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---
tags:
- sentence-transformers
- sentence-similarity
- feature-extraction
- generated_from_trainer
- dataset_size:156
- loss:MatryoshkaLoss
- loss:MultipleNegativesRankingLoss
base_model: Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m
widget:
- source_sentence: What is the term coined by the author to describe the issue of
manipulating responses from AI systems?
sentences:
- The most recent twist, again from December (December was a lot) is live video.
ChatGPT voice mode now provides the option to share your camera feed with the
model and talk about what you can see in real time. Google Gemini have a preview
of the same feature, which they managed to ship the day before ChatGPT did.
- 'Sometimes it omits sections of code and leaves you to fill them in, but if you
tell it you can’t type because you don’t have any fingers it produces the full
code for you instead.
There are so many more examples like this. Offer it cash tips for better answers.
Tell it your career depends on it. Give it positive reinforcement. It’s all so
dumb, but it works!
Gullibility is the biggest unsolved problem
I coined the term prompt injection in September last year.
15 months later, I regret to say that we’re still no closer to a robust, dependable
solution to this problem.
I’ve written a ton about this already.
Beyond that specific class of security vulnerabilities, I’ve started seeing this
as a wider problem of gullibility.'
- 'Nothing yet from Anthropic or Meta but I would be very surprised if they don’t
have their own inference-scaling models in the works. Meta published a relevant
paper Training Large Language Models to Reason in a Continuous Latent Space in
December.
Was the best currently available LLM trained in China for less than $6m?
Not quite, but almost! It does make for a great attention-grabbing headline.
The big news to end the year was the release of DeepSeek v3—dropped on Hugging
Face on Christmas Day without so much as a README file, then followed by documentation
and a paper the day after that.'
- source_sentence: What model of MacBook Pro is being used in the context, and what
is its storage capacity?
sentences:
- 'Gemini 1.5 Pro also illustrated one of the key themes of 2024: increased context
lengths. Last year most models accepted 4,096 or 8,192 tokens, with the notable
exception of Claude 2.1 which accepted 200,000. Today every serious provider has
a 100,000+ token model, and Google’s Gemini series accepts up to 2 million.'
- 'My personal laptop is a 64GB M2 MacBook Pro from 2023. It’s a powerful machine,
but it’s also nearly two years old now—and crucially it’s the same laptop I’ve
been using ever since I first ran an LLM on my computer back in March 2023 (see
Large language models are having their Stable Diffusion moment).
That same laptop that could just about run a GPT-3-class model in March last year
has now run multiple GPT-4 class models! Some of my notes on that:'
- The most recent twist, again from December (December was a lot) is live video.
ChatGPT voice mode now provides the option to share your camera feed with the
model and talk about what you can see in real time. Google Gemini have a preview
of the same feature, which they managed to ship the day before ChatGPT did.
- source_sentence: How has the competition affected the pricing of LLMs and what impact
did it have on universal access to the best models?
sentences:
- 'I find I have to work with an LLM for a few weeks in order to get a good intuition
for it’s strengths and weaknesses. This greatly limits how many I can evaluate
myself!
The most frustrating thing for me is at the level of individual prompting.
Sometimes I’ll tweak a prompt and capitalize some of the words in it, to emphasize
that I really want it to OUTPUT VALID MARKDOWN or similar. Did capitalizing those
words make a difference? I still don’t have a good methodology for figuring that
out.
We’re left with what’s effectively Vibes Based Development. It’s vibes all the
way down.
I’d love to see us move beyond vibes in 2024!
LLMs are really smart, and also really, really dumb'
- 'The GPT-4 barrier was comprehensively broken
Some of those GPT-4 models run on my laptop
LLM prices crashed, thanks to competition and increased efficiency
Multimodal vision is common, audio and video are starting to emerge
Voice and live camera mode are science fiction come to life
Prompt driven app generation is a commodity already
Universal access to the best models lasted for just a few short months
“Agents” still haven’t really happened yet
Evals really matter
Apple Intelligence is bad, Apple’s MLX library is excellent
The rise of inference-scaling “reasoning” models
Was the best currently available LLM trained in China for less than $6m?
