@inproceedings{yang-etal-2021-universal,
    title = "Universal Sentence Representation Learning with Conditional Masked Language Model",
    author = "Yang, Ziyi  and
      Yang, Yinfei  and
      Cer, Daniel  and
      Law, Jax  and
      Darve, Eric",
    editor = "Moens, Marie-Francine  and
      Huang, Xuanjing  and
      Specia, Lucia  and
      Yih, Scott Wen-tau",
    booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2021 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing",
    month = nov,
    year = "2021",
    address = "Online and Punta Cana, Dominican Republic",
    publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
    url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-emnlp/2021.emnlp-main.502/",
    doi = "10.18653/v1/2021.emnlp-main.502",
    pages = "6216--6228",
    abstract = "This paper presents a novel training method, Conditional Masked Language Modeling (CMLM), to effectively learn sentence representations on large scale unlabeled corpora. CMLM integrates sentence representation learning into MLM training by conditioning on the encoded vectors of adjacent sentences. Our English CMLM model achieves state-of-the-art performance on SentEval, even outperforming models learned using supervised signals. As a fully unsupervised learning method, CMLM can be conveniently extended to a broad range of languages and domains. We find that a multilingual CMLM model co-trained with bitext retrieval (BR) and natural language inference (NLI) tasks outperforms the previous state-of-the-art multilingual models by a large margin, e.g. 10{\%} improvement upon baseline models on cross-lingual semantic search. We explore the same language bias of the learned representations, and propose a simple, post-training and model agnostic approach to remove the language identifying information from the representation while still retaining sentence semantics."
}Markdown (Informal)
[Universal Sentence Representation Learning with Conditional Masked Language Model](https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-emnlp/2021.emnlp-main.502/) (Yang et al., EMNLP 2021)
ACL