This repository contains the code of ExtEnD: Extractive Entity Disambiguation, a novel approach to Entity Disambiguation (i.e. the task of linking a mention in context with its most suitable entity in a reference knowledge base) where we reformulate this task as a text extraction problem. This work was accepted at ACL 2022.
If you find our paper, code or framework useful, please reference this work in your paper:
@inproceedings{barba-etal-2021-extend,
title = "{E}xt{E}n{D}: Extractive Entity Disambiguation",
author = "Barba, Edoardo and
Procopio, Luigi and
Navigli, Roberto",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 60th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics",
month = may,
year = "2022",
address = "Online and Dublin, Ireland",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
}
ExtEnD is built on top of the classy library. If you are interested in using this project, we recommend checking first its introduction, although it is not strictly required to train and use the models.
Finally, we also developed a few additional tools that make it simple to use and test ExtEnD models:
- a very simple custom component for spaCy
- a demo on HuggingFace Spaces
- a docker image running two services, a streamlit demo and a REST service
Requirements:
- Debian-based (e.g. Debian, Ubuntu, ...) system
- conda installed
To quickly setup the environment to use ExtEnd/replicate our experiments, you can use the bash script setup.sh. The only requirements needed here is to have a Debian-based system (Debian, Ubuntu, ...) and conda installed.
bash setup.sh
We release the following checkpoints:
Model | Training Dataset | Avg Score |
---|---|---|
Longformer Large | AIDA | 85.8 |
Once you have downloaded the files, untar them inside the experiments/ folder.
# move file to experiments folder
mv ~/Downloads/extend-longformer-large.tar.gz experiments/
# untar
tar -xf experiments/extend-longformer-large.tar.gz -C experiments/
rm experiments/extend-longformer-large.tar.gz
All the datasets used to train and evaluate ExtEnD can be downloaded using the following script from the facebook GENRE repository.
We strongly recommend you organize them in the following structure under the data folder as it is used by several scripts in the project.
data
├── aida
│ ├── test.aida
│ ├── train.aida
│ └── validation.aida
└── out_of_domain
├── ace2004-test-kilt.ed
├── aquaint-test-kilt.ed
├── clueweb-test-kilt.ed
├── msnbc-test-kilt.ed
└── wiki-test-kilt.ed
To train a model from scratch, you just have to use the following command:
classy train qa <folder> -n my-model-name --profile aida-longformer-large-gam -pd extend
can be any folder containing exactly 3 files:
- train.aida
- validation.aida
- test.aida
This is required to let classy automatically discover the dataset splits. For instance, to re-train our AIDA-only model:
classy train data/aida -n my-model-name --profile aida-longformer-large-gam -pd extend
Note that can be any folder, as long as:
- it contains these 3 files
- they are in the same format as the files in data/aida
So if you want to train on these different datasets, just create the corresponding directory and you are ready to go!
In case you want to modify some training hyperparameter, you just have to edit the
aida-longformer-large-gam profile in the configurations/ folder. You can take a
look to the modifiable parameters by adding the parameter --print
to the
training command. You can find more on this in
classy official documentation.
You can use classy syntax to perform file prediction:
classy predict -pd extend file \
experiments/extend-longformer-large \
data/aida/test.aida \
-o data/aida_test_predictions.aida
To evaluate a checkpoint, you can run the bash script scripts/full_evaluation.sh, passing its path as an input argument. This will evaluate the model provided against both AIDA and OOD resources.
# syntax: bash scripts/full_evaluation.sh <ckpt-path>
bash scripts/full_evaluation.sh experiments/extend-longformer-large/2021-10-22/09-11-39/checkpoints/best.ckpt
If you are interested in AIDA-only evaluation, you can use scripts/aida_evaluation.sh instead (same syntax).
Furthermore, you can evaluate the model on any dataset that respects the same format of the original ones with the following command:
classy evaluate \
experiments/extend-longformer-large/2021-10-22/09-11-39/checkpoints/best.ckpt \
data/aida/test.aida \
-o data/aida_test_evaluation.txt \
-pd extend
You can also use ExtEnD with spaCy, allowing you to use our system with a seamless interface that tackles full end-to-end entity linking. To do so, you just need to have cloned the repo and run setup.sh to configure the environment. Then, you will be able to add extend as a custom component in the following way:
import spacy
from extend import spacy_component
nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
extend_config = dict(
checkpoint_path="<ckpt-path>",
mentions_inventory_path="<inventory-path>",
device=0,
tokens_per_batch=4000,
)
nlp.add_pipe("extend", after="ner", config=extend_config)
input_sentence = "Japan began the defence of their title " \
"with a lucky 2-1 win against Syria " \
"in a championship match on Friday."
doc = nlp(input_sentence)
# [(Japan, Japan National Footbal Team), (Syria, Syria National Footbal Team)]
disambiguated_entities = [(ent.text, ent._.disambiguated_entity) for ent in doc.ents]
Where:
<ckpt-path>
is the path to a pretrained checkpoint of extend that you can find in the Checkpoints section, and<inventory-path>
is the path to a file containing the mapping from mentions to the corresponding candidates.
We support two formats for <inventory-path>
:
- tsv:
That is,
$ head -1 <inventory-path> Rome \[TAB\] Rome City \[TAB\] Rome Football Team \[TAB\] Roman Empire \[TAB\] ...
<inventory-path>
is a tab-separated file where, for each row, we have the mention (Rome) followed by its possible entities. - sqlite: a sqlite3 database with a candidate table with two columns:
- mention (text PRIMARY KEY)
- entities (text). This must be a tab-separated list of the corresponding entities.
We release 6 possible pre-computed <inventory-path>
that you could use (we recommend creating a folder data/inventories/
and placing the files downloaded there inside, e.g., = data/inventories/le-and-titov-2018-inventory.min-count-2.sqlite3):
Inventory | Number of Mentions | Source |
---|---|---|
le-and-titov-2018-inventory.min-count-2.tsv | 12090972 | Cleaned version of the candidate set released by Le and Titov (2018). We discard mentions whose count is less than 2. |
[Recommended] le-and-titov-2018-inventory.min-count-2.sqlite3 | 12090972 | Cleaned version of the candidate set released by Le and Titov (2018). We discard mentions whose count is less than 2. |
le-and-titov-2018-inventory.tsv | 21571265 | The candidate set released by Le and Titov (2018) |
le-and-titov-2018-inventory.sqlite3 | 21571265 | The candidate set released by Le and Titov (2018) |
Note that, as far as you respect either of these two formats, you can also create and use your own inventory!
Finally, we also release a docker image running two services, a streamlit demo and a REST service:
$ docker run -p 22001:22001 -p 22002:22002 --rm -itd poccio/extend:1.0.1
<container id>
Now you can:
- checkout the streamlit demo at http://127.0.0.1:22001/
- invoke the REST service running at http://127.0.0.1:22002/ (http://127.0.0.1:22002/docs you can find the OpenAPI documentation):
$ curl -X POST http://127.0.0.1:22002/ -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '[{"text": "Rome is in Italy"}]' [{"text":"Rome is in Italy","disambiguated_entities":[{"char_start":0,"char_end":4,"mention":"Rome","entity":"Rome"},{"char_start":11,"char_end":16,"mention":"Italy","entity":"Italy"}]}]
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the ERC Consolidator Grant MOUSSE No. 726487 under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.
This work was supported in part by the MIUR under grant “Dipartimenti di eccellenza 2018-2022” of the Department of Computer Science of the Sapienza University of Rome.
This work is under the Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) license.