BERTopic is a topic modeling technique that leverages 🤗 transformers and c-TF-IDF to create dense clusters allowing for easily interpretable topics whilst keeping important words in the topic descriptions. It even supports visualizations similar to LDAvis!
Corresponding medium posts can be found here and here.
Installation, with sentence-transformers, can be done using pypi:
pip install bertopic
You may want to install more depending on the transformers and language backends that you will be using. The possible installations are:
pip install bertopic[flair]
pip install bertopic[gensim]
pip install bertopic[spacy]
pip install bertopic[use]
To install all backends:
pip install bertopic[all]
For an in-depth overview of the features of BERTopic you can check the full documentation here or you can follow along with one of the examples below:
We start by extracting topics from the well-known 20 newsgroups dataset which is comprised of english documents:
from bertopic import BERTopic
from sklearn.datasets import fetch_20newsgroups
docs = fetch_20newsgroups(subset='all', remove=('headers', 'footers', 'quotes'))['data']
topic_model = BERTopic()
topics, _ = topic_model.fit_transform(docs)
After generating topics, we can access the frequent topics that were generated:
>>> topic_model.get_topic_info()
Topic Count Name
-1 4630 -1_can_your_will_any
49 693 49_windows_drive_dos_file
32 466 32_jesus_bible_christian_faith
2 441 2_space_launch_orbit_lunar
22 381 22_key_encryption_keys_encrypted
-1 refers to all outliers and should typically be ignored. Next, let's take a look at the most frequent topic that was generated, topic 49:
>>> topic_model.get_topic(49)
[('windows', 0.006152228076250982),
('drive', 0.004982897610645755),
('dos', 0.004845038866360651),
('file', 0.004140142872194834),
('disk', 0.004131678774810884),
('mac', 0.003624848635985097),
('memory', 0.0034840976976789903),
('software', 0.0034415334250699077),
('email', 0.0034239554442333257),
('pc', 0.003047105930670237)]
NOTE: Use BERTopic(language="multilingual")
to select a model that supports 50+ languages.
After having trained our BERTopic model, we can iteratively go through perhaps a hundred topic to get a good understanding of the topics that were extract. However, that takes quite some time and lacks a global representation. Instead, we can visualize the topics that were generated in a way very similar to LDAvis:
topic_model.visualize_topics()
BERTopic supports many embedding models that can be used to embed the documents and words:
- Sentence-Transformers
- Flair
- Spacy
- Gensim
- USE
Click here for a full overview of all supported embedding models.
You can select any model from sentence-transformers here and pass it to BERTopic:
topic_model = BERTopic(embedding_model="xlm-r-bert-base-nli-stsb-mean-tokens")
Or select a SentenceTransformer model with your own parameters:
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
sentence_model = SentenceTransformer("distilbert-base-nli-mean-tokens", device="cpu")
topic_model = BERTopic(embedding_model=sentence_model)
Flair allows you to choose almost any embedding model that is publicly available. Flair can be used as follows:
from flair.embeddings import TransformerDocumentEmbeddings
roberta = TransformerDocumentEmbeddings('roberta-base')
topic_model = BERTopic(embedding_model=roberta)
You can select any 🤗 transformers model here.
Custom Embeddings
You can also use previously generated embeddings by passing it to fit_transform()
:
topic_model = BERTopic()
topics, _ = topic_model.fit_transform(docs, embeddings)
Dynamic topic modeling (DTM) is a collection of techniques aimed at analyzing the evolution of topics over time. These methods allow you to understand how a topic is represented across different times. Here, we will be using all of Donald Trump's tweet so see how he talked over certain topics over time:
import re
import pandas as pd
trump = pd.read_csv('https://drive.google.com/uc?export=download&id=1xRKHaP-QwACMydlDnyFPEaFdtskJuBa6')
trump.text = trump.apply(lambda row: re.sub(r"http\S+", "", row.text).lower(), 1)
trump.text = trump.apply(lambda row: " ".join(filter(lambda x:x[0]!="@", row.text.split())), 1)
trump.text = trump.apply(lambda row: " ".join(re.sub("[^a-zA-Z]+", " ", row.text).split()), 1)
trump = trump.loc[(trump.isRetweet == "f") & (trump.text != ""), :]
timestamps = trump.date.to_list()
tweets = trump.text.to_list()
Then, we need to extract the global topic representations by simply creating and training a BERTopic model:
topic_model = BERTopic(verbose=True)
topics, _ = topic_model.fit_transform(tweets)
From these topics, we are going to generate the topic representations at each timestamp for each topic. We do this
by simply calling topics_over_time
and pass in his tweets, the corresponding timestamps, and the related topics:
topics_over_time = topic_model.topics_over_time(tweets, topics, timestamps)
Finally, we can visualize the topics by simply calling visualize_topics_over_time()
:
topic_model.visualize_topics_over_time(topics_over_time, top_n=6)
For quick access to common function, here is an overview of BERTopic's main methods:
Method | Code |
---|---|
Fit the model | BERTopic().fit(docs) |
Fit the model and predict documents | BERTopic().fit_transform(docs) |
Predict new documents | BERTopic().transform([new_doc]) |
Access single topic | BERTopic().get_topic(topic=12) |
Access all topics | BERTopic().get_topics() |
Get topic freq | BERTopic().get_topic_freq() |
Get all topic information | BERTopic().get_topic_info() |
Get topics per class | BERTopic().topics_per_class(docs, topics, classes) |
Dynamic Topic Modeling | BERTopic().topics_over_time(docs, topics, timestamps) |
Visualize Topics | BERTopic().visualize_topics() |
Visualize Topic Probability Distribution | BERTopic().visualize_distribution(probs[0]) |
Visualize Topics over Time | BERTopic().visualize_topics_over_time(topics_over_time) |
Visualize Topics per Class | BERTopic().visualize_topics_per_class(topics_per_class) |
Update topic representation | BERTopic().update_topics(docs, topics, n_gram_range=(1, 3)) |
Reduce nr of topics | BERTopic().reduce_topics(docs, topics, nr_topics=30) |
Find topics | BERTopic().find_topics("vehicle") |
Save model | BERTopic().save("my_model") |
Load model | BERTopic.load("my_model") |
Get parameters | BERTopic().get_params() |
To cite BERTopic in your work, please use the following bibtex reference:
@misc{grootendorst2020bertopic,
author = {Maarten Grootendorst},
title = {BERTopic: Leveraging BERT and c-TF-IDF to create easily interpretable topics.},
year = 2020,
publisher = {Zenodo},
version = {v0.7.0},
doi = {10.5281/zenodo.4381785},
url = {https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4381785}
}