan, Bill Dolan, Lisa Ferro, Danilo Giampiccolo, Bernardo Magnini, and
Idan Szpektor. The second PASCAL recognising textual entailment challenge. In Proceedings of
the second PASCAL challenges workshop on recognising textual entailment, volume 6, pp. 6–4.
Venice, 2006.
Luisa Bentivogli, Peter Clark, Ido Dagan, and Danilo Giampiccolo. The fifth PASCAL recognizing
textual entailment challenge. In TAC, 2009.
Daniel Cer, Mona Diab, Eneko Agirre, Iñigo Lopez-Gazpio, and Lucia Specia. SemEval-2017 task
1: Semantic textual similarity multilingual and crosslingual focused evaluation. In Proceedings of
the 11th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation (SemEval-2017), pp. 1–14, Vancouver,
Canada, August 2017. Association for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/S17-2001.
URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/S17-2001.
Tianqi Chen, Bing Xu, Chiyuan Zhang, and Carlos Guestrin. Training deep nets with sublinear
memory cost. arXiv preprint arXiv:1604.06174, 2016.
Rewon Child, Scott Gray, Alec Radford, and Ilya Sutskever. Generating long sequences with sparse
transformers. arXiv preprint arXiv:1904.10509, 2019.
Kevin Clark, Minh-Thang Luong, Urvashi Khandelwal, Christopher D Manning, and Quoc V
Le. Bam! born-again multi-task networks for natural language understanding. arXiv preprint
arXiv:1907.04829, 2019.
Ido Dagan, Oren Glickman, and Bernardo Magnini. The PASCAL recognising textual entailment
challenge. In Machine Learning Challenges Workshop, pp. 177–190. Springer, 2005.
Andrew M Dai and Quoc V Le. Semi-supervised sequence learning. In Advances in neural infor-
mation processing systems, pp. 3079–3087, 2015.
Zihang Dai, Zhilin Yang, Yiming Yang, William W Cohen, Jaime Carbonell, Quoc V Le, and Ruslan
Salakhutdinov. Transformer-xl: Attentive language models beyond a fixed-length context. arXiv
preprint arXiv:1901.02860, 2019.
Mostafa Dehghani, Stephan Gouws, Oriol Vinyals, Jakob Uszkoreit, and Łukasz Kaiser. Universal
transformers. arXiv preprint arXiv:1807.03819, 2018.
Jacob Devlin, Ming-Wei Chang, Kenton Lee, and Kristina Toutanova. BERT: Pre-training of deep
bidirectional transformers for language understanding. In Proceedings of the 2019 Conference of
the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language
Technologies, Volume 1 (Long and Short Papers), pp. 4171–4186, Minneapolis, Minnesota, June
2019. Association for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/N19-1423. URL https:
//www.aclweb.org/anthology/N19-1423.
William B. Dolan and Chris Brockett. Automatically constructing a corpus of sentential paraphrases.
In Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Paraphrasing (IWP2005), 2005. URL
https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/I05-5002.
Zhe Gan, Yunchen Pu, Ricardo Henao, Chunyuan Li, Xiaodong He, and Lawrence Carin. Learn-
ing generic sentence representations using convolutional neural networks. In Proceedings of
the 2017 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, pp. 2390–2400,
Copenhagen, Denmark, September 2017. Association for Computational Linguistics. doi:
10.18653/v1/D17-1254. URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/D17-1254.
11
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
Danilo Giampiccolo, Bernardo Magnini, Ido Dagan, and Bill Dolan. The third PASCAL recognizing
textual entailment challenge. In Proceedings of the ACL-PASCAL Workshop on Textual Entail-
ment and Paraphrasing, pp. 1–9, Prague, June 2007. Association for Computational Linguistics.
URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/W07-1401.
Aidan N Gomez, Mengye Ren, Raquel Urtasun, and Roger B Grosse. The reversible residual net-
work: Backpropagation without storing activations. In Advances in neural information processing
systems, pp. 2214–2224, 2017.
