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null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
weighted/imatrix quants of https://huggingface.co/NeverSleep/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1
<!-- provided-files -->
static quants are available at https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-GGUF
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ1_S.gguf) | i1-IQ1_S | 4.5 | for the desperate |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ1_M.gguf) | i1-IQ1_M | 4.9 | for the desperate |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ2_XXS.gguf) | i1-IQ2_XXS | 5.5 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ2_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ2_XS | 6.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ2_S.gguf) | i1-IQ2_S | 6.5 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ2_M.gguf) | i1-IQ2_M | 7.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q2_K.gguf) | i1-Q2_K | 7.5 | IQ3_XXS probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ3_XXS.gguf) | i1-IQ3_XXS | 7.7 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ3_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ3_XS | 8.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ3_S.gguf) | i1-IQ3_S | 8.8 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q3_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_S | 8.8 | IQ3_XS probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ3_M.gguf) | i1-IQ3_M | 9.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q3_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_M | 9.8 | IQ3_S probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q3_K_L.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_L | 10.7 | IQ3_M probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-IQ4_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ4_XS | 10.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q4_0.gguf) | i1-Q4_0 | 11.4 | fast, low quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q4_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q4_K_S | 11.5 | optimal size/speed/quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q4_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q4_K_M | 12.1 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q5_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q5_K_S | 13.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q5_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q5_K_M | 14.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1.i1-Q6_K.gguf) | i1-Q6_K | 16.5 | practically like static Q6_K |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "cc-by-nc-4.0", "library_name": "transformers", "base_model": "NeverSleep/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1-i1-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"en",
"base_model:NeverSleep/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1",
"license:cc-by-nc-4.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:29:06+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #en #base_model-NeverSleep/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1 #license-cc-by-nc-4.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
weighted/imatrix quants of URL
static quants are available at URL
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #en #base_model-NeverSleep/Noromaid-20b-v0.1.1 #license-cc-by-nc-4.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
reinforcement-learning | null |
# **Reinforce** Agent playing **Pixelcopter-PLE-v0**
This is a trained model of a **Reinforce** agent playing **Pixelcopter-PLE-v0** .
To learn to use this model and train yours check Unit 4 of the Deep Reinforcement Learning Course: https://huggingface.co/deep-rl-course/unit4/introduction
| {"tags": ["Pixelcopter-PLE-v0", "reinforce", "reinforcement-learning", "custom-implementation", "deep-rl-class"], "model-index": [{"name": "policy2", "results": [{"task": {"type": "reinforcement-learning", "name": "reinforcement-learning"}, "dataset": {"name": "Pixelcopter-PLE-v0", "type": "Pixelcopter-PLE-v0"}, "metrics": [{"type": "mean_reward", "value": "38.80 +/- 15.33", "name": "mean_reward", "verified": false}]}]}]} | AkiraHase/policy2 | null | [
"Pixelcopter-PLE-v0",
"reinforce",
"reinforcement-learning",
"custom-implementation",
"deep-rl-class",
"model-index",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:29:52+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#Pixelcopter-PLE-v0 #reinforce #reinforcement-learning #custom-implementation #deep-rl-class #model-index #region-us
|
# Reinforce Agent playing Pixelcopter-PLE-v0
This is a trained model of a Reinforce agent playing Pixelcopter-PLE-v0 .
To learn to use this model and train yours check Unit 4 of the Deep Reinforcement Learning Course: URL
| [
"# Reinforce Agent playing Pixelcopter-PLE-v0\n This is a trained model of a Reinforce agent playing Pixelcopter-PLE-v0 .\n To learn to use this model and train yours check Unit 4 of the Deep Reinforcement Learning Course: URL"
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"TAGS\n#Pixelcopter-PLE-v0 #reinforce #reinforcement-learning #custom-implementation #deep-rl-class #model-index #region-us \n",
"# Reinforce Agent playing Pixelcopter-PLE-v0\n This is a trained model of a Reinforce agent playing Pixelcopter-PLE-v0 .\n To learn to use this model and train yours check Unit 4 of the Deep Reinforcement Learning Course: URL"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# my_awesome_gpt2_medium
This model is a fine-tuned version of [openai-community/gpt2-medium](https://huggingface.co/openai-community/gpt2-medium) on the eli5_category dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "mit", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["eli5_category"], "base_model": "openai-community/gpt2-medium", "model-index": [{"name": "my_awesome_gpt2_medium", "results": []}]} | jacklong0718/my_awesome_gpt2_medium | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"gpt2",
"text-generation",
"generated_from_trainer",
"dataset:eli5_category",
"base_model:openai-community/gpt2-medium",
"license:mit",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:31:45+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #gpt2 #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #dataset-eli5_category #base_model-openai-community/gpt2-medium #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# my_awesome_gpt2_medium
This model is a fine-tuned version of openai-community/gpt2-medium on the eli5_category dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
"# my_awesome_gpt2_medium\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of openai-community/gpt2-medium on the eli5_category dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 2e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 3.0",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.40.0\n- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] | [
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"# my_awesome_gpt2_medium\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of openai-community/gpt2-medium on the eli5_category dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 2e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 3.0",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.40.0\n- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
multiple-choice | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
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## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
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## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed]
| {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | Noboru-Ta/bert-base-japanese-v3-output_jcommonsenseqa | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"multiple-choice",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:33:25+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #multiple-choice #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
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"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
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"#### Metrics",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
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"# Model Card for Model ID",
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"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
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"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
text-generation | peft |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed]
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.8.2 | {"language": ["en", "fr", "it", "es"], "license": "apache-2.0", "library_name": "peft", "datasets": ["HiTZ/MedExpQA"], "metrics": ["accuracy"], "base_model": "mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1", "pipeline_tag": "text-generation"} | HiTZ/Mistral-7B-MedExpQA-EN | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"text-generation",
"en",
"fr",
"it",
"es",
"dataset:HiTZ/MedExpQA",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"base_model:mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1",
"license:apache-2.0",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:33:41+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [
"en",
"fr",
"it",
"es"
] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #text-generation #en #fr #it #es #dataset-HiTZ/MedExpQA #arxiv-1910.09700 #base_model-mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1 #license-apache-2.0 #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.8.2 | [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\n\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact",
"### Framework versions\n\n- PEFT 0.8.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#peft #safetensors #text-generation #en #fr #it #es #dataset-HiTZ/MedExpQA #arxiv-1910.09700 #base_model-mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1 #license-apache-2.0 #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\n\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact",
"### Framework versions\n\n- PEFT 0.8.2"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- header start -->
<p align="center">
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/mNM6Cai.png" width="100%" alt="Friendli Logo">
</p>
<!-- header end -->
# Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 - FP8
- Model creator: [Mistral AI](https://huggingface.co/mistralai)
- Original model: [Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1](https://huggingface.co/mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1)
## Description
This repo contains the Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 model quantized to FP8 by FriendliAI, significantly enhancing its inference efficiency while maintaining high accuracy.
Note that FP8 is only supported by NVIDIA Ada, Hopper, and Blackwell GPU architectures.
Check out [FriendliAI documentation](https://docs.friendli.ai/) for more details.
## Compatibility
This model is compatible with **[Friendli Container](https://friendli.ai/products/container/)**.
## Prerequisites
- Before you begin, make sure you have signed up for [Friendli Suite](https://suite.friendli.ai/). **You can use Friendli Containers free of charge for four weeks.**
- Prepare a Personal Access Token following [this guide](#preparing-personal-access-token).
- Prepare a Friendli Container Secret following [this guide](#preparing-container-secret).
### Preparing Personal Access Token
PAT (Personal Access Token) is the user credential for for logging into our container registry.
1. Sign in [Friendli Suite](https://suite.friendli.ai/).
2. Go to **[User Settings > Tokens](https://suite.friendli.ai/user-settings/tokens)** and click **'Create new token'**.
3. Save your created token value.
### Pulling Friendli Container Image
1. Log in to the Docker client using the personal access token created as outlined in [this guide](#preparing-personal-access-token).
```sh
export FRIENDLI_PAT="YOUR PAT"
docker login registry.friendli.ai -u $YOUR_EMAIL -p $FRIENDLI_PAT
```
2. Pull image
```sh
docker pull registry.friendli.ai/trial
```
## Running Friendli Container
Once you've prepared the image of Friendli Container, you can launch it to create a serving endpoint.
```sh
docker run \
--gpus '"device=0"' \
-p 8000:8000 \
-v ~/.cache/huggingface:/root/.cache/huggingface \
-e FRIENDLI_CONTAINER_SECRET="YOUR CONTAINER SECRET" \
registry.friendli.ai/trial \
--web-server-port 8000 \
--hf-model-name FriendliAI/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1-fp8
```
### Optimizing Inference Performance with Policy Search
To serve MoE models efficiently, it is required to run a policy search to explore the optimal execution policy:
```sh
export POLICY_DIR=$PWD/policy
mkdir -p $POLICY_DIR
docker run \
--gpus '"device=0"' \
-p 8000:8000 \
-v ~/.cache/huggingface:/root/.cache/huggingface \
-v $POLICY_DIR:/policy \
-e FRIENDLI_CONTAINER_SECRET="YOUR CONTAINER SECRET" \
registry.friendli.ai/trial \
--web-server-port 8000 \
--hf-model-name FriendliAI/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1-fp8 \
--algo-policy-dir /policy \
--search-policy true
```
When the optimal policy is successfully searched, the policy is compiled into a policy file and saved at `$POLICY_DIR`.
Now you can create an inference endpoint with this optimal policy as follows:
```sh
docker run \
--gpus '"device=0"' \
-p 8000:8000 \
-v ~/.cache/huggingface:/root/.cache/huggingface \
-v $POLICY_DIR:/policy \
-e FRIENDLI_CONTAINER_SECRET="YOUR CONTAINER SECRET" \
registry.friendli.ai/trial \
--web-server-port 8000 \
--hf-model-name FriendliAI/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1-fp8 \
--algo-policy-dir /policy
```
---
# Original model card: MistralAI's Mixtral-8x7B v0.1
# Model Card for Mixtral-8x7B
The Mixtral-8x7B Large Language Model (LLM) is a pretrained generative Sparse Mixture of Experts. The Mistral-8x7B outperforms Llama 2 70B on most benchmarks we tested.
For full details of this model please read our [release blog post](https://mistral.ai/news/mixtral-of-experts/).
## Warning
This repo contains weights that are compatible with [vLLM](https://github.com/vllm-project/vllm) serving of the model as well as Hugging Face [transformers](https://github.com/huggingface/transformers) library. It is based on the original Mixtral [torrent release](magnet:?xt=urn:btih:5546272da9065eddeb6fcd7ffddeef5b75be79a7&dn=mixtral-8x7b-32kseqlen&tr=udp%3A%2F%http://2Fopentracker.i2p.rocks%3A6969%2Fannounce&tr=http%3A%2F%http://2Ftracker.openbittorrent.com%3A80%2Fannounce), but the file format and parameter names are different. Please note that model cannot (yet) be instantiated with HF.
## Run the model
```python
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
model_id = "mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(model_id)
text = "Hello my name is"
inputs = tokenizer(text, return_tensors="pt")
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=20)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True))
```
By default, transformers will load the model in full precision. Therefore you might be interested to further reduce down the memory requirements to run the model through the optimizations we offer in HF ecosystem:
### In half-precision
Note `float16` precision only works on GPU devices
<details>
<summary> Click to expand </summary>
```diff
+ import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
model_id = "mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
+ model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(model_id, torch_dtype=torch.float16).to(0)
text = "Hello my name is"
+ inputs = tokenizer(text, return_tensors="pt").to(0)
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=20)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True))
```
</details>
### Lower precision using (8-bit & 4-bit) using `bitsandbytes`
<details>
<summary> Click to expand </summary>
```diff
+ import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
model_id = "mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
+ model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(model_id, load_in_4bit=True)
text = "Hello my name is"
+ inputs = tokenizer(text, return_tensors="pt").to(0)
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=20)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True))
```
</details>
### Load the model with Flash Attention 2
<details>
<summary> Click to expand </summary>
```diff
+ import torch
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
model_id = "mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
+ model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(model_id, use_flash_attention_2=True)
text = "Hello my name is"
+ inputs = tokenizer(text, return_tensors="pt").to(0)
outputs = model.generate(**inputs, max_new_tokens=20)
print(tokenizer.decode(outputs[0], skip_special_tokens=True))
```
</details>
## Notice
Mixtral-8x7B is a pretrained base model and therefore does not have any moderation mechanisms.
# The Mistral AI Team
Albert Jiang, Alexandre Sablayrolles, Arthur Mensch, Blanche Savary, Chris Bamford, Devendra Singh Chaplot, Diego de las Casas, Emma Bou Hanna, Florian Bressand, Gianna Lengyel, Guillaume Bour, Guillaume Lample, Lélio Renard Lavaud, Louis Ternon, Lucile Saulnier, Marie-Anne Lachaux, Pierre Stock, Teven Le Scao, Théophile Gervet, Thibaut Lavril, Thomas Wang, Timothée Lacroix, William El Sayed. | {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["pretrained"], "model_name": "mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1", "base_model": "mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1", "inference": false, "model_link": "https://huggingface.co/mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1", "pipeline_tag": "text-generation", "quantized_by": "FriendliAI"} | FriendliAI/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1-fp8 | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mixtral",
"text-generation",
"pretrained",
"base_model:mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"8-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:35:06+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mixtral #text-generation #pretrained #base_model-mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #text-generation-inference #8-bit #region-us
|
<p align="center">
<img src="https://i.URL width="100%" alt="Friendli Logo">
</p>
# Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 - FP8
- Model creator: Mistral AI
- Original model: Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1
## Description
This repo contains the Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 model quantized to FP8 by FriendliAI, significantly enhancing its inference efficiency while maintaining high accuracy.
Note that FP8 is only supported by NVIDIA Ada, Hopper, and Blackwell GPU architectures.
Check out FriendliAI documentation for more details.
## Compatibility
This model is compatible with Friendli Container.
## Prerequisites
- Before you begin, make sure you have signed up for Friendli Suite. You can use Friendli Containers free of charge for four weeks.
- Prepare a Personal Access Token following this guide.
- Prepare a Friendli Container Secret following this guide.
### Preparing Personal Access Token
PAT (Personal Access Token) is the user credential for for logging into our container registry.
1. Sign in Friendli Suite.
2. Go to User Settings > Tokens and click 'Create new token'.
3. Save your created token value.
### Pulling Friendli Container Image
1. Log in to the Docker client using the personal access token created as outlined in this guide.
2. Pull image
## Running Friendli Container
Once you've prepared the image of Friendli Container, you can launch it to create a serving endpoint.
### Optimizing Inference Performance with Policy Search
To serve MoE models efficiently, it is required to run a policy search to explore the optimal execution policy:
When the optimal policy is successfully searched, the policy is compiled into a policy file and saved at '$POLICY_DIR'.
Now you can create an inference endpoint with this optimal policy as follows:
---
# Original model card: MistralAI's Mixtral-8x7B v0.1
# Model Card for Mixtral-8x7B
The Mixtral-8x7B Large Language Model (LLM) is a pretrained generative Sparse Mixture of Experts. The Mistral-8x7B outperforms Llama 2 70B on most benchmarks we tested.
For full details of this model please read our release blog post.
## Warning
This repo contains weights that are compatible with vLLM serving of the model as well as Hugging Face transformers library. It is based on the original Mixtral torrent release, but the file format and parameter names are different. Please note that model cannot (yet) be instantiated with HF.
## Run the model
By default, transformers will load the model in full precision. Therefore you might be interested to further reduce down the memory requirements to run the model through the optimizations we offer in HF ecosystem:
### In half-precision
Note 'float16' precision only works on GPU devices
<details>
<summary> Click to expand </summary>
</details>
### Lower precision using (8-bit & 4-bit) using 'bitsandbytes'
<details>
<summary> Click to expand </summary>
</details>
### Load the model with Flash Attention 2
<details>
<summary> Click to expand </summary>
</details>
## Notice
Mixtral-8x7B is a pretrained base model and therefore does not have any moderation mechanisms.
# The Mistral AI Team
Albert Jiang, Alexandre Sablayrolles, Arthur Mensch, Blanche Savary, Chris Bamford, Devendra Singh Chaplot, Diego de las Casas, Emma Bou Hanna, Florian Bressand, Gianna Lengyel, Guillaume Bour, Guillaume Lample, Lélio Renard Lavaud, Louis Ternon, Lucile Saulnier, Marie-Anne Lachaux, Pierre Stock, Teven Le Scao, Théophile Gervet, Thibaut Lavril, Thomas Wang, Timothée Lacroix, William El Sayed. | [
"# Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 - FP8\n\n- Model creator: Mistral AI\n- Original model: Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1",
"## Description\n\nThis repo contains the Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 model quantized to FP8 by FriendliAI, significantly enhancing its inference efficiency while maintaining high accuracy.\nNote that FP8 is only supported by NVIDIA Ada, Hopper, and Blackwell GPU architectures.\nCheck out FriendliAI documentation for more details.",
"## Compatibility\n\nThis model is compatible with Friendli Container.",
"## Prerequisites\n\n- Before you begin, make sure you have signed up for Friendli Suite. You can use Friendli Containers free of charge for four weeks.\n- Prepare a Personal Access Token following this guide.\n- Prepare a Friendli Container Secret following this guide.",
"### Preparing Personal Access Token\n\nPAT (Personal Access Token) is the user credential for for logging into our container registry.\n\n1. Sign in Friendli Suite.\n2. Go to User Settings > Tokens and click 'Create new token'.\n3. Save your created token value.",
"### Pulling Friendli Container Image\n\n1. Log in to the Docker client using the personal access token created as outlined in this guide.\n\n \n\n2. Pull image",
"## Running Friendli Container\n\nOnce you've prepared the image of Friendli Container, you can launch it to create a serving endpoint.",
"### Optimizing Inference Performance with Policy Search\n\nTo serve MoE models efficiently, it is required to run a policy search to explore the optimal execution policy:\n\n\n\nWhen the optimal policy is successfully searched, the policy is compiled into a policy file and saved at '$POLICY_DIR'.\nNow you can create an inference endpoint with this optimal policy as follows:\n\n\n\n---",
"# Original model card: MistralAI's Mixtral-8x7B v0.1",
"# Model Card for Mixtral-8x7B\nThe Mixtral-8x7B Large Language Model (LLM) is a pretrained generative Sparse Mixture of Experts. The Mistral-8x7B outperforms Llama 2 70B on most benchmarks we tested.\n\nFor full details of this model please read our release blog post.",
"## Warning\nThis repo contains weights that are compatible with vLLM serving of the model as well as Hugging Face transformers library. It is based on the original Mixtral torrent release, but the file format and parameter names are different. Please note that model cannot (yet) be instantiated with HF.",
"## Run the model\n\n\n\n\nBy default, transformers will load the model in full precision. Therefore you might be interested to further reduce down the memory requirements to run the model through the optimizations we offer in HF ecosystem:",
"### In half-precision\n\nNote 'float16' precision only works on GPU devices\n\n<details>\n<summary> Click to expand </summary>\n\n\n</details>",
"### Lower precision using (8-bit & 4-bit) using 'bitsandbytes'\n\n<details>\n<summary> Click to expand </summary>\n\n\n</details>",
"### Load the model with Flash Attention 2\n\n<details>\n<summary> Click to expand </summary>\n\n\n</details>",
"## Notice\nMixtral-8x7B is a pretrained base model and therefore does not have any moderation mechanisms.",
"# The Mistral AI Team\nAlbert Jiang, Alexandre Sablayrolles, Arthur Mensch, Blanche Savary, Chris Bamford, Devendra Singh Chaplot, Diego de las Casas, Emma Bou Hanna, Florian Bressand, Gianna Lengyel, Guillaume Bour, Guillaume Lample, Lélio Renard Lavaud, Louis Ternon, Lucile Saulnier, Marie-Anne Lachaux, Pierre Stock, Teven Le Scao, Théophile Gervet, Thibaut Lavril, Thomas Wang, Timothée Lacroix, William El Sayed."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mixtral #text-generation #pretrained #base_model-mistralai/Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #text-generation-inference #8-bit #region-us \n",
"# Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 - FP8\n\n- Model creator: Mistral AI\n- Original model: Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1",
"## Description\n\nThis repo contains the Mixtral-8x7B-v0.1 model quantized to FP8 by FriendliAI, significantly enhancing its inference efficiency while maintaining high accuracy.\nNote that FP8 is only supported by NVIDIA Ada, Hopper, and Blackwell GPU architectures.\nCheck out FriendliAI documentation for more details.",
"## Compatibility\n\nThis model is compatible with Friendli Container.",
"## Prerequisites\n\n- Before you begin, make sure you have signed up for Friendli Suite. You can use Friendli Containers free of charge for four weeks.\n- Prepare a Personal Access Token following this guide.\n- Prepare a Friendli Container Secret following this guide.",
"### Preparing Personal Access Token\n\nPAT (Personal Access Token) is the user credential for for logging into our container registry.\n\n1. Sign in Friendli Suite.\n2. Go to User Settings > Tokens and click 'Create new token'.\n3. Save your created token value.",
"### Pulling Friendli Container Image\n\n1. Log in to the Docker client using the personal access token created as outlined in this guide.\n\n \n\n2. Pull image",
"## Running Friendli Container\n\nOnce you've prepared the image of Friendli Container, you can launch it to create a serving endpoint.",
"### Optimizing Inference Performance with Policy Search\n\nTo serve MoE models efficiently, it is required to run a policy search to explore the optimal execution policy:\n\n\n\nWhen the optimal policy is successfully searched, the policy is compiled into a policy file and saved at '$POLICY_DIR'.\nNow you can create an inference endpoint with this optimal policy as follows:\n\n\n\n---",
"# Original model card: MistralAI's Mixtral-8x7B v0.1",
"# Model Card for Mixtral-8x7B\nThe Mixtral-8x7B Large Language Model (LLM) is a pretrained generative Sparse Mixture of Experts. The Mistral-8x7B outperforms Llama 2 70B on most benchmarks we tested.\n\nFor full details of this model please read our release blog post.",
"## Warning\nThis repo contains weights that are compatible with vLLM serving of the model as well as Hugging Face transformers library. It is based on the original Mixtral torrent release, but the file format and parameter names are different. Please note that model cannot (yet) be instantiated with HF.",
"## Run the model\n\n\n\n\nBy default, transformers will load the model in full precision. Therefore you might be interested to further reduce down the memory requirements to run the model through the optimizations we offer in HF ecosystem:",
"### In half-precision\n\nNote 'float16' precision only works on GPU devices\n\n<details>\n<summary> Click to expand </summary>\n\n\n</details>",
"### Lower precision using (8-bit & 4-bit) using 'bitsandbytes'\n\n<details>\n<summary> Click to expand </summary>\n\n\n</details>",
"### Load the model with Flash Attention 2\n\n<details>\n<summary> Click to expand </summary>\n\n\n</details>",
"## Notice\nMixtral-8x7B is a pretrained base model and therefore does not have any moderation mechanisms.",
"# The Mistral AI Team\nAlbert Jiang, Alexandre Sablayrolles, Arthur Mensch, Blanche Savary, Chris Bamford, Devendra Singh Chaplot, Diego de las Casas, Emma Bou Hanna, Florian Bressand, Gianna Lengyel, Guillaume Bour, Guillaume Lample, Lélio Renard Lavaud, Louis Ternon, Lucile Saulnier, Marie-Anne Lachaux, Pierre Stock, Teven Le Scao, Théophile Gervet, Thibaut Lavril, Thomas Wang, Timothée Lacroix, William El Sayed."
] |
text-to-image | diffusers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the training script had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# Critical Dream - cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1
<Gallery />
## Model description
These are cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1 LoRA adaption weights for stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0, for the purposes of
generating images for the [Critical Dream](https://github.com/cosmicBboy/critical-dream)
project.
The weights were trained using [DreamBooth](https://dreambooth.github.io/).
LoRA for the text encoder was enabled: True.
Special VAE used for training: stabilityai/sdxl-vae.
## Trigger words
You should use a picture of [dm-matt-mercer], a dungeon master. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus" to trigger the image generation.
## Download model
Weights for this model are available in Safetensors format.
[Download](cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1/tree/main) them in the Files & versions tab.
## Tracker run link
https://wandb.ai/nielsbantilan/dreambooth-lora-sd-xl/runs/3dovon9m
## Intended uses & limitations
#### How to use
```python
# TODO: add an example code snippet for running this diffusion pipeline
```
#### Limitations and bias
[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]
## Training details
[TODO: describe the data used to train the model] | {"license": "openrail++", "library_name": "diffusers", "tags": ["text-to-image", "stable-diffusion-xl", "stable-diffusion-xl-diffusers", "text-to-image", "diffusers", "lora", "template:sd-lora"], "base_model": "stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0", "prompt": "a picture of [dm-matt-mercer], a dungeon master. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus\"", "widget": [{"text": "a picture of [dm-matt-mercer]", "output": {"url": "image_0.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [dm-matt-mercer]", "output": {"url": "image_1.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a dungeon master.", "output": {"url": "image_2.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a dungeon master.", "output": {"url": "image_3.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-fjord], a male half-orc warlock. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_4.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-fjord], a male half-orc warlock. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_5.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male half-orc warlock", "output": {"url": "image_6.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male half-orc warlock", "output": {"url": "image_7.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-beau], a female human monk. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_8.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-beau], a female human monk. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_9.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female human monk", "output": {"url": "image_10.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female human monk", "output": {"url": "image_11.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-caduceus], a male firbolg cleric. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_12.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-caduceus], a male firbolg cleric. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_13.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male firbolg cleric", "output": {"url": "image_14.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male firbolg cleric", "output": {"url": "image_15.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-caleb], a male human wizard. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_16.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-caleb], a male human wizard. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_17.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male human wizard", "output": {"url": "image_18.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male human wizard", "output": {"url": "image_19.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-jester], a female tiefling cleric. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_20.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-jester], a female tiefling cleric. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_21.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female tiefling cleric", "output": {"url": "image_22.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female tiefling cleric", "output": {"url": "image_23.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-nott], a female goblin rogue. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_24.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-nott], a female goblin rogue. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_25.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female goblin rogue", "output": {"url": "image_26.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female goblin rogue", "output": {"url": "image_27.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-veth], a female halfling rogue/wizard. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_28.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-veth], a female halfling rogue/wizard. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_29.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female halfling rogue/wizard", "output": {"url": "image_30.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female halfling rogue/wizard", "output": {"url": "image_31.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-yasha], a female aasimar barbarian. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_32.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-yasha], a female aasimar barbarian. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_33.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female aasimar barbarian", "output": {"url": "image_34.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a female aasimar barbarian", "output": {"url": "image_35.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-mollymauk], a male tiefling blood hunter. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_36.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-mollymauk], a male tiefling blood hunter. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_37.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male tiefling blood hunter", "output": {"url": "image_38.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male tiefling blood hunter", "output": {"url": "image_39.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-essek], a male drow wizard. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_40.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of [critrole-essek], a male drow wizard. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus", "output": {"url": "image_41.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male drow wizard", "output": {"url": "image_42.png"}}, {"text": "a picture of a male drow wizard", "output": {"url": "image_43.png"}}]} | cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1 | null | [
"diffusers",
"text-to-image",
"stable-diffusion-xl",
"stable-diffusion-xl-diffusers",
"lora",
"template:sd-lora",
"base_model:stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0",
"license:openrail++",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:35:16+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#diffusers #text-to-image #stable-diffusion-xl #stable-diffusion-xl-diffusers #lora #template-sd-lora #base_model-stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0 #license-openrail++ #region-us
|
# Critical Dream - cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1
<Gallery />
## Model description
These are cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1 LoRA adaption weights for stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0, for the purposes of
generating images for the Critical Dream
project.
The weights were trained using DreamBooth.
LoRA for the text encoder was enabled: True.
Special VAE used for training: stabilityai/sdxl-vae.
## Trigger words
You should use a picture of [dm-matt-mercer], a dungeon master. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus" to trigger the image generation.
## Download model
Weights for this model are available in Safetensors format.
Download them in the Files & versions tab.
## Tracker run link
URL
## Intended uses & limitations
#### How to use
#### Limitations and bias
[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]
## Training details
[TODO: describe the data used to train the model] | [
"# Critical Dream - cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1\n\n<Gallery />",
"## Model description\n\nThese are cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1 LoRA adaption weights for stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0, for the purposes of\ngenerating images for the Critical Dream\nproject.\n\nThe weights were trained using DreamBooth.\n\nLoRA for the text encoder was enabled: True.\n\nSpecial VAE used for training: stabilityai/sdxl-vae.",
"## Trigger words\n\nYou should use a picture of [dm-matt-mercer], a dungeon master. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus\" to trigger the image generation.",
"## Download model\n\nWeights for this model are available in Safetensors format.\n\nDownload them in the Files & versions tab.",
"## Tracker run link\n\nURL",
"## Intended uses & limitations",
"#### How to use",
"#### Limitations and bias\n\n[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]",
"## Training details\n\n[TODO: describe the data used to train the model]"
] | [
"TAGS\n#diffusers #text-to-image #stable-diffusion-xl #stable-diffusion-xl-diffusers #lora #template-sd-lora #base_model-stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0 #license-openrail++ #region-us \n",
"# Critical Dream - cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1\n\n<Gallery />",
"## Model description\n\nThese are cosmicBboy/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0-lora-dreambooth-critdream-v0.7.1 LoRA adaption weights for stabilityai/stable-diffusion-xl-base-1.0, for the purposes of\ngenerating images for the Critical Dream\nproject.\n\nThe weights were trained using DreamBooth.\n\nLoRA for the text encoder was enabled: True.\n\nSpecial VAE used for training: stabilityai/sdxl-vae.",
"## Trigger words\n\nYou should use a picture of [dm-matt-mercer], a dungeon master. background is a forest. fantasy art style, high quality, highly detailed, sharp focus\" to trigger the image generation.",
"## Download model\n\nWeights for this model are available in Safetensors format.\n\nDownload them in the Files & versions tab.",
"## Tracker run link\n\nURL",
"## Intended uses & limitations",
"#### How to use",
"#### Limitations and bias\n\n[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]",
"## Training details\n\n[TODO: describe the data used to train the model]"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# 4b_galore
This model is a fine-tuned version of [Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B](https://huggingface.co/Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B) on the universal_ner_all dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 1e-05
- train_batch_size: 2
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 8
- total_train_batch_size: 16
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 200
- num_epochs: 1.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.39.2
- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"license": "other", "tags": ["llama-factory", "full", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B", "model-index": [{"name": "4b_galore", "results": []}]} | VGLee/qwen1.5-4b-universal_ner-galore | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"qwen2",
"text-generation",
"llama-factory",
"full",
"generated_from_trainer",
"conversational",
"base_model:Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B",
"license:other",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:37:22+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #qwen2 #text-generation #llama-factory #full #generated_from_trainer #conversational #base_model-Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B #license-other #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# 4b_galore
This model is a fine-tuned version of Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B on the universal_ner_all dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 1e-05
- train_batch_size: 2
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 8
- total_train_batch_size: 16
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 200
- num_epochs: 1.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.39.2
- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"# 4b_galore\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B on the universal_ner_all dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 1e-05\n- train_batch_size: 2\n- eval_batch_size: 1\n- seed: 42\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 8\n- total_train_batch_size: 16\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: cosine\n- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 200\n- num_epochs: 1.0",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.39.2\n- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #qwen2 #text-generation #llama-factory #full #generated_from_trainer #conversational #base_model-Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B #license-other #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# 4b_galore\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of Qwen/Qwen1.5-4B on the universal_ner_all dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 1e-05\n- train_batch_size: 2\n- eval_batch_size: 1\n- seed: 42\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 8\n- total_train_batch_size: 16\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: cosine\n- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 200\n- num_epochs: 1.0",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.39.2\n- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
reinforcement-learning | ml-agents |
# **ppo** Agent playing **SnowballTarget**
This is a trained model of a **ppo** agent playing **SnowballTarget**
using the [Unity ML-Agents Library](https://github.com/Unity-Technologies/ml-agents).
## Usage (with ML-Agents)
The Documentation: https://unity-technologies.github.io/ml-agents/ML-Agents-Toolkit-Documentation/
We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:
- A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog 🐶 to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your
browser: https://huggingface.co/learn/deep-rl-course/unitbonus1/introduction
- A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:
https://huggingface.co/learn/deep-rl-course/unit5/introduction
### Resume the training
```bash
mlagents-learn <your_configuration_file_path.yaml> --run-id=<run_id> --resume
```
### Watch your Agent play
You can watch your agent **playing directly in your browser**
1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to https://huggingface.co/unity
2. Step 1: Find your model_id: lightyip/ppo-SnowballTarget
3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file
4. Click on Watch the agent play 👀
| {"library_name": "ml-agents", "tags": ["SnowballTarget", "deep-reinforcement-learning", "reinforcement-learning", "ML-Agents-SnowballTarget"]} | lightyip/ppo-SnowballTarget | null | [
"ml-agents",
"tensorboard",
"onnx",
"SnowballTarget",
"deep-reinforcement-learning",
"reinforcement-learning",
"ML-Agents-SnowballTarget",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:37:25+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#ml-agents #tensorboard #onnx #SnowballTarget #deep-reinforcement-learning #reinforcement-learning #ML-Agents-SnowballTarget #region-us
|
# ppo Agent playing SnowballTarget
This is a trained model of a ppo agent playing SnowballTarget
using the Unity ML-Agents Library.
