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Source code and dataset for EMNLP 2022 paper "Finding Skill Neurons in Pre-trained Transformer-based Language Models".

Data Preparation

The datasets used in our experiments can be downloaded here. Please unzip the dara to the path data/raw.

Add New Datasets

To add another customized dataset, one need to follow the steps.

  • If the dataset is downloaded from huggingface's datasets

    • Modify the codes in src/dataset.py and add the name of the dataset to the dicts datasetColumn, datasetRow and datasetLabel.
  • If the dataset is stored in .csv or .json formats

    • Modify the codes in src/dataset.py and define a new dataset class based on CsvDataset or JsonDataset. DbpediaDataset is provided as an example, one only need to define the customized function getsnt and getlabel. One should then modify the following dicts datasetType, datasetRow and datasetLabel.

Convert Multi-class Tasks

We provide a script src/binarize.py to transfer multi-class classification tasks into binary subtasks. Currently we support labelsets {negative,neutral,positive} or {contradict, negative, neutral, positive}. A sample command to convert the MNLI task is:

python src/binarize.py --task_type mnli --data_path data/raw/mnli --data_path data/raw

The dataset will be split into two subdatasets.

  • mnli-pn: a balanced dataset consisting only of positive and negative samples of MNLI.

  • mnli-neu: a balanced dataset with binary labels marking whether the original sentence is neutral.

Prompt Tuning

After data preparation, to locate the skill neurons, one should conduct prompt tuning using the code src/train.py. In the following instructions, we take the usage on the SST-2 task as the running sample. Its command is like:

python src/train.py --task_type sst2 --data_path data/raw/sst2 --save_to example --bz 128 --eval_every_step 2000 --model_type RobertaPrompt

After training, a directory named example will be created and it will contain trained prompt named as best-backbone and also its optimizer and scheduler states named as optimzer and scheduler, respectively. In case the training is interrupted, one can proceed from the previous best checkpoint using the following argument --resume_from example -p.

src/train.py contains the following arguments to support various other functions:

  • model_type: we support
    • RobertaPrompt: prompt tuning with frozen roberta-base backbone
    • RobertaBias: BitFit with frozen roberta-base backbone,
    • RobertaAdapter: Adapter-based tuning with frozen roberta-base backbone
    • RobertaPrunePrompt: prompt tuning with roberta-base backbone pruned using skill neurons
  • prompt_size: the length of prompt
  • p: whether to load a pretrained model, store true
  • save_to: path to save the model
  • resume_from: path to load the trained models
  • task_type: choose from the datasets defined in dataset.py
  • data_path: path to the dataset
  • verb: verbalizer for the task, left brank for default setups
  • device: choose from "cuda:0" and "cpu"
  • random_seed: the random seed
  • epoch, eval_every_step, batch, early_stop: common training parameters

Obtaining Predictivity

As described in Section 3 of the paper, we need to calculate the predictivities of every neurons to find the skill neurons. One can use the src/probe.py to obtain predictivities. A sample usage command is:

python src/probe.py --resume_from example --data_path data/raw/sst2 --save_to example --probe_type acc --bz 16 -p --task_type sst2 --model_type RobertaPrompt

After running, a directory named example/sst2 will be created and three files will be saved:

  • train_avg: average activation for every neuron, with shape [#layers, prompt length, FFN width], corresponding to $a_{bsl}$ in the paper
  • dev_perf: predictivity of every neuron using train_avg as the threshold, with shape [#layers, prompt length, FFN width]
  • test_perf: predictivity of every neuron using train_avg as the threshold, with shape [#layers, prompt length, FFN width]

src/probe.py contains the following arguments to support various other functions:

  • probe_type, to choose other analytical indexs, we support:
    • acc: to obtain the predictivities of all the neurons, will generate the three files as explained (only support prompt-based model)
    • acc_mean and acc_max: to obtain the prediction accuracies of neurons with mean pooling and max pooling, used for experiments in Section 4.1 of the paper
      • the outputs with shape [#layers, FFN width]
    • pos: to obtain the activations of a specific neuron, needing to specify (layers, index)
      • will create three files, train_mean_avg, dev_mean_perf, test_mean_perf
      • each with shape [#layers, FFN width]
    • prompt_act: to obtain the activations on the first special [MASK] token, paired with dataset empty, with output shape [#sample, #layer, FFN width], used for experiments in Section 6.2 of the paper
    • speed: to obtain the test performance and running time, will generate two files inference_perf and inference_time
  • model_type, prompt_size, p, resume_from, save_to, task_type, data_path, verb, device, random_seed, batch_size: as introduced in the last section

