My tensorflow implementation of "A neural conversational model", a Deep learning based chatbot

Overview

Deep Q&A

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/chatbot-pilots/DeepQA

Table of Contents

Presentation

This work tries to reproduce the results of A Neural Conversational Model (aka the Google chatbot). It uses a RNN (seq2seq model) for sentence predictions. It is done using python and TensorFlow.

The loading corpus part of the program is inspired by the Torch neuralconvo from macournoyer.

For now, DeepQA support the following dialog corpus:

To speedup the training, it's also possible to use pre-trained word embeddings (thanks to Eschnou). More info here.

Installation

The program requires the following dependencies (easy to install using pip: pip3 install -r requirements.txt):

  • python 3.5
  • tensorflow (tested with v1.0)
  • numpy
  • CUDA (for using GPU)
  • nltk (natural language toolkit for tokenized the sentences)
  • tqdm (for the nice progression bars)

You might also need to download additional data to make nltk work.

python3 -m nltk.downloader punkt

The Cornell dataset is already included. For the other datasets, look at the readme files into their respective folders (inside data/).

The web interface requires some additional packages:

  • django (tested with 1.10)
  • channels
  • Redis (see here)
  • asgi_redis (at least 1.0)

A Docker installation is also available. More detailed instructions here.

Running

Chatbot

To train the model, simply run main.py. Once trained, you can test the results with main.py --test (results generated in 'save/model/samples_predictions.txt') or main.py --test interactive (more fun).

Here are some flags which could be useful. For more help and options, use python main.py -h:

  • --modelTag <name>: allow to give a name to the current model to differentiate between them when testing/training.
  • --keepAll: use this flag when training if when testing, you want to see the predictions at different steps (it can be interesting to see the program changes its name and age as the training progress). Warning: It can quickly take a lot of storage space if you don't increase the --saveEvery option.
  • --filterVocab 20 or --vocabularySize 30000: Limit the vocabulary size to and optimize the performances and memory usage. Replace the words used less than 20 times by the <unknown> token and set a maximum vocabulary size.
  • --verbose: when testing, will print the sentences as they are computed.
  • --playDataset: show some dialogue samples from the dataset (can be use conjointly with --createDataset if this is the only action you want to perform).

To visualize the computational graph and the cost with TensorBoard, just run tensorboard --logdir save/.

By default, the network architecture is a standard encoder/decoder with two LSTM layers (hidden size of 256) and an embedding size for the vocabulary of 32. The network is trained using ADAM. The maximum sentence length is set to 10 words, but can be increased.

Web interface

Once trained, it's possible to chat with it using a more user friendly interface. The server will look at the model copied to save/model-server/model.ckpt. The first time you want to use it, you'll need to configure it with:

export CHATBOT_SECRET_KEY="my-secret-key"
cd chatbot_website/
python manage.py makemigrations
python manage.py migrate

Then, to launch the server locally, use the following commands:

cd chatbot_website/
redis-server &  # Launch Redis in background
python manage.py runserver

After launch, the interface should be available on http://localhost:8000/. If you want to deploy the program on a server, use python manage.py runserver 0.0.0.0 instead. More info here.

Chatbot web interface

Results

Surprisingly, it's possible to get some results after only 1 or 2 hours of training (on a GeForce GT 740M), by drastically reducing the input sequence to 5 words and output to 3 (plus the go and eos tokens) and by using a small embedding size (something like 25). Since then I modified the code and now the output length has to match the input one but you can still reproduce the original results, using this version. Of course, the network won't be really chatty:

Q: Hi
A: Hi.

Q: What is your name ?
A: Laura.

Q: What does that mean ?
A: I dunno.

Q: How old are you ?
A: thirty-five.

Q: Will Google hire me ?
A: No.

Q: Tell me the alphabet
A: Fuck you.

Q: That's not nice
A: Yeah.

Here is some case where it fails:

Q: Who is Laura ?
A: My brother.

Q: Say 'goodbye'
A: Alright.

Q: What is cooking ?
A: A channel.

Q: Can you say no ?
A: No.

Q: Two plus two
A: Manny...

With longer sentences, the network is much slower to train. After 250000 iterations with maxLength=10, the network still mainly gives evasive answers (by answering most of the open ended questions by 'I don't know') but it seems to have integrated some basic semantic:

Q: When are the fireworks ?
A: Tomorrow.

Q: What color ?
A: Gray.

Q: Which apple ?
A: That's the first one.

Q: What time is it ?
A: Eleven o'clock.

Q: Who is Skywalker ?
A: She's a freelance bio-exorcist.

Q: Who is John ?
A: The old man.

Q: Who is Jenny ?
A: The man who killed herself.

Q: When were you born ?
A: Soon.

As shown on the last questions, the network still does some confusion between the genders and the present/future. I also tried some deeper philosophical questions with more or less success.