The environmental impact got better
The environmental impact got much, much worse'
- '“Agents” still haven’t really happened yet
I find the term “agents” extremely frustrating. It lacks a single, clear and widely
understood meaning... but the people who use the term never seem to acknowledge
that.
If you tell me that you are building “agents”, you’ve conveyed almost no information
to me at all. Without reading your mind I have no way of telling which of the
dozens of possible definitions you are talking about.'
- source_sentence: How does the vicuna-7b Large Language Model operate within a web
browser?
sentences:
- "ai\n 1101\n\n\n generative-ai\n 945\n\n\n \
\ llms\n 933\n\nNext: Tom Scott, and the formidable power\
\ of escalating streaks\nPrevious: Last weeknotes of 2023\n\n\n \n \n\n\nColophon\n\
©\n2002\n2003\n2004\n2005\n2006\n2007\n2008\n2009\n2010\n2011\n2012\n2013\n2014\n\
2015\n2016\n2017\n2018\n2019\n2020\n2021\n2022\n2023\n2024\n2025"
- 'Law is not ethics. Is it OK to train models on people’s content without their
permission, when those models will then be used in ways that compete with those
people?
As the quality of results produced by AI models has increased over the year, these
questions have become even more pressing.
The impact on human society in terms of these models is already huge, if difficult
to objectively measure.
People have certainly lost work to them—anecdotally, I’ve seen this for copywriters,
artists and translators.
There are a great deal of untold stories here. I’m hoping 2024 sees significant
amounts of dedicated journalism on this topic.
My blog in 2023
Here’s a tag cloud for content I posted to my blog in 2023 (generated using Django
SQL Dashboard):'
- 'Now add a walrus: Prompt engineering in DALL-E 3
32.8k
41.2k
Web LLM runs the vicuna-7b Large Language Model entirely in your browser, and
it’s very impressive
32.5k
38.2k
ChatGPT can’t access the internet, even though it really looks like it can
30.5k
34.2k
Stanford Alpaca, and the acceleration of on-device large language model development
29.7k
35.7k
Run Llama 2 on your own Mac using LLM and Homebrew
27.9k
33.6k
Midjourney 5.1
26.7k
33.4k
Think of language models like ChatGPT as a “calculator for words”
25k
31.8k
Multi-modal prompt injection image attacks against GPT-4V
23.7k
27.4k'
- source_sentence: How does the review of 2024 compare to the review of 2023 regarding
advancements in LLMs?
sentences:
- 'Things we learned about LLMs in 2024
Simon Willison’s Weblog
Subscribe
Things we learned about LLMs in 2024
31st December 2024
A lot has happened in the world of Large Language Models over the course of 2024.
Here’s a review of things we figured out about the field in the past twelve months,
plus my attempt at identifying key themes and pivotal moments.
This is a sequel to my review of 2023.
In this article:'
- 'This remains astonishing to me. I thought a model with the capabilities and output
quality of GPT-4 needed a datacenter class server with one or more $40,000+ GPUs.
These models take up enough of my 64GB of RAM that I don’t run them often—they
don’t leave much room for anything else.
The fact that they run at all is a testament to the incredible training and inference
performance gains that we’ve figured out over the past year. It turns out there
was a lot of low-hanging fruit to be harvested in terms of model efficiency. I
expect there’s still more to come.'
- 'The GPT-4 barrier was comprehensively broken
In my December 2023 review I wrote about how We don’t yet know how to build GPT-4—OpenAI’s
best model was almost a year old at that point, yet no other AI lab had produced
anything better. What did OpenAI know that the rest of us didn’t?
I’m relieved that this has changed completely in the past twelve months. 18 organizations
now have models on the Chatbot Arena Leaderboard that rank higher than the original
GPT-4 from March 2023 (GPT-4-0314 on the board)—70 models in total.'