## Usage (with ML-Agents)
The Documentation: URL
We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:
- A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your
browser: URL
- A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:
URL
### Resume the training
### Watch your Agent play
You can watch your agent playing directly in your browser
1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to URL
2. Step 1: Find your model_id: lightyip/ppo-SnowballTarget
3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file
4. Click on Watch the agent play
| [
"# ppo Agent playing SnowballTarget\n This is a trained model of a ppo agent playing SnowballTarget\n using the Unity ML-Agents Library.\n\n ## Usage (with ML-Agents)\n The Documentation: URL\n\n We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:\n - A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your\n browser: URL\n - A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:\n URL\n\n ### Resume the training\n \n\n ### Watch your Agent play\n You can watch your agent playing directly in your browser\n\n 1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to URL\n 2. Step 1: Find your model_id: lightyip/ppo-SnowballTarget\n 3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file\n 4. Click on Watch the agent play"
] | [
"TAGS\n#ml-agents #tensorboard #onnx #SnowballTarget #deep-reinforcement-learning #reinforcement-learning #ML-Agents-SnowballTarget #region-us \n",
"# ppo Agent playing SnowballTarget\n This is a trained model of a ppo agent playing SnowballTarget\n using the Unity ML-Agents Library.\n\n ## Usage (with ML-Agents)\n The Documentation: URL\n\n We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:\n - A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your\n browser: URL\n - A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:\n URL\n\n ### Resume the training\n \n\n ### Watch your Agent play\n You can watch your agent playing directly in your browser\n\n 1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to URL\n 2. Step 1: Find your model_id: lightyip/ppo-SnowballTarget\n 3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file\n 4. Click on Watch the agent play"
] |
text-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# NDD-petclinic_test-content_tags
This model is a fine-tuned version of [distilbert-base-uncased](https://huggingface.co/distilbert-base-uncased) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.2832
- Accuracy: 0.9394
- F1: 0.9326
- Precision: 0.9434
- Recall: 0.9394
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 32
- eval_batch_size: 32
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4
- total_train_batch_size: 128
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 2
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Accuracy | F1 | Precision | Recall |
|:-------------:|:------:|:----:|:---------------:|:--------:|:------:|:---------:|:------:|
| 0.1788 | 0.9993 | 674 | 0.2734 | 0.9470 | 0.9434 | 0.9468 | 0.9470 |
| 0.1385 | 1.9985 | 1348 | 0.2832 | 0.9394 | 0.9326 | 0.9434 | 0.9394 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["accuracy", "f1", "precision", "recall"], "base_model": "distilbert-base-uncased", "model-index": [{"name": "NDD-petclinic_test-content_tags", "results": []}]} | lgk03/NDD-petclinic_test-content_tags | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"distilbert",
"text-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:distilbert-base-uncased",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:37:52+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #distilbert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-distilbert-base-uncased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| NDD-petclinic\_test-content\_tags
=================================
This model is a fine-tuned version of distilbert-base-uncased on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.2832
* Accuracy: 0.9394
* F1: 0.9326
* Precision: 0.9434
* Recall: 0.9394
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 32
* eval\_batch\_size: 32
* seed: 42
* gradient\_accumulation\_steps: 4
* total\_train\_batch\_size: 128
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 2
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.1
* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 32\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 32\n* seed: 42\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 4\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 128\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 2",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.1\n* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #distilbert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-distilbert-base-uncased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 32\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 32\n* seed: 42\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 4\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 128\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 2",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.1\n* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
feature-extraction | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
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## How to Get Started with the Model
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[More Information Needed]
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<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
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#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
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<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | EinsZwo/mlm_only_424_bertonly | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"feature-extraction",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:37:56+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #feature-extraction #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #bert #feature-extraction #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
sentence-similarity | sentence-transformers |
# alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV2
This is a [sentence-transformers](https://www.SBERT.net) model: It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768 dimensional dense vector space and can be used for tasks like clustering or semantic search.
<!--- Describe your model here -->
## Usage (Sentence-Transformers)
Using this model becomes easy when you have [sentence-transformers](https://www.SBERT.net) installed:
```
pip install -U sentence-transformers
```
Then you can use the model like this:
```python
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
sentences = ["This is an example sentence", "Each sentence is converted"]
model = SentenceTransformer('alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV2')
embeddings = model.encode(sentences)
print(embeddings)
```
## Evaluation Results
<!--- Describe how your model was evaluated -->
For an automated evaluation of this model, see the *Sentence Embeddings Benchmark*: [https://seb.sbert.net](https://seb.sbert.net?model_name=alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV2)
## Training
The model was trained with the parameters:
**DataLoader**:
`torch.utils.data.dataloader.DataLoader` of length 191 with parameters:
```
{'batch_size': 8, 'sampler': 'torch.utils.data.sampler.RandomSampler', 'batch_sampler': 'torch.utils.data.sampler.BatchSampler'}
```
**Loss**:
`sentence_transformers.losses.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss` with parameters:
```
{'scale': 20.0, 'similarity_fct': 'cos_sim'}
```
Parameters of the fit()-Method:
```
{
"epochs": 15,
"evaluation_steps": 0,
"evaluator": "NoneType",
"max_grad_norm": 1,
"optimizer_class": "<class 'torch.optim.adamw.AdamW'>",
"optimizer_params": {
"lr": 2e-05
},
"scheduler": "WarmupLinear",
"steps_per_epoch": null,
"warmup_steps": 2865,
"weight_decay": 0.01
}
```
## Full Model Architecture
```
SentenceTransformer(
(0): Transformer({'max_seq_length': 512, 'do_lower_case': False}) with Transformer model: XLMRobertaModel
(1): Pooling({'word_embedding_dimension': 768, 'pooling_mode_cls_token': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_tokens': True, 'pooling_mode_max_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_mean_sqrt_len_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_weightedmean_tokens': False, 'pooling_mode_lasttoken': False, 'include_prompt': True})
(2): Normalize()
)
```
## Citing & Authors
<!--- Describe where people can find more information --> | {"library_name": "sentence-transformers", "tags": ["sentence-transformers", "feature-extraction", "sentence-similarity"], "pipeline_tag": "sentence-similarity"} | alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV1 | null | [
"sentence-transformers",
"safetensors",
"xlm-roberta",
"feature-extraction",
"sentence-similarity",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us",
"has_space"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:38:10+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#sentence-transformers #safetensors #xlm-roberta #feature-extraction #sentence-similarity #endpoints_compatible #region-us #has_space
|
# alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV2
This is a sentence-transformers model: It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768 dimensional dense vector space and can be used for tasks like clustering or semantic search.
## Usage (Sentence-Transformers)
Using this model becomes easy when you have sentence-transformers installed:
Then you can use the model like this:
## Evaluation Results
For an automated evaluation of this model, see the *Sentence Embeddings Benchmark*: URL
## Training
The model was trained with the parameters:
DataLoader:
'URL.dataloader.DataLoader' of length 191 with parameters:
Loss:
'sentence_transformers.losses.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss' with parameters:
Parameters of the fit()-Method:
## Full Model Architecture
## Citing & Authors
| [
"# alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV2\n\nThis is a sentence-transformers model: It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768 dimensional dense vector space and can be used for tasks like clustering or semantic search.",
"## Usage (Sentence-Transformers)\n\nUsing this model becomes easy when you have sentence-transformers installed:\n\n\n\nThen you can use the model like this:",
"## Evaluation Results\n\n\n\nFor an automated evaluation of this model, see the *Sentence Embeddings Benchmark*: URL",
"## Training\nThe model was trained with the parameters:\n\nDataLoader:\n\n'URL.dataloader.DataLoader' of length 191 with parameters:\n\n\nLoss:\n\n'sentence_transformers.losses.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss' with parameters:\n \n\nParameters of the fit()-Method:",
"## Full Model Architecture",
"## Citing & Authors"
] | [
"TAGS\n#sentence-transformers #safetensors #xlm-roberta #feature-extraction #sentence-similarity #endpoints_compatible #region-us #has_space \n",
"# alixnaveed/NAMAZMODELV2\n\nThis is a sentence-transformers model: It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768 dimensional dense vector space and can be used for tasks like clustering or semantic search.",
"## Usage (Sentence-Transformers)\n\nUsing this model becomes easy when you have sentence-transformers installed:\n\n\n\nThen you can use the model like this:",
"## Evaluation Results\n\n\n\nFor an automated evaluation of this model, see the *Sentence Embeddings Benchmark*: URL",
"## Training\nThe model was trained with the parameters:\n\nDataLoader:\n\n'URL.dataloader.DataLoader' of length 191 with parameters:\n\n\nLoss:\n\n'sentence_transformers.losses.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss.MultipleNegativesRankingLoss' with parameters:\n \n\nParameters of the fit()-Method:",
"## Full Model Architecture",
"## Citing & Authors"
] |
null | peft |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wandb/assets/main/wandb-github-badge-28.svg" alt="Visualize in Weights & Biases" width="200" height="32"/>](https://wandb.ai/52g/huggingface/runs/xlq51xa8)
# results
This model is a fine-tuned version of [meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct](https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 1.0888
- Rewards/chosen: -0.0906
- Rewards/rejected: -0.1196
- Rewards/accuracies: 0.8000
- Rewards/margins: 0.0290
- Logps/rejected: -1.1960
- Logps/chosen: -0.9064
- Logits/rejected: -1.3083
- Logits/chosen: -1.0410
- Nll Loss: 1.0376
- Log Odds Ratio: -0.5127
- Log Odds Chosen: 0.4766
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 8e-06
- train_batch_size: 2
- eval_batch_size: 2
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4
- total_train_batch_size: 8
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 10
- num_epochs: 1
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Rewards/chosen | Rewards/rejected | Rewards/accuracies | Rewards/margins | Logps/rejected | Logps/chosen | Logits/rejected | Logits/chosen | Nll Loss | Log Odds Ratio | Log Odds Chosen |
|:-------------:|:------:|:----:|:---------------:|:--------------:|:----------------:|:------------------:|:---------------:|:--------------:|:------------:|:---------------:|:-------------:|:--------:|:--------------:|:---------------:|
| 1.0958 | 0.2020 | 25 | 1.4462 | -0.1303 | -0.1689 | 0.8000 | 0.0386 | -1.6887 | -1.3025 | -1.1831 | -0.9153 | 1.3976 | -0.4854 | 0.5211 |
| 1.2563 | 0.4040 | 50 | 1.2116 | -0.1057 | -0.1387 | 0.8000 | 0.0330 | -1.3872 | -1.0575 | -1.2714 | -1.0083 | 1.1616 | -0.5001 | 0.4913 |
| 1.3121 | 0.6061 | 75 | 1.1251 | -0.0952 | -0.1249 | 0.9000 | 0.0297 | -1.2491 | -0.9524 | -1.3022 | -1.0390 | 1.0740 | -0.5109 | 0.4726 |
| 1.3689 | 0.8081 | 100 | 1.0888 | -0.0906 | -0.1196 | 0.8000 | 0.0290 | -1.1960 | -0.9064 | -1.3083 | -1.0410 | 1.0376 | -0.5127 | 0.4766 |
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.1.dev0
- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0
- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | {"library_name": "peft", "tags": ["trl", "orpo", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct", "model-index": [{"name": "results", "results": []}]} | jasonkang14/results | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"trl",
"orpo",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:40:51+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #trl #orpo #generated_from_trainer #base_model-meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct #region-us
| <img src="URL alt="Visualize in Weights & Biases" width="200" height="32"/>
results
=======
This model is a fine-tuned version of meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 1.0888
* Rewards/chosen: -0.0906
* Rewards/rejected: -0.1196
* Rewards/accuracies: 0.8000
* Rewards/margins: 0.0290
* Logps/rejected: -1.1960
* Logps/chosen: -0.9064
* Logits/rejected: -1.3083
* Logits/chosen: -1.0410
* Nll Loss: 1.0376
* Log Odds Ratio: -0.5127
* Log Odds Chosen: 0.4766
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 8e-06
* train\_batch\_size: 2
* eval\_batch\_size: 2
* seed: 42
* gradient\_accumulation\_steps: 4
* total\_train\_batch\_size: 8
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_steps: 10
* num\_epochs: 1
### Training results
### Framework versions
* PEFT 0.10.1.dev0
* Transformers 4.41.0.dev0
* Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 8e-06\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 2\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 2\n* seed: 42\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 4\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 10\n* num\\_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* PEFT 0.10.1.dev0\n* Transformers 4.41.0.dev0\n* Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] | [
"TAGS\n#peft #safetensors #trl #orpo #generated_from_trainer #base_model-meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 8e-06\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 2\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 2\n* seed: 42\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 4\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 10\n* num\\_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* PEFT 0.10.1.dev0\n* Transformers 4.41.0.dev0\n* Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
static quants of https://huggingface.co/ThomasComics/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied
<!-- provided-files -->
weighted/imatrix quants seem not to be available (by me) at this time. If they do not show up a week or so after the static ones, I have probably not planned for them. Feel free to request them by opening a Community Discussion.
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q2_K.gguf) | Q2_K | 1.5 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.IQ3_XS.gguf) | IQ3_XS | 1.7 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.IQ3_S.gguf) | IQ3_S | 1.8 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q3_K_S.gguf) | Q3_K_S | 1.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.IQ3_M.gguf) | IQ3_M | 1.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q3_K_M.gguf) | Q3_K_M | 2.0 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q3_K_L.gguf) | Q3_K_L | 2.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.IQ4_XS.gguf) | IQ4_XS | 2.2 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q4_K_S.gguf) | Q4_K_S | 2.3 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q4_K_M.gguf) | Q4_K_M | 2.4 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q5_K_S.gguf) | Q5_K_S | 2.7 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q5_K_M.gguf) | Q5_K_M | 2.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q6_K.gguf) | Q6_K | 3.2 | very good quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.Q8_0.gguf) | Q8_0 | 4.2 | fast, best quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF/resolve/main/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied.f16.gguf) | f16 | 7.7 | 16 bpw, overkill |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "mit", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["nlp", "code"], "base_model": "ThomasComics/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied", "license_link": "https://huggingface.co/microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct/resolve/main/LICENSE", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"nlp",
"code",
"en",
"base_model:ThomasComics/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied",
"license:mit",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:43:32+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #nlp #code #en #base_model-ThomasComics/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied #license-mit #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
static quants of URL
weighted/imatrix quants seem not to be available (by me) at this time. If they do not show up a week or so after the static ones, I have probably not planned for them. Feel free to request them by opening a Community Discussion.
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #nlp #code #en #base_model-ThomasComics/Phi-3-mini-128k-instruct-LLaMAfied #license-mit #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
static quants of https://huggingface.co/Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B
<!-- provided-files -->
weighted/imatrix quants seem not to be available (by me) at this time. If they do not show up a week or so after the static ones, I have probably not planned for them. Feel free to request them by opening a Community Discussion.
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q2_K.gguf) | Q2_K | 2.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.IQ3_XS.gguf) | IQ3_XS | 3.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q3_K_S.gguf) | Q3_K_S | 3.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.IQ3_S.gguf) | IQ3_S | 3.3 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.IQ3_M.gguf) | IQ3_M | 3.4 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q3_K_M.gguf) | Q3_K_M | 3.6 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q3_K_L.gguf) | Q3_K_L | 3.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.IQ4_XS.gguf) | IQ4_XS | 4.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q4_K_S.gguf) | Q4_K_S | 4.2 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q4_K_M.gguf) | Q4_K_M | 4.5 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q5_K_S.gguf) | Q5_K_S | 5.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q5_K_M.gguf) | Q5_K_M | 5.2 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q6_K.gguf) | Q6_K | 6.0 | very good quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.Q8_0.gguf) | Q8_0 | 7.8 | fast, best quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B.f16.gguf) | f16 | 14.6 | 16 bpw, overkill |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["merge", "mergekit", "lazymergekit", "Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-Rubyroid-7B-Fixed", "Yuma42/KangalKhan-RawRuby-7B"], "base_model": "Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"merge",
"mergekit",
"lazymergekit",
"Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-Rubyroid-7B-Fixed",
"Yuma42/KangalKhan-RawRuby-7B",
"en",
"base_model:Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:45:26+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-Rubyroid-7B-Fixed #Yuma42/KangalKhan-RawRuby-7B #en #base_model-Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
static quants of URL
weighted/imatrix quants seem not to be available (by me) at this time. If they do not show up a week or so after the static ones, I have probably not planned for them. Feel free to request them by opening a Community Discussion.
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-Rubyroid-7B-Fixed #Yuma42/KangalKhan-RawRuby-7B #en #base_model-Yuma42/KangalKhan-Alpha-ExtraRawRubyroid-7B #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
reinforcement-learning | stable-baselines3 |
# **DQN** Agent playing **SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4**
This is a trained model of a **DQN** agent playing **SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4**
using the [stable-baselines3 library](https://github.com/DLR-RM/stable-baselines3)
and the [RL Zoo](https://github.com/DLR-RM/rl-baselines3-zoo).
The RL Zoo is a training framework for Stable Baselines3
reinforcement learning agents,
with hyperparameter optimization and pre-trained agents included.
## Usage (with SB3 RL Zoo)
RL Zoo: https://github.com/DLR-RM/rl-baselines3-zoo<br/>
SB3: https://github.com/DLR-RM/stable-baselines3<br/>
SB3 Contrib: https://github.com/Stable-Baselines-Team/stable-baselines3-contrib
Install the RL Zoo (with SB3 and SB3-Contrib):
```bash
pip install rl_zoo3
```
```
# Download model and save it into the logs/ folder
python -m rl_zoo3.load_from_hub --algo dqn --env SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 -orga ksdksu -f logs/
python -m rl_zoo3.enjoy --algo dqn --env SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 -f logs/
```
If you installed the RL Zoo3 via pip (`pip install rl_zoo3`), from anywhere you can do:
```
python -m rl_zoo3.load_from_hub --algo dqn --env SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 -orga ksdksu -f logs/
python -m rl_zoo3.enjoy --algo dqn --env SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 -f logs/
```
## Training (with the RL Zoo)
```
python -m rl_zoo3.train --algo dqn --env SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 -f logs/
# Upload the model and generate video (when possible)
python -m rl_zoo3.push_to_hub --algo dqn --env SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 -f logs/ -orga ksdksu
```
## Hyperparameters
```python
OrderedDict([('batch_size', 32),
('buffer_size', 100000),
('env_wrapper',
['stable_baselines3.common.atari_wrappers.AtariWrapper']),
('exploration_final_eps', 0.01),
('exploration_fraction', 0.1),
('frame_stack', 4),
('gradient_steps', 1),
('learning_rate', 0.0001),
('learning_starts', 100000),
('n_timesteps', 50000.0),
('optimize_memory_usage', False),
('policy', 'CnnPolicy'),
('target_update_interval', 1000),
('train_freq', 4),
('normalize', False)])
```
# Environment Arguments
```python
{'render_mode': 'rgb_array'}
```
| {"library_name": "stable-baselines3", "tags": ["SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4", "deep-reinforcement-learning", "reinforcement-learning", "stable-baselines3"], "model-index": [{"name": "DQN", "results": [{"task": {"type": "reinforcement-learning", "name": "reinforcement-learning"}, "dataset": {"name": "SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4", "type": "SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4"}, "metrics": [{"type": "mean_reward", "value": "329.00 +/- 157.97", "name": "mean_reward", "verified": false}]}]}]} | liudoujiang/dqn-SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 | null | [
"stable-baselines3",
"SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4",
"deep-reinforcement-learning",
"reinforcement-learning",
"model-index",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:46:24+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#stable-baselines3 #SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 #deep-reinforcement-learning #reinforcement-learning #model-index #region-us
|
# DQN Agent playing SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4
This is a trained model of a DQN agent playing SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4
using the stable-baselines3 library
and the RL Zoo.
The RL Zoo is a training framework for Stable Baselines3
reinforcement learning agents,
with hyperparameter optimization and pre-trained agents included.
## Usage (with SB3 RL Zoo)
RL Zoo: URL
SB3: URL
SB3 Contrib: URL
Install the RL Zoo (with SB3 and SB3-Contrib):
If you installed the RL Zoo3 via pip ('pip install rl_zoo3'), from anywhere you can do:
## Training (with the RL Zoo)
## Hyperparameters
# Environment Arguments
| [
"# DQN Agent playing SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4\nThis is a trained model of a DQN agent playing SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4\nusing the stable-baselines3 library\nand the RL Zoo.\n\nThe RL Zoo is a training framework for Stable Baselines3\nreinforcement learning agents,\nwith hyperparameter optimization and pre-trained agents included.",
"## Usage (with SB3 RL Zoo)\n\nRL Zoo: URL\nSB3: URL\nSB3 Contrib: URL\n\nInstall the RL Zoo (with SB3 and SB3-Contrib):\n\n\n\n\nIf you installed the RL Zoo3 via pip ('pip install rl_zoo3'), from anywhere you can do:",
"## Training (with the RL Zoo)",
"## Hyperparameters",
"# Environment Arguments"
] | [
"TAGS\n#stable-baselines3 #SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4 #deep-reinforcement-learning #reinforcement-learning #model-index #region-us \n",
"# DQN Agent playing SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4\nThis is a trained model of a DQN agent playing SpaceInvadersNoFrameskip-v4\nusing the stable-baselines3 library\nand the RL Zoo.\n\nThe RL Zoo is a training framework for Stable Baselines3\nreinforcement learning agents,\nwith hyperparameter optimization and pre-trained agents included.",
"## Usage (with SB3 RL Zoo)\n\nRL Zoo: URL\nSB3: URL\nSB3 Contrib: URL\n\nInstall the RL Zoo (with SB3 and SB3-Contrib):\n\n\n\n\nIf you installed the RL Zoo3 via pip ('pip install rl_zoo3'), from anywhere you can do:",
"## Training (with the RL Zoo)",
"## Hyperparameters",
"# Environment Arguments"
] |
text-classification | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | kangXn/engu-tp1-mde | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"deberta-v2",
"text-classification",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:48:29+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #deberta-v2 #text-classification #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
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"### Direct Use",
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"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
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"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #deberta-v2 #text-classification #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
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"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
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"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
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"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
automatic-speech-recognition | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# wav2vec2-turkish-300m-7
This model is a fine-tuned version of [facebook/wav2vec2-xls-r-300m](https://huggingface.co/facebook/wav2vec2-xls-r-300m) on the fleurs dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.3236
- Wer: 0.1668
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 0.0001
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 16
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 0.1
- num_epochs: 35
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Wer |
|:-------------:|:-------:|:-----:|:---------------:|:------:|
| 3.7291 | 0.6983 | 500 | 1.2114 | 0.8908 |
| 1.1707 | 1.3966 | 1000 | 0.3888 | 0.4555 |
| 0.5042 | 2.0950 | 1500 | 0.2879 | 0.3270 |
| 0.2623 | 2.7933 | 2000 | 0.2653 | 0.3265 |
| 0.2012 | 3.4916 | 2500 | 0.2405 | 0.2778 |
| 0.1817 | 4.1899 | 3000 | 0.2555 | 0.2704 |
| 0.1394 | 4.8883 | 3500 | 0.2452 | 0.2647 |
| 0.1112 | 5.5866 | 4000 | 0.2426 | 0.2458 |
| 0.1047 | 6.2849 | 4500 | 0.2520 | 0.2634 |
| 0.0916 | 6.9832 | 5000 | 0.2417 | 0.2443 |
| 0.0902 | 7.6816 | 5500 | 0.2627 | 0.2427 |
| 0.075 | 8.3799 | 6000 | 0.2551 | 0.2320 |
| 0.0716 | 9.0782 | 6500 | 0.2607 | 0.2221 |
| 0.0661 | 9.7765 | 7000 | 0.2504 | 0.2338 |
| 0.0634 | 10.4749 | 7500 | 0.2552 | 0.2229 |
| 0.0583 | 11.1732 | 8000 | 0.2637 | 0.2249 |
| 0.0537 | 11.8715 | 8500 | 0.2627 | 0.2122 |
| 0.0535 | 12.5698 | 9000 | 0.2654 | 0.2148 |
| 0.0521 | 13.2682 | 9500 | 0.2665 | 0.2123 |
| 0.0491 | 13.9665 | 10000 | 0.2814 | 0.2176 |
| 0.0466 | 14.6648 | 10500 | 0.2785 | 0.2138 |
| 0.0445 | 15.3631 | 11000 | 0.2856 | 0.2075 |
| 0.0415 | 16.0615 | 11500 | 0.2750 | 0.2076 |
| 0.0405 | 16.7598 | 12000 | 0.2743 | 0.2045 |
| 0.0368 | 17.4581 | 12500 | 0.2770 | 0.2013 |
| 0.0374 | 18.1564 | 13000 | 0.2961 | 0.2043 |
| 0.0374 | 18.8547 | 13500 | 0.2851 | 0.2028 |
| 0.0322 | 19.5531 | 14000 | 0.2955 | 0.1961 |
| 0.0317 | 20.2514 | 14500 | 0.3053 | 0.1998 |
| 0.0306 | 20.9497 | 15000 | 0.2988 | 0.1960 |
| 0.0328 | 21.6480 | 15500 | 0.2873 | 0.1949 |
| 0.0299 | 22.3464 | 16000 | 0.3030 | 0.1921 |
| 0.0272 | 23.0447 | 16500 | 0.2902 | 0.1866 |
| 0.0286 | 23.7430 | 17000 | 0.2962 | 0.1879 |
| 0.0288 | 24.4413 | 17500 | 0.3114 | 0.1871 |
| 0.0253 | 25.1397 | 18000 | 0.3203 | 0.1844 |
| 0.0262 | 25.8380 | 18500 | 0.2993 | 0.1861 |
| 0.0238 | 26.5363 | 19000 | 0.3108 | 0.1812 |
| 0.0228 | 27.2346 | 19500 | 0.3143 | 0.1759 |
| 0.0235 | 27.9330 | 20000 | 0.3077 | 0.1780 |
| 0.0227 | 28.6313 | 20500 | 0.3099 | 0.1739 |
| 0.0212 | 29.3296 | 21000 | 0.3144 | 0.1730 |
| 0.0212 | 30.0279 | 21500 | 0.3165 | 0.1726 |
| 0.0211 | 30.7263 | 22000 | 0.3178 | 0.1708 |
| 0.0192 | 31.4246 | 22500 | 0.3172 | 0.1682 |
| 0.0193 | 32.1229 | 23000 | 0.3188 | 0.1693 |
| 0.0195 | 32.8212 | 23500 | 0.3255 | 0.1661 |
| 0.0179 | 33.5196 | 24000 | 0.3248 | 0.1668 |
| 0.0166 | 34.2179 | 24500 | 0.3261 | 0.1668 |
| 0.018 | 34.9162 | 25000 | 0.3236 | 0.1668 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.17.1
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["fleurs"], "metrics": ["wer"], "base_model": "facebook/wav2vec2-xls-r-300m", "model-index": [{"name": "wav2vec2-turkish-300m-7", "results": [{"task": {"type": "automatic-speech-recognition", "name": "Automatic Speech Recognition"}, "dataset": {"name": "fleurs", "type": "fleurs", "config": "tr_tr", "split": "test", "args": "tr_tr"}, "metrics": [{"type": "wer", "value": 0.16677037958929683, "name": "Wer"}]}]}]} | tgrhn/wav2vec2-turkish-300m-7 | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"wav2vec2",
"automatic-speech-recognition",
"generated_from_trainer",
"dataset:fleurs",
"base_model:facebook/wav2vec2-xls-r-300m",
"license:apache-2.0",
"model-index",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:48:35+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #wav2vec2 #automatic-speech-recognition #generated_from_trainer #dataset-fleurs #base_model-facebook/wav2vec2-xls-r-300m #license-apache-2.0 #model-index #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| wav2vec2-turkish-300m-7
=======================
This model is a fine-tuned version of facebook/wav2vec2-xls-r-300m on the fleurs dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.3236
* Wer: 0.1668
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 0.0001
* train\_batch\_size: 4
* eval\_batch\_size: 16
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_steps: 0.1
* num\_epochs: 35
* mixed\_precision\_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.0
* Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
* Datasets 2.17.1
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
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"### Training results",
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"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.0\n* Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121\n* Datasets 2.17.1\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# my_awesome_gpt2
This model is a fine-tuned version of [openai-community/gpt2](https://huggingface.co/openai-community/gpt2) on the eli5_category dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 3.5693
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|
| 3.6951 | 1.0 | 1324 | 3.5759 |
| 3.5754 | 2.0 | 2648 | 3.5691 |
| 3.5246 | 3.0 | 3972 | 3.5693 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "mit", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["eli5_category"], "base_model": "openai-community/gpt2", "model-index": [{"name": "my_awesome_gpt2", "results": []}]} | jacklong0718/my_awesome_gpt2 | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"gpt2",
"text-generation",
"generated_from_trainer",
"dataset:eli5_category",
"base_model:openai-community/gpt2",
"license:mit",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:49:11+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #gpt2 #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #dataset-eli5_category #base_model-openai-community/gpt2 #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
| my\_awesome\_gpt2
=================
This model is a fine-tuned version of openai-community/gpt2 on the eli5\_category dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 3.5693
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 8
* eval\_batch\_size: 8
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.0
* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
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"### Training results",
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"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 3.0",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.0\n* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
null | null |
# RachidAR/wiz-llama3-8B-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from [`feeltheAGI/wiz-llama3-8B`](https://huggingface.co/feeltheAGI/wiz-llama3-8B) using llama.cpp via the ggml.ai's [GGUF-my-repo](https://huggingface.co/spaces/ggml-org/gguf-my-repo) space.
Refer to the [original model card](https://huggingface.co/feeltheAGI/wiz-llama3-8B) for more details on the model.
## Use with llama.cpp
Install llama.cpp through brew.
```bash
brew install ggerganov/ggerganov/llama.cpp
```
Invoke the llama.cpp server or the CLI.
CLI:
```bash
llama-cli --hf-repo RachidAR/wiz-llama3-8B-Q6_K-GGUF --model wiz-llama3-8b.Q6_K.gguf -p "The meaning to life and the universe is"
```
Server:
```bash
llama-server --hf-repo RachidAR/wiz-llama3-8B-Q6_K-GGUF --model wiz-llama3-8b.Q6_K.gguf -c 2048
```
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the [usage steps](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp?tab=readme-ov-file#usage) listed in the Llama.cpp repo as well.
```
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp && cd llama.cpp && make && ./main -m wiz-llama3-8b.Q6_K.gguf -n 128
```
| {"tags": ["llama-cpp", "gguf-my-repo"]} | RachidAR/wiz-llama3-8B-Q6_K-GGUF | null | [
"gguf",
"llama-cpp",
"gguf-my-repo",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:49:19+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#gguf #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #region-us
|
# RachidAR/wiz-llama3-8B-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from 'feeltheAGI/wiz-llama3-8B' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.
Refer to the original model card for more details on the model.
## Use with URL
Install URL through brew.
Invoke the URL server or the CLI.
CLI:
Server:
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well.
| [
"# RachidAR/wiz-llama3-8B-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'feeltheAGI/wiz-llama3-8B' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] | [
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"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] |
text-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# chatbot
This model is a fine-tuned version of [bert-large-uncased](https://huggingface.co/bert-large-uncased) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.6024
- Accuracy: 0.8958
- F1: 0.8910
- Precision: 0.8846
- Recall: 0.9295
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 32
- eval_batch_size: 16
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 100
- num_epochs: 50
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Accuracy | F1 | Precision | Recall |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|:--------:|:------:|:---------:|:------:|
| 2.9886 | 10.0 | 50 | 2.5714 | 0.2708 | 0.1833 | 0.1547 | 0.2949 |
| 1.3584 | 20.0 | 100 | 1.1008 | 0.8542 | 0.8496 | 0.8622 | 0.9071 |
| 0.1639 | 30.0 | 150 | 0.6093 | 0.8958 | 0.8897 | 0.8910 | 0.9295 |
| 0.0136 | 40.0 | 200 | 0.6092 | 0.9167 | 0.9112 | 0.9071 | 0.9423 |
| 0.007 | 50.0 | 250 | 0.6024 | 0.8958 | 0.8910 | 0.8846 | 0.9295 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.37.2
- Pytorch 2.2.0+cu121
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["accuracy", "f1", "precision", "recall"], "base_model": "bert-large-uncased", "model-index": [{"name": "chatbot", "results": []}]} | arzans9/chatbot | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"text-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:bert-large-uncased",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:49:33+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-bert-large-uncased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| chatbot
=======
This model is a fine-tuned version of bert-large-uncased on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.6024
* Accuracy: 0.8958
* F1: 0.8910
* Precision: 0.8846
* Recall: 0.9295
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 5e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 32
* eval\_batch\_size: 16
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_steps: 100
* num\_epochs: 50
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.37.2
* Pytorch 2.2.0+cu121
* Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 5e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 32\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 100\n* num\\_epochs: 50",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.37.2\n* Pytorch 2.2.0+cu121\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #bert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-bert-large-uncased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 5e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 32\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 100\n* num\\_epochs: 50",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.37.2\n* Pytorch 2.2.0+cu121\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
static quants of https://huggingface.co/SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B
<!-- provided-files -->
weighted/imatrix quants are available at https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q2_K.gguf) | Q2_K | 2.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.IQ3_XS.gguf) | IQ3_XS | 3.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q3_K_S.gguf) | Q3_K_S | 3.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.IQ3_S.gguf) | IQ3_S | 3.3 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.IQ3_M.gguf) | IQ3_M | 3.4 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q3_K_M.gguf) | Q3_K_M | 3.6 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q3_K_L.gguf) | Q3_K_L | 3.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.IQ4_XS.gguf) | IQ4_XS | 4.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q4_K_S.gguf) | Q4_K_S | 4.2 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q4_K_M.gguf) | Q4_K_M | 4.5 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q5_K_S.gguf) | Q5_K_S | 5.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q5_K_M.gguf) | Q5_K_M | 5.2 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q6_K.gguf) | Q6_K | 6.0 | very good quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.Q8_0.gguf) | Q8_0 | 7.8 | fast, best quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.f16.gguf) | f16 | 14.6 | 16 bpw, overkill |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["merge", "mergekit", "lazymergekit", "SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B", "NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO"], "base_model": "SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"merge",
"mergekit",
"lazymergekit",
"SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B",
"NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO",
"en",
"base_model:SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:49:58+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B #NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO #en #base_model-SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
static quants of URL
weighted/imatrix quants are available at URL
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B #NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO #en #base_model-SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
text-generation | null |
# RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from [`d0rj/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties`](https://huggingface.co/d0rj/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties) using llama.cpp via the ggml.ai's [GGUF-my-repo](https://huggingface.co/spaces/ggml-org/gguf-my-repo) space.
Refer to the [original model card](https://huggingface.co/d0rj/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties) for more details on the model.
## Use with llama.cpp
Install llama.cpp through brew.
```bash
brew install ggerganov/ggerganov/llama.cpp
```
Invoke the llama.cpp server or the CLI.
CLI:
```bash
llama-cli --hf-repo RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF --model llama-3-8b-saiga-suzume-ties.Q6_K.gguf -p "The meaning to life and the universe is"
```
Server:
```bash
llama-server --hf-repo RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF --model llama-3-8b-saiga-suzume-ties.Q6_K.gguf -c 2048
```
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the [usage steps](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp?tab=readme-ov-file#usage) listed in the Llama.cpp repo as well.