Q: What is the purpose of being intelligent ?
A: The man are obsolete.

Q: What is immoral ?
A: The truth.

Q: What is morality ?
A: The worst.

Q: What is the purpose of existence ?
A: It 's private.

Q: What happens if machines can think ?
A: I think I'll just lie with you.

The model I trained is quite limited by the embedding size I put and by its size, and by the training corpus size. Its 'thought vector' is also probably too small to answer the kind of following:

Q: My name is David. What is my name ?
A: Debbie.

Q: My name is John. What is my name ?
A: Carl Smith.

Q: How many legs does a cat have ?
A: Four.

Q: How many legs does a spider have ?
A: Four.

Q: Do you prefer football or soccer ?
A: Whiskey.

It also seems to overfit as sometimes it will just pop out sentences from its training set unrelated to the question. Adding some dropout should reduce the issue.

Q: I play tennis. What do I play ?
A: I'm going to get laid.

Q: What color is the sky ?
A: One of the deputies is everywhere.

Pretrained model

You can find a pre-trained model here, trained of the default corpus. To use it:

  1. Extract the zip file inside DeepQA/save/
  2. Copy the preprocessed dataset from save/model-pretrainedv2/dataset-cornell-old-lenght10-filter0-vocabSize0.pkl to data/samples/.
  3. Run ./main.py --modelTag pretrainedv2 --test interactive.

Thanks to Nicholas C., here (original) are some additional pre-trained models (compatible with TF 1.2) for diverse datasets. The folder also contains the pre-processed dataset for Cornell, OpenSubtitles, Ubuntu and Scotus (to move inside data/samples/). Those are required is you don't want to process the datasets yourself.

If you have a high-end GPU, don't hesitate to play with the hyper-parameters/corpus to train a better model. From my experiments, it seems that the learning rate and dropout rate have the most impact on the results. Also if you want to share your models, don't hesitate to contact me and I'll add it here.

Improvements

In addition to trying larger/deeper model, there are a lot of small improvements which could be tested. Don't hesitate to send a pull request if you implement one of those. Here are some ideas:

  • For now, the predictions are deterministic (the network just take the most likely output) so when answering a question, the network will always gives the same answer. By adding a sampling mechanism, the network could give more diverse (and maybe more interesting) answers. The easiest way to do that is to sample the next predicted word from the SoftMax probability distribution. By combining that with the loop_function argument of tf.nn.seq2seq.rnn_decoder, it shouldn't be too difficult to add. After that, it should be possible to play with the SoftMax temperature to get more conservative or exotic predictions.
  • Adding attention could potentially improve the predictions, especially for longer sentences. It should be straightforward by replacing embedding_rnn_seq2seq by embedding_attention_seq2seq on model.py.
  • Having more data usually don't hurt. Training on a bigger corpus should be beneficial. Reddit comments dataset seems the biggest for now (and is too big for this program to support it). Another trick to artificially increase the dataset size when creating the corpus could be to split the sentences of each training sample (ex: from the sample Q:Sentence 1. Sentence 2. => A:Sentence X. Sentence Y. we could generate 3 new samples: Q:Sentence 1. Sentence 2. => A:Sentence X., Q:Sentence 2. => A:Sentence X. Sentence Y. and Q:Sentence 2. => A:Sentence X.. Warning: other combinations like Q:Sentence 1. => A:Sentence X. won't work because it would break the transition 2 => X which links the question to the answer)
  • The testing curve should really be monitored as done in my other music generation project. This would greatly help to see the impact of dropout on overfitting. For now it's just done empirically by manually checking the testing prediction at different training steps.
  • For now, the questions are independent from each other. To link questions together, a straightforward way would be to feed all previous questions and answer to the encoder before giving the answer. Some caching could be done on the final encoder stated to avoid recomputing it each time. To improve the accuracy, the network should be retrain on entire dialogues instead of just individual QA. Also when feeding the previous dialogue to the encoder, new tokens <Q> and <A> could be added so the encoder knows when the interlocutor is changing. I'm not sure though that the simple seq2seq model would be sufficient to capture long term dependencies between sentences. Adding a bucket system to group similar input lengths together could greatly improve training speed.
Owner
Conchylicultor
Research Engineer
Conchylicultor
Topic Modelling for Humans

gensim – Topic Modelling in Python Gensim is a Python library for topic modelling, document indexing and similarity retrieval with large corpora. Targ

RARE Technologies 13.8k Jan 03, 2023
A set of simple scripts to process the Imagenet-1K dataset as TFRecords and make index files for NVIDIA DALI.