Linyuan Gong, Di He, Zhuohan Li, Tao Qin, Liwei Wang, and Tieyan Liu. Efficient training of bert
by progressively stacking. In International Conference on Machine Learning, pp. 2337–2346,
2019.
Edouard Grave, Armand Joulin, Moustapha Cissé, Hervé Jégou, et al. Efficient softmax approxima-
tion for gpus. In Proceedings of the 34th International Conference on Machine Learning-Volume
70, pp. 1302–1310. JMLR. org, 2017.
Barbara J. Grosz, Aravind K. Joshi, and Scott Weinstein. Centering: A framework for modeling the
local coherence of discourse. Computational Linguistics, 21(2):203–225, 1995. URL https:
//www.aclweb.org/anthology/J95-2003.
M.A.K. Halliday and Ruqaiya Hasan. Cohesion in English. Routledge, 1976.
Jie Hao, Xing Wang, Baosong Yang, Longyue Wang, Jinfeng Zhang, and Zhaopeng Tu. Modeling
recurrence for transformer. Proceedings of the 2019 Conference of the North, 2019. doi: 10.
18653/v1/n19-1122. URL http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/n19-1122.
Dan Hendrycks and Kevin Gimpel. Gaussian Error Linear Units (GELUs). arXiv preprint
arXiv:1606.08415, 2016.
Felix Hill, Kyunghyun Cho, and Anna Korhonen. Learning distributed representations of sentences
from unlabelled data. In Proceedings of the 2016 Conference of the North American Chapter of
the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies, pp. 1367–1377.
Association for Computational Linguistics, 2016. doi: 10.18653/v1/N16-1162. URL http:
//aclweb.org/anthology/N16-1162.
Jerry R. Hobbs. Coherence and coreference. Cognitive Science, 3(1):67–90, 1979.
Jeremy Howard and Sebastian Ruder. Universal language model fine-tuning for text classification.
arXiv preprint arXiv:1801.06146, 2018.
Shankar Iyer, Nikhil Dandekar, and Kornl Csernai. First quora dataset release: Ques-
tion pairs, January 2017. URL https://www.quora.com/q/quoradata/
First-Quora-Dataset-Release-Question-Pairs.
Yacine Jernite, Samuel R Bowman, and David Sontag. Discourse-based objectives for fast unsuper-
vised sentence representation learning. arXiv preprint arXiv:1705.00557, 2017.
Mandar Joshi, Danqi Chen, Yinhan Liu, Daniel S Weld, Luke Zettlemoyer, and Omer Levy.
SpanBERT: Improving pre-training by representing and predicting spans. arXiv preprint
arXiv:1907.10529, 2019.
Ryan Kiros, Yukun Zhu, Ruslan Salakhutdinov, Richard S. Zemel, Antonio Torralba, Raquel Ur-
tasun, and Sanja Fidler. Skip-thought vectors. In Proceedings of the 28th International Con-
ference on Neural Information Processing Systems - Volume 2, NIPS’15, pp. 3294–3302, Cam-
bridge, MA, USA, 2015. MIT Press. URL http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=
2969442.2969607.
Taku Kudo and John Richardson. SentencePiece: A simple and language independent sub-
word tokenizer and detokenizer for neural text processing. In Proceedings of the 2018 Con-
ference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing: System Demonstrations, pp.
66–71, Brussels, Belgium, November 2018. Association for Computational Linguistics. doi:
10.18653/v1/D18-2012. URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/D18-2012.
12
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
Guokun Lai, Qizhe Xie, Hanxiao Liu, Yiming Yang, and Eduard Hovy. RACE: Large-scale ReAding
comprehension dataset from examinations. In Proceedings of the 2017 Conference on Empirical
Methods in Natural Language Processing, pp. 785–794, Copenhagen, Denmark, September 2017.
Association for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/D17-1082. URL https://www.
aclweb.org/anthology/D17-1082.
Quoc Le and Tomas Mikolov. Distributed representations of sentences and documents. In Proceed-
ings of the 31st ICML, Beijing, China, 2014.
Hector Levesque, Ernest Davis, and Leora Morgenstern. The Winograd schema challenge. In Thir-
teenth International Conference on the Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning,
2012.