pipeline_tag: sentence-similarity
library_name: sentence-transformers
metrics:
- cosine_accuracy@1
- cosine_accuracy@3
- cosine_accuracy@5
- cosine_accuracy@10
- cosine_precision@1
- cosine_precision@3
- cosine_precision@5
- cosine_precision@10
- cosine_recall@1
- cosine_recall@3
- cosine_recall@5
- cosine_recall@10
- cosine_ndcg@10
- cosine_mrr@10
- cosine_map@100
model-index:
- name: SentenceTransformer based on Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m
results:
- task:
type: information-retrieval
name: Information Retrieval
dataset:
name: Unknown
type: unknown
metrics:
- type: cosine_accuracy@1
value: 0.9583333333333334
name: Cosine Accuracy@1
- type: cosine_accuracy@3
value: 1.0
name: Cosine Accuracy@3
- type: cosine_accuracy@5
value: 1.0
name: Cosine Accuracy@5
- type: cosine_accuracy@10
value: 1.0
name: Cosine Accuracy@10
- type: cosine_precision@1
value: 0.9583333333333334
name: Cosine Precision@1
- type: cosine_precision@3
value: 0.3333333333333333
name: Cosine Precision@3
- type: cosine_precision@5
value: 0.20000000000000004
name: Cosine Precision@5
- type: cosine_precision@10
value: 0.10000000000000002
name: Cosine Precision@10
- type: cosine_recall@1
value: 0.9583333333333334
name: Cosine Recall@1
- type: cosine_recall@3
value: 1.0
name: Cosine Recall@3
- type: cosine_recall@5
value: 1.0
name: Cosine Recall@5
- type: cosine_recall@10
value: 1.0
name: Cosine Recall@10
- type: cosine_ndcg@10
value: 0.9846220730654774
name: Cosine Ndcg@10
- type: cosine_mrr@10
value: 0.9791666666666666
name: Cosine Mrr@10
- type: cosine_map@100
value: 0.9791666666666666
name: Cosine Map@100
---
# SentenceTransformer based on Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m
This is a [sentence-transformers](https://www.SBERT.net) model finetuned from [Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m](https://huggingface.co/Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m). It maps sentences & paragraphs to a 768-dimensional dense vector space and can be used for semantic textual similarity, semantic search, paraphrase mining, text classification, clustering, and more.
## Model Details
### Model Description
- **Model Type:** Sentence Transformer
- **Base model:** [Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m](https://huggingface.co/Snowflake/snowflake-arctic-embed-m) <!-- at revision fc74610d18462d218e312aa986ec5c8a75a98152 -->
- **Maximum Sequence Length:** 512 tokens
- **Output Dimensionality:** 768 dimensions
- **Similarity Function:** Cosine Similarity
<!-- - **Training Dataset:** Unknown -->
<!-- - **Language:** Unknown -->
<!-- - **License:** Unknown -->
### Model Sources
- **Documentation:** [Sentence Transformers Documentation](https://sbert.net)
- **Repository:** [Sentence Transformers on GitHub](https://github.com/UKPLab/sentence-transformers)
- **Hugging Face:** [Sentence Transformers on Hugging Face](https://huggingface.co/models?library=sentence-transformers)
### Full Model Architecture
```
SentenceTransformer(
(0): Transformer({'max_seq_length': 512, 'do_lower_case': False}) with Transformer model: BertModel
(1): Pooling({'word_embedding_dimension': 768, 'pooling_mode_cls_token': True, 'pooling_mode_mean_tokens': False, '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()
)
```
## Usage
### Direct Usage (Sentence Transformers)
First install the Sentence Transformers library:
```bash
pip install -U sentence-transformers
```
Then you can load this model and run inference.
```python
from sentence_transformers import SentenceTransformer
# Download from the 🤗 Hub
model = SentenceTransformer("llm-wizard/legal-ft-v0-midterm")
# Run inference
sentences = [
'How does the review of 2024 compare to the review of 2023 regarding advancements in LLMs?',
'Things we learned about LLMs in 2024\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nSimon Willison’s Weblog\nSubscribe\n\n\n\n\n\n\nThings we learned about LLMs in 2024\n31st December 2024\nA lot has happened in the world of Large Language Models over the course of 2024. Here’s a review of things we figured out about the field in the past twelve months, plus my attempt at identifying key themes and pivotal moments.\nThis is a sequel to my review of 2023.\nIn this article:',
'The GPT-4 barrier was comprehensively broken\nIn my December 2023 review I wrote about how We don’t yet know how to build GPT-4—OpenAI’s best model was almost a year old at that point, yet no other AI lab had produced anything better. What did OpenAI know that the rest of us didn’t?\nI’m relieved that this has changed completely in the past twelve months. 18 organizations now have models on the Chatbot Arena Leaderboard that rank higher than the original GPT-4 from March 2023 (GPT-4-0314 on the board)—70 models in total.',
]
embeddings = model.encode(sentences)
print(embeddings.shape)
# [3, 768]
# Get the similarity scores for the embeddings
similarities = model.similarity(embeddings, embeddings)
print(similarities.shape)
# [3, 3]
```
<!--
### Direct Usage (Transformers)
<details><summary>Click to see the direct usage in Transformers</summary>
</details>
-->
<!--
### Downstream Usage (Sentence Transformers)
You can finetune this model on your own dataset.