Find Skill Neurons

With the predictivities, one can find skill neurons with src/skillneuron.py. A sample command is:

python src/skillneuron.py --save_to example -a example/sst2/dev_perf

After the command, a directory named as example/info/sst2 will be created, consisting files 0.0 to 0.19, each is a boolean tensor with shape [#layer, FFN width] indicating the locations of skill neurons. For example, in the tensor of file 0.05, the 1 elements indicating the neurons here are top 5% skill neurons.

src/skillneuron.py contains the following arguments.

  • type: choose from mean or min, meaning to aggregate the accuracy of different prompt tokens with average pooling or min pooling
  • a/acc_path: path to dumped predictivity files, seperated by comma
  • aa/acc_aux_path: path to dumped predictivity files of more decomposed subtasks for multi-class tasks
  • task_type, save_to: the same as introduced above

Perturbing Skill Neurons

To do the neuron perturbation experiments for skill neurons, one may use the code src/mask.py. A sample command is like:

python src/mask.py --info_path example/info/sst2/0.1 --resume_from example --data_path data/raw/sst2 --save_to example --bz 16 -p  --cmp

src/mask.py has the following arguments:

  • cmp: wheter do control experiment perturbing the same number of random neurons, store true
  • info_path: path to the skill neuron location files generated in the last step
  • type: choose perturbation method, we support:
    • gaussian, add gaussian noises with standard error of alpha(recommended)
    • zero, replace the activations by zero
    • mean, replace the activations by customized thresholds
  • alpha: standard error for the gaussian noise if set type as gaussian
  • ths_path: to specify the customized threshold file if set type as mean. The threshold should be a tensor of shape [#layer, FFN width]
  • low_layer and high layer: to only perturb layers in [lower_layer, high_layer]
  • task_type, data_path, verb, model_type, prompt_size, p, save_to, resume_from, device, random_seed, batch: as introduced above

Pruning Transformers with Skill Neurons

As shown in Section 6.1 of the paper, we can use the skill neurons to guide network pruning on Transformers.

To do this, one should first generate the prune model structure by running the following commands:

mkdir prune_structure
python src/helper/getprunestructure.py

To generate a pruned Transformer model with the skill neurons, a sample command is:

python src/prune.py --info_path example/info/sst2/0.02 --ths_path example/sst2/train_avg --save_to example/prune --resume_from example/best-backbone 

This will create a pruned model at example/prune/best-backbone. One can further evaluate the inference speed of this model by:

python src/probe.py -p --resume_from example/prune --model_type RobertaPrunePrompt --save_to example/prune --probe_type speed --data_path data/raw/sst2 

One can also further train the pruned model by:

python src/train.py -p --resume_from example/prune --model_type RobertaPrunePrompt --task_type sst2 --data_path  data/raw/sst2 --save_to example/prune --bz 128 --eval_every_step 2000

src/prune.py support only pruning RobertaPrompt model to RobertaPrunePrompt model. It needs the following arguments:

  • info_path: path to the skill neuron location files generated in the last step
  • resume_from: a path to a trained model as the input of pruning
  • ths_path: path to a file for the fixed activations of non-skill neurons. It shall be a tensor of shape [#layers, FFN width] or [#layers, prompt length, FFN width]
  • save_to, random_seed: as introduced above

Citation

If the codes help you, please cite our paper:

@inproceedings{wang-wen-etal2022skill,
  title = {Finding Skill Neurons in Pre-trained Transformer-based Language Models},
  author = {Xiaozhi Wang and Kaiyue Wen and Zhengyan Zhang and Lei Hou and Zhiyuan Liu and Juanzi Li},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of EMNLP},
  year = {2022},
}

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Source code for EMNLP2022 paper "Finding Skill Neurons in Pre-trained Transformers via Prompt Tuning".

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