```
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp && cd llama.cpp && make && ./main -m llama-3-8b-saiga-suzume-ties.Q6_K.gguf -n 128
```
| {"language": ["ru", "en"], "license": "llama3", "tags": ["merge", "mergekit", "lazymergekit", "IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b", "lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual", "llama-cpp", "gguf-my-repo"], "base_model": ["IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b", "lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation"} | RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF | null | [
"gguf",
"merge",
"mergekit",
"lazymergekit",
"IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b",
"lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual",
"llama-cpp",
"gguf-my-repo",
"text-generation",
"ru",
"en",
"base_model:IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b",
"base_model:lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual",
"license:llama3",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:50:38+00:00 | [] | [
"ru",
"en"
] | TAGS
#gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b #lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #text-generation #ru #en #base_model-IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b #base_model-lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual #license-llama3 #region-us
|
# RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from 'd0rj/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.
Refer to the original model card for more details on the model.
## Use with URL
Install URL through brew.
Invoke the URL server or the CLI.
CLI:
Server:
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well.
| [
"# RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'd0rj/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] | [
"TAGS\n#gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b #lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #text-generation #ru #en #base_model-IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b #base_model-lightblue/suzume-llama-3-8B-multilingual #license-llama3 #region-us \n",
"# RachidAR/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'd0rj/Llama-3-8B-saiga-suzume-ties' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] |
null | null |
# RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from [`IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b`](https://huggingface.co/IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b) using llama.cpp via the ggml.ai's [GGUF-my-repo](https://huggingface.co/spaces/ggml-org/gguf-my-repo) space.
Refer to the [original model card](https://huggingface.co/IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b) for more details on the model.
## Use with llama.cpp
Install llama.cpp through brew.
```bash
brew install ggerganov/ggerganov/llama.cpp
```
Invoke the llama.cpp server or the CLI.
CLI:
```bash
llama-cli --hf-repo RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF --model saiga_llama3_8b.Q6_K.gguf -p "The meaning to life and the universe is"
```
Server:
```bash
llama-server --hf-repo RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF --model saiga_llama3_8b.Q6_K.gguf -c 2048
```
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the [usage steps](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp?tab=readme-ov-file#usage) listed in the Llama.cpp repo as well.
```
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp && cd llama.cpp && make && ./main -m saiga_llama3_8b.Q6_K.gguf -n 128
```
| {"language": ["ru"], "license": "other", "tags": ["llama-cpp", "gguf-my-repo"], "datasets": ["IlyaGusev/saiga_scored"], "license_name": "llama3", "license_link": "https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license/"} | RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF | null | [
"gguf",
"llama-cpp",
"gguf-my-repo",
"ru",
"dataset:IlyaGusev/saiga_scored",
"license:other",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:52:56+00:00 | [] | [
"ru"
] | TAGS
#gguf #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #ru #dataset-IlyaGusev/saiga_scored #license-other #region-us
|
# RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from 'IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.
Refer to the original model card for more details on the model.
## Use with URL
Install URL through brew.
Invoke the URL server or the CLI.
CLI:
Server:
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well.
| [
"# RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] | [
"TAGS\n#gguf #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #ru #dataset-IlyaGusev/saiga_scored #license-other #region-us \n",
"# RachidAR/saiga_llama3_8b-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'IlyaGusev/saiga_llama3_8b' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | zandfj/LLaMA2-7B-Chat-sft-042615-moren | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:53:13+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
null | transformers |
# RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from [`NekoFi/llama-3-indotuned-v0`](https://huggingface.co/NekoFi/llama-3-indotuned-v0) using llama.cpp via the ggml.ai's [GGUF-my-repo](https://huggingface.co/spaces/ggml-org/gguf-my-repo) space.
Refer to the [original model card](https://huggingface.co/NekoFi/llama-3-indotuned-v0) for more details on the model.
## Use with llama.cpp
Install llama.cpp through brew.
```bash
brew install ggerganov/ggerganov/llama.cpp
```
Invoke the llama.cpp server or the CLI.
CLI:
```bash
llama-cli --hf-repo RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF --model llama-3-indotuned-v0.Q6_K.gguf -p "The meaning to life and the universe is"
```
Server:
```bash
llama-server --hf-repo RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF --model llama-3-indotuned-v0.Q6_K.gguf -c 2048
```
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the [usage steps](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp?tab=readme-ov-file#usage) listed in the Llama.cpp repo as well.
```
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp && cd llama.cpp && make && ./main -m llama-3-indotuned-v0.Q6_K.gguf -n 128
```
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["text-generation-inference", "transformers", "unsloth", "llama", "trl", "sft", "llama-cpp", "gguf-my-repo"], "base_model": "unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit"} | RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"text-generation-inference",
"unsloth",
"llama",
"trl",
"sft",
"llama-cpp",
"gguf-my-repo",
"en",
"base_model:unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:54:20+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #sft #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from 'NekoFi/llama-3-indotuned-v0' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.
Refer to the original model card for more details on the model.
## Use with URL
Install URL through brew.
Invoke the URL server or the CLI.
CLI:
Server:
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well.
| [
"# RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'NekoFi/llama-3-indotuned-v0' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #sft #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# RachidAR/llama-3-indotuned-v0-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'NekoFi/llama-3-indotuned-v0' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] |
null | transformers |
# RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from [`PathFinderKR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct`](https://huggingface.co/PathFinderKR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct) using llama.cpp via the ggml.ai's [GGUF-my-repo](https://huggingface.co/spaces/ggml-org/gguf-my-repo) space.
Refer to the [original model card](https://huggingface.co/PathFinderKR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct) for more details on the model.
## Use with llama.cpp
Install llama.cpp through brew.
```bash
brew install ggerganov/ggerganov/llama.cpp
```
Invoke the llama.cpp server or the CLI.
CLI:
```bash
llama-cli --hf-repo RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF --model waktaverse-llama-3-ko-8b-instruct.Q6_K.gguf -p "The meaning to life and the universe is"
```
Server:
```bash
llama-server --hf-repo RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF --model waktaverse-llama-3-ko-8b-instruct.Q6_K.gguf -c 2048
```
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the [usage steps](https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp?tab=readme-ov-file#usage) listed in the Llama.cpp repo as well.
```
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp && cd llama.cpp && make && ./main -m waktaverse-llama-3-ko-8b-instruct.Q6_K.gguf -n 128
```
| {"language": ["ko", "en"], "license": "mit", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["llama-cpp", "gguf-my-repo"], "datasets": ["MarkrAI/KoCommercial-Dataset"]} | RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"llama-cpp",
"gguf-my-repo",
"ko",
"en",
"dataset:MarkrAI/KoCommercial-Dataset",
"license:mit",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:55:36+00:00 | [] | [
"ko",
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #ko #en #dataset-MarkrAI/KoCommercial-Dataset #license-mit #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF
This model was converted to GGUF format from 'PathFinderKR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.
Refer to the original model card for more details on the model.
## Use with URL
Install URL through brew.
Invoke the URL server or the CLI.
CLI:
Server:
Note: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well.
| [
"# RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'PathFinderKR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #llama-cpp #gguf-my-repo #ko #en #dataset-MarkrAI/KoCommercial-Dataset #license-mit #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# RachidAR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct-Q6_K-GGUF\nThis model was converted to GGUF format from 'PathFinderKR/Waktaverse-Llama-3-KO-8B-Instruct' using URL via the URL's GGUF-my-repo space.\nRefer to the original model card for more details on the model.",
"## Use with URL\n\nInstall URL through brew.\n\n\nInvoke the URL server or the CLI.\n\nCLI:\n\n\n\nServer:\n\n\n\nNote: You can also use this checkpoint directly through the usage steps listed in the URL repo as well."
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# EverythingBagel-DPO-7B
EverythingBagel-DPO-7B is a merge of the following models using [LazyMergekit](https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1obulZ1ROXHjYLn6PPZJwRR6GzgQogxxb?usp=sharing):
* [jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5](https://huggingface.co/jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5)
* [SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B](https://huggingface.co/SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B)
## 🧩 Configuration
```yaml
slices:
- sources:
- model: jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5
layer_range: [0, 32]
- model: SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B
layer_range: [0, 32]
merge_method: slerp
base_model: jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5
parameters:
t:
- filter: self_attn
value: [0, 0.5, 0.3, 0.7, 1]
- filter: mlp
value: [1, 0.5, 0.7, 0.3, 0]
- value: 0.5
dtype: bfloat16
```
## 💻 Usage
```python
!pip install -qU transformers accelerate
from transformers import AutoTokenizer
import transformers
import torch
model = "OmnicromsBrain/EverythingBagel-DPO-7B"
messages = [{"role": "user", "content": "What is a large language model?"}]
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model)
prompt = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(messages, tokenize=False, add_generation_prompt=True)
pipeline = transformers.pipeline(
"text-generation",
model=model,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
device_map="auto",
)
outputs = pipeline(prompt, max_new_tokens=256, do_sample=True, temperature=0.7, top_k=50, top_p=0.95)
print(outputs[0]["generated_text"])
``` | {"tags": ["merge", "mergekit", "lazymergekit", "jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5", "SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B"], "base_model": ["jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5", "SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B"]} | OmnicromsBrain/EverythingBagel-DPO-7B | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"merge",
"mergekit",
"lazymergekit",
"jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5",
"SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B",
"conversational",
"base_model:jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5",
"base_model:SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:55:53+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5 #SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B #conversational #base_model-jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5 #base_model-SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# EverythingBagel-DPO-7B
EverythingBagel-DPO-7B is a merge of the following models using LazyMergekit:
* jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5
* SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B
## Configuration
## Usage
| [
"# EverythingBagel-DPO-7B\n\n\n\nEverythingBagel-DPO-7B is a merge of the following models using LazyMergekit:\n* jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5\n* SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B",
"## Configuration",
"## Usage"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5 #SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B #conversational #base_model-jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5 #base_model-SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# EverythingBagel-DPO-7B\n\n\n\nEverythingBagel-DPO-7B is a merge of the following models using LazyMergekit:\n* jondurbin/bagel-dpo-7b-v0.5\n* SanjiWatsuki/Silicon-Maid-7B",
"## Configuration",
"## Usage"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl/main/image/axolotl-badge-web.png" alt="Built with Axolotl" width="200" height="32"/>](https://github.com/OpenAccess-AI-Collective/axolotl)
<details><summary>See axolotl config</summary>
axolotl version: `0.4.0`
```yaml
base_model: beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B
model_type: LlamaForCausalLM
tokenizer_type: AutoTokenizer
load_in_8bit: false
load_in_4bit: false
strict: false
datasets:
- path: sosoai/mixed_dataset
type: alpaca
dataset_prepared_path: last_run_prepared
val_set_size: 0.05
output_dir: ./beomi-llama3-8b-64k
save_safetensors: true
sequence_len: 8192
sample_packing: true
pad_to_sequence_len: false
use_pose: true
pose_max_context_len: 65536
overrides_of_model_config:
rope_theta: 500000.0
max_position_embeddings: 65536
wandb_project:
wandb_entity:
wandb_watch:
wandb_name:
wandb_log_model:
gradient_accumulation_steps: 8
micro_batch_size: 1
num_epochs: 3
optimizer: paged_adamw_8bit
lr_scheduler: cosine
learning_rate: 2e-5
train_on_inputs: false
group_by_length: false
bf16: true
fp16:
tf32: true
gradient_checkpointing: true
gradient_checkpointing_kwargs:
use_reentrant: false
early_stopping_patience:
resume_from_checkpoint:
logging_steps: 1
xformers_attention:
flash_attention: true
warmup_steps: 100
eval_sample_packing: False
evals_per_epoch: 2
eval_table_size:
saves_per_epoch: 1
debug:
deepspeed:
weight_decay: 0.0
fsdp:
fsdp_config:
special_tokens:
pad_token: <|end_of_text|>
```
</details><br>
# beomi-llama3-8b-64k
This model is a fine-tuned version of [beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B](https://huggingface.co/beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B) on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.9960
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 1
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 8
- total_train_batch_size: 8
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 100
- num_epochs: 3
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|
| 1.6869 | 0.06 | 1 | 1.7410 |
| 1.6246 | 0.52 | 9 | 1.6575 |
| 1.4583 | 1.01 | 18 | 1.4841 |
| 1.3375 | 1.53 | 27 | 1.3299 |
| 1.171 | 2.01 | 36 | 1.1744 |
| 1.0133 | 2.53 | 45 | 0.9960 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0.dev0
- Pytorch 2.1.1
- Datasets 2.15.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.0
| {"license": "other", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B", "model-index": [{"name": "beomi-llama3-8b-64k", "results": []}]} | sosoai/hansoldeco-beomi-llama3-open-ko-8b-64k-test | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B",
"license:other",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:55:53+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #base_model-beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B #license-other #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
| <img src="URL alt="Built with Axolotl" width="200" height="32"/>
See axolotl config
axolotl version: '0.4.0'
beomi-llama3-8b-64k
===================
This model is a fine-tuned version of beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.9960
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 1
* eval\_batch\_size: 1
* seed: 42
* gradient\_accumulation\_steps: 8
* total\_train\_batch\_size: 8
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: cosine
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_steps: 100
* num\_epochs: 3
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.0.dev0
* Pytorch 2.1.1
* Datasets 2.15.0
* Tokenizers 0.15.0
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 1\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 1\n* seed: 42\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 8\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: cosine\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 100\n* num\\_epochs: 3",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.0.dev0\n* Pytorch 2.1.1\n* Datasets 2.15.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.0"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #base_model-beomi/Llama-3-Open-Ko-8B #license-other #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 1\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 1\n* seed: 42\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 8\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: cosine\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 100\n* num\\_epochs: 3",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.0.dev0\n* Pytorch 2.1.1\n* Datasets 2.15.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.0"
] |
text-generation | transformers | <!-- header start -->
<!-- 200823 -->
<div style="width: auto; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
<a href="https://www.pruna.ai/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/eDAlcgk.png" alt="PrunaAI" style="width: 100%; min-width: 400px; display: block; margin: auto;">
</a>
</div>
<!-- header end -->
[](https://twitter.com/PrunaAI)
[](https://github.com/PrunaAI)
[](https://www.linkedin.com/company/93832878/admin/feed/posts/?feedType=following)
[](https://discord.gg/CP4VSgck)
# Simply make AI models cheaper, smaller, faster, and greener!
- Give a thumbs up if you like this model!
- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next [here](https://www.pruna.ai/contact).
- Request access to easily compress your *own* AI models [here](https://z0halsaff74.typeform.com/pruna-access?typeform-source=www.pruna.ai).
- Read the documentations to know more [here](https://pruna-ai-pruna.readthedocs-hosted.com/en/latest/)
- Join Pruna AI community on Discord [here](https://discord.gg/CP4VSgck) to share feedback/suggestions or get help.
## Results

**Frequently Asked Questions**
- ***How does the compression work?*** The model is compressed with awq.
- ***How does the model quality change?*** The quality of the model output might vary compared to the base model.
- ***How is the model efficiency evaluated?*** These results were obtained on NVIDIA A100-PCIE-40GB with configuration described in `model/smash_config.json` and are obtained after a hardware warmup. The smashed model is directly compared to the original base model. Efficiency results may vary in other settings (e.g. other hardware, image size, batch size, ...). We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.
- ***What is the model format?*** We use safetensors.
- ***What calibration data has been used?*** If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.
- ***What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?*** We take the original model name and append "turbo", "tiny", or "green" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.
- ***How to compress my own models?*** You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases [here](https://z0halsaff74.typeform.com/pruna-access?typeform-source=www.pruna.ai).
- ***What are "first" metrics?*** Results mentioning "first" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.
- ***What are "Sync" and "Async" metrics?*** "Sync" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. "Async" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.
## Setup
You can run the smashed model with these steps:
0. Check requirements from the original repo MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.
1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.
```bash
pip install autoawq
```
2. Load & run the model.
```python
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
from awq import AutoAWQForCausalLM
model = AutoAWQForCausalLM.from_quantized("PrunaAI/MaziyarPanahi-Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k-AWQ-4bit-smashed", trust_remote_code=True, device_map='auto')
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k")
input_ids = tokenizer("What is the color of prunes?,", return_tensors='pt').to(model.device)["input_ids"]
outputs = model.generate(input_ids, max_new_tokens=216)
tokenizer.decode(outputs[0])
```
## Configurations
The configuration info are in `smash_config.json`.
## Credits & License
The license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the `pruna-engine` is [here](https://pypi.org/project/pruna-engine/) on Pypi.
## Want to compress other models?
- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next [here](https://www.pruna.ai/contact).
- Request access to easily compress your own AI models [here](https://z0halsaff74.typeform.com/pruna-access?typeform-source=www.pruna.ai). | {"tags": ["pruna-ai"], "metrics": ["memory_disk", "memory_inference", "inference_latency", "inference_throughput", "inference_CO2_emissions", "inference_energy_consumption"], "thumbnail": "https://assets-global.website-files.com/646b351987a8d8ce158d1940/64ec9e96b4334c0e1ac41504_Logo%20with%20white%20text.svg", "base_model": "MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k"} | PrunaAI/MaziyarPanahi-Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k-AWQ-4bit-smashed | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"pruna-ai",
"conversational",
"base_model:MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"4-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:56:27+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #pruna-ai #conversational #base_model-MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #4-bit #region-us
|
<div style="width: auto; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
<a href="URL target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">
<img src="https://i.URL alt="PrunaAI" style="width: 100%; min-width: 400px; display: block; margin: auto;">
</a>
</div>
. We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.
- *What is the model format?* We use safetensors.
- *What calibration data has been used?* If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.
- *What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?* We take the original model name and append "turbo", "tiny", or "green" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.
- *How to compress my own models?* You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases here.
- *What are "first" metrics?* Results mentioning "first" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.
- *What are "Sync" and "Async" metrics?* "Sync" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. "Async" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.
## Setup
You can run the smashed model with these steps:
0. Check requirements from the original repo MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.
1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.
2. Load & run the model.
## Configurations
The configuration info are in 'smash_config.json'.
## Credits & License
The license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the 'pruna-engine' is here on Pypi.
## Want to compress other models?
- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.
- Request access to easily compress your own AI models here. | [
"# Simply make AI models cheaper, smaller, faster, and greener!\n\n- Give a thumbs up if you like this model!\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your *own* AI models here.\n- Read the documentations to know more here\n- Join Pruna AI community on Discord here to share feedback/suggestions or get help.",
"## Results\n\n!image info\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\n- *How does the compression work?* The model is compressed with awq.\n- *How does the model quality change?* The quality of the model output might vary compared to the base model.\n- *How is the model efficiency evaluated?* These results were obtained on NVIDIA A100-PCIE-40GB with configuration described in 'model/smash_config.json' and are obtained after a hardware warmup. The smashed model is directly compared to the original base model. Efficiency results may vary in other settings (e.g. other hardware, image size, batch size, ...). We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.\n- *What is the model format?* We use safetensors.\n- *What calibration data has been used?* If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.\n- *What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?* We take the original model name and append \"turbo\", \"tiny\", or \"green\" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.\n- *How to compress my own models?* You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases here.\n- *What are \"first\" metrics?* Results mentioning \"first\" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.\n- *What are \"Sync\" and \"Async\" metrics?* \"Sync\" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. \"Async\" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.",
"## Setup\n\nYou can run the smashed model with these steps:\n\n0. Check requirements from the original repo MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.\n1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.\n \n2. Load & run the model.",
"## Configurations\n\nThe configuration info are in 'smash_config.json'.",
"## Credits & License\n\nThe license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the 'pruna-engine' is here on Pypi.",
"## Want to compress other models?\n\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your own AI models here."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #pruna-ai #conversational #base_model-MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #4-bit #region-us \n",
"# Simply make AI models cheaper, smaller, faster, and greener!\n\n- Give a thumbs up if you like this model!\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your *own* AI models here.\n- Read the documentations to know more here\n- Join Pruna AI community on Discord here to share feedback/suggestions or get help.",
"## Results\n\n!image info\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\n- *How does the compression work?* The model is compressed with awq.\n- *How does the model quality change?* The quality of the model output might vary compared to the base model.\n- *How is the model efficiency evaluated?* These results were obtained on NVIDIA A100-PCIE-40GB with configuration described in 'model/smash_config.json' and are obtained after a hardware warmup. The smashed model is directly compared to the original base model. Efficiency results may vary in other settings (e.g. other hardware, image size, batch size, ...). We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.\n- *What is the model format?* We use safetensors.\n- *What calibration data has been used?* If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.\n- *What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?* We take the original model name and append \"turbo\", \"tiny\", or \"green\" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.\n- *How to compress my own models?* You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases here.\n- *What are \"first\" metrics?* Results mentioning \"first\" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.\n- *What are \"Sync\" and \"Async\" metrics?* \"Sync\" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. \"Async\" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.",
"## Setup\n\nYou can run the smashed model with these steps:\n\n0. Check requirements from the original repo MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.\n1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.\n \n2. Load & run the model.",
"## Configurations\n\nThe configuration info are in 'smash_config.json'.",
"## Credits & License\n\nThe license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model MaziyarPanahi/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-64k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the 'pruna-engine' is here on Pypi.",
"## Want to compress other models?\n\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your own AI models here."
] |
null | null |
# Experimental Chess Model (Causal)
## Overview
This model is an experimental fine-tuned variant designed for **causal inference** on a very small subset of chess games. It leverages the base model obtained from Microsoft(phi-3-mini-4k-instruct) and has been fine-tuned using **Hugging Face Transformers** with the **Accelerate** library.
## Key Details
- **Task**: Causal inference on chess games
- **Base Model**: phi-3-mini-4k-instruct
- **Fine-Tuning Framework**: Hugging Face Transformers with Accelerate and peft
- **License**: MIT
## Description
The primary purpose of this model is to explore causal relationships within chess games. It was trained on a limited dataset, making it suitable for experimentation and research. While its performance may not match larger-scale models, it serves as a starting point for causal analysis in the chess games.
It also gives us an insight on how *causal models* react to high level chess games (2000> ELO).
## Limitations
- **Small Dataset**: Due to the limited data, the model's generalization capabilities are restricted.
- **Experimental Nature**: This model is not production-ready and should be used for research purposes only.
- **Causal Interpretation**: Interpretation of causal effects requires careful consideration and domain expertise.
## Usage
will be updated shortly !!!
## Metrics
global_step=2795, training_loss=0.15753029228749557, metrics={'train_runtime': 7548.9262, 'train_samples_per_second': 0.37, 'train_steps_per_second': 0.37, 'total_flos': 4.255669870466458e+16, 'train_loss': 0.15753029228749557, 'epoch': 1.0, 'num_input_tokens_seen': 1892547}
will be updated shortly !!!
## Author
- **Author**: @bhuvanmdev <a href="https://github.com/bhuvanmdev" target="_blank">(GitHub profile)</a>
The main authors of the base model can be found <a href="https://huggingface.co/microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct" target="_blank">Here</a>
Consider having a read at the <a href="https://huggingface.co/microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct" target="_blank">original model card</a> to understand the biases,limitations and other necessary details.
**It's one of my first systematically fine-tuned model, Feel free to experiment with this model and contribute to its development! ;)
THANK YOU**
---
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "mit", "tags": ["game", "experimetal", "chess"], "datasets": ["bhuvanmdev/chess-causal-formatted"]} | bhuvanmdev/phi3-7b-chess-beta | null | [
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"game",
"experimetal",
"chess",
"en",
"dataset:bhuvanmdev/chess-causal-formatted",
"license:mit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:56:43+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#tensorboard #safetensors #game #experimetal #chess #en #dataset-bhuvanmdev/chess-causal-formatted #license-mit #region-us
|
# Experimental Chess Model (Causal)
## Overview
This model is an experimental fine-tuned variant designed for causal inference on a very small subset of chess games. It leverages the base model obtained from Microsoft(phi-3-mini-4k-instruct) and has been fine-tuned using Hugging Face Transformers with the Accelerate library.
## Key Details
- Task: Causal inference on chess games
- Base Model: phi-3-mini-4k-instruct
- Fine-Tuning Framework: Hugging Face Transformers with Accelerate and peft
- License: MIT
## Description
The primary purpose of this model is to explore causal relationships within chess games. It was trained on a limited dataset, making it suitable for experimentation and research. While its performance may not match larger-scale models, it serves as a starting point for causal analysis in the chess games.
It also gives us an insight on how *causal models* react to high level chess games (2000> ELO).
## Limitations
- Small Dataset: Due to the limited data, the model's generalization capabilities are restricted.
- Experimental Nature: This model is not production-ready and should be used for research purposes only.
- Causal Interpretation: Interpretation of causal effects requires careful consideration and domain expertise.
## Usage
will be updated shortly !!!
## Metrics
global_step=2795, training_loss=0.15753029228749557, metrics={'train_runtime': 7548.9262, 'train_samples_per_second': 0.37, 'train_steps_per_second': 0.37, 'total_flos': 4.255669870466458e+16, 'train_loss': 0.15753029228749557, 'epoch': 1.0, 'num_input_tokens_seen': 1892547}
will be updated shortly !!!
## Author
- Author: @bhuvanmdev <a href="URL target="_blank">(GitHub profile)</a>
The main authors of the base model can be found <a href="URL target="_blank">Here</a>
Consider having a read at the <a href="URL target="_blank">original model card</a> to understand the biases,limitations and other necessary details.
It's one of my first systematically fine-tuned model, Feel free to experiment with this model and contribute to its development! ;)
THANK YOU
---
| [
"# Experimental Chess Model (Causal)",
"## Overview\nThis model is an experimental fine-tuned variant designed for causal inference on a very small subset of chess games. It leverages the base model obtained from Microsoft(phi-3-mini-4k-instruct) and has been fine-tuned using Hugging Face Transformers with the Accelerate library.",
"## Key Details\n- Task: Causal inference on chess games\n- Base Model: phi-3-mini-4k-instruct\n- Fine-Tuning Framework: Hugging Face Transformers with Accelerate and peft\n- License: MIT",
"## Description\nThe primary purpose of this model is to explore causal relationships within chess games. It was trained on a limited dataset, making it suitable for experimentation and research. While its performance may not match larger-scale models, it serves as a starting point for causal analysis in the chess games.\nIt also gives us an insight on how *causal models* react to high level chess games (2000> ELO).",
"## Limitations\n- Small Dataset: Due to the limited data, the model's generalization capabilities are restricted.\n- Experimental Nature: This model is not production-ready and should be used for research purposes only.\n- Causal Interpretation: Interpretation of causal effects requires careful consideration and domain expertise.",
"## Usage\nwill be updated shortly !!!",
"## Metrics\nglobal_step=2795, training_loss=0.15753029228749557, metrics={'train_runtime': 7548.9262, 'train_samples_per_second': 0.37, 'train_steps_per_second': 0.37, 'total_flos': 4.255669870466458e+16, 'train_loss': 0.15753029228749557, 'epoch': 1.0, 'num_input_tokens_seen': 1892547}\nwill be updated shortly !!!",
"## Author\n- Author: @bhuvanmdev <a href=\"URL target=\"_blank\">(GitHub profile)</a>\n\n\nThe main authors of the base model can be found <a href=\"URL target=\"_blank\">Here</a>\n\nConsider having a read at the <a href=\"URL target=\"_blank\">original model card</a> to understand the biases,limitations and other necessary details.\n\n\nIt's one of my first systematically fine-tuned model, Feel free to experiment with this model and contribute to its development! ;)\nTHANK YOU\n\n---"
] | [
"TAGS\n#tensorboard #safetensors #game #experimetal #chess #en #dataset-bhuvanmdev/chess-causal-formatted #license-mit #region-us \n",
"# Experimental Chess Model (Causal)",
"## Overview\nThis model is an experimental fine-tuned variant designed for causal inference on a very small subset of chess games. It leverages the base model obtained from Microsoft(phi-3-mini-4k-instruct) and has been fine-tuned using Hugging Face Transformers with the Accelerate library.",
"## Key Details\n- Task: Causal inference on chess games\n- Base Model: phi-3-mini-4k-instruct\n- Fine-Tuning Framework: Hugging Face Transformers with Accelerate and peft\n- License: MIT",
"## Description\nThe primary purpose of this model is to explore causal relationships within chess games. It was trained on a limited dataset, making it suitable for experimentation and research. While its performance may not match larger-scale models, it serves as a starting point for causal analysis in the chess games.\nIt also gives us an insight on how *causal models* react to high level chess games (2000> ELO).",
"## Limitations\n- Small Dataset: Due to the limited data, the model's generalization capabilities are restricted.\n- Experimental Nature: This model is not production-ready and should be used for research purposes only.\n- Causal Interpretation: Interpretation of causal effects requires careful consideration and domain expertise.",
"## Usage\nwill be updated shortly !!!",
"## Metrics\nglobal_step=2795, training_loss=0.15753029228749557, metrics={'train_runtime': 7548.9262, 'train_samples_per_second': 0.37, 'train_steps_per_second': 0.37, 'total_flos': 4.255669870466458e+16, 'train_loss': 0.15753029228749557, 'epoch': 1.0, 'num_input_tokens_seen': 1892547}\nwill be updated shortly !!!",
"## Author\n- Author: @bhuvanmdev <a href=\"URL target=\"_blank\">(GitHub profile)</a>\n\n\nThe main authors of the base model can be found <a href=\"URL target=\"_blank\">Here</a>\n\nConsider having a read at the <a href=\"URL target=\"_blank\">original model card</a> to understand the biases,limitations and other necessary details.\n\n\nIt's one of my first systematically fine-tuned model, Feel free to experiment with this model and contribute to its development! ;)\nTHANK YOU\n\n---"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed]
| {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | quickstep3621/4soncbp | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"stablelm",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:58:03+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #stablelm #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
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- Paper [optional]:
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## Uses
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### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
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## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
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] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# test-sft
This model is a fine-tuned version of [codellama/CodeLlama-7b-Instruct-hf](https://huggingface.co/codellama/CodeLlama-7b-Instruct-hf) on an unknown dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 3e-05
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 4
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 128
- total_train_batch_size: 2048
- total_eval_batch_size: 32
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.39.2
- Pytorch 2.0.1+cu117
- Datasets 2.16.1
- Tokenizers 0.15.0
| {"license": "llama2", "tags": ["trl", "sft", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "codellama/CodeLlama-7b-Instruct-hf", "model-index": [{"name": "test-sft", "results": []}]} | YDTsai/test-sft | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"trl",
"sft",
"generated_from_trainer",
"conversational",
"base_model:codellama/CodeLlama-7b-Instruct-hf",
"license:llama2",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T07:59:28+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #trl #sft #generated_from_trainer #conversational #base_model-codellama/CodeLlama-7b-Instruct-hf #license-llama2 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# test-sft
This model is a fine-tuned version of codellama/CodeLlama-7b-Instruct-hf on an unknown dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 3e-05
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 4
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 128
- total_train_batch_size: 2048
- total_eval_batch_size: 32
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.39.2
- Pytorch 2.0.1+cu117
- Datasets 2.16.1
- Tokenizers 0.15.0
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] |
null | transformers |
# Uploaded model
- **Developed by:** dbands
- **License:** apache-2.0
- **Finetuned from model :** unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with [Unsloth](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth) and Huggingface's TRL library.
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unslothai/unsloth/main/images/unsloth%20made%20with%20love.png" width="200"/>](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth)
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["text-generation-inference", "transformers", "unsloth", "llama", "trl"], "base_model": "unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit"} | dbands/llama-3-8b-instruct_databricks-dolly-15k_lora_model | null | [
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"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:00:50+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Uploaded model
- Developed by: dbands
- License: apache-2.0
- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.
<img src="URL width="200"/>
| [
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] | [
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] |
text-generation | transformers |
This is an EXL2 quant made with [exllamav2](https://github.com/turboderp/exllamav2) at 8.0bpw
<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/655bb613e8a8971e89944f3e/TSa3V8YpoVagnTYgxiLaO.png" width="200"/>
# Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at [email protected].
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai). It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.

**Approach:**
- [meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct](https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct) as the base
- NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
- Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the [Large World Model](https://huggingface.co/LargeWorldModel) [2] (See details below)
**Infra:**
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai) high performance L40S cluster.
**Quantized versions and GGUF**
GGUF is available on on Crusoe's huggingface account. Check it out here: [crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF)
**Data:**
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting [SlimPajama](https://huggingface.co/datasets/cerebras/SlimPajama-627B).
**Progressive Training Details:**
| Parameter | 65K | 262K |
|-----------------------------|----------------|------------|
| Initialize From | LLaMA-3-8B-Inst| 65K |
| Sequence Length | 2^16 | 2^18 |
| RoPE theta | 15.3 M | 207.1 M |
| Batch Size (Tokens / Step) | 2.097 M | 4.192 M |
| Steps | 30 | 24 |
| Total Tokens | 63 M | 101 M |
| Learning Rate | 2.00E-05 | 2.00E-05 |
| # GPUs | 32 | 32 |
| GPU Type | NVIDIA L40S | NVIDIA L40S|
## The Gradient AI Team
https://gradient.ai/
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
## Contact Us
Drop an email to [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])
## References
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] https://github.com/jzhang38/EasyContext
----
# Base Model
## Model Details
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
**Model developers** Meta
**Variations** Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
**Input** Models input text only.
**Output** Models generate text and code only.
**Model Architecture** Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Training Data</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Params</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Context length</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>GQA</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Token count</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Knowledge cutoff</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="2" >Llama 3
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >A new mix of publicly available online data.
</td>
<td>8B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >15T+
</td>
<td>March, 2023
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>70B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td>December, 2023
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**Llama 3 family of models**. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
**Model Release Date** April 18, 2024.
**Status** This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
**License** A custom commercial license is available at: [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license)
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model [README](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3). For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes).
## Intended Use
**Intended Use Cases** Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
**Out-of-scope** Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English**.
**Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
## How to use
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original `llama3` codebase.
### Use with transformers
You can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the `generate()` function. Let's see examples of both.
