/Transformers-Recipe

A quick recipe to learn all about Transformers

Transformers Recipe

Transformers have accelerated the development of new techniques and models for natural language processing (NLP) tasks. While it has mostly been used for NLP tasks, it is now seeing heavy adoption to address computer vision tasks as well. That makes it a very important concept to understand and be able to apply.

I am aware that a lot of machine learning and NLP students and practitioners are keen on learning about transformers. Therefore, I have prepared this recipe of resources and study materials to help guide students interested in learning about the world of Transformers.

To begin with, I have prepared a few links to materials that I used to better understand and implement transformer models from scratch.

This recipe will also allow me to easily continue to update the study materials needed to learning about Transformers.

🧠 High-level Introduction

First, try to get a very high-level introduction about transformers. Some references worth looking at:

🔗 Transformers From Scratch (Brandon Rohrer)

🔗 How Transformers work in deep learning and NLP: an intuitive introduction (AI Summer)

🔗 Deep Learning for Language Understanding (DeepMind)

🎨 The Illustrated Transformer

Jay Alammar's illustrated explanations are exceptional. Once you get that high-level understanding of transformers, you can jump into this popular detailed and illustrated explanation of transformers:

🔗 http://jalammar.github.io/illustrated-transformer/

Figure source: http://jalammar.github.io/illustrated-transformer/

🔖 Technical Summary

At this point, you may be looking for a technical summary and overview of transformers. Lilian Weng's blog posts are a gem and provide concise technical explanations/summaries:

🔗 https://lilianweng.github.io/lil-log/2020/04/07/the-transformer-family.html

Figure source: https://lilianweng.github.io/lil-log/2020/04/07/the-transformer-family.html

👩🏼‍💻 Implementation

After the theory, it's important to test the knowledge. I typically prefer to understand things in more detail so I prefer to implement algorithms from scratch. For implementing transformers, I mainly relied on this tutorial:

🔗 https://nlp.seas.harvard.edu/2018/04/03/attention.html

(Google Colab | GitHub)

Figure source: https://nlp.seas.harvard.edu/2018/04/03/attention.html

📄 Attention Is All You Need

This paper by Vaswani et al. introduced the Transformer architecture. Read it after you have a high-level understanding and want to get into the details. Pay attention to other references in the paper for diving deep.

🔗 https://arxiv.org/pdf/1706.03762v5.pdf

Figure source: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1706.03762v5.pdf

👩🏼‍💻 Applying Transformers

After some time studying and understanding the theory behind transformers, you may be interested in applying them to different NLP projects or research. At this time, your best bet is the Transformers library by HuggingFace.

🔗 https://github.com/huggingface/transformers

The Hugging Face Team is also publishing a new book on NLP with Transformers, so you might want to check that out here.


Feel free to suggest study material. In the next update, I am looking to add a more comprehensive collection of Transformer applications and papers. In addition, a code implementation for easy experimentation is coming as well. Stay tuned!

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