How does the task complexity of masked pretraining objectives affect downstream performance?

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Abstract

Masked language modeling (MLM) is a widely used self-supervised pretraining objective, where a model needs to predict an original token that is replaced with a mask given contexts. Although simpler and computationally efficient pretraining objectives, e.g., predicting the first character of a masked token, have recently shown comparable results to MLM, no objectives with a masking scheme actually outperform it in downstream tasks. Motivated by the assumption that their lack of complexity plays a vital role in the degradation, we validate whether more complex masked objectives can achieve better results and investigate how much complexity they should have to perform comparably to MLM. Our results using GLUE, SQuAD, and Universal Dependencies benchmarks demonstrate that more complicated objectives tend to show better downstream results with at least half of the MLM complexity needed to perform comparably to MLM. Finally, we discuss how we should pretrain a model using a masked objective from the task complexity perspective.

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APA

Yamaguchi, A., Ozaki, H., Morishita, T., Morio, G., & Sogawa, Y. (2023). How does the task complexity of masked pretraining objectives affect downstream performance? In Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (pp. 10527–10537). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2023.findings-acl.669

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