#### Transformers pipeline
```python
import transformers
import torch
model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct"
pipeline = transformers.pipeline(
"text-generation",
model=model_id,
model_kwargs={"torch_dtype": torch.bfloat16},
device_map="auto",
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a pirate chatbot who always responds in pirate speak!"},
{"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"},
]
prompt = pipeline.tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
messages,
tokenize=False,
add_generation_prompt=True
)
terminators = [
pipeline.tokenizer.eos_token_id,
pipeline.tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids("<|eot_id|>")
]
outputs = pipeline(
prompt,
max_new_tokens=256,
eos_token_id=terminators,
do_sample=True,
temperature=0.6,
top_p=0.9,
)
print(outputs[0]["generated_text"][len(prompt):])
```
#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM
```python
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM
import torch
model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
model_id,
torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16,
device_map="auto",
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a pirate chatbot who always responds in pirate speak!"},
{"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"},
]
input_ids = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
messages,
add_generation_prompt=True,
return_tensors="pt"
).to(model.device)
terminators = [
tokenizer.eos_token_id,
tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids("<|eot_id|>")
]
outputs = model.generate(
input_ids,
max_new_tokens=256,
eos_token_id=terminators,
do_sample=True,
temperature=0.6,
top_p=0.9,
)
response = outputs[0][input_ids.shape[-1]:]
print(tokenizer.decode(response, skip_special_tokens=True))
```
### Use with `llama3`
Please, follow the instructions in the [repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3)
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging `huggingface-cli`:
```
huggingface-cli download meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct --include "original/*" --local-dir Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct
```
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.
## Hardware and Software
**Training Factors** We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
**Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative** 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Time (GPU hours)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Power Consumption (W)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Carbon Emitted(tCO2eq)</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 8B
</td>
<td>1.3M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>390
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 70B
</td>
<td>6.4M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>1900
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Total
</td>
<td>7.7M
</td>
<td>
</td>
<td>2290
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**CO2 emissions during pre-training**. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
## Training Data
**Overview** Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
**Data Freshness** The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
## Benchmarks
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/eval_methodology.md).
### Base pretrained models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Category</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="6" >General
</td>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>66.6
</td>
<td>45.7
</td>
<td>53.8
</td>
<td>79.5
</td>
<td>69.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>AGIEval English (3-5 shot)
</td>
<td>45.9
</td>
<td>28.8
</td>
<td>38.7
</td>
<td>63.0
</td>
<td>54.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>CommonSenseQA (7-shot)
</td>
<td>72.6
</td>
<td>57.6
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>83.8
</td>
<td>78.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Winogrande (5-shot)
</td>
<td>76.1
</td>
<td>73.3
</td>
<td>75.4
</td>
<td>83.1
</td>
<td>81.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BIG-Bench Hard (3-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>61.1
</td>
<td>38.1
</td>
<td>47.0
</td>
<td>81.3
</td>
<td>65.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>ARC-Challenge (25-shot)
</td>
<td>78.6
</td>
<td>53.7
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>85.3
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Knowledge reasoning
</td>
<td>TriviaQA-Wiki (5-shot)
</td>
<td>78.5
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>89.7
</td>
<td>87.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="4" >Reading comprehension
</td>
<td>SQuAD (1-shot)
</td>
<td>76.4
</td>
<td>72.2
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>85.6
</td>
<td>82.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>QuAC (1-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>44.4
</td>
<td>39.6
</td>
<td>44.9
</td>
<td>51.1
</td>
<td>49.4
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BoolQ (0-shot)
</td>
<td>75.7
</td>
<td>65.5
</td>
<td>66.9
</td>
<td>79.0
</td>
<td>73.1
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>DROP (3-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>58.4
</td>
<td>37.9
</td>
<td>49.8
</td>
<td>79.7
</td>
<td>70.2
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Instruction tuned models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>68.4
</td>
<td>34.1
</td>
<td>47.8
</td>
<td>82.0
</td>
<td>52.9
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GPQA (0-shot)
</td>
<td>34.2
</td>
<td>21.7
</td>
<td>22.3
</td>
<td>39.5
</td>
<td>21.0
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>HumanEval (0-shot)
</td>
<td>62.2
</td>
<td>7.9
</td>
<td>14.0
</td>
<td>81.7
</td>
<td>25.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GSM-8K (8-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>25.7
</td>
<td>77.4
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>57.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MATH (4-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>30.0
</td>
<td>3.8
</td>
<td>6.7
</td>
<td>50.4
</td>
<td>11.6
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our [Responsible Use Guide](https://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide/) to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including [Meta Llama Guard 2](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) and [Code Shield](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a [reference implementation](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes/tree/main/recipes/responsible_ai) to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Safety</span>
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Refusals</span>
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/).
#### Critical risks
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">CBRNE</span> (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Cyber Security </span>
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of [equivalent coding capability](https://huggingface.co/spaces/facebook/CyberSecEval).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Child Safety</span>
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our [Github repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/PurpleLlama).
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an [output reporting mechanism](https://developers.facebook.com/llama_output_feedback) and [bug bounty program](https://www.facebook.com/whitehat) to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
## Ethical Considerations and Limitations
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating [Purple Llama](https://github.com/facebookresearch/PurpleLlama) solutions into your workflows and specifically [Llama Guard](https://ai.meta.com/research/publications/llama-guard-llm-based-input-output-safeguard-for-human-ai-conversations/) which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at [http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide](http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide)
## Citation instructions
@article{llama3modelcard,
title={Llama 3 Model Card},
author={AI@Meta},
year={2024},
url = {https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/MODEL_CARD.md}
}
## Contributors
Aaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos
| {"language": ["en"], "tags": ["meta", "llama-3"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation"} | bullerwins/gradientai_Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k_exl2_8.0bpw | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"meta",
"llama-3",
"conversational",
"en",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"8-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:01:11+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #meta #llama-3 #conversational #en #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #8-bit #region-us
| This is an EXL2 quant made with exllamav2 at 8.0bpw
<img src="URL width="200"/>
Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k
========================
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at contact@URL.
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from Crusoe Energy. It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.
!image/png
Approach:
* meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct as the base
* NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
* Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the Large World Model [2] (See details below)
Infra:
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on Crusoe Energy high performance L40S cluster.
Quantized versions and GGUF
GGUF is available on on Crusoe's huggingface account. Check it out here: crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF
Data:
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting SlimPajama.
Progressive Training Details:
Parameter: Initialize From, 65K: LLaMA-3-8B-Inst, 262K: 65K
Parameter: Sequence Length, 65K: 2^16, 262K: 2^18
Parameter: RoPE theta, 65K: 15.3 M, 262K: 207.1 M
Parameter: Batch Size (Tokens / Step), 65K: 2.097 M, 262K: 4.192 M
Parameter: Steps, 65K: 30, 262K: 24
Parameter: Total Tokens, 65K: 63 M, 262K: 101 M
Parameter: Learning Rate, 65K: 2.00E-05, 262K: 2.00E-05
Parameter: # GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32
Parameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S
The Gradient AI Team
--------------------
URL
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
Contact Us
----------
Drop an email to contact@URL
References
----------
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] URL
---
Base Model
==========
Model Details
-------------
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
Model developers Meta
Variations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
Input Models input text only.
Output Models generate text and code only.
Model Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
Llama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
Model Release Date April 18, 2024.
Status This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
License A custom commercial license is available at: URL
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.
Intended Use
------------
Intended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
Out-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.
Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
How to use
----------
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.
### Use with transformers
You can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.
#### Transformers pipeline
#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM
### Use with 'llama3'
Please, follow the instructions in the repository
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.
Hardware and Software
---------------------
Training Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
CO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
Training Data
-------------
Overview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
Data Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
Benchmarks
----------
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.
### Base pretrained models
### Instruction tuned models
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
Safety
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
Refusals
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL
#### Critical risks
CBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### Cyber Security
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.
### Child Safety
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
Ethical Considerations and Limitations
--------------------------------------
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL
instructions
@article{llama3modelcard,
title={Llama 3 Model Card},
author={AI@Meta},
year={2024},
url = {URL
}
Contributors
------------
Aaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos
| [
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nContact Us\n----------\n\n\nDrop an email to contact@URL\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHow to use\n----------\n\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\n\nYou can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.",
"#### Transformers pipeline",
"#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository\n\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL\n\n\ninstructions\n\n\n@article{llama3modelcard,\n\n\ntitle={Llama 3 Model Card},\n\n\nauthor={AI@Meta},\n\n\nyear={2024},\n\n\nurl = {URL\n\n\n}\n\n\nContributors\n------------\n\n\nAaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #meta #llama-3 #conversational #en #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #8-bit #region-us \n",
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nContact Us\n----------\n\n\nDrop an email to contact@URL\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHow to use\n----------\n\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\n\nYou can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.",
"#### Transformers pipeline",
"#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository\n\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL\n\n\ninstructions\n\n\n@article{llama3modelcard,\n\n\ntitle={Llama 3 Model Card},\n\n\nauthor={AI@Meta},\n\n\nyear={2024},\n\n\nurl = {URL\n\n\n}\n\n\nContributors\n------------\n\n\nAaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Uploaded model
- **Developed by:** dbands
- **License:** apache-2.0
- **Finetuned from model :** unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with [Unsloth](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth) and Huggingface's TRL library.
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unslothai/unsloth/main/images/unsloth%20made%20with%20love.png" width="200"/>](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth)
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["text-generation-inference", "transformers", "unsloth", "llama", "trl", "sft"], "base_model": "unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit"} | dbands/llama-3-8b-instruct_databricks-dolly-15k_16bit | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"text-generation-inference",
"unsloth",
"trl",
"sft",
"en",
"base_model:unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:03:00+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #text-generation-inference #unsloth #trl #sft #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Uploaded model
- Developed by: dbands
- License: apache-2.0
- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.
<img src="URL width="200"/>
| [
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: dbands\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #text-generation-inference #unsloth #trl #sft #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: dbands\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] |
text-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# results
This model is a fine-tuned version of [aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert](https://huggingface.co/aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert) on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 1.4485
- Accuracy: 0.7656
- Precision: 0.7688
- Recall: 0.7656
- F1: 0.7650
- Mrr: 0.8440
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 320
- num_epochs: 12
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Accuracy | Precision | Recall | F1 | Mrr |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:-----:|:---------------:|:--------:|:---------:|:------:|:------:|:------:|
| 0.9496 | 1.0 | 2250 | 0.9448 | 0.69 | 0.7197 | 0.69 | 0.6896 | 0.8003 |
| 0.7839 | 2.0 | 4500 | 0.8385 | 0.7 | 0.7302 | 0.7 | 0.7032 | 0.8101 |
| 0.4602 | 3.0 | 6750 | 0.9599 | 0.745 | 0.7524 | 0.745 | 0.7421 | 0.8346 |
| 0.4453 | 4.0 | 9000 | 0.9992 | 0.7325 | 0.7474 | 0.7325 | 0.7353 | 0.8342 |
| 0.3919 | 5.0 | 11250 | 1.2636 | 0.7425 | 0.7551 | 0.7425 | 0.7413 | 0.8312 |
| 0.313 | 6.0 | 13500 | 1.3639 | 0.7625 | 0.7679 | 0.7625 | 0.7628 | 0.8442 |
| 0.2186 | 7.0 | 15750 | 1.6281 | 0.745 | 0.7566 | 0.745 | 0.7461 | 0.8369 |
| 0.1942 | 8.0 | 18000 | 1.5611 | 0.775 | 0.7822 | 0.775 | 0.7752 | 0.8486 |
| 0.128 | 9.0 | 20250 | 1.7601 | 0.74 | 0.7504 | 0.74 | 0.7412 | 0.8341 |
| 0.0598 | 10.0 | 22500 | 1.6894 | 0.7725 | 0.7761 | 0.7725 | 0.7725 | 0.8548 |
| 0.0699 | 11.0 | 24750 | 1.8025 | 0.765 | 0.7698 | 0.765 | 0.7645 | 0.8460 |
| 0.0292 | 12.0 | 27000 | 1.8754 | 0.76 | 0.7621 | 0.76 | 0.7592 | 0.8451 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.38.2
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["accuracy", "precision", "recall", "f1"], "base_model": "aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert", "model-index": [{"name": "results", "results": []}]} | GeorgeIbrahim/AraBERT-MADAR | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"text-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:03:09+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| results
=======
This model is a fine-tuned version of aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 1.4485
* Accuracy: 0.7656
* Precision: 0.7688
* Recall: 0.7656
* F1: 0.7650
* Mrr: 0.8440
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 5e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 8
* eval\_batch\_size: 8
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_steps: 320
* num\_epochs: 12
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.38.2
* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
* Datasets 2.18.0
* Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 5e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 320\n* num\\_epochs: 12",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.38.2\n* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n* Datasets 2.18.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #bert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-aubmindlab/bert-base-arabert #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 5e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_steps: 320\n* num\\_epochs: 12",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.38.2\n* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n* Datasets 2.18.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
object-detection | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wandb/assets/main/wandb-github-badge-28.svg" alt="Visualize in Weights & Biases" width="200" height="32"/>](https://wandb.ai/qubvel-hf-co/transformers-detection-model-finetuning-cppe5/runs/nzag6oys)
# sensetime-deformable-detr-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad
This model is a fine-tuned version of [SenseTime/deformable-detr](https://huggingface.co/SenseTime/deformable-detr) on the cppe-5 dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 1337
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2
- total_train_batch_size: 8
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 100.0
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0
- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.0
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["object-detection", "vision", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "SenseTime/deformable-detr", "model-index": [{"name": "sensetime-deformable-detr-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad", "results": []}]} | qubvel-hf/sensetime-deformable-detr-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"deformable_detr",
"object-detection",
"vision",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:SenseTime/deformable-detr",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:08:07+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #deformable_detr #object-detection #vision #generated_from_trainer #base_model-SenseTime/deformable-detr #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
<img src="URL alt="Visualize in Weights & Biases" width="200" height="32"/>
# sensetime-deformable-detr-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad
This model is a fine-tuned version of SenseTime/deformable-detr on the cppe-5 dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 1337
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2
- total_train_batch_size: 8
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 100.0
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0
- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.0
| [
"# sensetime-deformable-detr-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of SenseTime/deformable-detr on the cppe-5 dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 4\n- eval_batch_size: 1\n- seed: 1337\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2\n- total_train_batch_size: 8\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 100.0\n- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0\n- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.0"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #deformable_detr #object-detection #vision #generated_from_trainer #base_model-SenseTime/deformable-detr #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# sensetime-deformable-detr-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of SenseTime/deformable-detr on the cppe-5 dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 4\n- eval_batch_size: 1\n- seed: 1337\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2\n- total_train_batch_size: 8\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 100.0\n- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0\n- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.0"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Uploaded model
- **Developed by:** dbands
- **License:** apache-2.0
- **Finetuned from model :** unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with [Unsloth](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth) and Huggingface's TRL library.
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unslothai/unsloth/main/images/unsloth%20made%20with%20love.png" width="200"/>](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth)
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["text-generation-inference", "transformers", "unsloth", "llama", "trl", "sft"], "base_model": "unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit"} | dbands/llama-3-8b-instruct_databricks-dolly-15k_4bit | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"text-generation-inference",
"unsloth",
"trl",
"sft",
"en",
"base_model:unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"4-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:09:23+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #text-generation-inference #unsloth #trl #sft #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #4-bit #region-us
|
# Uploaded model
- Developed by: dbands
- License: apache-2.0
- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.
<img src="URL width="200"/>
| [
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: dbands\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #text-generation-inference #unsloth #trl #sft #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #4-bit #region-us \n",
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: dbands\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
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<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
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## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
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### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
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#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
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<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
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#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
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<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
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## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
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## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
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## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | laitrongduc/zephyr-7B-alpha-customer-chatbot | null | [
"transformers",
"pytorch",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:10:52+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #pytorch #mistral #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #pytorch #mistral #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
static quants of https://huggingface.co/n00854180t/BuRPris-Remix-7B
<!-- provided-files -->
weighted/imatrix quants seem not to be available (by me) at this time. If they do not show up a week or so after the static ones, I have probably not planned for them. Feel free to request them by opening a Community Discussion.
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q2_K.gguf) | Q2_K | 2.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.IQ3_XS.gguf) | IQ3_XS | 3.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q3_K_S.gguf) | Q3_K_S | 3.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.IQ3_S.gguf) | IQ3_S | 3.3 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.IQ3_M.gguf) | IQ3_M | 3.4 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q3_K_M.gguf) | Q3_K_M | 3.6 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q3_K_L.gguf) | Q3_K_L | 3.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.IQ4_XS.gguf) | IQ4_XS | 4.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q4_K_S.gguf) | Q4_K_S | 4.2 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q4_K_M.gguf) | Q4_K_M | 4.5 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q5_K_S.gguf) | Q5_K_S | 5.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q5_K_M.gguf) | Q5_K_M | 5.2 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q6_K.gguf) | Q6_K | 6.0 | very good quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.Q8_0.gguf) | Q8_0 | 7.8 | fast, best quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF/resolve/main/BuRPris-Remix-7B.f16.gguf) | f16 | 14.6 | 16 bpw, overkill |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["mergekit", "merge"], "base_model": "n00854180t/BuRPris-Remix-7B", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/BuRPris-Remix-7B-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"mergekit",
"merge",
"en",
"base_model:n00854180t/BuRPris-Remix-7B",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:11:37+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #mergekit #merge #en #base_model-n00854180t/BuRPris-Remix-7B #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
static quants of URL
weighted/imatrix quants seem not to be available (by me) at this time. If they do not show up a week or so after the static ones, I have probably not planned for them. Feel free to request them by opening a Community Discussion.
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #mergekit #merge #en #base_model-n00854180t/BuRPris-Remix-7B #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
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- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
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#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
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## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
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<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
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## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
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[More Information Needed]
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<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
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[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | DS-PM4-FS24/whisper-small-tedlium | null | [
"transformers",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:11:51+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
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- Language(s) (NLP):
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## Uses
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## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
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### Training Procedure
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## Evaluation
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## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
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## Technical Specifications [optional]
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### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
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"## Glossary [optional]",
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"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
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"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
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"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
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"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
text-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-clinc
This model is a fine-tuned version of [distilbert-base-uncased](https://huggingface.co/distilbert-base-uncased) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.7721
- Accuracy: 0.9181
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 48
- eval_batch_size: 48
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 5
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Accuracy |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|:--------:|
| No log | 1.0 | 318 | 3.2884 | 0.7419 |
| 3.7865 | 2.0 | 636 | 1.8751 | 0.8368 |
| 3.7865 | 3.0 | 954 | 1.1569 | 0.8961 |
| 1.6925 | 4.0 | 1272 | 0.8573 | 0.9132 |
| 0.9056 | 5.0 | 1590 | 0.7721 | 0.9181 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.30.0
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.13.3
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["accuracy"], "model-index": [{"name": "distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-clinc", "results": []}]} | fibleep/distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-clinc | null | [
"transformers",
"pytorch",
"tensorboard",
"distilbert",
"text-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:12:12+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #pytorch #tensorboard #distilbert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| distilbert-base-uncased-finetuned-clinc
=======================================
This model is a fine-tuned version of distilbert-base-uncased on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.7721
* Accuracy: 0.9181
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 48
* eval\_batch\_size: 48
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 5
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.30.0
* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.13.3
| [
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"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.30.0\n* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.13.3"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
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This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
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<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
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<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
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<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
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[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | shallow6414/bkyth32 | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:12:27+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
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## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
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#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
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## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
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### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
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## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
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"### Training Data",
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"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
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"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
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"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
static quants of https://huggingface.co/chargoddard/llama3-42b-v0
<!-- provided-files -->
weighted/imatrix quants are available at https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-i1-GGUF
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q2_K.gguf) | Q2_K | 16.4 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.IQ3_XS.gguf) | IQ3_XS | 18.2 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q3_K_S.gguf) | Q3_K_S | 19.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.IQ3_S.gguf) | IQ3_S | 19.1 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.IQ3_M.gguf) | IQ3_M | 19.7 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q3_K_M.gguf) | Q3_K_M | 21.1 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q3_K_L.gguf) | Q3_K_L | 22.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.IQ4_XS.gguf) | IQ4_XS | 23.6 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q4_K_S.gguf) | Q4_K_S | 24.8 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q4_K_M.gguf) | Q4_K_M | 26.2 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q5_K_S.gguf) | Q5_K_S | 29.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q5_K_M.gguf) | Q5_K_M | 30.7 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q6_K.gguf) | Q6_K | 35.5 | very good quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF/resolve/main/llama3-42b-v0.Q8_0.gguf) | Q8_0 | 46.0 | fast, best quality |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "llama3", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["axolotl", "mergekit", "llama"], "datasets": ["JeanKaddour/minipile"], "base_model": "chargoddard/llama3-42b-v0", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/llama3-42b-v0-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"axolotl",
"mergekit",
"llama",
"en",
"dataset:JeanKaddour/minipile",
"base_model:chargoddard/llama3-42b-v0",
"license:llama3",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:12:36+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #axolotl #mergekit #llama #en #dataset-JeanKaddour/minipile #base_model-chargoddard/llama3-42b-v0 #license-llama3 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
static quants of URL
weighted/imatrix quants are available at URL
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #axolotl #mergekit #llama #en #dataset-JeanKaddour/minipile #base_model-chargoddard/llama3-42b-v0 #license-llama3 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
weighted/imatrix quants of https://huggingface.co/SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B
<!-- provided-files -->
static quants are available at https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-GGUF
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ1_S.gguf) | i1-IQ1_S | 1.7 | for the desperate |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ1_M.gguf) | i1-IQ1_M | 1.9 | for the desperate |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ2_XXS.gguf) | i1-IQ2_XXS | 2.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ2_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ2_XS | 2.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ2_S.gguf) | i1-IQ2_S | 2.4 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ2_M.gguf) | i1-IQ2_M | 2.6 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q2_K.gguf) | i1-Q2_K | 2.8 | IQ3_XXS probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ3_XXS.gguf) | i1-IQ3_XXS | 2.9 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ3_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ3_XS | 3.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q3_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_S | 3.3 | IQ3_XS probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ3_S.gguf) | i1-IQ3_S | 3.3 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ3_M.gguf) | i1-IQ3_M | 3.4 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q3_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_M | 3.6 | IQ3_S probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q3_K_L.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_L | 3.9 | IQ3_M probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-IQ4_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ4_XS | 4.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q4_0.gguf) | i1-Q4_0 | 4.2 | fast, low quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q4_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q4_K_S | 4.2 | optimal size/speed/quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q4_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q4_K_M | 4.5 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q5_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q5_K_S | 5.1 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q5_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q5_K_M | 5.2 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B.i1-Q6_K.gguf) | i1-Q6_K | 6.0 | practically like static Q6_K |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["merge", "mergekit", "lazymergekit", "SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B", "NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO"], "base_model": "SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B-i1-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"merge",
"mergekit",
"lazymergekit",
"SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B",
"NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO",
"en",
"base_model:SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:12:37+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B #NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO #en #base_model-SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
weighted/imatrix quants of URL
static quants are available at URL
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-DPO-7B #NeverSleep/Noromaid-7B-0.4-DPO #en #base_model-SanjiWatsuki/Lelantos-Maid-DPO-7B #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
null | transformers |
# Uploaded model
- **Developed by:** dbands
- **License:** apache-2.0
- **Finetuned from model :** unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with [Unsloth](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth) and Huggingface's TRL library.
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unslothai/unsloth/main/images/unsloth%20made%20with%20love.png" width="200"/>](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth)
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["text-generation-inference", "transformers", "unsloth", "llama", "trl"], "base_model": "unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit"} | dbands/llama-3-8b-instruct_lora_databricks-dolly-15k | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"text-generation-inference",
"unsloth",
"llama",
"trl",
"en",
"base_model:unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:13:08+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Uploaded model
- Developed by: dbands
- License: apache-2.0
- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.
<img src="URL width="200"/>
| [
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: dbands\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: dbands\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] |
object-detection | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/wandb/assets/main/wandb-github-badge-28.svg" alt="Visualize in Weights & Biases" width="200" height="32"/>](https://wandb.ai/qubvel-hf-co/transformers-detection-model-finetuning-cppe5/runs/lgrnumaa)
# hustvl-yolos-small-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad
This model is a fine-tuned version of [hustvl/yolos-small](https://huggingface.co/hustvl/yolos-small) on the cppe-5 dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 1337
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 100.0
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0
- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.0
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["object-detection", "vision", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "hustvl/yolos-small", "model-index": [{"name": "hustvl-yolos-small-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad", "results": []}]} | qubvel-hf/hustvl-yolos-small-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"yolos",
"object-detection",
"vision",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:hustvl/yolos-small",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:13:11+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #yolos #object-detection #vision #generated_from_trainer #base_model-hustvl/yolos-small #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
<img src="URL alt="Visualize in Weights & Biases" width="200" height="32"/>
# hustvl-yolos-small-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad
This model is a fine-tuned version of hustvl/yolos-small on the cppe-5 dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 1337
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 100.0
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0
- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.0
| [
"# hustvl-yolos-small-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of hustvl/yolos-small on the cppe-5 dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 1\n- seed: 1337\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 100.0\n- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0\n- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.0"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #yolos #object-detection #vision #generated_from_trainer #base_model-hustvl/yolos-small #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# hustvl-yolos-small-finetuned-10k-cppe5-manual-pad\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of hustvl/yolos-small on the cppe-5 dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 1\n- seed: 1337\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 100.0\n- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.41.0.dev0\n- Pytorch 1.13.0+cu117\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.0"
] |
null | transformers | ## About
<!-- ### quantize_version: 1 -->
<!-- ### output_tensor_quantised: 1 -->
<!-- ### convert_type: -->
<!-- ### vocab_type: -->
weighted/imatrix quants of https://huggingface.co/dillfrescott/silicon-maid-medium
<!-- provided-files -->
static quants are available at https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-GGUF
## Usage
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of [TheBloke's
READMEs](https://huggingface.co/TheBloke/KafkaLM-70B-German-V0.1-GGUF) for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
## Provided Quants
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
| Link | Type | Size/GB | Notes |
|:-----|:-----|--------:|:------|
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ1_S.gguf) | i1-IQ1_S | 2.5 | for the desperate |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ1_M.gguf) | i1-IQ1_M | 2.7 | for the desperate |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ2_XXS.gguf) | i1-IQ2_XXS | 3.0 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ2_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ2_XS | 3.3 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ2_S.gguf) | i1-IQ2_S | 3.5 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ2_M.gguf) | i1-IQ2_M | 3.8 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q2_K.gguf) | i1-Q2_K | 4.1 | IQ3_XXS probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ3_XXS.gguf) | i1-IQ3_XXS | 4.3 | lower quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ3_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ3_XS | 4.5 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q3_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_S | 4.8 | IQ3_XS probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ3_S.gguf) | i1-IQ3_S | 4.8 | beats Q3_K* |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ3_M.gguf) | i1-IQ3_M | 4.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q3_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_M | 5.3 | IQ3_S probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q3_K_L.gguf) | i1-Q3_K_L | 5.8 | IQ3_M probably better |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-IQ4_XS.gguf) | i1-IQ4_XS | 5.9 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q4_0.gguf) | i1-Q4_0 | 6.2 | fast, low quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q4_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q4_K_S | 6.2 | optimal size/speed/quality |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q4_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q4_K_M | 6.6 | fast, recommended |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q5_K_S.gguf) | i1-Q5_K_S | 7.5 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q5_K_M.gguf) | i1-Q5_K_M | 7.7 | |
| [GGUF](https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF/resolve/main/silicon-maid-medium.i1-Q6_K.gguf) | i1-Q6_K | 8.9 | practically like static Q6_K |
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):

And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
https://gist.github.com/Artefact2/b5f810600771265fc1e39442288e8ec9
## FAQ / Model Request
See https://huggingface.co/mradermacher/model_requests for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
## Thanks
I thank my company, [nethype GmbH](https://www.nethype.de/), for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
<!-- end -->
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "library_name": "transformers", "base_model": "dillfrescott/silicon-maid-medium", "quantized_by": "mradermacher"} | mradermacher/silicon-maid-medium-i1-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"en",
"base_model:dillfrescott/silicon-maid-medium",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:13:52+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #en #base_model-dillfrescott/silicon-maid-medium #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| About
-----
weighted/imatrix quants of URL
static quants are available at URL
Usage
-----
If you are unsure how to use GGUF files, refer to one of TheBloke's
READMEs for
more details, including on how to concatenate multi-part files.
Provided Quants
---------------
(sorted by size, not necessarily quality. IQ-quants are often preferable over similar sized non-IQ quants)
Here is a handy graph by ikawrakow comparing some lower-quality quant
types (lower is better):
!URL
And here are Artefact2's thoughts on the matter:
URL
FAQ / Model Request
-------------------
See URL for some answers to
questions you might have and/or if you want some other model quantized.
Thanks
------
I thank my company, nethype GmbH, for letting
me use its servers and providing upgrades to my workstation to enable
this work in my free time.
| [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #en #base_model-dillfrescott/silicon-maid-medium #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n"
] |
token-classification | transformers | # Model Card for Model ID
base_model : [dmis-lab/biobert-v1.1](https://huggingface.co/dmis-lab/biobert-v1.1)
hidden_size : 768
max_position_embeddings : 512
num_attention_heads : 12
num_hidden_layers : 12
vocab_size : 28996
# Basic usage
```python
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForTokenClassification
import numpy as np
# match tag
id2tag = {0:'O', 1:'B_MT', 2:'I_MT'}
# load model & tokenizer
MODEL_NAME = 'MDDDDR/dmis_lab_biobert_v1.1_NER'
model = AutoModelForTokenClassification.from_pretrained(MODEL_NAME)
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(MODEL_NAME)
# prepare input
text = 'mental disorder can also contribute to the development of diabetes through various mechanism including increased stress, poor self care behavior, and adverse effect on glucose metabolism.'
tokenized = tokenizer(text, return_tensors='pt')
# forward pass
output = model(**tokenized)
# result
pred = np.argmax(output[0].cpu().detach().numpy(), axis=2)[0][1:-1]
# check pred
for txt, pred in zip(tokenizer.tokenize(text), pred):
print("{}\t{}".format(id2tag[pred], txt))
# B_MT mental
# B_MT disorder
```
## Framework versions
- transformers : 4.39.1
- torch : 2.1.0+cu121
- datasets : 2.18.0
- tokenizers : 0.15.2
- numpy : 1.20.0 | {"language": ["en"], "tags": ["BERT"], "datasets": ["pubmed"]} | MDDDDR/dmis_lab_biobert_v1.1_NER | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"token-classification",
"BERT",
"en",
"dataset:pubmed",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:14:24+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #token-classification #BERT #en #dataset-pubmed #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| # Model Card for Model ID
base_model : dmis-lab/biobert-v1.1
hidden_size : 768
max_position_embeddings : 512
num_attention_heads : 12
num_hidden_layers : 12
vocab_size : 28996
# Basic usage
## Framework versions
- transformers : 4.39.1
- torch : 2.1.0+cu121
- datasets : 2.18.0
- tokenizers : 0.15.2
- numpy : 1.20.0 | [
"# Model Card for Model ID\n\nbase_model : dmis-lab/biobert-v1.1\n\nhidden_size : 768\n\nmax_position_embeddings : 512\n\nnum_attention_heads : 12\n\nnum_hidden_layers : 12\n\nvocab_size : 28996",
"# Basic usage",
"## Framework versions\n- transformers : 4.39.1\n- torch : 2.1.0+cu121\n- datasets : 2.18.0\n- tokenizers : 0.15.2\n- numpy : 1.20.0"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #bert #token-classification #BERT #en #dataset-pubmed #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID\n\nbase_model : dmis-lab/biobert-v1.1\n\nhidden_size : 768\n\nmax_position_embeddings : 512\n\nnum_attention_heads : 12\n\nnum_hidden_layers : 12\n\nvocab_size : 28996",
"# Basic usage",
"## Framework versions\n- transformers : 4.39.1\n- torch : 2.1.0+cu121\n- datasets : 2.18.0\n- tokenizers : 0.15.2\n- numpy : 1.20.0"
] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | GAWON0619/HallymChatbot-koalpaca-polyglot-5_8b-1000step-8batch_4epoch | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:14:50+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
text-to-image | diffusers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the training script had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# DreamBooth - BKM1804/mixi_output
This is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using [DreamBooth](https://dreambooth.github.io/).
You can find some example images in the following.
DreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.
## Intended uses & limitations
#### How to use
```python
# TODO: add an example code snippet for running this diffusion pipeline
```
#### Limitations and bias
[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]
## Training details
[TODO: describe the data used to train the model] | {"license": "creativeml-openrail-m", "library_name": "diffusers", "tags": ["text-to-image", "dreambooth", "diffusers-training", "stable-diffusion", "stable-diffusion-diffusers", "text-to-image", "dreambooth", "diffusers-training", "stable-diffusion", "stable-diffusion-diffusers"], "base_model": "CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4", "inference": true, "instance_prompt": "a photo of sks dog"} | BKM1804/mixi_output | null | [
"diffusers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"text-to-image",
"dreambooth",
"diffusers-training",
"stable-diffusion",
"stable-diffusion-diffusers",
"base_model:CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
"license:creativeml-openrail-m",
"endpoints_compatible",
"diffusers:StableDiffusionPipeline",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:15:05+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#diffusers #tensorboard #safetensors #text-to-image #dreambooth #diffusers-training #stable-diffusion #stable-diffusion-diffusers #base_model-CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4 #license-creativeml-openrail-m #endpoints_compatible #diffusers-StableDiffusionPipeline #region-us
|
# DreamBooth - BKM1804/mixi_output
This is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using DreamBooth.
You can find some example images in the following.
DreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.