Xiang Li, Shuo Chen, Xiaolin Hu, and Jian Yang. Understanding the disharmony between dropout
and batch normalization by variance shift. In Proceedings of the IEEE Conference on Computer
Vision and Pattern Recognition, pp. 2682–2690, 2019.
Yinhan Liu, Myle Ott, Naman Goyal, Jingfei Du, Mandar Joshi, Danqi Chen, Omer Levy, Mike
Lewis, Luke Zettlemoyer, and Veselin Stoyanov. RoBERTa: A robustly optimized BERT pre-
training approach. arXiv preprint arXiv:1907.11692, 2019.
Bryan McCann, James Bradbury, Caiming Xiong, and Richard Socher. Learned in translation:
Contextualized word vectors. In I. Guyon, U. V. Luxburg, S. Bengio, H. Wallach, R. Fergus,
S. Vishwanathan, and R. Garnett (eds.), Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems 30,
pp. 6294–6305. Curran Associates, Inc., 2017. URL http://papers.nips.cc/paper/
7209-learned-in-translation-contextualized-word-vectors.pdf.
Tomas Mikolov, Ilya Sutskever, Kai Chen, Greg S Corrado, and Jeff Dean. Distributed represen-
tations of words and phrases and their compositionality. In Advances in neural information pro-
cessing systems, pp. 3111–3119, 2013.
Allen Nie, Erin Bennett, and Noah Goodman. DisSent: Learning sentence representations from ex-
plicit discourse relations. In Proceedings of the 57th Annual Meeting of the Association for Com-
putational Linguistics, pp. 4497–4510, Florence, Italy, July 2019. Association for Computational
Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/P19-1442. URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/
P19-1442.
Jeffrey Pennington, Richard Socher, and Christopher Manning. Glove: Global vectors for word rep-
resentation. In Proceedings of the 2014 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language
Processing (EMNLP), pp. 1532–1543, Doha, Qatar, October 2014. Association for Computational
Linguistics. doi: 10.3115/v1/D14-1162. URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/
D14-1162.
Matthew Peters, Mark Neumann, Mohit Iyyer, Matt Gardner, Christopher Clark, Kenton Lee, and
Luke Zettlemoyer. Deep contextualized word representations. In Proceedings of the 2018 Con-
ference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Hu-
man Language Technologies, Volume 1 (Long Papers), pp. 2227–2237, New Orleans, Louisiana,
June 2018. Association for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/N18-1202. URL
https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/N18-1202.
Alec Radford, Karthik Narasimhan, Tim Salimans, and Ilya Sutskever. Improving language
understanding by generative pre-training. https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/
openai-assets/research-covers/language-unsupervised/language_
understanding_paper.pdf, 2018.
Alec Radford, Jeffrey Wu, Rewon Child, David Luan, Dario Amodei, and Ilya Sutskever. Language
models are unsupervised multitask learners. OpenAI Blog, 1(8), 2019.
Colin Raffel, Noam Shazeer, Adam Roberts, Katherine Lee, Sharan Narang, Michael Matena, Yanqi
Zhou, Wei Li, and Peter J Liu. Exploring the limits of transfer learning with a unified text-to-text
transformer. arXiv preprint arXiv:1910.10683, 2019.
13
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
Pranav Rajpurkar, Jian Zhang, Konstantin Lopyrev, and Percy Liang. SQuAD: 100,000+ questions
for machine comprehension of text. In Proceedings of the 2016 Conference on Empirical Methods
in Natural Language Processing, pp. 2383–2392, Austin, Texas, November 2016. Association
for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/D16-1264. URL https://www.aclweb.
org/anthology/D16-1264.
Pranav Rajpurkar, Robin Jia, and Percy Liang. Know what you don’t know: Unanswerable questions
for SQuAD. In Proceedings of the 56th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational
Linguistics (Volume 2: Short Papers), pp. 784–789, Melbourne, Australia, July 2018. Association
for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/P18-2124. URL https://www.aclweb.
org/anthology/P18-2124.
