Recent work has demonstrated that pretraining in-domain language models can boost performance when adapting to a new domain. However, the costs associated with pretraining raise an important question: given a fixed budget, what steps should an NLP practitioner take to maximize performance? In this paper, we study domain adaptation under budget constraints, and approach it as a customer choice problem between data annotation and pre-training. Specifically, we measure the annotation cost of three procedural text datasets and the pre-training cost of three in-domain language models. Then we evaluate the utility of different combinations of pre-training and data annotation under varying budget constraints to assess which combination strategy works best. We find that, for small budgets, spending all funds on annotation leads to the best performance; once the budget becomes large enough, a combination of data annotation and in-domain pre-training works more optimally. We therefore suggest that task-specific data annotation should be part of an economical strategy when adapting an NLP model to a new domain.
CITATION STYLE
Bai, F., Ritter, A., & Xu, W. (2021). Pre-train or Annotate? Domain Adaptation with a Constrained Budget. In EMNLP 2021 - 2021 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, Proceedings (pp. 5002–5015). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2021.emnlp-main.409
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