## Intended uses & limitations
#### How to use
#### Limitations and bias
[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]
## Training details
[TODO: describe the data used to train the model] | [
"# DreamBooth - BKM1804/mixi_output\n\nThis is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using DreamBooth.\nYou can find some example images in the following. \n\n\n\nDreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.",
"## Intended uses & limitations",
"#### How to use",
"#### Limitations and bias\n\n[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]",
"## Training details\n\n[TODO: describe the data used to train the model]"
] | [
"TAGS\n#diffusers #tensorboard #safetensors #text-to-image #dreambooth #diffusers-training #stable-diffusion #stable-diffusion-diffusers #base_model-CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4 #license-creativeml-openrail-m #endpoints_compatible #diffusers-StableDiffusionPipeline #region-us \n",
"# DreamBooth - BKM1804/mixi_output\n\nThis is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using DreamBooth.\nYou can find some example images in the following. \n\n\n\nDreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.",
"## Intended uses & limitations",
"#### How to use",
"#### Limitations and bias\n\n[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]",
"## Training details\n\n[TODO: describe the data used to train the model]"
] |
null | peft | ## Training procedure
The following `bitsandbytes` quantization config was used during training:
- load_in_8bit: False
- load_in_4bit: True
- llm_int8_threshold: 6.0
- llm_int8_skip_modules: None
- llm_int8_enable_fp32_cpu_offload: False
- llm_int8_has_fp16_weight: False
- bnb_4bit_quant_type: nf4
- bnb_4bit_use_double_quant: True
- bnb_4bit_compute_dtype: bfloat16
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.4.0
| {"library_name": "peft"} | chakkakrishna/falconfinetune | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"falcon",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:15:14+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #falcon #region-us
| ## Training procedure
The following 'bitsandbytes' quantization config was used during training:
- load_in_8bit: False
- load_in_4bit: True
- llm_int8_threshold: 6.0
- llm_int8_skip_modules: None
- llm_int8_enable_fp32_cpu_offload: False
- llm_int8_has_fp16_weight: False
- bnb_4bit_quant_type: nf4
- bnb_4bit_use_double_quant: True
- bnb_4bit_compute_dtype: bfloat16
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.4.0
| [
"## Training procedure\n\n\nThe following 'bitsandbytes' quantization config was used during training:\n- load_in_8bit: False\n- load_in_4bit: True\n- llm_int8_threshold: 6.0\n- llm_int8_skip_modules: None\n- llm_int8_enable_fp32_cpu_offload: False\n- llm_int8_has_fp16_weight: False\n- bnb_4bit_quant_type: nf4\n- bnb_4bit_use_double_quant: True\n- bnb_4bit_compute_dtype: bfloat16",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n- PEFT 0.4.0"
] | [
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"### Framework versions\n\n\n- PEFT 0.4.0"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
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[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
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### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
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#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
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## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
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## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | RobertML/sn6b | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"stablelm",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:16:27+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #stablelm #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
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] |
text2text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# tiny-bart-sst2-distilled
This model is a fine-tuned version of [aravindhank/valuenet-bart-base](https://huggingface.co/aravindhank/valuenet-bart-base) on the None dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 6e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 33
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 10
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "aravindhank/valuenet-bart-base", "model-index": [{"name": "tiny-bart-sst2-distilled", "results": []}]} | aravindhank/tiny-bart-sst2-distilled | null | [
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"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:18:18+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #bart #text2text-generation #generated_from_trainer #base_model-aravindhank/valuenet-bart-base #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# tiny-bart-sst2-distilled
This model is a fine-tuned version of aravindhank/valuenet-bart-base on the None dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 6e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 33
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 10
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
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] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
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<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
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<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
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- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
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<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
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[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | jjmaxwell/OrpoLlama-3-8B | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:18:42+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
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text-generation | transformers | The tnayaj-8B model is an innovative open-source language model specifically engineered for the biomedical domain. Crafted by Jayant AI Labs, this model harnesses state-of-the-art methodologies to achieve unparalleled performance across various biomedical tasks.
🏥 Specialization in medicine: tnayaj-8B caters to the intricate linguistic and informational demands of the medical and life sciences realms. Its refinement stems from extensive training on a comprehensive biomedical dataset, enabling precise and articulate text generation within the domain.
🎓 Exceptional Performance: Boasting a staggering 8 billion parameters
🧠 Advanced Training Methodologies: tnayaj-8B builds upon the foundational prowess of the Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct .It integrates the DPO dataset and a tailored array of medical instruction data for refinement. Central to its training regimen are meticulously curated components, including: | {"license": "apache-2.0"} | Jayant9928/tnayaj | null | [
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"text-generation",
"conversational",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:19:17+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #conversational #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
| The tnayaj-8B model is an innovative open-source language model specifically engineered for the biomedical domain. Crafted by Jayant AI Labs, this model harnesses state-of-the-art methodologies to achieve unparalleled performance across various biomedical tasks.
Specialization in medicine: tnayaj-8B caters to the intricate linguistic and informational demands of the medical and life sciences realms. Its refinement stems from extensive training on a comprehensive biomedical dataset, enabling precise and articulate text generation within the domain.
Exceptional Performance: Boasting a staggering 8 billion parameters
Advanced Training Methodologies: tnayaj-8B builds upon the foundational prowess of the Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct .It integrates the DPO dataset and a tailored array of medical instruction data for refinement. Central to its training regimen are meticulously curated components, including: | [] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #conversational #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n"
] |
null | peft |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# llama3-8b-schopenhauer

This model is a fine-tuned version of [meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct](https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct) on a synthetic dataset of argumentative conversations.
The model has been built by [Raphaaal](https://github.com/Raphaaal), [vdeva](https://github.com/vdeva), [margotcosson](https://github.com/margotcosson) and [basileplus](https://github.com/basileplus)
## Model description
The model as been trained to be an argumentative expert, following deterministic rethoric guidelines depicted by Schopenhauer in The Art of Being Right.
The model aims at showing how persuasive a model can be if we simply introduce some simple deterministic argumentative guidelines.
## Training and evaluation data
The model has been trained using LoRa on a small synthetic dataset which quality can be improved both in size and quality. The model has shown great performance in responding with short percuting answers to argumentative conversations. No argumentative metric has been implemented, interesting arguments evaluation benchmark can be found in [Cabrio, E., & Villata, S. (Year). Towards a Benchmark of Natural Language Arguments. INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France.](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1405.0941v1)
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | {"language": ["en"], "license": "other", "library_name": "peft", "tags": ["trl", "sft", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct", "model-index": [{"name": "llama3-8b-schopenhauer", "results": []}]} | basilePlus/llama3-8b-schopenhauer | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"trl",
"sft",
"generated_from_trainer",
"en",
"arxiv:1405.0941",
"base_model:meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct",
"license:other",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:19:48+00:00 | [
"1405.0941"
] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #trl #sft #generated_from_trainer #en #arxiv-1405.0941 #base_model-meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct #license-other #region-us
|
# llama3-8b-schopenhauer
!llama_sch.png
This model is a fine-tuned version of meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct on a synthetic dataset of argumentative conversations.
The model has been built by Raphaaal, vdeva, margotcosson and basileplus
## Model description
The model as been trained to be an argumentative expert, following deterministic rethoric guidelines depicted by Schopenhauer in The Art of Being Right.
The model aims at showing how persuasive a model can be if we simply introduce some simple deterministic argumentative guidelines.
## Training and evaluation data
The model has been trained using LoRa on a small synthetic dataset which quality can be improved both in size and quality. The model has shown great performance in responding with short percuting answers to argumentative conversations. No argumentative metric has been implemented, interesting arguments evaluation benchmark can be found in Cabrio, E., & Villata, S. (Year). Towards a Benchmark of Natural Language Arguments. INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France.
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | [
"# llama3-8b-schopenhauer\n\n!llama_sch.png\n\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct on a synthetic dataset of argumentative conversations.\nThe model has been built by Raphaaal, vdeva, margotcosson and basileplus",
"## Model description\n\nThe model as been trained to be an argumentative expert, following deterministic rethoric guidelines depicted by Schopenhauer in The Art of Being Right. \nThe model aims at showing how persuasive a model can be if we simply introduce some simple deterministic argumentative guidelines.",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nThe model has been trained using LoRa on a small synthetic dataset which quality can be improved both in size and quality. The model has shown great performance in responding with short percuting answers to argumentative conversations. No argumentative metric has been implemented, interesting arguments evaluation benchmark can be found in Cabrio, E., & Villata, S. (Year). Towards a Benchmark of Natural Language Arguments. INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France.",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 3.0",
"### Framework versions\n\n- PEFT 0.10.0\n- Transformers 4.40.1\n- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] | [
"TAGS\n#peft #safetensors #trl #sft #generated_from_trainer #en #arxiv-1405.0941 #base_model-meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct #license-other #region-us \n",
"# llama3-8b-schopenhauer\n\n!llama_sch.png\n\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct on a synthetic dataset of argumentative conversations.\nThe model has been built by Raphaaal, vdeva, margotcosson and basileplus",
"## Model description\n\nThe model as been trained to be an argumentative expert, following deterministic rethoric guidelines depicted by Schopenhauer in The Art of Being Right. \nThe model aims at showing how persuasive a model can be if we simply introduce some simple deterministic argumentative guidelines.",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nThe model has been trained using LoRa on a small synthetic dataset which quality can be improved both in size and quality. The model has shown great performance in responding with short percuting answers to argumentative conversations. No argumentative metric has been implemented, interesting arguments evaluation benchmark can be found in Cabrio, E., & Villata, S. (Year). Towards a Benchmark of Natural Language Arguments. INRIA Sophia Antipolis, France.",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 3.0",
"### Framework versions\n\n- PEFT 0.10.0\n- Transformers 4.40.1\n- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
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## How to Get Started with the Model
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#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
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<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
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#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
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### Results
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<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
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- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
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[More Information Needed]
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## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
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[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | zandfj/LLaMA2-7B-Chat-sft-042616-making | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:21:33+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
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"## Training Details",
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"#### Testing Data",
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"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
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"### Compute Infrastructure",
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"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
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"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
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"#### Hardware",
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"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# 0.001_4iters_bs256_nodpo_only2third_userresponse_iter_1
This model is a fine-tuned version of [HuggingFaceH4/mistral-7b-sft-beta](https://huggingface.co/HuggingFaceH4/mistral-7b-sft-beta) on the updated and the original datasets.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-07
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 8
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4
- total_train_batch_size: 256
- total_eval_batch_size: 64
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- lr_scheduler_warmup_ratio: 0.1
- num_epochs: 1
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.1.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.14.6
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "mit", "tags": ["alignment-handbook", "trl", "dpo", "generated_from_trainer", "trl", "dpo", "generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["updated", "original"], "base_model": "HuggingFaceH4/mistral-7b-sft-beta", "model-index": [{"name": "0.001_4iters_bs256_nodpo_only2third_userresponse_iter_1", "results": []}]} | ShenaoZ/0.001_4iters_bs256_nodpo_only2third_userresponse_iter_1 | null | [
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"license:mit",
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] | null | 2024-04-26T08:21:37+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
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|
# 0.001_4iters_bs256_nodpo_only2third_userresponse_iter_1
This model is a fine-tuned version of HuggingFaceH4/mistral-7b-sft-beta on the updated and the original datasets.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-07
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 8
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4
- total_train_batch_size: 256
- total_eval_batch_size: 64
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- lr_scheduler_warmup_ratio: 0.1
- num_epochs: 1
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.1.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.14.6
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
"# 0.001_4iters_bs256_nodpo_only2third_userresponse_iter_1\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of HuggingFaceH4/mistral-7b-sft-beta on the updated and the original datasets.",
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"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-07\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- distributed_type: multi-GPU\n- num_devices: 8\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4\n- total_train_batch_size: 256\n- total_eval_batch_size: 64\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: cosine\n- lr_scheduler_warmup_ratio: 0.1\n- num_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
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] |
text-generation | transformers | This is an EXL2 quant made with [exllamav2](https://github.com/turboderp/exllamav2) at 6.0bpw
<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/655bb613e8a8971e89944f3e/TSa3V8YpoVagnTYgxiLaO.png" width="200"/>
# Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at [email protected].
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai). It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.

**Approach:**
- [meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct](https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct) as the base
- NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
- Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the [Large World Model](https://huggingface.co/LargeWorldModel) [2] (See details below)
**Infra:**
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai) high performance L40S cluster.
**Quantized versions and GGUF**
GGUF is available on on Crusoe's huggingface account. Check it out here: [crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF)
**Data:**
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting [SlimPajama](https://huggingface.co/datasets/cerebras/SlimPajama-627B).
**Progressive Training Details:**
| Parameter | 65K | 262K |
|-----------------------------|----------------|------------|
| Initialize From | LLaMA-3-8B-Inst| 65K |
| Sequence Length | 2^16 | 2^18 |
| RoPE theta | 15.3 M | 207.1 M |
| Batch Size (Tokens / Step) | 2.097 M | 4.192 M |
| Steps | 30 | 24 |
| Total Tokens | 63 M | 101 M |
| Learning Rate | 2.00E-05 | 2.00E-05 |
| # GPUs | 32 | 32 |
| GPU Type | NVIDIA L40S | NVIDIA L40S|
## The Gradient AI Team
https://gradient.ai/
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
## Contact Us
Drop an email to [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])
## References
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] https://github.com/jzhang38/EasyContext
----
# Base Model
## Model Details
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
**Model developers** Meta
**Variations** Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
**Input** Models input text only.
**Output** Models generate text and code only.
**Model Architecture** Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Training Data</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Params</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Context length</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>GQA</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Token count</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Knowledge cutoff</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="2" >Llama 3
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >A new mix of publicly available online data.
</td>
<td>8B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >15T+
</td>
<td>March, 2023
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>70B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td>December, 2023
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**Llama 3 family of models**. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
**Model Release Date** April 18, 2024.
**Status** This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
**License** A custom commercial license is available at: [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license)
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model [README](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3). For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes).
## Intended Use
**Intended Use Cases** Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
**Out-of-scope** Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English**.
**Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
## How to use
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original `llama3` codebase.
### Use with transformers
You can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the `generate()` function. Let's see examples of both.
#### Transformers pipeline
```python
import transformers
import torch
model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct"
pipeline = transformers.pipeline(
"text-generation",
model=model_id,
model_kwargs={"torch_dtype": torch.bfloat16},
device_map="auto",
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a pirate chatbot who always responds in pirate speak!"},
{"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"},
]
prompt = pipeline.tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
messages,
tokenize=False,
add_generation_prompt=True
)
terminators = [
pipeline.tokenizer.eos_token_id,
pipeline.tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids("<|eot_id|>")
]
outputs = pipeline(
prompt,
max_new_tokens=256,
eos_token_id=terminators,
do_sample=True,
temperature=0.6,
top_p=0.9,
)
print(outputs[0]["generated_text"][len(prompt):])
```
#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM
```python
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM
import torch
model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
model_id,
torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16,
device_map="auto",
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a pirate chatbot who always responds in pirate speak!"},
{"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"},
]
input_ids = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
messages,
add_generation_prompt=True,
return_tensors="pt"
).to(model.device)
terminators = [
tokenizer.eos_token_id,
tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids("<|eot_id|>")
]
outputs = model.generate(
input_ids,
max_new_tokens=256,
eos_token_id=terminators,
do_sample=True,
temperature=0.6,
top_p=0.9,
)
response = outputs[0][input_ids.shape[-1]:]
print(tokenizer.decode(response, skip_special_tokens=True))
```
### Use with `llama3`
Please, follow the instructions in the [repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3)
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging `huggingface-cli`:
```
huggingface-cli download meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct --include "original/*" --local-dir Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct
```
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.
## Hardware and Software
**Training Factors** We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
**Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative** 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Time (GPU hours)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Power Consumption (W)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Carbon Emitted(tCO2eq)</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 8B
</td>
<td>1.3M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>390
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 70B
</td>
<td>6.4M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>1900
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Total
</td>
<td>7.7M
</td>
<td>
</td>
<td>2290
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**CO2 emissions during pre-training**. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
## Training Data
**Overview** Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
**Data Freshness** The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
## Benchmarks
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/eval_methodology.md).
### Base pretrained models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Category</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="6" >General
</td>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>66.6
</td>
<td>45.7
</td>
<td>53.8
</td>
<td>79.5
</td>
<td>69.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>AGIEval English (3-5 shot)
</td>
<td>45.9
</td>
<td>28.8
</td>
<td>38.7
</td>
<td>63.0
</td>
<td>54.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>CommonSenseQA (7-shot)
</td>
<td>72.6
</td>
<td>57.6
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>83.8
</td>
<td>78.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Winogrande (5-shot)
</td>
<td>76.1
</td>
<td>73.3
</td>
<td>75.4
</td>
<td>83.1
</td>
<td>81.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BIG-Bench Hard (3-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>61.1
</td>
<td>38.1
</td>
<td>47.0
</td>
<td>81.3
</td>
<td>65.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>ARC-Challenge (25-shot)
</td>
<td>78.6
</td>
<td>53.7
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>85.3
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Knowledge reasoning
</td>
<td>TriviaQA-Wiki (5-shot)
</td>
<td>78.5
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>89.7
</td>
<td>87.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="4" >Reading comprehension
</td>
<td>SQuAD (1-shot)
</td>
<td>76.4
</td>
<td>72.2
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>85.6
</td>
<td>82.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>QuAC (1-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>44.4
</td>
<td>39.6
</td>
<td>44.9
</td>
<td>51.1
</td>
<td>49.4
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BoolQ (0-shot)
</td>
<td>75.7
</td>
<td>65.5
</td>
<td>66.9
</td>
<td>79.0
</td>
<td>73.1
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>DROP (3-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>58.4
</td>
<td>37.9
</td>
<td>49.8
</td>
<td>79.7
</td>
<td>70.2
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Instruction tuned models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>68.4
</td>
<td>34.1
</td>
<td>47.8
</td>
<td>82.0
</td>
<td>52.9
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GPQA (0-shot)
</td>
<td>34.2
</td>
<td>21.7
</td>
<td>22.3
</td>
<td>39.5
</td>
<td>21.0
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>HumanEval (0-shot)
</td>
<td>62.2
</td>
<td>7.9
</td>
<td>14.0
</td>
<td>81.7
</td>
<td>25.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GSM-8K (8-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>25.7
</td>
<td>77.4
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>57.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MATH (4-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>30.0
</td>
<td>3.8
</td>
<td>6.7
</td>
<td>50.4
</td>
<td>11.6
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our [Responsible Use Guide](https://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide/) to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including [Meta Llama Guard 2](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) and [Code Shield](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a [reference implementation](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes/tree/main/recipes/responsible_ai) to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Safety</span>
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Refusals</span>
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/).
#### Critical risks
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">CBRNE</span> (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Cyber Security </span>
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of [equivalent coding capability](https://huggingface.co/spaces/facebook/CyberSecEval).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Child Safety</span>
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our [Github repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/PurpleLlama).
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an [output reporting mechanism](https://developers.facebook.com/llama_output_feedback) and [bug bounty program](https://www.facebook.com/whitehat) to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
## Ethical Considerations and Limitations
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating [Purple Llama](https://github.com/facebookresearch/PurpleLlama) solutions into your workflows and specifically [Llama Guard](https://ai.meta.com/research/publications/llama-guard-llm-based-input-output-safeguard-for-human-ai-conversations/) which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at [http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide](http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide)
## Citation instructions
@article{llama3modelcard,
title={Llama 3 Model Card},
author={AI@Meta},
year={2024},
url = {https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/MODEL_CARD.md}
}
## Contributors
Aaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos
| {"language": ["en"], "tags": ["meta", "llama-3"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation"} | bullerwins/gradientai_Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k_exl2_6.0bpw | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"meta",
"llama-3",
"conversational",
"en",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"6-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:21:55+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #meta #llama-3 #conversational #en #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #6-bit #region-us
| This is an EXL2 quant made with exllamav2 at 6.0bpw
<img src="URL width="200"/>
Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k
========================
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at contact@URL.
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from Crusoe Energy. It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.
!image/png
Approach:
* meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct as the base
* NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
* Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the Large World Model [2] (See details below)
Infra:
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on Crusoe Energy high performance L40S cluster.
Quantized versions and GGUF
GGUF is available on on Crusoe's huggingface account. Check it out here: crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF
Data:
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting SlimPajama.
Progressive Training Details:
Parameter: Initialize From, 65K: LLaMA-3-8B-Inst, 262K: 65K
Parameter: Sequence Length, 65K: 2^16, 262K: 2^18
Parameter: RoPE theta, 65K: 15.3 M, 262K: 207.1 M
Parameter: Batch Size (Tokens / Step), 65K: 2.097 M, 262K: 4.192 M
Parameter: Steps, 65K: 30, 262K: 24
Parameter: Total Tokens, 65K: 63 M, 262K: 101 M
Parameter: Learning Rate, 65K: 2.00E-05, 262K: 2.00E-05
Parameter: # GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32
Parameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S
The Gradient AI Team
--------------------
URL
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
Contact Us
----------
Drop an email to contact@URL
References
----------
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] URL
---
Base Model
==========
Model Details
-------------
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
Model developers Meta
Variations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
Input Models input text only.
Output Models generate text and code only.
Model Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
Llama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
Model Release Date April 18, 2024.
Status This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
License A custom commercial license is available at: URL
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.
Intended Use
------------
Intended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
Out-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.
Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
How to use
----------
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.
### Use with transformers
You can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.
#### Transformers pipeline
#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM
### Use with 'llama3'
Please, follow the instructions in the repository
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.
Hardware and Software
---------------------
Training Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
CO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
Training Data
-------------
Overview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
Data Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
Benchmarks
----------
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.
### Base pretrained models
### Instruction tuned models
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
Safety
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
Refusals
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL
#### Critical risks
CBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### Cyber Security
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.
### Child Safety
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
Ethical Considerations and Limitations
--------------------------------------
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL
instructions
@article{llama3modelcard,
title={Llama 3 Model Card},
author={AI@Meta},
year={2024},
url = {URL
}
Contributors
------------
Aaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos
| [
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nContact Us\n----------\n\n\nDrop an email to contact@URL\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHow to use\n----------\n\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\n\nYou can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.",
"#### Transformers pipeline",
"#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository\n\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL\n\n\ninstructions\n\n\n@article{llama3modelcard,\n\n\ntitle={Llama 3 Model Card},\n\n\nauthor={AI@Meta},\n\n\nyear={2024},\n\n\nurl = {URL\n\n\n}\n\n\nContributors\n------------\n\n\nAaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #meta #llama-3 #conversational #en #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #6-bit #region-us \n",
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nContact Us\n----------\n\n\nDrop an email to contact@URL\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHow to use\n----------\n\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\n\nYou can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.",
"#### Transformers pipeline",
"#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository\n\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL\n\n\ninstructions\n\n\n@article{llama3modelcard,\n\n\ntitle={Llama 3 Model Card},\n\n\nauthor={AI@Meta},\n\n\nyear={2024},\n\n\nurl = {URL\n\n\n}\n\n\nContributors\n------------\n\n\nAaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch-capybara-1epoch
This model is a fine-tuned version of [orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch](https://huggingface.co/orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch) on the argilla/Capybara-Preferences dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-06
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 4
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2
- total_train_batch_size: 64
- total_eval_batch_size: 32
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- num_epochs: 1
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.39.3
- Pytorch 2.1.2.post303
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"tags": ["alignment-handbook", "trl", "orpo", "generated_from_trainer", "trl", "orpo", "generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["argilla/Capybara-Preferences"], "base_model": "orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch", "model-index": [{"name": "kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch-capybara-1epoch", "results": []}]} | orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch-capybara-1epoch | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"alignment-handbook",
"trl",
"orpo",
"generated_from_trainer",
"conversational",
"dataset:argilla/Capybara-Preferences",
"base_model:orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:22:04+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #alignment-handbook #trl #orpo #generated_from_trainer #conversational #dataset-argilla/Capybara-Preferences #base_model-orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch-capybara-1epoch
This model is a fine-tuned version of orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch on the argilla/Capybara-Preferences dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-06
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 4
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2
- total_train_batch_size: 64
- total_eval_batch_size: 32
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- num_epochs: 1
### Training results
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.39.3
- Pytorch 2.1.2.post303
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"# kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch-capybara-1epoch\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch on the argilla/Capybara-Preferences dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-06\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- distributed_type: multi-GPU\n- num_devices: 4\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2\n- total_train_batch_size: 64\n- total_eval_batch_size: 32\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: cosine\n- num_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.39.3\n- Pytorch 2.1.2.post303\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #alignment-handbook #trl #orpo #generated_from_trainer #conversational #dataset-argilla/Capybara-Preferences #base_model-orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch-capybara-1epoch\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of orpo-explorers/kaist-mistral-orpo-OHP-15k-Stratified-1-beta-0.2-2epoch on the argilla/Capybara-Preferences dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-06\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- distributed_type: multi-GPU\n- num_devices: 4\n- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2\n- total_train_batch_size: 64\n- total_eval_batch_size: 32\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: cosine\n- num_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.39.3\n- Pytorch 2.1.2.post303\n- Datasets 2.18.0\n- Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
token-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# bert-practice
This model is a fine-tuned version of [bert-base-cased](https://huggingface.co/bert-base-cased) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.5468
- Precision: 0.2987
- Recall: 0.4299
- F1: 0.3525
- Accuracy: 0.8237
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Precision | Recall | F1 | Accuracy |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|:---------:|:------:|:------:|:--------:|
| No log | 1.0 | 13 | 0.5920 | 0.2053 | 0.3645 | 0.2626 | 0.8027 |
| No log | 2.0 | 26 | 0.5632 | 0.3007 | 0.4019 | 0.344 | 0.8247 |
| No log | 3.0 | 39 | 0.5468 | 0.2987 | 0.4299 | 0.3525 | 0.8237 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.2+cpu
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["precision", "recall", "f1", "accuracy"], "base_model": "bert-base-cased", "model-index": [{"name": "bert-practice", "results": []}]} | Lily-Tina/bert-practice | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"token-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:bert-base-cased",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:22:19+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #token-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-bert-base-cased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| bert-practice
=============
This model is a fine-tuned version of bert-base-cased on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.5468
* Precision: 0.2987
* Recall: 0.4299
* F1: 0.3525
* Accuracy: 0.8237
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 8
* eval\_batch\_size: 8
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 3
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.0
* Pytorch 2.2.2+cpu
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 3",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.0\n* Pytorch 2.2.2+cpu\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #bert #token-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-bert-base-cased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 3",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.0\n* Pytorch 2.2.2+cpu\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
text-generation | transformers | This is an EXL2 quant made with [exllamav2](https://github.com/turboderp/exllamav2) at 6.0bpw
<img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/655bb613e8a8971e89944f3e/TSa3V8YpoVagnTYgxiLaO.png" width="200"/>
# Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at [email protected].
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai). It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.

**Approach:**
- [meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct](https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct) as the base
- NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
- Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the [Large World Model](https://huggingface.co/LargeWorldModel) [2] (See details below)
**Infra:**
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai) high performance L40S cluster.
**Quantized versions and GGUF**
GGUF is available on on Crusoe's huggingface account. Check it out here: [crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF)
**Data:**
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting [SlimPajama](https://huggingface.co/datasets/cerebras/SlimPajama-627B).
**Progressive Training Details:**
| Parameter | 65K | 262K |
|-----------------------------|----------------|------------|
| Initialize From | LLaMA-3-8B-Inst| 65K |
| Sequence Length | 2^16 | 2^18 |
| RoPE theta | 15.3 M | 207.1 M |
| Batch Size (Tokens / Step) | 2.097 M | 4.192 M |
| Steps | 30 | 24 |
| Total Tokens | 63 M | 101 M |
| Learning Rate | 2.00E-05 | 2.00E-05 |
| # GPUs | 32 | 32 |
| GPU Type | NVIDIA L40S | NVIDIA L40S|
## The Gradient AI Team
https://gradient.ai/
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
## Contact Us
Drop an email to [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])
## References
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] https://github.com/jzhang38/EasyContext
----
# Base Model
## Model Details
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
**Model developers** Meta
**Variations** Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
**Input** Models input text only.
**Output** Models generate text and code only.
**Model Architecture** Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Training Data</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Params</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Context length</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>GQA</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Token count</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Knowledge cutoff</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="2" >Llama 3
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >A new mix of publicly available online data.
</td>
<td>8B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >15T+
</td>
<td>March, 2023
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>70B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td>December, 2023
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**Llama 3 family of models**. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
**Model Release Date** April 18, 2024.
**Status** This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
**License** A custom commercial license is available at: [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license)
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model [README](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3). For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes).
## Intended Use
**Intended Use Cases** Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
**Out-of-scope** Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English**.
**Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
## How to use
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original `llama3` codebase.
### Use with transformers
You can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the `generate()` function. Let's see examples of both.
#### Transformers pipeline
```python
import transformers
import torch
model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct"
pipeline = transformers.pipeline(
"text-generation",
model=model_id,
model_kwargs={"torch_dtype": torch.bfloat16},
device_map="auto",
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a pirate chatbot who always responds in pirate speak!"},
{"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"},
]
prompt = pipeline.tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
messages,
tokenize=False,
add_generation_prompt=True
)
terminators = [
pipeline.tokenizer.eos_token_id,
pipeline.tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids("<|eot_id|>")
]
outputs = pipeline(
prompt,
max_new_tokens=256,
eos_token_id=terminators,
do_sample=True,
temperature=0.6,
top_p=0.9,
)
print(outputs[0]["generated_text"][len(prompt):])
```
#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM
```python
from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM
import torch
model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_id)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
model_id,
torch_dtype=torch.bfloat16,
device_map="auto",
)
messages = [
{"role": "system", "content": "You are a pirate chatbot who always responds in pirate speak!"},
{"role": "user", "content": "Who are you?"},
]
input_ids = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
messages,
add_generation_prompt=True,
return_tensors="pt"
).to(model.device)
terminators = [
tokenizer.eos_token_id,
tokenizer.convert_tokens_to_ids("<|eot_id|>")
]
outputs = model.generate(
input_ids,
max_new_tokens=256,
eos_token_id=terminators,
do_sample=True,
temperature=0.6,
top_p=0.9,
)
response = outputs[0][input_ids.shape[-1]:]
print(tokenizer.decode(response, skip_special_tokens=True))
```
### Use with `llama3`
Please, follow the instructions in the [repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3)
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging `huggingface-cli`:
```
huggingface-cli download meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct --include "original/*" --local-dir Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct
```
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.
## Hardware and Software
**Training Factors** We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
**Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative** 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Time (GPU hours)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Power Consumption (W)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Carbon Emitted(tCO2eq)</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 8B
</td>
<td>1.3M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>390
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 70B
</td>
<td>6.4M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>1900
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Total
</td>
<td>7.7M
</td>
<td>
</td>
<td>2290
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**CO2 emissions during pre-training**. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
## Training Data
**Overview** Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
**Data Freshness** The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
## Benchmarks
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/eval_methodology.md).
### Base pretrained models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Category</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="6" >General
</td>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>66.6
</td>
<td>45.7
</td>
<td>53.8
</td>
<td>79.5
</td>
<td>69.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>AGIEval English (3-5 shot)
</td>
<td>45.9
</td>
<td>28.8
</td>
<td>38.7
</td>
<td>63.0
</td>
<td>54.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>CommonSenseQA (7-shot)
</td>
<td>72.6
</td>
<td>57.6
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>83.8
</td>
<td>78.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Winogrande (5-shot)
</td>
<td>76.1
</td>
<td>73.3
</td>
<td>75.4
</td>
<td>83.1
</td>
<td>81.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BIG-Bench Hard (3-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>61.1
</td>
<td>38.1
</td>
<td>47.0
</td>
<td>81.3
</td>
<td>65.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>ARC-Challenge (25-shot)
</td>
<td>78.6
</td>
<td>53.7
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>85.3
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Knowledge reasoning
</td>
<td>TriviaQA-Wiki (5-shot)
</td>
<td>78.5
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>89.7
</td>
<td>87.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="4" >Reading comprehension
</td>
<td>SQuAD (1-shot)
</td>
<td>76.4
</td>
<td>72.2
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>85.6
</td>
<td>82.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>QuAC (1-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>44.4
</td>
<td>39.6
</td>
<td>44.9
</td>
<td>51.1
</td>
<td>49.4
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BoolQ (0-shot)
</td>
<td>75.7
</td>
<td>65.5
</td>
<td>66.9
</td>
<td>79.0
</td>
<td>73.1
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>DROP (3-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>58.4
</td>
<td>37.9
</td>
<td>49.8
</td>
<td>79.7
</td>
<td>70.2
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Instruction tuned models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>68.4
</td>
<td>34.1
</td>
<td>47.8
</td>
<td>82.0
</td>
<td>52.9
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GPQA (0-shot)
</td>
<td>34.2
</td>
<td>21.7
</td>
<td>22.3
</td>
<td>39.5
</td>
<td>21.0
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>HumanEval (0-shot)
</td>
<td>62.2
</td>
<td>7.9
</td>
<td>14.0
</td>
<td>81.7
</td>
<td>25.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GSM-8K (8-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>25.7
</td>
<td>77.4
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>57.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MATH (4-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>30.0
</td>
<td>3.8
</td>
<td>6.7
</td>
<td>50.4
</td>
<td>11.6
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our [Responsible Use Guide](https://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide/) to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including [Meta Llama Guard 2](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) and [Code Shield](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a [reference implementation](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes/tree/main/recipes/responsible_ai) to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Safety</span>
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Refusals</span>
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/).
#### Critical risks
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">CBRNE</span> (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Cyber Security </span>
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of [equivalent coding capability](https://huggingface.co/spaces/facebook/CyberSecEval).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Child Safety</span>
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our [Github repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/PurpleLlama).
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an [output reporting mechanism](https://developers.facebook.com/llama_output_feedback) and [bug bounty program](https://www.facebook.com/whitehat) to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
## Ethical Considerations and Limitations
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating [Purple Llama](https://github.com/facebookresearch/PurpleLlama) solutions into your workflows and specifically [Llama Guard](https://ai.meta.com/research/publications/llama-guard-llm-based-input-output-safeguard-for-human-ai-conversations/) which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at [http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide](http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide)
## Citation instructions
@article{llama3modelcard,
title={Llama 3 Model Card},
author={AI@Meta},
year={2024},
url = {https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/MODEL_CARD.md}
}
## Contributors
Aaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos
| {"language": ["en"], "tags": ["meta", "llama-3"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation"} | bullerwins/gradientai_Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k_exl2_5.0bpw | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"meta",
"llama-3",
"conversational",
"en",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"5-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:23:09+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #meta #llama-3 #conversational #en #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #5-bit #region-us
| This is an EXL2 quant made with exllamav2 at 6.0bpw
<img src="URL width="200"/>
Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k
========================
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at contact@URL.
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from Crusoe Energy. It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.
!image/png
Approach:
* meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct as the base
* NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
* Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the Large World Model [2] (See details below)
Infra:
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on Crusoe Energy high performance L40S cluster.