Noam Shazeer, Youlong Cheng, Niki Parmar, Dustin Tran, Ashish Vaswani, Penporn Koanantakool,
Peter Hawkins, HyoukJoong Lee, Mingsheng Hong, Cliff Young, et al. Mesh-tensorflow: Deep
learning for supercomputers. In Advances in Neural Information Processing Systems, pp. 10414–
10423, 2018.
Tao Shen, Tianyi Zhou, Guodong Long, Jing Jiang, and Chengqi Zhang. Bi-directional block self-
attention for fast and memory-efficient sequence modeling. arXiv preprint arXiv:1804.00857,
2018.
Mohammad Shoeybi, Mostofa Patwary, Raul Puri, Patrick LeGresley, Jared Casper, and Bryan
Catanzaro. Megatron-LM: Training multi-billion parameter language models using model par-
allelism, 2019.
Richard Socher, Alex Perelygin, Jean Wu, Jason Chuang, Christopher D. Manning, Andrew Ng,
and Christopher Potts. Recursive deep models for semantic compositionality over a sentiment
treebank. In Proceedings of the 2013 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language
Processing, pp. 1631–1642, Seattle, Washington, USA, October 2013. Association for Computa-
tional Linguistics. URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/D13-1170.
Siqi Sun, Yu Cheng, Zhe Gan, and Jingjing Liu. Patient knowledge distillation for BERT model
compression. arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.09355, 2019.
Christian Szegedy, Sergey Ioffe, Vincent Vanhoucke, and Alexander A Alemi. Inception-v4,
inception-resnet and the impact of residual connections on learning. In Thirty-First AAAI Confer-
ence on Artificial Intelligence, 2017.
Iulia Turc, Ming-Wei Chang, Kenton Lee, and Kristina Toutanova. Well-read students learn better:
The impact of student initialization on knowledge distillation. arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.08962,
2019.
Ashish Vaswani, Noam Shazeer, Niki Parmar, Jakob Uszkoreit, Llion Jones, Aidan N Gomez,
Łukasz Kaiser, and Illia Polosukhin. Attention is all you need. In Advances in neural information
processing systems, pp. 5998–6008, 2017.
Alex Wang, Amanpreet Singh, Julian Michael, Felix Hill, Omer Levy, and Samuel Bowman. GLUE:
A multi-task benchmark and analysis platform for natural language understanding. In Proceed-
ings of the 2018 EMNLP Workshop BlackboxNLP: Analyzing and Interpreting Neural Networks
for NLP, pp. 353–355, Brussels, Belgium, November 2018. Association for Computational Lin-
guistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/W18-5446. URL https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/
W18-5446.
Wei Wang, Bin Bi, Ming Yan, Chen Wu, Zuyi Bao, Liwei Peng, and Luo Si. StructBERT: Incor-
porating language structures into pre-training for deep language understanding. arXiv preprint
arXiv:1908.04577, 2019.
Alex Warstadt, Amanpreet Singh, and Samuel R Bowman. Neural network acceptability judgments.
arXiv preprint arXiv:1805.12471, 2018.
Adina Williams, Nikita Nangia, and Samuel Bowman. A broad-coverage challenge corpus for sen-
tence understanding through inference. In Proceedings of the 2018 Conference of the North
14
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technolo-
gies, Volume 1 (Long Papers), pp. 1112–1122, New Orleans, Louisiana, June 2018. Association
for Computational Linguistics. doi: 10.18653/v1/N18-1101. URL https://www.aclweb.
org/anthology/N18-1101.
Zhilin Yang, Zihang Dai, Yiming Yang, Jaime Carbonell, Ruslan Salakhutdinov, and Quoc V
Le. XLNet: Generalized autoregressive pretraining for language understanding. arXiv preprint
arXiv:1906.08237, 2019.
Yang You, Jing Li, Jonathan Hseu, Xiaodan Song, James Demmel, and Cho-Jui Hsieh. Reducing
BERT pre-training time from 3 days to 76 minutes. arXiv preprint arXiv:1904.00962, 2019.