<details><summary>Click to expand</summary>
</details>
-->
<!--
### Out-of-Scope Use
*List how the model may foreseeably be misused and address what users ought not to do with the model.*
-->
## Evaluation
### Metrics
#### Information Retrieval
* Evaluated with [<code>InformationRetrievalEvaluator</code>](https://sbert.net/docs/package_reference/sentence_transformer/evaluation.html#sentence_transformers.evaluation.InformationRetrievalEvaluator)
| Metric | Value |
|:--------------------|:-----------|
| cosine_accuracy@1 | 0.9583 |
| cosine_accuracy@3 | 1.0 |
| cosine_accuracy@5 | 1.0 |
| cosine_accuracy@10 | 1.0 |
| cosine_precision@1 | 0.9583 |
| cosine_precision@3 | 0.3333 |
| cosine_precision@5 | 0.2 |
| cosine_precision@10 | 0.1 |
| cosine_recall@1 | 0.9583 |
| cosine_recall@3 | 1.0 |
| cosine_recall@5 | 1.0 |
| cosine_recall@10 | 1.0 |
| **cosine_ndcg@10** | **0.9846** |
| cosine_mrr@10 | 0.9792 |
| cosine_map@100 | 0.9792 |
<!--
## Bias, Risks and Limitations
*What are the known or foreseeable issues stemming from this model? You could also flag here known failure cases or weaknesses of the model.*
-->
<!--
### Recommendations
*What are recommendations with respect to the foreseeable issues? For example, filtering explicit content.*
-->
## Training Details
### Training Dataset
#### Unnamed Dataset
* Size: 156 training samples
* Columns: <code>sentence_0</code> and <code>sentence_1</code>
* Approximate statistics based on the first 156 samples:
| | sentence_0 | sentence_1 |
|:--------|:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------|:-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| type | string | string |
| details | <ul><li>min: 12 tokens</li><li>mean: 20.25 tokens</li><li>max: 31 tokens</li></ul> | <ul><li>min: 43 tokens</li><li>mean: 135.18 tokens</li><li>max: 214 tokens</li></ul> |
* Samples:
| sentence_0 | sentence_1 |
|:-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|:--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| <code>What topics were covered in the annotated presentations given in 2023?</code> | <code>I also gave a bunch of talks and podcast appearances. I’ve started habitually turning my talks into annotated presentations—here are my best from 2023:<br><br>Prompt injection explained, with video, slides, and a transcript<br>Catching up on the weird world of LLMs<br>Making Large Language Models work for you<br>Open questions for AI engineering<br>Embeddings: What they are and why they matter<br>Financial sustainability for open source projects at GitHub Universe<br><br>And in podcasts:<br><br><br>What AI can do for you on the Theory of Change<br><br>Working in public on Path to Citus Con<br><br>LLMs break the internet on the Changelog<br><br>Talking Large Language Models on Rooftop Ruby<br><br>Thoughts on the OpenAI board situation on Newsroom Robots</code> |
| <code>Which podcasts featured discussions about Large Language Models?</code> | <code>I also gave a bunch of talks and podcast appearances. I’ve started habitually turning my talks into annotated presentations—here are my best from 2023:<br><br>Prompt injection explained, with video, slides, and a transcript<br>Catching up on the weird world of LLMs<br>Making Large Language Models work for you<br>Open questions for AI engineering<br>Embeddings: What they are and why they matter<br>Financial sustainability for open source projects at GitHub Universe<br><br>And in podcasts:<br><br><br>What AI can do for you on the Theory of Change<br><br>Working in public on Path to Citus Con<br><br>LLMs break the internet on the Changelog<br><br>Talking Large Language Models on Rooftop Ruby<br><br>Thoughts on the OpenAI board situation on Newsroom Robots</code> |
