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The (In)Effectiveness of Intermediate Task Training For Domain Adaptation and Cross-Lingual Transfer Learning

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arxiv 2210.01091 v2 pith:ETI4NUQO submitted 2022-10-03 cs.CL

The (In)Effectiveness of Intermediate Task Training For Domain Adaptation and Cross-Lingual Transfer Learning

classification cs.CL
keywords transfertasksintermediatelearningtasktrainingadaptationfine-tuning
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Transfer learning from large language models (LLMs) has emerged as a powerful technique to enable knowledge-based fine-tuning for a number of tasks, adaptation of models for different domains and even languages. However, it remains an open question, if and when transfer learning will work, i.e. leading to positive or negative transfer. In this paper, we analyze the knowledge transfer across three natural language processing (NLP) tasks - text classification, sentimental analysis, and sentence similarity, using three LLMs - BERT, RoBERTa, and XLNet - and analyzing their performance, by fine-tuning on target datasets for domain and cross-lingual adaptation tasks, with and without an intermediate task training on a larger dataset. Our experiments showed that fine-tuning without an intermediate task training can lead to a better performance for most tasks, while more generalized tasks might necessitate a preceding intermediate task training step. We hope that this work will act as a guide on transfer learning to NLP practitioners.

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