Shuailiang Zhang, Hai Zhao, Yuwei Wu, Zhuosheng Zhang, Xi Zhou, and Xiang Zhou.
DCMN+: Dual co-matching network for multi-choice reading comprehension. arXiv preprint
arXiv:1908.11511, 2019.
Yukun Zhu, Ryan Kiros, Rich Zemel, Ruslan Salakhutdinov, Raquel Urtasun, Antonio Torralba, and
Sanja Fidler. Aligning books and movies: Towards story-like visual explanations by watching
movies and reading books. In Proceedings of the IEEE international conference on computer
vision, pp. 19–27, 2015.
A A PPENDIX
A.1 E FFECT OF NETWORK DEPTH AND WIDTH
In this section, we check how depth (number of layers) and width (hidden size) affect the perfor-
mance of ALBERT. Table 11 shows the performance of an ALBERT-large configuration (see Ta-
ble 1) using different numbers of layers. Networks with 3 or more layers are trained by fine-tuning
using the parameters from the depth before (e.g., the 12-layer network parameters are fine-tuned
from the checkpoint of the 6-layer network parameters).5 Similar technique has been used in Gong
et al. (2019). If we compare a 3-layer ALBERT model with a 1-layer ALBERT model, although
they have the same number of parameters, the performance increases significantly. However, there
are diminishing returns when continuing to increase the number of layers: the results of a 12-layer
network are relatively close to the results of a 24-layer network, and the performance of a 48-layer
network appears to decline.
Number of layers Parameters SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
1 18M 31.1/22.9 50.1/50.1 66.4 80.8 40.1 52.9
3 18M 79.8/69.7 64.4/61.7 77.7 86.7 54.0 71.2
6 18M 86.4/78.4 73.8/71.1 81.2 88.9 60.9 77.2
12 18M 89.8/83.3 80.7/77.9 83.3 91.7 66.7 81.5
24 18M 90.3/83.3 81.8/79.0 83.3 91.5 68.7 82.1
48 18M 90.0/83.1 81.8/78.9 83.4 91.9 66.9 81.8
Table 11: The effect of increasing the number of layers for an ALBERT-large configuration.
A similar phenomenon, this time for width, can be seen in Table 12 for a 3-layer ALBERT-large
configuration. As we increase the hidden size, we get an increase in performance with diminishing
returns. At a hidden size of 6144, the performance appears to decline significantly. We note that none
of these models appear to overfit the training data, and they all have higher training and development
loss compared to the best-performing ALBERT configurations.
5
If we compare the performance of ALBERT-large here to the performance in Table 2, we can see that this
warm-start technique does not help to improve the downstream performance. However, it does help the 48-layer
network to converge. A similar technique has been applied to our ALBERT-xxlarge, where we warm-start from
a 6-layer network.
15
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
Hidden size Parameters SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
1024 18M 79.8/69.7 64.4/61.7 77.7 86.7 54.0 71.2
2048 60M 83.3/74.1 69.1/66.6 79.7 88.6 58.2 74.6
4096 225M 85.0/76.4 71.0/68.1 80.3 90.4 60.4 76.3
6144 499M 84.7/75.8 67.8/65.4 78.1 89.1 56.0 74.0
Table 12: The effect of increasing the hidden-layer size for an ALBERT-large 3-layer configuration.
A.2 D O VERY WIDE ALBERT MODELS NEED TO BE DEEP ( ER ) TOO ?
In Section A.1, we show that for ALBERT-large (H=1024), the difference between a 12-layer and a
24-layer configuration is small. Does this result still hold for much wider ALBERT configurations,
such as ALBERT-xxlarge (H=4096)?
Number of layers SQuAD1.1 SQuAD2.0 MNLI SST-2 RACE Avg
12 94.0/88.1 88.3/85.3 87.8 95.4 82.5 88.7
24 94.1/88.3 88.1/85.1 88.0 95.2 82.3 88.7
Table 13: The effect of a deeper network using an ALBERT-xxlarge configuration.