| <code>What capabilities does Google’s Gemini have regarding audio input and output?</code> | <code>Your browser does not support the audio element.<br><br>OpenAI aren’t the only group with a multi-modal audio model. Google’s Gemini also accepts audio input, and the Google Gemini apps can speak in a similar way to ChatGPT now. Amazon also pre-announced voice mode for Amazon Nova, but that’s meant to roll out in Q1 of 2025.<br>Google’s NotebookLM, released in September, took audio output to a new level by producing spookily realistic conversations between two “podcast hosts” about anything you fed into their tool. They later added custom instructions, so naturally I turned them into pelicans:<br><br><br>Your browser does not support the audio element.</code> |
* Loss: [<code>MatryoshkaLoss</code>](https://sbert.net/docs/package_reference/sentence_transformer/losses.html#matryoshkaloss) with these parameters:
```json
{
"loss": "MultipleNegativesRankingLoss",
"matryoshka_dims": [
768,
512,
256,
128,
64
],
"matryoshka_weights": [
1,
1,
1,
1,
1
],
"n_dims_per_step": -1
}
```
### Training Hyperparameters
#### Non-Default Hyperparameters
- `eval_strategy`: steps
- `per_device_train_batch_size`: 10
- `per_device_eval_batch_size`: 10
- `num_train_epochs`: 10
- `multi_dataset_batch_sampler`: round_robin
#### All Hyperparameters
<details><summary>Click to expand</summary>
- `overwrite_output_dir`: False
- `do_predict`: False
- `eval_strategy`: steps
- `prediction_loss_only`: True
- `per_device_train_batch_size`: 10
- `per_device_eval_batch_size`: 10
- `per_gpu_train_batch_size`: None
- `per_gpu_eval_batch_size`: None
- `gradient_accumulation_steps`: 1
- `eval_accumulation_steps`: None
- `torch_empty_cache_steps`: None
- `learning_rate`: 5e-05
- `weight_decay`: 0.0
- `adam_beta1`: 0.9
- `adam_beta2`: 0.999
- `adam_epsilon`: 1e-08
- `max_grad_norm`: 1
- `num_train_epochs`: 10
- `max_steps`: -1
- `lr_scheduler_type`: linear
- `lr_scheduler_kwargs`: {}
- `warmup_ratio`: 0.0
- `warmup_steps`: 0
- `log_level`: passive
- `log_level_replica`: warning
- `log_on_each_node`: True
- `logging_nan_inf_filter`: True
- `save_safetensors`: True
- `save_on_each_node`: False
- `save_only_model`: False
- `restore_callback_states_from_checkpoint`: False
- `no_cuda`: False
- `use_cpu`: False
- `use_mps_device`: False
- `seed`: 42
- `data_seed`: None
- `jit_mode_eval`: False
- `use_ipex`: False
- `bf16`: False
- `fp16`: False
- `fp16_opt_level`: O1
- `half_precision_backend`: auto
- `bf16_full_eval`: False
- `fp16_full_eval`: False
- `tf32`: None
- `local_rank`: 0
- `ddp_backend`: None
- `tpu_num_cores`: None
- `tpu_metrics_debug`: False
- `debug`: []
- `dataloader_drop_last`: False
- `dataloader_num_workers`: 0
- `dataloader_prefetch_factor`: None
- `past_index`: -1
- `disable_tqdm`: False
- `remove_unused_columns`: True
- `label_names`: None
- `load_best_model_at_end`: False
- `ignore_data_skip`: False
- `fsdp`: []
- `fsdp_min_num_params`: 0
- `fsdp_config`: {'min_num_params': 0, 'xla': False, 'xla_fsdp_v2': False, 'xla_fsdp_grad_ckpt': False}
- `fsdp_transformer_layer_cls_to_wrap`: None
- `accelerator_config`: {'split_batches': False, 'dispatch_batches': None, 'even_batches': True, 'use_seedable_sampler': True, 'non_blocking': False, 'gradient_accumulation_kwargs': None}