Quantized versions and GGUF
GGUF is available on on Crusoe's huggingface account. Check it out here: crusoeai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF
Data:
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting SlimPajama.
Progressive Training Details:
Parameter: Initialize From, 65K: LLaMA-3-8B-Inst, 262K: 65K
Parameter: Sequence Length, 65K: 2^16, 262K: 2^18
Parameter: RoPE theta, 65K: 15.3 M, 262K: 207.1 M
Parameter: Batch Size (Tokens / Step), 65K: 2.097 M, 262K: 4.192 M
Parameter: Steps, 65K: 30, 262K: 24
Parameter: Total Tokens, 65K: 63 M, 262K: 101 M
Parameter: Learning Rate, 65K: 2.00E-05, 262K: 2.00E-05
Parameter: # GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32
Parameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S
The Gradient AI Team
--------------------
URL
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
Contact Us
----------
Drop an email to contact@URL
References
----------
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] URL
---
Base Model
==========
Model Details
-------------
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
Model developers Meta
Variations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
Input Models input text only.
Output Models generate text and code only.
Model Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
Llama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
Model Release Date April 18, 2024.
Status This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
License A custom commercial license is available at: URL
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.
Intended Use
------------
Intended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
Out-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.
Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
How to use
----------
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.
### Use with transformers
You can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.
#### Transformers pipeline
#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM
### Use with 'llama3'
Please, follow the instructions in the repository
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.
Hardware and Software
---------------------
Training Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
CO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
Training Data
-------------
Overview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
Data Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
Benchmarks
----------
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.
### Base pretrained models
### Instruction tuned models
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
Safety
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
Refusals
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL
#### Critical risks
CBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### Cyber Security
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.
### Child Safety
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
Ethical Considerations and Limitations
--------------------------------------
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL
instructions
@article{llama3modelcard,
title={Llama 3 Model Card},
author={AI@Meta},
year={2024},
url = {URL
}
Contributors
------------
Aaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos
| [
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nContact Us\n----------\n\n\nDrop an email to contact@URL\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHow to use\n----------\n\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\n\nYou can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.",
"#### Transformers pipeline",
"#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository\n\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL\n\n\ninstructions\n\n\n@article{llama3modelcard,\n\n\ntitle={Llama 3 Model Card},\n\n\nauthor={AI@Meta},\n\n\nyear={2024},\n\n\nurl = {URL\n\n\n}\n\n\nContributors\n------------\n\n\nAaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #meta #llama-3 #conversational #en #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #5-bit #region-us \n",
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nContact Us\n----------\n\n\nDrop an email to contact@URL\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHow to use\n----------\n\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\n\nYou can run conversational inference using the Transformers pipeline abstraction, or by leveraging the Auto classes with the 'generate()' function. Let's see examples of both.",
"#### Transformers pipeline",
"#### Transformers AutoModelForCausalLM",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository\n\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL\n\n\ninstructions\n\n\n@article{llama3modelcard,\n\n\ntitle={Llama 3 Model Card},\n\n\nauthor={AI@Meta},\n\n\nyear={2024},\n\n\nurl = {URL\n\n\n}\n\n\nContributors\n------------\n\n\nAaditya Singh; Aaron Grattafiori; Abhimanyu Dubey; Abhinav Jauhri; Abhinav Pandey; Abhishek Kadian; Adam Kelsey; Adi Gangidi; Ahmad Al-Dahle; Ahuva Goldstand; Aiesha Letman; Ajay Menon; Akhil Mathur; Alan Schelten; Alex Vaughan; Amy Yang; Andrei Lupu; Andres Alvarado; Andrew Gallagher; Andrew Gu; Andrew Ho; Andrew Poulton; Andrew Ryan; Angela Fan; Ankit Ramchandani; Anthony Hartshorn; Archi Mitra; Archie Sravankumar; Artem Korenev; Arun Rao; Ashley Gabriel; Ashwin Bharambe; Assaf Eisenman; Aston Zhang; Aurelien Rodriguez; Austen Gregerson; Ava Spataru; Baptiste Roziere; Ben Maurer; Benjamin Leonhardi; Bernie Huang; Bhargavi Paranjape; Bing Liu; Binh Tang; Bobbie Chern; Brani Stojkovic; Brian Fuller; Catalina Mejia Arenas; Chao Zhou; Charlotte Caucheteux; Chaya Nayak; Ching-Hsiang Chu; Chloe Bi; Chris Cai; Chris Cox; Chris Marra; Chris McConnell; Christian Keller; Christoph Feichtenhofer; Christophe Touret; Chunyang Wu; Corinne Wong; Cristian Canton Ferrer; Damien Allonsius; Daniel Kreymer; Daniel Haziza; Daniel Li; Danielle Pintz; Danny Livshits; Danny Wyatt; David Adkins; David Esiobu; David Xu; Davide Testuggine; Delia David; Devi Parikh; Dhruv Choudhary; Dhruv Mahajan; Diana Liskovich; Diego Garcia-Olano; Diego Perino; Dieuwke Hupkes; Dingkang Wang; Dustin Holland; Egor Lakomkin; Elina Lobanova; Xiaoqing Ellen Tan; Emily Dinan; Eric Smith; Erik Brinkman; Esteban Arcaute; Filip Radenovic; Firat Ozgenel; Francesco Caggioni; Frank Seide; Frank Zhang; Gabriel Synnaeve; Gabriella Schwarz; Gabrielle Lee; Gada Badeer; Georgia Anderson; Graeme Nail; Gregoire Mialon; Guan Pang; Guillem Cucurell; Hailey Nguyen; Hannah Korevaar; Hannah Wang; Haroun Habeeb; Harrison Rudolph; Henry Aspegren; Hu Xu; Hugo Touvron; Iga Kozlowska; Igor Molybog; Igor Tufanov; Iliyan Zarov; Imanol Arrieta Ibarra; Irina-Elena Veliche; Isabel Kloumann; Ishan Misra; Ivan Evtimov; Jacob Xu; Jade Copet; Jake Weissman; Jan Geffert; Jana Vranes; Japhet Asher; Jason Park; Jay Mahadeokar; Jean-Baptiste Gaya; Jeet Shah; Jelmer van der Linde; Jennifer Chan; Jenny Hong; Jenya Lee; Jeremy Fu; Jeremy Teboul; Jianfeng Chi; Jianyu Huang; Jie Wang; Jiecao Yu; Joanna Bitton; Joe Spisak; Joelle Pineau; Jon Carvill; Jongsoo Park; Joseph Rocca; Joshua Johnstun; Junteng Jia; Kalyan Vasuden Alwala; Kam Hou U; Kate Plawiak; Kartikeya Upasani; Kaushik Veeraraghavan; Ke Li; Kenneth Heafield; Kevin Stone; Khalid El-Arini; Krithika Iyer; Kshitiz Malik; Kuenley Chiu; Kunal Bhalla; Kyle Huang; Lakshya Garg; Lauren Rantala-Yeary; Laurens van der Maaten; Lawrence Chen; Leandro Silva; Lee Bell; Lei Zhang; Liang Tan; Louis Martin; Lovish Madaan; Luca Wehrstedt; Lukas Blecher; Luke de Oliveira; Madeline Muzzi; Madian Khabsa; Manav Avlani; Mannat Singh; Manohar Paluri; Mark Zuckerberg; Marcin Kardas; Martynas Mankus; Mathew Oldham; Mathieu Rita; Matthew Lennie; Maya Pavlova; Meghan Keneally; Melanie Kambadur; Mihir Patel; Mikayel Samvelyan; Mike Clark; Mike Lewis; Min Si; Mitesh Kumar Singh; Mo Metanat; Mona Hassan; Naman Goyal; Narjes Torabi; Nicolas Usunier; Nikolay Bashlykov; Nikolay Bogoychev; Niladri Chatterji; Ning Dong; Oliver Aobo Yang; Olivier Duchenne; Onur Celebi; Parth Parekh; Patrick Alrassy; Paul Saab; Pavan Balaji; Pedro Rittner; Pengchuan Zhang; Pengwei Li; Petar Vasic; Peter Weng; Polina Zvyagina; Prajjwal Bhargava; Pratik Dubal; Praveen Krishnan; Punit Singh Koura; Qing He; Rachel Rodriguez; Ragavan Srinivasan; Rahul Mitra; Ramon Calderer; Raymond Li; Robert Stojnic; Roberta Raileanu; Robin Battey; Rocky Wang; Rohit Girdhar; Rohit Patel; Romain Sauvestre; Ronnie Polidoro; Roshan Sumbaly; Ross Taylor; Ruan Silva; Rui Hou; Rui Wang; Russ Howes; Ruty Rinott; Saghar Hosseini; Sai Jayesh Bondu; Samyak Datta; Sanjay Singh; Sara Chugh; Sargun Dhillon; Satadru Pan; Sean Bell; Sergey Edunov; Shaoliang Nie; Sharan Narang; Sharath Raparthy; Shaun Lindsay; Sheng Feng; Sheng Shen; Shenghao Lin; Shiva Shankar; Shruti Bhosale; Shun Zhang; Simon Vandenhende; Sinong Wang; Seohyun Sonia Kim; Soumya Batra; Sten Sootla; Steve Kehoe; Suchin Gururangan; Sumit Gupta; Sunny Virk; Sydney Borodinsky; Tamar Glaser; Tamar Herman; Tamara Best; Tara Fowler; Thomas Georgiou; Thomas Scialom; Tianhe Li; Todor Mihaylov; Tong Xiao; Ujjwal Karn; Vedanuj Goswami; Vibhor Gupta; Vignesh Ramanathan; Viktor Kerkez; Vinay Satish Kumar; Vincent Gonguet; Vish Vogeti; Vlad Poenaru; Vlad Tiberiu Mihailescu; Vladan Petrovic; Vladimir Ivanov; Wei Li; Weiwei Chu; Wenhan Xiong; Wenyin Fu; Wes Bouaziz; Whitney Meers; Will Constable; Xavier Martinet; Xiaojian Wu; Xinbo Gao; Xinfeng Xie; Xuchao Jia; Yaelle Goldschlag; Yann LeCun; Yashesh Gaur; Yasmine Babaei; Ye Qi; Yenda Li; Yi Wen; Yiwen Song; Youngjin Nam; Yuchen Hao; Yuchen Zhang; Yun Wang; Yuning Mao; Yuzi He; Zacharie Delpierre Coudert; Zachary DeVito; Zahra Hankir; Zhaoduo Wen; Zheng Yan; Zhengxing Chen; Zhenyu Yang; Zoe Papakipos"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# griffin-1024-llama3t-8layer-simple_wikipedia_LM-vN
pretraining experiment on the pszemraj/simple_wikipedia_LM dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 4.3584
- Accuracy: 0.3789
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 0.0003
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 4
- seed: 80085
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 32
- total_train_batch_size: 128
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.99) and epsilon=1e-07
- lr_scheduler_type: constant_with_warmup
- lr_scheduler_warmup_ratio: 0.05
- num_epochs: 2.0
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Accuracy |
|:-------------:|:------:|:----:|:---------------:|:--------:|
| 13.6044 | 0.2495 | 100 | 12.5441 | 0.0079 |
| 8.9524 | 0.4989 | 200 | 8.4254 | 0.0473 |
| 7.1721 | 0.7484 | 300 | 6.6199 | 0.0389 |
| 6.2087 | 0.9978 | 400 | 5.7198 | 0.2251 |
| 5.4917 | 1.2473 | 500 | 4.9480 | 0.3268 |
| 4.9408 | 1.4967 | 600 | 4.6730 | 0.3567 |
| 4.8347 | 1.7462 | 700 | 4.4984 | 0.3707 |
| 4.7023 | 1.9956 | 800 | 4.3584 | 0.3789 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["pszemraj/simple_wikipedia_LM"], "metrics": ["accuracy"], "model-index": [{"name": "griffin-1024-llama3t-8layer-simple_wikipedia_LM-vN", "results": []}]} | pszemraj/griffin-1024-llama3t-8layer-simplewiki-silu | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"recurrent_gemma",
"text-generation",
"generated_from_trainer",
"en",
"dataset:pszemraj/simple_wikipedia_LM",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:23:35+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #recurrent_gemma #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #en #dataset-pszemraj/simple_wikipedia_LM #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| griffin-1024-llama3t-8layer-simple\_wikipedia\_LM-vN
====================================================
pretraining experiment on the pszemraj/simple\_wikipedia\_LM dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 4.3584
* Accuracy: 0.3789
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 0.0003
* train\_batch\_size: 4
* eval\_batch\_size: 4
* seed: 80085
* gradient\_accumulation\_steps: 32
* total\_train\_batch\_size: 128
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.99) and epsilon=1e-07
* lr\_scheduler\_type: constant\_with\_warmup
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_ratio: 0.05
* num\_epochs: 2.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.1
* Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 0.0003\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 4\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 4\n* seed: 80085\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 32\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 128\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.99) and epsilon=1e-07\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: constant\\_with\\_warmup\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_ratio: 0.05\n* num\\_epochs: 2.0",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.1\n* Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #recurrent_gemma #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #en #dataset-pszemraj/simple_wikipedia_LM #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 0.0003\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 4\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 4\n* seed: 80085\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 32\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 128\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.99) and epsilon=1e-07\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: constant\\_with\\_warmup\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_ratio: 0.05\n* num\\_epochs: 2.0",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.40.1\n* Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Trained Using AutoTrain
This model was trained using AutoTrain. For more information, please visit [AutoTrain](https://hf.co/docs/autotrain).
# Usage
```python
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
model_path = "PATH_TO_THIS_REPO"
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model_path)
model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained(
model_path,
device_map="auto",
torch_dtype='auto'
).eval()
# Prompt content: "hi"
messages = [
{"role": "user", "content": "hi"}
]
input_ids = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(conversation=messages, tokenize=True, add_generation_prompt=True, return_tensors='pt')
output_ids = model.generate(input_ids.to('cuda'))
response = tokenizer.decode(output_ids[0][input_ids.shape[1]:], skip_special_tokens=True)
# Model response: "Hello! How can I assist you today?"
print(response)
``` | {"license": "other", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["autotrain", "text-generation-inference", "text-generation", "peft"], "widget": [{"messages": [{"role": "user", "content": "What is your favorite condiment?"}]}]} | ilya-ilya/mistral-7b-test | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"autotrain",
"text-generation-inference",
"text-generation",
"peft",
"conversational",
"license:other",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:23:44+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #autotrain #text-generation-inference #text-generation #peft #conversational #license-other #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Trained Using AutoTrain
This model was trained using AutoTrain. For more information, please visit AutoTrain.
# Usage
| [
"# Model Trained Using AutoTrain\n\nThis model was trained using AutoTrain. For more information, please visit AutoTrain.",
"# Usage"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #autotrain #text-generation-inference #text-generation #peft #conversational #license-other #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Trained Using AutoTrain\n\nThis model was trained using AutoTrain. For more information, please visit AutoTrain.",
"# Usage"
] |
reinforcement-learning | ml-agents |
# **ppo** Agent playing **Pyramids**
This is a trained model of a **ppo** agent playing **Pyramids**
using the [Unity ML-Agents Library](https://github.com/Unity-Technologies/ml-agents).
## Usage (with ML-Agents)
The Documentation: https://unity-technologies.github.io/ml-agents/ML-Agents-Toolkit-Documentation/
We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:
- A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog 🐶 to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your
browser: https://huggingface.co/learn/deep-rl-course/unitbonus1/introduction
- A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:
https://huggingface.co/learn/deep-rl-course/unit5/introduction
### Resume the training
```bash
mlagents-learn <your_configuration_file_path.yaml> --run-id=<run_id> --resume
```
### Watch your Agent play
You can watch your agent **playing directly in your browser**
1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to https://huggingface.co/unity
2. Step 1: Find your model_id: aw-infoprojekt/ppo-Pyramids
3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file
4. Click on Watch the agent play 👀
| {"library_name": "ml-agents", "tags": ["Pyramids", "deep-reinforcement-learning", "reinforcement-learning", "ML-Agents-Pyramids"]} | aw-infoprojekt/ppo-Pyramids | null | [
"ml-agents",
"tensorboard",
"onnx",
"Pyramids",
"deep-reinforcement-learning",
"reinforcement-learning",
"ML-Agents-Pyramids",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:24:54+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#ml-agents #tensorboard #onnx #Pyramids #deep-reinforcement-learning #reinforcement-learning #ML-Agents-Pyramids #region-us
|
# ppo Agent playing Pyramids
This is a trained model of a ppo agent playing Pyramids
using the Unity ML-Agents Library.
## Usage (with ML-Agents)
The Documentation: URL
We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:
- A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your
browser: URL
- A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:
URL
### Resume the training
### Watch your Agent play
You can watch your agent playing directly in your browser
1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to URL
2. Step 1: Find your model_id: aw-infoprojekt/ppo-Pyramids
3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file
4. Click on Watch the agent play
| [
"# ppo Agent playing Pyramids\n This is a trained model of a ppo agent playing Pyramids\n using the Unity ML-Agents Library.\n\n ## Usage (with ML-Agents)\n The Documentation: URL\n\n We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:\n - A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your\n browser: URL\n - A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:\n URL\n\n ### Resume the training\n \n\n ### Watch your Agent play\n You can watch your agent playing directly in your browser\n\n 1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to URL\n 2. Step 1: Find your model_id: aw-infoprojekt/ppo-Pyramids\n 3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file\n 4. Click on Watch the agent play"
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"TAGS\n#ml-agents #tensorboard #onnx #Pyramids #deep-reinforcement-learning #reinforcement-learning #ML-Agents-Pyramids #region-us \n",
"# ppo Agent playing Pyramids\n This is a trained model of a ppo agent playing Pyramids\n using the Unity ML-Agents Library.\n\n ## Usage (with ML-Agents)\n The Documentation: URL\n\n We wrote a complete tutorial to learn to train your first agent using ML-Agents and publish it to the Hub:\n - A *short tutorial* where you teach Huggy the Dog to fetch the stick and then play with him directly in your\n browser: URL\n - A *longer tutorial* to understand how works ML-Agents:\n URL\n\n ### Resume the training\n \n\n ### Watch your Agent play\n You can watch your agent playing directly in your browser\n\n 1. If the environment is part of ML-Agents official environments, go to URL\n 2. Step 1: Find your model_id: aw-infoprojekt/ppo-Pyramids\n 3. Step 2: Select your *.nn /*.onnx file\n 4. Click on Watch the agent play"
] |
text-classification | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
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This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
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[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "pipeline_tag": "text-classification"} | dendimaki/mistral-classification_v3 | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"text-classification",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:25:14+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #text-classification #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
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- Developed by:
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## How to Get Started with the Model
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## Training Details
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## Evaluation
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## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
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- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
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"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
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] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #text-classification #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
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"## Training Details",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
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"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
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This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
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[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
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#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
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#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
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[More Information Needed]
### Results
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#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
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[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | suthawadee/donut-demo_new | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"vision-encoder-decoder",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us",
"has_space"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:25:14+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #vision-encoder-decoder #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us #has_space
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
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- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
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] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
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<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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### Direct Use
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<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
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## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
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<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
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<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
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## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
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#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
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<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
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#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
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## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | devkya/uandi-whisper-peft | null | [
"transformers",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:25:52+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
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- Language(s) (NLP):
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### Model Sources [optional]
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## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
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] |
null | peft |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# mistral_7b_lora_completion_only
This model is a fine-tuned version of [mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2](https://huggingface.co/mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2) on the DandinPower/ZH-Reading-Comprehension-Mistral-Instruct dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.1344
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 0.0001
- train_batch_size: 1
- eval_batch_size: 1
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 2
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 8
- total_train_batch_size: 16
- total_eval_batch_size: 2
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- lr_scheduler_warmup_steps: 700
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss |
|:-------------:|:------:|:----:|:---------------:|
| 0.1996 | 0.3690 | 250 | 0.1814 |
| 0.1856 | 0.7380 | 500 | 0.1344 |
| 0.1515 | 1.1070 | 750 | 0.1724 |
| 0.1547 | 1.4760 | 1000 | 0.1977 |
| 0.0953 | 1.8450 | 1250 | 0.1641 |
| 0.0788 | 2.2140 | 1500 | 0.1450 |
| 0.0715 | 2.5830 | 1750 | 0.1359 |
| 0.0646 | 2.9520 | 2000 | 0.1427 |
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | {"language": ["zh"], "license": "apache-2.0", "library_name": "peft", "tags": ["trl", "sft", "nycu-112-2-deeplearning-hw2", "generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["DandinPower/ZH-Reading-Comprehension-Mistral-Instruct"], "base_model": "mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2", "model-index": [{"name": "mistral_7b_lora_completion_only", "results": []}]} | DandinPower/mistral_7b_lora_completion_only | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"trl",
"sft",
"nycu-112-2-deeplearning-hw2",
"generated_from_trainer",
"zh",
"dataset:DandinPower/ZH-Reading-Comprehension-Mistral-Instruct",
"base_model:mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2",
"license:apache-2.0",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:28:36+00:00 | [] | [
"zh"
] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #trl #sft #nycu-112-2-deeplearning-hw2 #generated_from_trainer #zh #dataset-DandinPower/ZH-Reading-Comprehension-Mistral-Instruct #base_model-mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2 #license-apache-2.0 #region-us
| mistral\_7b\_lora\_completion\_only
===================================
This model is a fine-tuned version of mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.2 on the DandinPower/ZH-Reading-Comprehension-Mistral-Instruct dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.1344
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 0.0001
* train\_batch\_size: 1
* eval\_batch\_size: 1
* seed: 42
* distributed\_type: multi-GPU
* num\_devices: 2
* gradient\_accumulation\_steps: 8
* total\_train\_batch\_size: 16
* total\_eval\_batch\_size: 2
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_steps: 700
* num\_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
* PEFT 0.10.0
* Transformers 4.40.0
* Pytorch 2.2.2+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
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"### Training results",
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] |
text-classification | peft |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
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<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
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## How to Get Started with the Model
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[More Information Needed]
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#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
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<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
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#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
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## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
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## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
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- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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[More Information Needed]
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<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
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### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0 | {"library_name": "peft", "base_model": "mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1", "pipeline_tag": "text-classification"} | dendimaki/mistral-classification_v3_sample | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"text-classification",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"base_model:mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:29:03+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #text-classification #arxiv-1910.09700 #base_model-mistralai/Mistral-7B-v0.1 #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
### Framework versions
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"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
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"### Framework versions\n\n- PEFT 0.10.0"
] |
token-classification | spacy | | Feature | Description |
| --- | --- |
| **Name** | `en_custom_medical_ner` |
| **Version** | `0.0.0` |
| **spaCy** | `>=3.7.3,<3.8.0` |
| **Default Pipeline** | `tok2vec`, `ner` |
| **Components** | `tok2vec`, `ner` |
| **Vectors** | 0 keys, 0 unique vectors (0 dimensions) |
| **Sources** | n/a |
| **License** | n/a |
| **Author** | [n/a]() |
### Label Scheme
<details>
<summary>View label scheme (3 labels for 1 components)</summary>
| Component | Labels |
| --- | --- |
| **`ner`** | `MEDICALCONDITION`, `MEDICINE`, `PATHOGEN` |
</details>
### Accuracy
| Type | Score |
| --- | --- |
| `ENTS_F` | 98.79 |
| `ENTS_P` | 98.39 |
| `ENTS_R` | 99.19 |
| `TOK2VEC_LOSS` | 17197.46 |
| `NER_LOSS` | 24980.55 | | {"language": ["en"], "tags": ["spacy", "token-classification"]} | yogeshkulkarni/en_custom_medical_ner | null | [
"spacy",
"token-classification",
"en",
"model-index",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:35:16+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#spacy #token-classification #en #model-index #region-us
|
### Label Scheme
View label scheme (3 labels for 1 components)
### Accuracy
| [
"### Label Scheme\n\n\n\nView label scheme (3 labels for 1 components)",
"### Accuracy"
] | [
"TAGS\n#spacy #token-classification #en #model-index #region-us \n",
"### Label Scheme\n\n\n\nView label scheme (3 labels for 1 components)",
"### Accuracy"
] |
null | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
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- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
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## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | zandfj/LLaMA2-7B-Chat-sft-042616-mix | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:35:28+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
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## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
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- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
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"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
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"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
text-generation | transformers | Quantizations of https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B
Update (May 1, 2024): re-uploaded models after this merge: https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/pull/6920
Models now work correctly (tried with 7777+3333 and 3333+777 using Q8_0, both gave correct results)
# From original readme
## How to use
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B, for use with transformers and with the original `llama3` codebase.
### Use with transformers
See the snippet below for usage with Transformers:
```python
>>> import transformers
>>> import torch
>>> model_id = "meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B"
>>> pipeline = transformers.pipeline(
"text-generation", model=model_id, model_kwargs={"torch_dtype": torch.bfloat16}, device_map="auto"
)
>>> pipeline("Hey how are you doing today?")
```
### Use with `llama3`
Please, follow the instructions in the [repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3).
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging `huggingface-cli`:
```
huggingface-cli download meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B --include "original/*" --local-dir Meta-Llama-3-8B
```
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works. | {"language": ["en"], "license": "other", "tags": ["transformers", "gguf", "imatrix", "Meta-Llama-3-8B", "llama-3", "meta"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation", "inference": false} | duyntnet/Meta-Llama-3-8B-imatrix-GGUF | null | [
"transformers",
"gguf",
"imatrix",
"Meta-Llama-3-8B",
"llama-3",
"meta",
"text-generation",
"en",
"license:other",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:35:39+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #gguf #imatrix #Meta-Llama-3-8B #llama-3 #meta #text-generation #en #license-other #region-us
| Quantizations of URL
Update (May 1, 2024): re-uploaded models after this merge: URL
Models now work correctly (tried with 7777+3333 and 3333+777 using Q8_0, both gave correct results)
# From original readme
## How to use
This repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.
### Use with transformers
See the snippet below for usage with Transformers:
### Use with 'llama3'
Please, follow the instructions in the repository.
To download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':
For Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works. | [
"# From original readme",
"## How to use\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\nSee the snippet below for usage with Transformers:",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository.\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #gguf #imatrix #Meta-Llama-3-8B #llama-3 #meta #text-generation #en #license-other #region-us \n",
"# From original readme",
"## How to use\n\nThis repository contains two versions of Meta-Llama-3-8B, for use with transformers and with the original 'llama3' codebase.",
"### Use with transformers\n\nSee the snippet below for usage with Transformers:",
"### Use with 'llama3'\n\nPlease, follow the instructions in the repository.\n\nTo download Original checkpoints, see the example command below leveraging 'huggingface-cli':\n\n\n\nFor Hugging Face support, we recommend using transformers or TGI, but a similar command works."
] |
null | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# TrOCR-SIN-DeiT-Handwritten-Beam10
This model is a fine-tuned version of [kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT](https://huggingface.co/kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 2.2754
- Cer: 0.5246
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 16
- eval_batch_size: 16
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- training_steps: 2400
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Cer | Validation Loss |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:------:|:---------------:|
| 0.9957 | 1.75 | 100 | 0.6176 | 1.6796 |
| 0.0678 | 3.51 | 200 | 0.5996 | 1.7777 |
| 0.1315 | 5.26 | 300 | 0.6794 | 2.1444 |
| 0.0668 | 7.02 | 400 | 0.6363 | 2.0162 |
| 0.0656 | 8.77 | 500 | 0.6046 | 1.9573 |
| 0.0612 | 10.53 | 600 | 0.6330 | 1.9388 |
| 0.0454 | 12.28 | 700 | 0.6679 | 3.0649 |
| 0.004 | 14.04 | 800 | 0.5814 | 2.0252 |
| 0.0034 | 15.79 | 900 | 0.5492 | 2.0399 |
| 0.0336 | 17.54 | 1000 | 0.6041 | 2.9769 |
| 0.0135 | 19.3 | 1100 | 0.5742 | 1.9405 |
| 0.0012 | 21.05 | 1200 | 0.5959 | 2.5722 |
| 0.0143 | 22.81 | 1300 | 0.5527 | 2.0862 |
| 0.0018 | 24.56 | 1400 | 0.5764 | 2.4146 |
| 0.0064 | 26.32 | 1500 | 0.5647 | 2.0710 |
| 0.0006 | 28.07 | 1600 | 0.5472 | 2.1849 |
| 0.0004 | 29.82 | 1700 | 0.5547 | 2.4497 |
| 0.0001 | 31.58 | 1800 | 0.5430 | 2.0830 |
| 0.0215 | 33.33 | 1900 | 0.5560 | 2.5979 |
| 0.0 | 35.09 | 2000 | 0.5525 | 2.4792 |
| 0.0 | 36.84 | 2100 | 0.5428 | 2.4779 |
| 0.0 | 38.6 | 2200 | 0.5438 | 2.7873 |
| 0.0 | 40.35 | 2300 | 0.5552 | 2.9236 |
| 0.0 | 42.11 | 2400 | 0.5246 | 2.2754 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.35.2
- Pytorch 2.1.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.18.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.1
| {"tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT", "model-index": [{"name": "TrOCR-SIN-DeiT-Handwritten-Beam10", "results": []}]} | kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT-Handwritten-Beam10 | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"vision-encoder-decoder",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:35:59+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #vision-encoder-decoder #generated_from_trainer #base_model-kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| TrOCR-SIN-DeiT-Handwritten-Beam10
=================================
This model is a fine-tuned version of kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 2.2754
* Cer: 0.5246
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 5e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 16
* eval\_batch\_size: 16
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* training\_steps: 2400
* mixed\_precision\_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.35.2
* Pytorch 2.1.0+cu121
* Datasets 2.18.0
* Tokenizers 0.15.1
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 5e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* training\\_steps: 2400\n* mixed\\_precision\\_training: Native AMP",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.35.2\n* Pytorch 2.1.0+cu121\n* Datasets 2.18.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.1"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #vision-encoder-decoder #generated_from_trainer #base_model-kavg/TrOCR-SIN-DeiT #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 5e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* training\\_steps: 2400\n* mixed\\_precision\\_training: Native AMP",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.35.2\n* Pytorch 2.1.0+cu121\n* Datasets 2.18.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.1"
] |
text-generation | transformers | <!-- header start -->
<!-- 200823 -->
<div style="width: auto; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
<a href="https://www.pruna.ai/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">
<img src="https://i.imgur.com/eDAlcgk.png" alt="PrunaAI" style="width: 100%; min-width: 400px; display: block; margin: auto;">
</a>
</div>
<!-- header end -->
[](https://twitter.com/PrunaAI)
[](https://github.com/PrunaAI)
[](https://www.linkedin.com/company/93832878/admin/feed/posts/?feedType=following)
[](https://discord.gg/CP4VSgck)
# Simply make AI models cheaper, smaller, faster, and greener!
- Give a thumbs up if you like this model!
- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next [here](https://www.pruna.ai/contact).
- Request access to easily compress your *own* AI models [here](https://z0halsaff74.typeform.com/pruna-access?typeform-source=www.pruna.ai).
- Read the documentations to know more [here](https://pruna-ai-pruna.readthedocs-hosted.com/en/latest/)
- Join Pruna AI community on Discord [here](https://discord.gg/CP4VSgck) to share feedback/suggestions or get help.
## Results

**Frequently Asked Questions**
- ***How does the compression work?*** The model is compressed with awq.
- ***How does the model quality change?*** The quality of the model output might vary compared to the base model.
- ***How is the model efficiency evaluated?*** These results were obtained on NVIDIA A100-PCIE-40GB with configuration described in `model/smash_config.json` and are obtained after a hardware warmup. The smashed model is directly compared to the original base model. Efficiency results may vary in other settings (e.g. other hardware, image size, batch size, ...). We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.
- ***What is the model format?*** We use safetensors.
- ***What calibration data has been used?*** If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.
- ***What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?*** We take the original model name and append "turbo", "tiny", or "green" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.
- ***How to compress my own models?*** You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases [here](https://z0halsaff74.typeform.com/pruna-access?typeform-source=www.pruna.ai).
- ***What are "first" metrics?*** Results mentioning "first" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.
- ***What are "Sync" and "Async" metrics?*** "Sync" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. "Async" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.
## Setup
You can run the smashed model with these steps:
0. Check requirements from the original repo gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.
1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.
```bash
pip install autoawq
```
2. Load & run the model.
```python
from transformers import AutoModelForCausalLM, AutoTokenizer
from awq import AutoAWQForCausalLM
model = AutoAWQForCausalLM.from_quantized("PrunaAI/gradientai-Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-AWQ-4bit-smashed", trust_remote_code=True, device_map='auto')
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k")
input_ids = tokenizer("What is the color of prunes?,", return_tensors='pt').to("cuda")["input_ids"]
outputs = model.generate(input_ids, max_new_tokens=216)
tokenizer.decode(outputs[0])
```
## Configurations
The configuration info are in `smash_config.json`.
## Credits & License
The license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the `pruna-engine` is [here](https://pypi.org/project/pruna-engine/) on Pypi.
## Want to compress other models?
- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next [here](https://www.pruna.ai/contact).
- Request access to easily compress your own AI models [here](https://z0halsaff74.typeform.com/pruna-access?typeform-source=www.pruna.ai). | {"tags": ["pruna-ai"], "metrics": ["memory_disk", "memory_inference", "inference_latency", "inference_throughput", "inference_CO2_emissions", "inference_energy_consumption"], "thumbnail": "https://assets-global.website-files.com/646b351987a8d8ce158d1940/64ec9e96b4334c0e1ac41504_Logo%20with%20white%20text.svg", "base_model": "gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k"} | PrunaAI/gradientai-Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-AWQ-4bit-smashed | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"pruna-ai",
"conversational",
"base_model:gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"4-bit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:36:02+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #pruna-ai #conversational #base_model-gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #4-bit #region-us
|
<div style="width: auto; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto">
<a href="URL target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">
<img src="https://i.URL alt="PrunaAI" style="width: 100%; min-width: 400px; display: block; margin: auto;">
</a>
</div>
. We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.
- *What is the model format?* We use safetensors.
- *What calibration data has been used?* If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.
- *What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?* We take the original model name and append "turbo", "tiny", or "green" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.
- *How to compress my own models?* You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases here.
- *What are "first" metrics?* Results mentioning "first" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.
- *What are "Sync" and "Async" metrics?* "Sync" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. "Async" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.