The answer is given by the results from Table 13. The difference between 12-layer and 24-layer
ALBERT-xxlarge configurations in terms of downstream accuracy is negligible, with the Avg score
being the same. We conclude that, when sharing all cross-layer parameters (ALBERT-style), there
is no need for models deeper than a 12-layer configuration.
A.3 D OWNSTREAM E VALUATION TASKS
GLUE GLUE is comprised of 9 tasks, namely Corpus of Linguistic Acceptability
(CoLA; Warstadt et al., 2018), Stanford Sentiment Treebank (SST; Socher et al., 2013), Microsoft
Research Paraphrase Corpus (MRPC; Dolan & Brockett, 2005), Semantic Textual Similarity Bench-
mark (STS; Cer et al., 2017), Quora Question Pairs (QQP; Iyer et al., 2017), Multi-Genre NLI
(MNLI; Williams et al., 2018), Question NLI (QNLI; Rajpurkar et al., 2016), Recognizing Textual
Entailment (RTE; Dagan et al., 2005; Bar-Haim et al., 2006; Giampiccolo et al., 2007; Bentivogli
et al., 2009) and Winograd NLI (WNLI; Levesque et al., 2012). It focuses on evaluating model
capabilities for natural language understanding. When reporting MNLI results, we only report the
“match” condition (MNLI-m). We follow the finetuning procedures from prior work (Devlin et al.,
2019; Liu et al., 2019; Yang et al., 2019) and report the held-out test set performance obtained from
GLUE submissions. For test set submissions, we perform task-specific modifications for WNLI and
QNLI as described by Liu et al. (2019) and Yang et al. (2019).
SQuAD SQuAD is an extractive question answering dataset built from Wikipedia. The answers
are segments from the context paragraphs and the task is to predict answer spans. We evaluate our
models on two versions of SQuAD: v1.1 and v2.0. SQuAD v1.1 has 100,000 human-annotated
question/answer pairs. SQuAD v2.0 additionally introduced 50,000 unanswerable questions. For
SQuAD v1.1, we use the same training procedure as BERT, whereas for SQuAD v2.0, models are
jointly trained with a span extraction loss and an additional classifier for predicting answerabil-
ity (Yang et al., 2019; Liu et al., 2019). We report both development set and test set performance.
RACE RACE is a large-scale dataset for multi-choice reading comprehension, collected from En-
glish examinations in China with nearly 100,000 questions. Each instance in RACE has 4 candidate
answers. Following prior work (Yang et al., 2019; Liu et al., 2019), we use the concatenation of the
passage, question, and each candidate answer as the input to models. Then, we use the represen-
tations from the “[CLS]” token for predicting the probability of each answer. The dataset consists
of two domains: middle school and high school. We train our models on both domains and report
accuracies on both the development set and test set.
16
Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2020
A.4 H YPERPARAMETERS
Hyperparameters for downstream tasks are shown in Table 14. We adapt these hyperparameters
from Liu et al. (2019), Devlin et al. (2019), and Yang et al. (2019).
LR BSZ ALBERT DR Classifier DR TS WS MSL
CoLA 1.00E-05 16 0 0.1 5336 320 512
STS 2.00E-05 16 0 0.1 3598 214 512
SST-2 1.00E-05 32 0 0.1 20935 1256 512
MNLI 3.00E-05 128 0 0.1 10000 1000 512
QNLI 1.00E-05 32 0 0.1 33112 1986 512
QQP 5.00E-05 128 0.1 0.1 14000 1000 512
RTE 3.00E-05 32 0.1 0.1 800 200 512
MRPC 2.00E-05 32 0 0.1 800 200 512
WNLI 2.00E-05 16 0.1 0.1 2000 250 512
SQuAD v1.1 5.00E-05 48 0 0.1 3649 365 384
SQuAD v2.0 3.00E-05 48 0 0.1 8144 814 512
RACE 2.00E-05 32 0.1 0.1 12000 1000 512
Table 14: Hyperparameters for ALBERT in downstream tasks. LR: Learning Rate. BSZ: Batch
Size. DR: Dropout Rate. TS: Training Steps. WS: Warmup Steps. MSL: Maximum Sequence
Length.
17
来源材料