Overview This is a set of simple scripts to process the Imagenet-1K dataset as TFRecords and make index files for NVIDIA DALI. Make TFRecords To run t

8 Nov 01, 2022
City-seeds - A random generator of cultural characteristics intended to spark ideas and help draw threads

City Seeds This is a random generator of cultural characteristics intended to sp

Aydin O'Leary 2 Mar 12, 2022
Unofficial implementation of Perceiver IO: A General Architecture for Structured Inputs & Outputs

Perceiver IO Unofficial implementation of Perceiver IO: A General Architecture for Structured Inputs & Outputs Usage import torch from src.perceiver.

Timur Ganiev 111 Nov 15, 2022
A library that allows for inference on probabilistic models

Bean Machine Overview Bean Machine is a probabilistic programming language for inference over statistical models written in the Python language using

Meta Research 234 Dec 29, 2022
CVAT is free, online, interactive video and image annotation tool for computer vision

Computer Vision Annotation Tool (CVAT) CVAT is free, online, interactive video and image annotation tool for computer vision. It is being used by our

OpenVINO Toolkit 8.6k Jan 04, 2023
Meta Learning for Semi-Supervised Few-Shot Classification

few-shot-ssl-public Code for paper Meta-Learning for Semi-Supervised Few-Shot Classification. [arxiv] Dependencies cv2 numpy pandas python 2.7 / 3.5+

Mengye Ren 501 Jan 08, 2023
YoloAll is a collection of yolo all versions. you you use YoloAll to test yolov3/yolov5/yolox/yolo_fastest

官方讨论群 QQ群:552703875 微信群:15158106211(先加作者微信,再邀请入群) YoloAll项目简介 YoloAll是一个将当前主流Yolo版本集成到同一个UI界面下的推理预测工具。可以迅速切换不同的yolo版本,并且可以针对图片,视频,摄像头码流进行实时推理,可以很方便,直观

DL-Practise 244 Jan 01, 2023
Semi-supervised semantic segmentation needs strong, varied perturbations

Semi-supervised semantic segmentation using CutMix and Colour Augmentation Implementations of our papers: Semi-supervised semantic segmentation needs

146 Dec 20, 2022
Additional environments compatible with OpenAI gym

Decentralized Control of Quadrotor Swarms with End-to-end Deep Reinforcement Learning A codebase for training reinforcement learning policies for quad

Zhehui Huang 40 Dec 06, 2022
CAST: Character labeling in Animation using Self-supervision by Tracking

CAST: Character labeling in Animation using Self-supervision by Tracking (Published as a conference paper at EuroGraphics 2022) Note: The CAST paper c

15 Nov 18, 2022
Fibonacci Method Gradient Descent

An implementation of the Fibonacci method for gradient descent, featuring a TKinter GUI for inputting the function / parameters to be examined and a matplotlib plot of the function and results.

Emma 1 Jan 28, 2022
Stock-Prediction - prediction of stock market movements using sentiment analysis and deep learning.

Stock-Prediction- In this project, we aim to enhance the prediction of stock market movements using sentiment analysis and deep learning. We divide th

5 Jan 25, 2022
Diverse Branch Block: Building a Convolution as an Inception-like Unit

Diverse Branch Block: Building a Convolution as an Inception-like Unit (PyTorch) (CVPR-2021) DBB is a powerful ConvNet building block to replace regul

253 Dec 24, 2022
Data and analysis code for an MS on SK VOC genomes phenotyping/neutralisation assays

Description Summary of phylogenomic methods and analyses used in "Immunogenicity of convalescent and vaccinated sera against clinical isolates of ance

Finlay Maguire 1 Jan 06, 2022
Distributed Asynchronous Hyperparameter Optimization better than HyperOpt.

UltraOpt : Distributed Asynchronous Hyperparameter Optimization better than HyperOpt. UltraOpt is a simple and efficient library to minimize expensive

98 Aug 16, 2022
CLEAR algorithm for multi-view data association

CLEAR: Consistent Lifting, Embedding, and Alignment Rectification Algorithm The Matlab, Python, and C++ implementation of the CLEAR algorithm, as desc

MIT Aerospace Controls Laboratory 30 Jan 02, 2023
Demo notebooks for Qiskit application modules demo sessions (Oct 8 & 15):

qiskit-application-modules-demo-sessions This repo hosts demo notebooks for the Qiskit application modules demo sessions hosted on Qiskit YouTube. Par

Qiskit Community 46 Nov 24, 2022
Code for "MetaMorph: Learning Universal Controllers with Transformers", Gupta et al, ICLR 2022

MetaMorph: Learning Universal Controllers with Transformers This is the code for the paper MetaMorph: Learning Universal Controllers with Transformers

Agrim Gupta 50 Jan 03, 2023
(Preprint) Official PyTorch implementation of "How Do Vision Transformers Work?"

(Preprint) Official PyTorch implementation of "How Do Vision Transformers Work?"

xxxnell 656 Dec 30, 2022