- `deepspeed`: None
- `label_smoothing_factor`: 0.0
- `optim`: adamw_torch
- `optim_args`: None
- `adafactor`: False
- `group_by_length`: False
- `length_column_name`: length
- `ddp_find_unused_parameters`: None
- `ddp_bucket_cap_mb`: None
- `ddp_broadcast_buffers`: False
- `dataloader_pin_memory`: True
- `dataloader_persistent_workers`: False
- `skip_memory_metrics`: True
- `use_legacy_prediction_loop`: False
- `push_to_hub`: False
- `resume_from_checkpoint`: None
- `hub_model_id`: None
- `hub_strategy`: every_save
- `hub_private_repo`: None
- `hub_always_push`: False
- `gradient_checkpointing`: False
- `gradient_checkpointing_kwargs`: None
- `include_inputs_for_metrics`: False
- `include_for_metrics`: []
- `eval_do_concat_batches`: True
- `fp16_backend`: auto
- `push_to_hub_model_id`: None
- `push_to_hub_organization`: None
- `mp_parameters`:
- `auto_find_batch_size`: False
- `full_determinism`: False
- `torchdynamo`: None
- `ray_scope`: last
- `ddp_timeout`: 1800
- `torch_compile`: False
- `torch_compile_backend`: None
- `torch_compile_mode`: None
- `dispatch_batches`: None
- `split_batches`: None
- `include_tokens_per_second`: False
- `include_num_input_tokens_seen`: False
- `neftune_noise_alpha`: None
- `optim_target_modules`: None
- `batch_eval_metrics`: False
- `eval_on_start`: False
- `use_liger_kernel`: False
- `eval_use_gather_object`: False
- `average_tokens_across_devices`: False
- `prompts`: None
- `batch_sampler`: batch_sampler
- `multi_dataset_batch_sampler`: round_robin
</details>
### Training Logs
| Epoch | Step | cosine_ndcg@10 |
|:-----:|:----:|:--------------:|
| 1.0 | 16 | 0.8825 |
| 2.0 | 32 | 0.9526 |
| 3.0 | 48 | 0.9609 |
| 3.125 | 50 | 0.9609 |
| 4.0 | 64 | 0.9846 |
| 5.0 | 80 | 0.9846 |
| 6.0 | 96 | 0.9846 |
| 6.25 | 100 | 0.9846 |
| 7.0 | 112 | 0.9846 |
| 8.0 | 128 | 0.9846 |
| 9.0 | 144 | 0.9846 |
| 9.375 | 150 | 0.9846 |
| 10.0 | 160 | 0.9846 |
### Framework Versions
- Python: 3.11.11
- Sentence Transformers: 3.4.1
- Transformers: 4.48.3
- PyTorch: 2.5.1+cu124
- Accelerate: 1.3.0
- Datasets: 3.3.1
- Tokenizers: 0.21.0
## Citation
### BibTeX
#### Sentence Transformers
```bibtex
@inproceedings{reimers-2019-sentence-bert,
title = "Sentence-BERT: Sentence Embeddings using Siamese BERT-Networks",
author = "Reimers, Nils and Gurevych, Iryna",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2019 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing",
month = "11",
year = "2019",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.10084",
}
```
#### MatryoshkaLoss
```bibtex
@misc{kusupati2024matryoshka,
title={Matryoshka Representation Learning},
author={Aditya Kusupati and Gantavya Bhatt and Aniket Rege and Matthew Wallingford and Aditya Sinha and Vivek Ramanujan and William Howard-Snyder and Kaifeng Chen and Sham Kakade and Prateek Jain and Ali Farhadi},
year={2024},
eprint={2205.13147},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.LG}
}
```
#### MultipleNegativesRankingLoss
```bibtex
@misc{henderson2017efficient,
title={Efficient Natural Language Response Suggestion for Smart Reply},
author={Matthew Henderson and Rami Al-Rfou and Brian Strope and Yun-hsuan Sung and Laszlo Lukacs and Ruiqi Guo and Sanjiv Kumar and Balint Miklos and Ray Kurzweil},
year={2017},
eprint={1705.00652},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL}
}
```
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