## Setup
You can run the smashed model with these steps:
0. Check requirements from the original repo gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.
1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.
2. Load & run the model.
## Configurations
The configuration info are in 'smash_config.json'.
## Credits & License
The license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the 'pruna-engine' is here on Pypi.
## Want to compress other models?
- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.
- Request access to easily compress your own AI models here. | [
"# Simply make AI models cheaper, smaller, faster, and greener!\n\n- Give a thumbs up if you like this model!\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your *own* AI models here.\n- Read the documentations to know more here\n- Join Pruna AI community on Discord here to share feedback/suggestions or get help.",
"## Results\n\n!image info\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\n- *How does the compression work?* The model is compressed with awq.\n- *How does the model quality change?* The quality of the model output might vary compared to the base model.\n- *How is the model efficiency evaluated?* These results were obtained on NVIDIA A100-PCIE-40GB with configuration described in 'model/smash_config.json' and are obtained after a hardware warmup. The smashed model is directly compared to the original base model. Efficiency results may vary in other settings (e.g. other hardware, image size, batch size, ...). We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.\n- *What is the model format?* We use safetensors.\n- *What calibration data has been used?* If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.\n- *What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?* We take the original model name and append \"turbo\", \"tiny\", or \"green\" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.\n- *How to compress my own models?* You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases here.\n- *What are \"first\" metrics?* Results mentioning \"first\" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.\n- *What are \"Sync\" and \"Async\" metrics?* \"Sync\" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. \"Async\" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.",
"## Setup\n\nYou can run the smashed model with these steps:\n\n0. Check requirements from the original repo gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.\n1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.\n \n2. Load & run the model.",
"## Configurations\n\nThe configuration info are in 'smash_config.json'.",
"## Credits & License\n\nThe license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the 'pruna-engine' is here on Pypi.",
"## Want to compress other models?\n\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your own AI models here."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #pruna-ai #conversational #base_model-gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #4-bit #region-us \n",
"# Simply make AI models cheaper, smaller, faster, and greener!\n\n- Give a thumbs up if you like this model!\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your *own* AI models here.\n- Read the documentations to know more here\n- Join Pruna AI community on Discord here to share feedback/suggestions or get help.",
"## Results\n\n!image info\n\nFrequently Asked Questions\n- *How does the compression work?* The model is compressed with awq.\n- *How does the model quality change?* The quality of the model output might vary compared to the base model.\n- *How is the model efficiency evaluated?* These results were obtained on NVIDIA A100-PCIE-40GB with configuration described in 'model/smash_config.json' and are obtained after a hardware warmup. The smashed model is directly compared to the original base model. Efficiency results may vary in other settings (e.g. other hardware, image size, batch size, ...). We recommend to directly run them in the use-case conditions to know if the smashed model can benefit you.\n- *What is the model format?* We use safetensors.\n- *What calibration data has been used?* If needed by the compression method, we used WikiText as the calibration data.\n- *What is the naming convention for Pruna Huggingface models?* We take the original model name and append \"turbo\", \"tiny\", or \"green\" if the smashed model has a measured inference speed, inference memory, or inference energy consumption which is less than 90% of the original base model.\n- *How to compress my own models?* You can request premium access to more compression methods and tech support for your specific use-cases here.\n- *What are \"first\" metrics?* Results mentioning \"first\" are obtained after the first run of the model. The first run might take more memory or be slower than the subsequent runs due cuda overheads.\n- *What are \"Sync\" and \"Async\" metrics?* \"Sync\" metrics are obtained by syncing all GPU processes and stop measurement when all of them are executed. \"Async\" metrics are obtained without syncing all GPU processes and stop when the model output can be used by the CPU. We provide both metrics since both could be relevant depending on the use-case. We recommend to test the efficiency gains directly in your use-cases.",
"## Setup\n\nYou can run the smashed model with these steps:\n\n0. Check requirements from the original repo gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k installed. In particular, check python, cuda, and transformers versions.\n1. Make sure that you have installed quantization related packages.\n \n2. Load & run the model.",
"## Configurations\n\nThe configuration info are in 'smash_config.json'.",
"## Credits & License\n\nThe license of the smashed model follows the license of the original model. Please check the license of the original model gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k before using this model which provided the base model. The license of the 'pruna-engine' is here on Pypi.",
"## Want to compress other models?\n\n- Contact us and tell us which model to compress next here.\n- Request access to easily compress your own AI models here."
] |
null | transformers |
# Uploaded model
- **Developed by:** Crysiss
- **License:** apache-2.0
- **Finetuned from model :** unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with [Unsloth](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth) and Huggingface's TRL library.
[<img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/unslothai/unsloth/main/images/unsloth%20made%20with%20love.png" width="200"/>](https://github.com/unslothai/unsloth)
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["text-generation-inference", "transformers", "unsloth", "llama", "trl"], "base_model": "unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit"} | Crysiss/llama3-8B-welfare-2 | null | [
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"text-generation-inference",
"unsloth",
"llama",
"trl",
"en",
"base_model:unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit",
"license:apache-2.0",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:36:12+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Uploaded model
- Developed by: Crysiss
- License: apache-2.0
- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit
This llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.
<img src="URL width="200"/>
| [
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: Crysiss\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #text-generation-inference #unsloth #llama #trl #en #base_model-unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit #license-apache-2.0 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Uploaded model\n\n- Developed by: Crysiss\n- License: apache-2.0\n- Finetuned from model : unsloth/llama-3-8b-bnb-4bit\n\nThis llama model was trained 2x faster with Unsloth and Huggingface's TRL library.\n\n<img src=\"URL width=\"200\"/>"
] |
null | peft |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# llama3-poison-5p-2048
This model is a fine-tuned version of [Undi95/Meta-Llama-3-8B-hf](https://huggingface.co/Undi95/Meta-Llama-3-8B-hf) on the HuggingFaceH4/ultrachat_200k dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: nan
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 4
- seed: 42
- distributed_type: multi-GPU
- num_devices: 4
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 2
- total_train_batch_size: 64
- total_eval_batch_size: 16
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: cosine
- lr_scheduler_warmup_ratio: 0.1
- num_epochs: 1
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|
| 0.0 | 1.0 | 326 | nan |
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.7.1
- Transformers 4.39.0.dev0
- Pytorch 2.1.2
- Datasets 2.14.6
- Tokenizers 0.15.2 | {"license": "other", "library_name": "peft", "tags": ["alignment-handbook", "trl", "sft", "generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["HuggingFaceH4/ultrachat_200k"], "base_model": "Undi95/Meta-Llama-3-8B-hf", "model-index": [{"name": "llama3-poison-5p-2048", "results": []}]} | Jackie999/llama3-poison-5p-2048 | null | [
"peft",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"alignment-handbook",
"trl",
"sft",
"generated_from_trainer",
"dataset:HuggingFaceH4/ultrachat_200k",
"base_model:Undi95/Meta-Llama-3-8B-hf",
"license:other",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:37:45+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#peft #tensorboard #safetensors #llama #alignment-handbook #trl #sft #generated_from_trainer #dataset-HuggingFaceH4/ultrachat_200k #base_model-Undi95/Meta-Llama-3-8B-hf #license-other #region-us
| llama3-poison-5p-2048
=====================
This model is a fine-tuned version of Undi95/Meta-Llama-3-8B-hf on the HuggingFaceH4/ultrachat\_200k dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: nan
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 8
* eval\_batch\_size: 4
* seed: 42
* distributed\_type: multi-GPU
* num\_devices: 4
* gradient\_accumulation\_steps: 2
* total\_train\_batch\_size: 64
* total\_eval\_batch\_size: 16
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: cosine
* lr\_scheduler\_warmup\_ratio: 0.1
* num\_epochs: 1
### Training results
### Framework versions
* PEFT 0.7.1
* Transformers 4.39.0.dev0
* Pytorch 2.1.2
* Datasets 2.14.6
* Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 4\n* seed: 42\n* distributed\\_type: multi-GPU\n* num\\_devices: 4\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 2\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 64\n* total\\_eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: cosine\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_ratio: 0.1\n* num\\_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
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] | [
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"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 8\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 4\n* seed: 42\n* distributed\\_type: multi-GPU\n* num\\_devices: 4\n* gradient\\_accumulation\\_steps: 2\n* total\\_train\\_batch\\_size: 64\n* total\\_eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: cosine\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_warmup\\_ratio: 0.1\n* num\\_epochs: 1",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* PEFT 0.7.1\n* Transformers 4.39.0.dev0\n* Pytorch 2.1.2\n* Datasets 2.14.6\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
text-to-image | diffusers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the training script had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# DreamBooth - manhdofts03/mixi_output
This is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using [DreamBooth](https://dreambooth.github.io/).
You can find some example images in the following.
DreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.
## Intended uses & limitations
#### How to use
```python
# TODO: add an example code snippet for running this diffusion pipeline
```
#### Limitations and bias
[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]
## Training details
[TODO: describe the data used to train the model] | {"license": "creativeml-openrail-m", "library_name": "diffusers", "tags": ["text-to-image", "dreambooth", "diffusers-training", "stable-diffusion", "stable-diffusion-diffusers", "text-to-image", "dreambooth", "diffusers-training", "stable-diffusion", "stable-diffusion-diffusers"], "base_model": "CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4", "inference": true, "instance_prompt": "a photo of sks dog"} | manhdofts03/mixi_output | null | [
"diffusers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"text-to-image",
"dreambooth",
"diffusers-training",
"stable-diffusion",
"stable-diffusion-diffusers",
"base_model:CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4",
"license:creativeml-openrail-m",
"endpoints_compatible",
"diffusers:StableDiffusionPipeline",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:37:52+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#diffusers #tensorboard #safetensors #text-to-image #dreambooth #diffusers-training #stable-diffusion #stable-diffusion-diffusers #base_model-CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4 #license-creativeml-openrail-m #endpoints_compatible #diffusers-StableDiffusionPipeline #region-us
|
# DreamBooth - manhdofts03/mixi_output
This is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using DreamBooth.
You can find some example images in the following.
DreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.
## Intended uses & limitations
#### How to use
#### Limitations and bias
[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]
## Training details
[TODO: describe the data used to train the model] | [
"# DreamBooth - manhdofts03/mixi_output\n\nThis is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using DreamBooth.\nYou can find some example images in the following. \n\n\n\nDreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.",
"## Intended uses & limitations",
"#### How to use",
"#### Limitations and bias\n\n[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]",
"## Training details\n\n[TODO: describe the data used to train the model]"
] | [
"TAGS\n#diffusers #tensorboard #safetensors #text-to-image #dreambooth #diffusers-training #stable-diffusion #stable-diffusion-diffusers #base_model-CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4 #license-creativeml-openrail-m #endpoints_compatible #diffusers-StableDiffusionPipeline #region-us \n",
"# DreamBooth - manhdofts03/mixi_output\n\nThis is a dreambooth model derived from CompVis/stable-diffusion-v1-4. The weights were trained on a photo of sks dog using DreamBooth.\nYou can find some example images in the following. \n\n\n\nDreamBooth for the text encoder was enabled: False.",
"## Intended uses & limitations",
"#### How to use",
"#### Limitations and bias\n\n[TODO: provide examples of latent issues and potential remediations]",
"## Training details\n\n[TODO: describe the data used to train the model]"
] |
text-to-image | diffusers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🧨 diffusers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed]
| {"library_name": "diffusers"} | Priya-H/tune-a-videos | null | [
"diffusers",
"safetensors",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"diffusers:StableDiffusionPipeline",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:40:15+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#diffusers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #diffusers-StableDiffusionPipeline #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a diffusers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a diffusers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
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"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
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"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#diffusers #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #diffusers-StableDiffusionPipeline #region-us \n",
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] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Starling-LM-7B-alpha-ExPO
The extrapolated (ExPO) model based on `berkeley-nest/Starling-LM-7B-alpha` and `openchat/openchat_3.5`, as in the "[Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment](https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.16792)" paper.
Specifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference. | {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0"} | chujiezheng/Starling-LM-7B-alpha-ExPO | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"en",
"arxiv:2404.16792",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:41:02+00:00 | [
"2404.16792"
] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #conversational #en #arxiv-2404.16792 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Starling-LM-7B-alpha-ExPO
The extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'berkeley-nest/Starling-LM-7B-alpha' and 'openchat/openchat_3.5', as in the "Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment" paper.
Specifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference. | [
"# Starling-LM-7B-alpha-ExPO\n\nThe extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'berkeley-nest/Starling-LM-7B-alpha' and 'openchat/openchat_3.5', as in the \"Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment\" paper.\n\nSpecifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #conversational #en #arxiv-2404.16792 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# Starling-LM-7B-alpha-ExPO\n\nThe extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'berkeley-nest/Starling-LM-7B-alpha' and 'openchat/openchat_3.5', as in the \"Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment\" paper.\n\nSpecifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference."
] |
feature-extraction | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
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## Model Details
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This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
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[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | cycy233/rqllm | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"bert",
"feature-extraction",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:42:08+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #bert #feature-extraction #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
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## Training Details
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| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
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"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
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"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #bert #feature-extraction #arxiv-1910.09700 #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
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"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
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] |
text-generation | null | <img src="https://cdn-uploads.huggingface.co/production/uploads/655bb613e8a8971e89944f3e/TSa3V8YpoVagnTYgxiLaO.png" width="200"/>
# Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k-GGUF
- This is quantized version of [gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k](https://huggingface.co/gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k) created using llama.cpp
# Model Description
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at [email protected].
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai). It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.

**Approach:**
- [meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct](https://huggingface.co/meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct) as the base
- NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
- Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the [Large World Model](https://huggingface.co/LargeWorldModel) [2] (See details below)
**Infra:**
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on [Crusoe Energy](https://huggingface.co/crusoeai) high performance L40S cluster.
**Data:**
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting [SlimPajama](https://huggingface.co/datasets/cerebras/SlimPajama-627B).
**Progressive Training Details:**
| Parameter | 65K | 262K |
|-----------------------------|----------------|------------|
| Initialize From | LLaMA-3-8B-Inst| 65K |
| Sequence Length | 2^16 | 2^18 |
| RoPE theta | 15.3 M | 207.1 M |
| Batch Size (Tokens / Step) | 2.097 M | 4.192 M |
| Steps | 30 | 24 |
| Total Tokens | 63 M | 101 M |
| Learning Rate | 2.00E-05 | 2.00E-05 |
| # GPUs | 32 | 32 |
| GPU Type | NVIDIA L40S | NVIDIA L40S|
## The Gradient AI Team
https://gradient.ai/
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
## References
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] https://github.com/jzhang38/EasyContext
----
# Base Model
## Model Details
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
**Model developers** Meta
**Variations** Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
**Input** Models input text only.
**Output** Models generate text and code only.
**Model Architecture** Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Training Data</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Params</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Context length</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>GQA</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Token count</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Knowledge cutoff</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="2" >Llama 3
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >A new mix of publicly available online data.
</td>
<td>8B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td rowspan="2" >15T+
</td>
<td>March, 2023
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>70B
</td>
<td>8k
</td>
<td>Yes
</td>
<td>December, 2023
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**Llama 3 family of models**. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
**Model Release Date** April 18, 2024.
**Status** This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
**License** A custom commercial license is available at: [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/license)
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model [README](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3). For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes).
## Intended Use
**Intended Use Cases** Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
**Out-of-scope** Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English**.
**Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
## Hardware and Software
**Training Factors** We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
**Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative** 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
<table>
<tr>
<td>
</td>
<td><strong>Time (GPU hours)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Power Consumption (W)</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Carbon Emitted(tCO2eq)</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 8B
</td>
<td>1.3M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>390
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Llama 3 70B
</td>
<td>6.4M
</td>
<td>700
</td>
<td>1900
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Total
</td>
<td>7.7M
</td>
<td>
</td>
<td>2290
</td>
</tr>
</table>
**CO2 emissions during pre-training**. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
## Training Data
**Overview** Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
**Data Freshness** The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
## Benchmarks
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see [here](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama3/blob/main/eval_methodology.md).
### Base pretrained models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Category</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="6" >General
</td>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>66.6
</td>
<td>45.7
</td>
<td>53.8
</td>
<td>79.5
</td>
<td>69.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>AGIEval English (3-5 shot)
</td>
<td>45.9
</td>
<td>28.8
</td>
<td>38.7
</td>
<td>63.0
</td>
<td>54.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>CommonSenseQA (7-shot)
</td>
<td>72.6
</td>
<td>57.6
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>83.8
</td>
<td>78.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Winogrande (5-shot)
</td>
<td>76.1
</td>
<td>73.3
</td>
<td>75.4
</td>
<td>83.1
</td>
<td>81.8
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BIG-Bench Hard (3-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>61.1
</td>
<td>38.1
</td>
<td>47.0
</td>
<td>81.3
</td>
<td>65.7
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>ARC-Challenge (25-shot)
</td>
<td>78.6
</td>
<td>53.7
</td>
<td>67.6
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>85.3
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Knowledge reasoning
</td>
<td>TriviaQA-Wiki (5-shot)
</td>
<td>78.5
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>89.7
</td>
<td>87.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td rowspan="4" >Reading comprehension
</td>
<td>SQuAD (1-shot)
</td>
<td>76.4
</td>
<td>72.2
</td>
<td>72.1
</td>
<td>85.6
</td>
<td>82.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>QuAC (1-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>44.4
</td>
<td>39.6
</td>
<td>44.9
</td>
<td>51.1
</td>
<td>49.4
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>BoolQ (0-shot)
</td>
<td>75.7
</td>
<td>65.5
</td>
<td>66.9
</td>
<td>79.0
</td>
<td>73.1
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>DROP (3-shot, F1)
</td>
<td>58.4
</td>
<td>37.9
</td>
<td>49.8
</td>
<td>79.7
</td>
<td>70.2
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Instruction tuned models
<table>
<tr>
<td><strong>Benchmark</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 8B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 7B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 13B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 3 70B</strong>
</td>
<td><strong>Llama 2 70B</strong>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MMLU (5-shot)
</td>
<td>68.4
</td>
<td>34.1
</td>
<td>47.8
</td>
<td>82.0
</td>
<td>52.9
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GPQA (0-shot)
</td>
<td>34.2
</td>
<td>21.7
</td>
<td>22.3
</td>
<td>39.5
</td>
<td>21.0
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>HumanEval (0-shot)
</td>
<td>62.2
</td>
<td>7.9
</td>
<td>14.0
</td>
<td>81.7
</td>
<td>25.6
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>GSM-8K (8-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>79.6
</td>
<td>25.7
</td>
<td>77.4
</td>
<td>93.0
</td>
<td>57.5
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>MATH (4-shot, CoT)
</td>
<td>30.0
</td>
<td>3.8
</td>
<td>6.7
</td>
<td>50.4
</td>
<td>11.6
</td>
</tr>
</table>
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our [Responsible Use Guide](https://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide/) to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including [Meta Llama Guard 2](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) and [Code Shield](https://llama.meta.com/purple-llama/) safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a [reference implementation](https://github.com/meta-llama/llama-recipes/tree/main/recipes/responsible_ai) to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Safety</span>
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">Refusals</span>
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at [https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/](https://llama.meta.com/llama3/use-policy/).
#### Critical risks
<span style="text-decoration:underline;">CBRNE</span> (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Cyber Security </span>
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of [equivalent coding capability](https://huggingface.co/spaces/facebook/CyberSecEval).
### <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Child Safety</span>
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our [Github repository](https://github.com/meta-llama/PurpleLlama).
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an [output reporting mechanism](https://developers.facebook.com/llama_output_feedback) and [bug bounty program](https://www.facebook.com/whitehat) to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
## Ethical Considerations and Limitations
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating [Purple Llama](https://github.com/facebookresearch/PurpleLlama) solutions into your workflows and specifically [Llama Guard](https://ai.meta.com/research/publications/llama-guard-llm-based-input-output-safeguard-for-human-ai-conversations/) which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at [http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide](http://llama.meta.com/responsible-use-guide)
| {"language": ["en"], "license": "llama3", "tags": ["meta", "llama-3"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation", "base_model": "gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k"} | QuantFactory/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k-GGUF | null | [
"gguf",
"meta",
"llama-3",
"text-generation",
"en",
"base_model:gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k",
"license:llama3",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:42:37+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#gguf #meta #llama-3 #text-generation #en #base_model-gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k #license-llama3 #region-us
| <img src="URL width="200"/>
Llama-3 8B Instruct 262k-GGUF
=============================
* This is quantized version of gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k created using URL
Model Description
=================
Gradient incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business. To learn more or collaborate on a custom model, drop us a message at contact@URL.
This model extends LLama-3 8B's context length from 8k to > 160K, developed by Gradient, sponsored by compute from Crusoe Energy. It demonstrates that SOTA LLMs can learn to operate on long context with minimal training (< 200M tokens) by appropriately adjusting RoPE theta.
!image/png
Approach:
* meta-llama/Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct as the base
* NTK-aware interpolation [1] to initialize an optimal schedule for RoPE theta, followed by a new data-driven RoPE theta optimization technique
* Progressive training on increasing context lengths similar to the Large World Model [2] (See details below)
Infra:
We build on top of the EasyContext Blockwise RingAttention library [3] to scalably and efficiently train on contexts up to 262144 tokens on Crusoe Energy high performance L40S cluster.
Data:
For training data, we generate long contexts by augmenting SlimPajama.
Progressive Training Details:
Parameter: Initialize From, 65K: LLaMA-3-8B-Inst, 262K: 65K
Parameter: Sequence Length, 65K: 2^16, 262K: 2^18
Parameter: RoPE theta, 65K: 15.3 M, 262K: 207.1 M
Parameter: Batch Size (Tokens / Step), 65K: 2.097 M, 262K: 4.192 M
Parameter: Steps, 65K: 30, 262K: 24
Parameter: Total Tokens, 65K: 63 M, 262K: 101 M
Parameter: Learning Rate, 65K: 2.00E-05, 262K: 2.00E-05
Parameter: # GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32
Parameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S
The Gradient AI Team
--------------------
URL
Gradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.
References
----------
[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. "Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models." arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).
[2] Liu, Hao, et al. "World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention." arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).
[3] URL
---
Base Model
==========
Model Details
-------------
Meta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.
Model developers Meta
Variations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.
Input Models input text only.
Output Models generate text and code only.
Model Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.
Llama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.
Model Release Date April 18, 2024.
Status This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.
License A custom commercial license is available at: URL
Where to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.
Intended Use
------------
Intended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.
Out-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.
Note: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.
Hardware and Software
---------------------
Training Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.
Carbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.
CO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.
Training Data
-------------
Overview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.
Data Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.
Benchmarks
----------
In this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.
### Base pretrained models
### Instruction tuned models
### Responsibility & Safety
We believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.
Foundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.
Rather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.
As part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.
#### Llama 3-Instruct
As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.
Safety
For our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.
Refusals
In addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.
We built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.
#### Responsible release
In addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.
Misuse
If you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL
#### Critical risks
CBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)
We have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:
* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.
* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).
### Cyber Security
We have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.
### Child Safety
Child Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.
### Community
Generative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.
Finally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.
Ethical Considerations and Limitations
--------------------------------------
The core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.
But Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.
Please see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL
| [
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL"
] | [
"TAGS\n#gguf #meta #llama-3 #text-generation #en #base_model-gradientai/Llama-3-8B-Instruct-262k #license-llama3 #region-us \n",
"# GPUs, 65K: 32, 262K: 32\nParameter: GPU Type, 65K: NVIDIA L40S, 262K: NVIDIA L40S\n\n\nThe Gradient AI Team\n--------------------\n\n\nURL\n\n\nGradient is accelerating AI transformation across industries. Our AI Foundry incorporates your data to deploy autonomous assistants that power critical operations across your business.\n\n\nReferences\n----------\n\n\n[1] Peng, Bowen, et al. \"Yarn: Efficient context window extension of large language models.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.00071 (2023).\n\n\n[2] Liu, Hao, et al. \"World Model on Million-Length Video And Language With RingAttention.\" arXiv preprint arXiv:2402.08268 (2024).\n\n\n[3] URL\n\n\n\n\n---\n\n\nBase Model\n==========\n\n\nModel Details\n-------------\n\n\nMeta developed and released the Meta Llama 3 family of large language models (LLMs), a collection of pretrained and instruction tuned generative text models in 8 and 70B sizes. The Llama 3 instruction tuned models are optimized for dialogue use cases and outperform many of the available open source chat models on common industry benchmarks. Further, in developing these models, we took great care to optimize helpfulness and safety.\n\n\nModel developers Meta\n\n\nVariations Llama 3 comes in two sizes — 8B and 70B parameters — in pre-trained and instruction tuned variants.\n\n\nInput Models input text only.\n\n\nOutput Models generate text and code only.\n\n\nModel Architecture Llama 3 is an auto-regressive language model that uses an optimized transformer architecture. The tuned versions use supervised fine-tuning (SFT) and reinforcement learning with human feedback (RLHF) to align with human preferences for helpfulness and safety.\n\n\n\nLlama 3 family of models. Token counts refer to pretraining data only. Both the 8 and 70B versions use Grouped-Query Attention (GQA) for improved inference scalability.\n\n\nModel Release Date April 18, 2024.\n\n\nStatus This is a static model trained on an offline dataset. Future versions of the tuned models will be released as we improve model safety with community feedback.\n\n\nLicense A custom commercial license is available at: URL\n\n\nWhere to send questions or comments about the model Instructions on how to provide feedback or comments on the model can be found in the model README. For more technical information about generation parameters and recipes for how to use Llama 3 in applications, please go here.\n\n\nIntended Use\n------------\n\n\nIntended Use Cases Llama 3 is intended for commercial and research use in English. Instruction tuned models are intended for assistant-like chat, whereas pretrained models can be adapted for a variety of natural language generation tasks.\n\n\nOut-of-scope Use in any manner that violates applicable laws or regulations (including trade compliance laws). Use in any other way that is prohibited by the Acceptable Use Policy and Llama 3 Community License. Use in languages other than English.\n\n\nNote: Developers may fine-tune Llama 3 models for languages beyond English provided they comply with the Llama 3 Community License and the Acceptable Use Policy.\n\n\nHardware and Software\n---------------------\n\n\nTraining Factors We used custom training libraries, Meta's Research SuperCluster, and production clusters for pretraining. Fine-tuning, annotation, and evaluation were also performed on third-party cloud compute.\n\n\nCarbon Footprint Pretraining utilized a cumulative 7.7M GPU hours of computation on hardware of type H100-80GB (TDP of 700W). Estimated total emissions were 2290 tCO2eq, 100% of which were offset by Meta’s sustainability program.\n\n\n\nCO2 emissions during pre-training. Time: total GPU time required for training each model. Power Consumption: peak power capacity per GPU device for the GPUs used adjusted for power usage efficiency. 100% of the emissions are directly offset by Meta's sustainability program, and because we are openly releasing these models, the pretraining costs do not need to be incurred by others.\n\n\nTraining Data\n-------------\n\n\nOverview Llama 3 was pretrained on over 15 trillion tokens of data from publicly available sources. The fine-tuning data includes publicly available instruction datasets, as well as over 10M human-annotated examples. Neither the pretraining nor the fine-tuning datasets include Meta user data.\n\n\nData Freshness The pretraining data has a cutoff of March 2023 for the 7B and December 2023 for the 70B models respectively.\n\n\nBenchmarks\n----------\n\n\nIn this section, we report the results for Llama 3 models on standard automatic benchmarks. For all the evaluations, we use our internal evaluations library. For details on the methodology see here.",
"### Base pretrained models",
"### Instruction tuned models",
"### Responsibility & Safety\n\n\nWe believe that an open approach to AI leads to better, safer products, faster innovation, and a bigger overall market. We are committed to Responsible AI development and took a series of steps to limit misuse and harm and support the open source community.\n\n\nFoundation models are widely capable technologies that are built to be used for a diverse range of applications. They are not designed to meet every developer preference on safety levels for all use cases, out-of-the-box, as those by their nature will differ across different applications.\n\n\nRather, responsible LLM-application deployment is achieved by implementing a series of safety best practices throughout the development of such applications, from the model pre-training, fine-tuning and the deployment of systems composed of safeguards to tailor the safety needs specifically to the use case and audience.\n\n\nAs part of the Llama 3 release, we updated our Responsible Use Guide to outline the steps and best practices for developers to implement model and system level safety for their application. We also provide a set of resources including Meta Llama Guard 2 and Code Shield safeguards. These tools have proven to drastically reduce residual risks of LLM Systems, while maintaining a high level of helpfulness. We encourage developers to tune and deploy these safeguards according to their needs and we provide a reference implementation to get you started.",
"#### Llama 3-Instruct\n\n\nAs outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, some trade-off between model helpfulness and model alignment is likely unavoidable. Developers should exercise discretion about how to weigh the benefits of alignment and helpfulness for their specific use case and audience. Developers should be mindful of residual risks when using Llama models and leverage additional safety tools as needed to reach the right safety bar for their use case.\n\n\nSafety\n\n\nFor our instruction tuned model, we conducted extensive red teaming exercises, performed adversarial evaluations and implemented safety mitigations techniques to lower residual risks. As with any Large Language Model, residual risks will likely remain and we recommend that developers assess these risks in the context of their use case. In parallel, we are working with the community to make AI safety benchmark standards transparent, rigorous and interpretable.\n\n\nRefusals\n\n\nIn addition to residual risks, we put a great emphasis on model refusals to benign prompts. Over-refusing not only can impact the user experience but could even be harmful in certain contexts as well. We’ve heard the feedback from the developer community and improved our fine tuning to ensure that Llama 3 is significantly less likely to falsely refuse to answer prompts than Llama 2.\n\n\nWe built internal benchmarks and developed mitigations to limit false refusals making Llama 3 our most helpful model to date.",
"#### Responsible release\n\n\nIn addition to responsible use considerations outlined above, we followed a rigorous process that requires us to take extra measures against misuse and critical risks before we make our release decision.\n\n\nMisuse\n\n\nIf you access or use Llama 3, you agree to the Acceptable Use Policy. The most recent copy of this policy can be found at URL",
"#### Critical risks\n\n\nCBRNE (Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and high yield Explosives)\n\n\nWe have conducted a two fold assessment of the safety of the model in this area:\n\n\n* Iterative testing during model training to assess the safety of responses related to CBRNE threats and other adversarial risks.\n* Involving external CBRNE experts to conduct an uplift test assessing the ability of the model to accurately provide expert knowledge and reduce barriers to potential CBRNE misuse, by reference to what can be achieved using web search (without the model).",
"### Cyber Security\n\n\nWe have evaluated Llama 3 with CyberSecEval, Meta’s cybersecurity safety eval suite, measuring Llama 3’s propensity to suggest insecure code when used as a coding assistant, and Llama 3’s propensity to comply with requests to help carry out cyber attacks, where attacks are defined by the industry standard MITRE ATT&CK cyber attack ontology. On our insecure coding and cyber attacker helpfulness tests, Llama 3 behaved in the same range or safer than models of equivalent coding capability.",
"### Child Safety\n\n\nChild Safety risk assessments were conducted using a team of experts, to assess the model’s capability to produce outputs that could result in Child Safety risks and inform on any necessary and appropriate risk mitigations via fine tuning. We leveraged those expert red teaming sessions to expand the coverage of our evaluation benchmarks through Llama 3 model development. For Llama 3, we conducted new in-depth sessions using objective based methodologies to assess the model risks along multiple attack vectors. We also partnered with content specialists to perform red teaming exercises assessing potentially violating content while taking account of market specific nuances or experiences.",
"### Community\n\n\nGenerative AI safety requires expertise and tooling, and we believe in the strength of the open community to accelerate its progress. We are active members of open consortiums, including the AI Alliance, Partnership in AI and MLCommons, actively contributing to safety standardization and transparency. We encourage the community to adopt taxonomies like the MLCommons Proof of Concept evaluation to facilitate collaboration and transparency on safety and content evaluations. Our Purple Llama tools are open sourced for the community to use and widely distributed across ecosystem partners including cloud service providers. We encourage community contributions to our Github repository.\n\n\nFinally, we put in place a set of resources including an output reporting mechanism and bug bounty program to continuously improve the Llama technology with the help of the community.\n\n\nEthical Considerations and Limitations\n--------------------------------------\n\n\nThe core values of Llama 3 are openness, inclusivity and helpfulness. It is meant to serve everyone, and to work for a wide range of use cases. It is thus designed to be accessible to people across many different backgrounds, experiences and perspectives. Llama 3 addresses users and their needs as they are, without insertion unnecessary judgment or normativity, while reflecting the understanding that even content that may appear problematic in some cases can serve valuable purposes in others. It respects the dignity and autonomy of all users, especially in terms of the values of free thought and expression that power innovation and progress.\n\n\nBut Llama 3 is a new technology, and like any new technology, there are risks associated with its use. Testing conducted to date has been in English, and has not covered, nor could it cover, all scenarios. For these reasons, as with all LLMs, Llama 3’s potential outputs cannot be predicted in advance, and the model may in some instances produce inaccurate, biased or other objectionable responses to user prompts. Therefore, before deploying any applications of Llama 3 models, developers should perform safety testing and tuning tailored to their specific applications of the model. As outlined in the Responsible Use Guide, we recommend incorporating Purple Llama solutions into your workflows and specifically Llama Guard which provides a base model to filter input and output prompts to layer system-level safety on top of model-level safety.\n\n\nPlease see the Responsible Use Guide available at URL"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
This is the model card of a 🤗 transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
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## Uses
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## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
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## Technical Specifications [optional]
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[More Information Needed] | {"library_name": "transformers", "tags": []} | happylayers/sc33 | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"stablelm",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:43:05+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #stablelm #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
This is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
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## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
| [
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #stablelm #text-generation #conversational #arxiv-1910.09700 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# Model Card for Model ID",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nThis is the model card of a transformers model that has been pushed on the Hub. This model card has been automatically generated.\n\n- Developed by: \n- Funded by [optional]: \n- Shared by [optional]: \n- Model type: \n- Language(s) (NLP): \n- License: \n- Finetuned from model [optional]:",
"### Model Sources [optional]\n\n\n\n- Repository: \n- Paper [optional]: \n- Demo [optional]:",
"## Uses",
"### Direct Use",
"### Downstream Use [optional]",
"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact"
] |
null | null | this is only a very quick sft (few minutes in google colab) on a very tiny (60 steps) subset of cstr/capybara_de_sharegpt with unsloth, just as a proof of concept, that you can do this, make the model output in (not very good) german, and prompt with chatml template | {"license": "mit"} | cstr/phi3-mini-4k-llamafied-sft-v1 | null | [
"gguf",
"license:mit",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:43:34+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#gguf #license-mit #region-us
| this is only a very quick sft (few minutes in google colab) on a very tiny (60 steps) subset of cstr/capybara_de_sharegpt with unsloth, just as a proof of concept, that you can do this, make the model output in (not very good) german, and prompt with chatml template | [] | [
"TAGS\n#gguf #license-mit #region-us \n"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Starling-LM-7B-beta-ExPO
The extrapolated (ExPO) model based on `Nexusflow/Starling-LM-7B-beta` and `openchat/openchat-3.5-0106`, as in the "[Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment](https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.16792)" paper.
Specifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference. | {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0"} | chujiezheng/Starling-LM-7B-beta-ExPO | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"en",
"arxiv:2404.16792",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:46:02+00:00 | [
"2404.16792"
] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #conversational #en #arxiv-2404.16792 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Starling-LM-7B-beta-ExPO
The extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'Nexusflow/Starling-LM-7B-beta' and 'openchat/openchat-3.5-0106', as in the "Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment" paper.
Specifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference. | [
"# Starling-LM-7B-beta-ExPO\n\nThe extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'Nexusflow/Starling-LM-7B-beta' and 'openchat/openchat-3.5-0106', as in the \"Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment\" paper.\n\nSpecifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #conversational #en #arxiv-2404.16792 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# Starling-LM-7B-beta-ExPO\n\nThe extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'Nexusflow/Starling-LM-7B-beta' and 'openchat/openchat-3.5-0106', as in the \"Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment\" paper.\n\nSpecifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference."
] |
summarization | transformers |
# bart-base-finetuned-xsum-rougel
This model is a optimized version of [Vexemous/t5-small-finetuned-xsum](https://huggingface.co/Vexemous/t5-small-finetuned-xsum) on the xsum dataset through rouge-L as the reward model with PPOTrainer
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
More information needed
### Model Sources
More information needed
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 1.13.1+cu117
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | {"library_name": "transformers", "pipeline_tag": "summarization"} | Vexemous/t5-finetuned-xsum-rougel | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"t5",
"text2text-generation",
"summarization",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:48:26+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #t5 #text2text-generation #summarization #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# bart-base-finetuned-xsum-rougel
This model is a optimized version of Vexemous/t5-small-finetuned-xsum on the xsum dataset through rouge-L as the reward model with PPOTrainer
## Model Details
### Model Description
More information needed
### Model Sources
More information needed
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 1.13.1+cu117
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | [
"# bart-base-finetuned-xsum-rougel\n\nThis model is a optimized version of Vexemous/t5-small-finetuned-xsum on the xsum dataset through rouge-L as the reward model with PPOTrainer",
"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nMore information needed",
"### Model Sources\n\nMore information needed",
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"## Model Details",
"### Model Description\n\n\n\nMore information needed",
"### Model Sources\n\nMore information needed",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.40.1\n- Pytorch 1.13.1+cu117\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.19.1"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# my_awesome_eli5_clm-model
This model is a fine-tuned version of [EleutherAI/gpt-neo-125M](https://huggingface.co/EleutherAI/gpt-neo-125M) on the eli5_category dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 3.6380
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|
| 3.6497 | 1.0 | 1249 | 3.6418 |
| 3.5063 | 2.0 | 2498 | 3.6378 |
| 3.4291 | 3.0 | 3747 | 3.6380 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.0
- Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1
| {"license": "mit", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "datasets": ["eli5_category"], "base_model": "EleutherAI/gpt-neo-125M", "model-index": [{"name": "my_awesome_eli5_clm-model", "results": []}]} | HanliangXu/my_awesome_eli5_clm-model | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"gpt_neo",
"text-generation",
"generated_from_trainer",
"dataset:eli5_category",
"base_model:EleutherAI/gpt-neo-125M",
"license:mit",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:49:09+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #gpt_neo #text-generation #generated_from_trainer #dataset-eli5_category #base_model-EleutherAI/gpt-neo-125M #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| my\_awesome\_eli5\_clm-model
============================
This model is a fine-tuned version of EleutherAI/gpt-neo-125M on the eli5\_category dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 3.6380
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 8
* eval\_batch\_size: 8
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 3.0
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.0
* Pytorch 2.2.1+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
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"### Training results",
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] |
null | peft |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# llava-1.5-7b-hf-ft-mix-vsft
This model is a fine-tuned version of [llava-hf/llava-1.5-7b-hf](https://huggingface.co/llava-hf/llava-1.5-7b-hf) on an unknown dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 1.4e-05
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4
- total_train_batch_size: 16
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 50
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0
- Transformers 4.39.3
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2 | {"library_name": "peft", "tags": ["trl", "sft", "generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "llava-hf/llava-1.5-7b-hf", "model-index": [{"name": "llava-1.5-7b-hf-ft-mix-vsft", "results": []}]} | nezsrine/llava-1.5-7b-hf-ft-mix-vsft | null | [
"peft",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"trl",
"sft",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:llava-hf/llava-1.5-7b-hf",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:51:38+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#peft #tensorboard #safetensors #trl #sft #generated_from_trainer #base_model-llava-hf/llava-1.5-7b-hf #region-us
|
# llava-1.5-7b-hf-ft-mix-vsft
This model is a fine-tuned version of llava-hf/llava-1.5-7b-hf on an unknown dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 1.4e-05
- train_batch_size: 4
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- gradient_accumulation_steps: 4
- total_train_batch_size: 16
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 50
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0
- Transformers 4.39.3
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2 | [
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] |
summarization | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# bart-base-finetuned-samsum
This model is a fine-tuned version of [facebook/bart-base](https://huggingface.co/facebook/bart-base) on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 1.5273
- Rouge1: 46.8865
- Rouge2: 23.8976
- Rougel: 39.8604
- Rougelsum: 43.0185
- Gen Len: 18.0659
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 16
- eval_batch_size: 16
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 5
- mixed_precision_training: Native AMP
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Rouge1 | Rouge2 | Rougel | Rougelsum | Gen Len |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|:-------:|:-------:|:-------:|:---------:|:-------:|
| 2.0008 | 1.0 | 921 | 1.6050 | 45.4152 | 21.5898 | 38.2192 | 41.5283 | 18.3272 |
| 1.6741 | 2.0 | 1842 | 1.5611 | 45.6316 | 22.7331 | 38.6353 | 42.0206 | 17.9963 |
| 1.547 | 3.0 | 2763 | 1.5362 | 46.4511 | 23.218 | 39.1461 | 42.4645 | 17.9255 |
| 1.4668 | 4.0 | 3684 | 1.5338 | 46.8899 | 23.7554 | 39.7789 | 43.0769 | 18.3553 |
| 1.4218 | 5.0 | 4605 | 1.5273 | 46.8865 | 23.8976 | 39.8604 | 43.0185 | 18.0659 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.40.1
- Pytorch 1.13.1+cu117
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.19.1 | {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0", "metrics": ["rouge"], "base_model": "facebook/bart-base", "pipeline_tag": "summarization", "model-index": [{"name": "bart-base-finetuned-samsum", "results": []}]} | Vexemous/bart-based-finetuned-samsum | null | [
"transformers",
"tensorboard",
"safetensors",
"bart",
"text2text-generation",
"summarization",
"en",
"base_model:facebook/bart-base",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:52:00+00:00 | [] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #tensorboard #safetensors #bart #text2text-generation #summarization #en #base_model-facebook/bart-base #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| bart-base-finetuned-samsum
==========================
This model is a fine-tuned version of facebook/bart-base on an unknown dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 1.5273
* Rouge1: 46.8865
* Rouge2: 23.8976
* Rougel: 39.8604
* Rougelsum: 43.0185
* Gen Len: 18.0659
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 16
* eval\_batch\_size: 16
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 5
* mixed\_precision\_training: Native AMP
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.40.1
* Pytorch 1.13.1+cu117
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.19.1
| [
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] |
null | peft |
# Model Card for Model ID
<!-- Provide a quick summary of what the model is/does. -->
## Model Details
### Model Description
<!-- Provide a longer summary of what this model is. -->
- **Developed by:** [More Information Needed]
- **Funded by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Shared by [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Model type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Language(s) (NLP):** [More Information Needed]
- **License:** [More Information Needed]
- **Finetuned from model [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
### Model Sources [optional]
<!-- Provide the basic links for the model. -->
- **Repository:** [More Information Needed]
- **Paper [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
- **Demo [optional]:** [More Information Needed]
## Uses
<!-- Address questions around how the model is intended to be used, including the foreseeable users of the model and those affected by the model. -->
### Direct Use
<!-- This section is for the model use without fine-tuning or plugging into a larger ecosystem/app. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Downstream Use [optional]
<!-- This section is for the model use when fine-tuned for a task, or when plugged into a larger ecosystem/app -->
[More Information Needed]
### Out-of-Scope Use
<!-- This section addresses misuse, malicious use, and uses that the model will not work well for. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
<!-- This section is meant to convey both technical and sociotechnical limitations. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Recommendations
<!-- This section is meant to convey recommendations with respect to the bias, risk, and technical limitations. -->
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
[More Information Needed]
## Training Details
### Training Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card, perhaps with a short stub of information on what the training data is all about as well as documentation related to data pre-processing or additional filtering. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Training Procedure
<!-- This relates heavily to the Technical Specifications. Content here should link to that section when it is relevant to the training procedure. -->
#### Preprocessing [optional]
[More Information Needed]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- **Training regime:** [More Information Needed] <!--fp32, fp16 mixed precision, bf16 mixed precision, bf16 non-mixed precision, fp16 non-mixed precision, fp8 mixed precision -->
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
<!-- This section provides information about throughput, start/end time, checkpoint size if relevant, etc. -->
[More Information Needed]
## Evaluation
<!-- This section describes the evaluation protocols and provides the results. -->
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
<!-- This should link to a Dataset Card if possible. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Factors
<!-- These are the things the evaluation is disaggregating by, e.g., subpopulations or domains. -->
[More Information Needed]
#### Metrics
<!-- These are the evaluation metrics being used, ideally with a description of why. -->
[More Information Needed]
### Results
[More Information Needed]
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
<!-- Relevant interpretability work for the model goes here -->
[More Information Needed]
## Environmental Impact
<!-- Total emissions (in grams of CO2eq) and additional considerations, such as electricity usage, go here. Edit the suggested text below accordingly -->
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the [Machine Learning Impact calculator](https://mlco2.github.io/impact#compute) presented in [Lacoste et al. (2019)](https://arxiv.org/abs/1910.09700).
- **Hardware Type:** [More Information Needed]
- **Hours used:** [More Information Needed]
- **Cloud Provider:** [More Information Needed]
- **Compute Region:** [More Information Needed]
- **Carbon Emitted:** [More Information Needed]
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
[More Information Needed]
### Compute Infrastructure
[More Information Needed]
#### Hardware
[More Information Needed]
#### Software
[More Information Needed]
## Citation [optional]
<!-- If there is a paper or blog post introducing the model, the APA and Bibtex information for that should go in this section. -->
**BibTeX:**
[More Information Needed]
**APA:**
[More Information Needed]
## Glossary [optional]
<!-- If relevant, include terms and calculations in this section that can help readers understand the model or model card. -->
[More Information Needed]
## More Information [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
[More Information Needed]
## Model Card Contact
[More Information Needed]
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0 | {"library_name": "peft", "base_model": "shrenikb/sparsegpt50sparsitymodel"} | shrenikb/fedsparsegpt50sparsity1test2 | null | [
"peft",
"safetensors",
"arxiv:1910.09700",
"base_model:shrenikb/sparsegpt50sparsitymodel",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:52:10+00:00 | [
"1910.09700"
] | [] | TAGS
#peft #safetensors #arxiv-1910.09700 #base_model-shrenikb/sparsegpt50sparsitymodel #region-us
|
# Model Card for Model ID
## Model Details
### Model Description
- Developed by:
- Funded by [optional]:
- Shared by [optional]:
- Model type:
- Language(s) (NLP):
- License:
- Finetuned from model [optional]:
### Model Sources [optional]
- Repository:
- Paper [optional]:
- Demo [optional]:
## Uses
### Direct Use
### Downstream Use [optional]
### Out-of-Scope Use
## Bias, Risks, and Limitations
### Recommendations
Users (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.
## How to Get Started with the Model
Use the code below to get started with the model.
## Training Details
### Training Data
### Training Procedure
#### Preprocessing [optional]
#### Training Hyperparameters
- Training regime:
#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]
## Evaluation
### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics
#### Testing Data
#### Factors
#### Metrics
### Results
#### Summary
## Model Examination [optional]
## Environmental Impact
Carbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).
- Hardware Type:
- Hours used:
- Cloud Provider:
- Compute Region:
- Carbon Emitted:
## Technical Specifications [optional]
### Model Architecture and Objective
### Compute Infrastructure
#### Hardware
#### Software
[optional]
BibTeX:
APA:
## Glossary [optional]
## More Information [optional]
## Model Card Authors [optional]
## Model Card Contact
### Framework versions
- PEFT 0.10.0 | [
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"### Out-of-Scope Use",
"## Bias, Risks, and Limitations",
"### Recommendations\n\n\n\nUsers (both direct and downstream) should be made aware of the risks, biases and limitations of the model. More information needed for further recommendations.",
"## How to Get Started with the Model\n\nUse the code below to get started with the model.",
"## Training Details",
"### Training Data",
"### Training Procedure",
"#### Preprocessing [optional]",
"#### Training Hyperparameters\n\n- Training regime:",
"#### Speeds, Sizes, Times [optional]",
"## Evaluation",
"### Testing Data, Factors & Metrics",
"#### Testing Data",
"#### Factors",
"#### Metrics",
"### Results",
"#### Summary",
"## Model Examination [optional]",
"## Environmental Impact\n\n\n\nCarbon emissions can be estimated using the Machine Learning Impact calculator presented in Lacoste et al. (2019).\n\n- Hardware Type: \n- Hours used: \n- Cloud Provider: \n- Compute Region: \n- Carbon Emitted:",
"## Technical Specifications [optional]",
"### Model Architecture and Objective",
"### Compute Infrastructure",
"#### Hardware",
"#### Software\n\n\n\n[optional]\n\n\n\nBibTeX:\n\n\n\nAPA:",
"## Glossary [optional]",
"## More Information [optional]",
"## Model Card Authors [optional]",
"## Model Card Contact",
"### Framework versions\n\n- PEFT 0.10.0"
] |
text-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# TrainedLocation
This model is a fine-tuned version of [distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased](https://huggingface.co/distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased) on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 0.0090
- Accuracy: 0.9967
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 16
- eval_batch_size: 16
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 20
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Accuracy |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|:--------:|
| No log | 1.0 | 38 | 0.2576 | 0.905 |
| No log | 2.0 | 76 | 0.1648 | 0.9433 |
| No log | 3.0 | 114 | 0.1230 | 0.965 |
| No log | 4.0 | 152 | 0.0910 | 0.9717 |
| No log | 5.0 | 190 | 0.0732 | 0.9767 |
| No log | 6.0 | 228 | 0.0623 | 0.9767 |
| No log | 7.0 | 266 | 0.0355 | 0.99 |
| No log | 8.0 | 304 | 0.0291 | 0.9883 |
| No log | 9.0 | 342 | 0.0246 | 0.99 |
| No log | 10.0 | 380 | 0.0217 | 0.9917 |
| No log | 11.0 | 418 | 0.0148 | 0.995 |
| No log | 12.0 | 456 | 0.0148 | 0.995 |
| No log | 13.0 | 494 | 0.0118 | 0.995 |
| 0.1064 | 14.0 | 532 | 0.0103 | 0.9967 |
| 0.1064 | 15.0 | 570 | 0.0101 | 0.9967 |
| 0.1064 | 16.0 | 608 | 0.0095 | 0.9967 |
| 0.1064 | 17.0 | 646 | 0.0099 | 0.9967 |
| 0.1064 | 18.0 | 684 | 0.0092 | 0.9967 |
| 0.1064 | 19.0 | 722 | 0.0089 | 0.9967 |
| 0.1064 | 20.0 | 760 | 0.0090 | 0.9967 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.38.1
- Pytorch 2.2.1
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["accuracy"], "base_model": "distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased", "model-index": [{"name": "TrainedLocation", "results": []}]} | PathofthePeople/TrainedLocation | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"distilbert",
"text-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:54:19+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #distilbert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
| TrainedLocation
===============
This model is a fine-tuned version of distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 0.0090
* Accuracy: 0.9967
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 16
* eval\_batch\_size: 16
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 20
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.38.1
* Pytorch 2.2.1
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 20",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.38.1\n* Pytorch 2.2.1\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #distilbert #text-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-distilbert/distilbert-base-uncased #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 20",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.38.1\n* Pytorch 2.2.1\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
## Model Card Contact
[[email protected]] | {"language": ["vi"], "license": "mit", "library_name": "transformers", "tags": ["LLMs", "NLP", "Vietnamese"], "datasets": ["Tamnemtf/Flirty"], "pipeline_tag": "text-generation", "base_model": "Viet-Mistral/Vistral-7B-Chat"} | Tamnemtf/Flirty-Mistral | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"LLMs",
"NLP",
"Vietnamese",
"conversational",
"vi",
"dataset:Tamnemtf/Flirty",
"base_model:Viet-Mistral/Vistral-7B-Chat",
"license:mit",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:54:49+00:00 | [] | [
"vi"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #LLMs #NLP #Vietnamese #conversational #vi #dataset-Tamnemtf/Flirty #base_model-Viet-Mistral/Vistral-7B-Chat #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
## Model Card Contact
[nguyndantdm6@URL] | [
"## Model Card Contact\n\n[nguyndantdm6@URL]"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #LLMs #NLP #Vietnamese #conversational #vi #dataset-Tamnemtf/Flirty #base_model-Viet-Mistral/Vistral-7B-Chat #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"## Model Card Contact\n\n[nguyndantdm6@URL]"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12
Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12 is a merge of the following models using [LazyMergekit](https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1obulZ1ROXHjYLn6PPZJwRR6GzgQogxxb?usp=sharing):
# Keep in mind that, this merged model isn't usually tested at the moment, which could benefit in vocabulary error.
* [Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5](https://huggingface.co/Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5)
* [jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B](https://huggingface.co/jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B)
* [Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1](https://huggingface.co/Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1)
## 🧩 Configuration
```yaml
merge_method: model_stock
dtype: float16
base_model: Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.4-8B-10
models:
- model: Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5
parameters:
weight: .126
density: .216
- model: jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B
parameters:
weight: .128
density: .256
- model: Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1
parameters:
weight: .16
density: .12
parameters:
normalize: true
int8_mask: true
```
## 💻 Usage
```python
!pip install -qU transformers accelerate
from transformers import AutoTokenizer
import transformers
import torch
model = "Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12"
messages = [{"role": "user", "content": "What is a large language model?"}]
tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained(model)
prompt = tokenizer.apply_chat_template(messages, tokenize=False, add_generation_prompt=True)
pipeline = transformers.pipeline(
"text-generation",
model=model,
torch_dtype=torch.float16,
device_map="auto",
)
outputs = pipeline(prompt, max_new_tokens=256, do_sample=True, temperature=0.7, top_k=50, top_p=0.95)
print(outputs[0]["generated_text"])
``` | {"tags": ["merge", "mergekit", "lazymergekit", "Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5", "jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B", "Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1"], "base_model": ["Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5", "jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B", "Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1"]} | Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12 | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"llama",
"text-generation",
"merge",
"mergekit",
"lazymergekit",
"Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5",
"jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B",
"Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1",
"conversational",
"base_model:Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5",
"base_model:jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B",
"base_model:Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:57:37+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5 #jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B #Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1 #conversational #base_model-Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5 #base_model-jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B #base_model-Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12
Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12 is a merge of the following models using LazyMergekit:
# Keep in mind that, this merged model isn't usually tested at the moment, which could benefit in vocabulary error.
* Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5
* jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B
* Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1
## Configuration
## Usage
| [
"# Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12\n\nKeiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12 is a merge of the following models using LazyMergekit:",
"# Keep in mind that, this merged model isn't usually tested at the moment, which could benefit in vocabulary error.\n* Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5\n* jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B\n* Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1",
"## Configuration",
"## Usage"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #llama #text-generation #merge #mergekit #lazymergekit #Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5 #jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B #Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1 #conversational #base_model-Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5 #base_model-jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B #base_model-Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# Keiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12\n\nKeiana-L3-Test5.6-8B-12 is a merge of the following models using LazyMergekit:",
"# Keep in mind that, this merged model isn't usually tested at the moment, which could benefit in vocabulary error.\n* Kaoeiri/Keiana-L3-Test5.45-8B-10.5\n* jeiku/Chaos_RP_l3_8B\n* Sao10K/L3-Solana-8B-v1",
"## Configuration",
"## Usage"
] |
null | null | # Word Importance
This repository contains code snippets used for training models which are described in the paper [Assessing Word Importance Using Models Trained for Semantic Tasks](https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.19689).
## Generating scores
```bash
head -n 10 data/quora-paws-labeled-swap/processed/valid.premise | python ./scripts/masks/evaluation/generate_masks.py --model_path=./interpreters/pi/checkpoint4.ckpt | python ./scripts/masks/evaluation/aggregate_masks.py --scale --float_precision 2
```
Output:
```
What is the difference between coincidence and luck ? 0.04 0.04 0.01 0.18 0.22 1.00 0.09 0.93 0.00
How do I close a pvt ltd company in India ? 0.02 0.05 0.09 0.50 0.03 0.45 1.00 0.67 0.13 0.62 0.00
Who will win if India and China fight now without allies ? 0.29 0.16 0.58 0.44 0.67 0.09 0.94 0.82 0.68 1.00 0.91 0.00
How long could a human survive on just peanut butter and water ? 0.02 0.55 0.39 0.04 0.33 0.73 0.28 0.66 1.00 0.89 0.06 0.77 0.00
What are the importance of mathematical induction ? 0.03 0.03 0.01 0.54 0.08 0.97 1.00 0.00
What is the Sahara , and how do the average temperatures there compare to the ones in the Simpson Desert ? 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.50 0.26 0.09 0.14 0.10 0.05 0.42 0.38 0.23 0.80 0.10 0.05 0.50 0.15 0.05 1.00 0.67 0.00
What does it mean when you dream about someone you haven 't seen for a long time ? 0.03 0.08 0.07 0.14 0.21 0.09 0.83 0.36 0.15 0.11 0.51 1.00 0.30 0.14 0.03 0.78 0.24 0.00
What are some adaptations of the great white shark ? 0.03 0.04 0.09 0.79 0.06 0.02 0.14 0.67 1.00 0.00
How much app partition size does Lenovo K3 Note have ? 0.03 0.31 0.43 0.31 0.46 0.11 1.00 0.78 0.41 0.12 0.00
What is the best smartphone app ? 0.12 0.10 0.06 0.20 1.00 0.98 0.00
```
## Training
Underlying models (NLI and PI)
```bash
./train.sh
```
Masks
```bash
python scripts/masks/train/run_nli_diffmask.py
```
### Automatized installation
```bash
./setup.sh <python_path> <virtual_env_name>
```
## Interactive Gradio App
Install gradio (`pip install gradio`) and run `python gradio_example.py` and test the models using an interactive web-based application.
## CREDITS
```
@inproceedings{javorsky-etal-2023-assessing,
title = "Assessing Word Importance Using Models Trained for Semantic Tasks",
author = "Javorsk{\'y}, D{\'a}vid and
Bojar, Ond{\v{r}}ej and
Yvon, Fran{\c{c}}ois",
booktitle = "Findings of the Association for Computational Linguistics: ACL 2023",
month = jul,
year = "2023",
address = "Toronto, Canada",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2023.findings-acl.563",
doi = "10.18653/v1/2023.findings-acl.563",
pages = "8846--8856",
abstract = "Many NLP tasks require to automatically identify the most significant words in a text. In this work, we derive word significance from models trained to solve semantic task: Natural Language Inference and Paraphrase Identification. Using an attribution method aimed to explain the predictions of these models, we derive importance scores for each input token. We evaluate their relevance using a so-called cross-task evaluation: Analyzing the performance of one model on an input masked according to the other model{'}s weight, we show that our method is robust with respect to the choice of the initial task. Additionally, we investigate the scores from the syntax point of view and observe interesting patterns, e.g. words closer to the root of a syntactic tree receive higher importance scores. Altogether, these observations suggest that our method can be used to identify important words in sentences without any explicit word importance labeling in training.",
}
``` | {} | J4VORSKY/word-importance | null | [
"tensorboard",
"arxiv:2305.19689",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:58:02+00:00 | [
"2305.19689"
] | [] | TAGS
#tensorboard #arxiv-2305.19689 #region-us
| # Word Importance
This repository contains code snippets used for training models which are described in the paper Assessing Word Importance Using Models Trained for Semantic Tasks.
## Generating scores
Output:
## Training
Underlying models (NLI and PI)
Masks
### Automatized installation
## Interactive Gradio App
Install gradio ('pip install gradio') and run 'python gradio_example.py' and test the models using an interactive web-based application.
## CREDITS
| [
"# Word Importance\n\nThis repository contains code snippets used for training models which are described in the paper Assessing Word Importance Using Models Trained for Semantic Tasks.",
"## Generating scores\n\n\n\nOutput:",
"## Training\n\nUnderlying models (NLI and PI)\n\n\n\nMasks",
"### Automatized installation",
"## Interactive Gradio App\n\nInstall gradio ('pip install gradio') and run 'python gradio_example.py' and test the models using an interactive web-based application.",
"## CREDITS"
] | [
"TAGS\n#tensorboard #arxiv-2305.19689 #region-us \n",
"# Word Importance\n\nThis repository contains code snippets used for training models which are described in the paper Assessing Word Importance Using Models Trained for Semantic Tasks.",
"## Generating scores\n\n\n\nOutput:",
"## Training\n\nUnderlying models (NLI and PI)\n\n\n\nMasks",
"### Automatized installation",
"## Interactive Gradio App\n\nInstall gradio ('pip install gradio') and run 'python gradio_example.py' and test the models using an interactive web-based application.",
"## CREDITS"
] |
text2text-generation | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# testvw
This model is a fine-tuned version of [google-t5/t5-small](https://huggingface.co/google-t5/t5-small) on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
- Loss: 1.4714
- Rouge1: 0.1612
- Rouge2: 0.1398
- Rougel: 0.1597
- Rougelsum: 0.1607
- Gen Len: 19.0
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 2e-05
- train_batch_size: 16
- eval_batch_size: 16
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 30
### Training results
| Training Loss | Epoch | Step | Validation Loss | Rouge1 | Rouge2 | Rougel | Rougelsum | Gen Len |
|:-------------:|:-----:|:----:|:---------------:|:------:|:------:|:------:|:---------:|:-------:|
| No log | 1.0 | 8 | 1.7385 | 0.1563 | 0.1179 | 0.1494 | 0.1508 | 19.0 |
| No log | 2.0 | 16 | 1.7008 | 0.1609 | 0.1333 | 0.1573 | 0.1579 | 19.0 |
| No log | 3.0 | 24 | 1.6673 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 4.0 | 32 | 1.6382 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 5.0 | 40 | 1.6139 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 6.0 | 48 | 1.5950 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 7.0 | 56 | 1.5793 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 8.0 | 64 | 1.5645 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 9.0 | 72 | 1.5518 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 10.0 | 80 | 1.5408 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 11.0 | 88 | 1.5304 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 12.0 | 96 | 1.5217 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 13.0 | 104 | 1.5148 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 14.0 | 112 | 1.5085 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 15.0 | 120 | 1.5033 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 16.0 | 128 | 1.4988 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 17.0 | 136 | 1.4947 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 18.0 | 144 | 1.4910 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 19.0 | 152 | 1.4880 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 20.0 | 160 | 1.4853 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 21.0 | 168 | 1.4828 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 22.0 | 176 | 1.4803 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 23.0 | 184 | 1.4783 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 24.0 | 192 | 1.4762 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 25.0 | 200 | 1.4749 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 26.0 | 208 | 1.4736 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 27.0 | 216 | 1.4726 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 28.0 | 224 | 1.4719 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 29.0 | 232 | 1.4716 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
| No log | 30.0 | 240 | 1.4714 | 0.1612 | 0.1398 | 0.1597 | 0.1607 | 19.0 |
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.37.2
- Pytorch 2.1.2+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"license": "apache-2.0", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "metrics": ["rouge"], "base_model": "google-t5/t5-small", "model-index": [{"name": "testvw", "results": []}]} | mrid124/testvw | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"t5",
"text2text-generation",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:google-t5/t5-small",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:58:16+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #t5 #text2text-generation #generated_from_trainer #base_model-google-t5/t5-small #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
| testvw
======
This model is a fine-tuned version of google-t5/t5-small on the None dataset.
It achieves the following results on the evaluation set:
* Loss: 1.4714
* Rouge1: 0.1612
* Rouge2: 0.1398
* Rougel: 0.1597
* Rougelsum: 0.1607
* Gen Len: 19.0
Model description
-----------------
More information needed
Intended uses & limitations
---------------------------
More information needed
Training and evaluation data
----------------------------
More information needed
Training procedure
------------------
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
* learning\_rate: 2e-05
* train\_batch\_size: 16
* eval\_batch\_size: 16
* seed: 42
* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
* lr\_scheduler\_type: linear
* num\_epochs: 30
### Training results
### Framework versions
* Transformers 4.37.2
* Pytorch 2.1.2+cu121
* Datasets 2.19.0
* Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 30",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.37.2\n* Pytorch 2.1.2+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
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"### Training hyperparameters\n\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n\n\n* learning\\_rate: 2e-05\n* train\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* eval\\_batch\\_size: 16\n* seed: 42\n* optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n* lr\\_scheduler\\_type: linear\n* num\\_epochs: 30",
"### Training results",
"### Framework versions\n\n\n* Transformers 4.37.2\n* Pytorch 2.1.2+cu121\n* Datasets 2.19.0\n* Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
null | null | token tazzan_sks person | {} | TrgTuan10/db_tazan | null | [
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T08:59:21+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#region-us
| token tazzan_sks person | [] | [
"TAGS\n#region-us \n"
] |
token-classification | transformers |
<!-- This model card has been generated automatically according to the information the Trainer had access to. You
should probably proofread and complete it, then remove this comment. -->
# roberta-base-finetuned-ner
This model is a fine-tuned version of [roberta-base](https://huggingface.co/roberta-base) on an unknown dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 2
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.36.2
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| {"license": "mit", "tags": ["generated_from_trainer"], "base_model": "roberta-base", "model-index": [{"name": "roberta-base-finetuned-ner", "results": []}]} | Sevixdd/roberta-base-finetuned-ner | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"roberta",
"token-classification",
"generated_from_trainer",
"base_model:roberta-base",
"license:mit",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T09:00:26+00:00 | [] | [] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #roberta #token-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-roberta-base #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us
|
# roberta-base-finetuned-ner
This model is a fine-tuned version of roberta-base on an unknown dataset.
## Model description
More information needed
## Intended uses & limitations
More information needed
## Training and evaluation data
More information needed
## Training procedure
### Training hyperparameters
The following hyperparameters were used during training:
- learning_rate: 5e-05
- train_batch_size: 8
- eval_batch_size: 8
- seed: 42
- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08
- lr_scheduler_type: linear
- num_epochs: 2
### Framework versions
- Transformers 4.36.2
- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121
- Datasets 2.19.0
- Tokenizers 0.15.2
| [
"# roberta-base-finetuned-ner\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of roberta-base on an unknown dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 2",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.36.2\n- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #roberta #token-classification #generated_from_trainer #base_model-roberta-base #license-mit #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #region-us \n",
"# roberta-base-finetuned-ner\n\nThis model is a fine-tuned version of roberta-base on an unknown dataset.",
"## Model description\n\nMore information needed",
"## Intended uses & limitations\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training and evaluation data\n\nMore information needed",
"## Training procedure",
"### Training hyperparameters\n\nThe following hyperparameters were used during training:\n- learning_rate: 5e-05\n- train_batch_size: 8\n- eval_batch_size: 8\n- seed: 42\n- optimizer: Adam with betas=(0.9,0.999) and epsilon=1e-08\n- lr_scheduler_type: linear\n- num_epochs: 2",
"### Framework versions\n\n- Transformers 4.36.2\n- Pytorch 2.3.0+cu121\n- Datasets 2.19.0\n- Tokenizers 0.15.2"
] |
text-generation | transformers |
# zephyr-7b-dpo-full-ExPO
The extrapolated (ExPO) model based on `alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-dpo-full` and `alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-sft-full`, as in the "[Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment](https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.16792)" paper.
Specifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference. | {"language": ["en"], "license": "apache-2.0"} | chujiezheng/zephyr-7b-dpo-full-ExPO | null | [
"transformers",
"safetensors",
"mistral",
"text-generation",
"conversational",
"en",
"arxiv:2404.16792",
"license:apache-2.0",
"autotrain_compatible",
"endpoints_compatible",
"text-generation-inference",
"region:us"
] | null | 2024-04-26T09:01:06+00:00 | [
"2404.16792"
] | [
"en"
] | TAGS
#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #conversational #en #arxiv-2404.16792 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us
|
# zephyr-7b-dpo-full-ExPO
The extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-dpo-full' and 'alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-sft-full', as in the "Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment" paper.
Specifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference. | [
"# zephyr-7b-dpo-full-ExPO\n\nThe extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-dpo-full' and 'alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-sft-full', as in the \"Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment\" paper.\n\nSpecifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference."
] | [
"TAGS\n#transformers #safetensors #mistral #text-generation #conversational #en #arxiv-2404.16792 #license-apache-2.0 #autotrain_compatible #endpoints_compatible #text-generation-inference #region-us \n",
"# zephyr-7b-dpo-full-ExPO\n\nThe extrapolated (ExPO) model based on 'alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-dpo-full' and 'alignment-handbook/zephyr-7b-sft-full', as in the \"Weak-to-Strong Extrapolation Expedites Alignment\" paper.\n\nSpecifically, we obtain this model by extrapolating from the weights of the SFT and DPO/RLHF checkpoints, achieving superior alignment with human preference."
] |
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