extremo

Referencias:

XNLI

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XNLI')
  • Descripción :
The Cross-lingual Natural Language Inference (XNLI) corpus is a crowd-sourced collection of 5,000 test and
2,500 dev pairs for the MultiNLI corpus. The pairs are annotated with textual entailment and translated into
14 languages: French, Spanish, German, Greek, Bulgarian, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese,
Hindi, Swahili and Urdu. This results in 112.5k annotated pairs. Each premise can be associated with the
corresponding hypothesis in the 15 languages, summing up to more than 1.5M combinations. The corpus is made to
evaluate how to perform inference in any language (including low-resources ones like Swahili or Urdu) when only
English NLI data is available at training time. One solution is cross-lingual sentence encoding, for which XNLI
is an evaluation benchmark.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 75150
'validation' 37350
  • Características :
{
    "language": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "gold_label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tidiqa

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tydiqa')
  • Descripción :
Gold passage task (GoldP): Given a passage that is guaranteed to contain the
             answer, predict the single contiguous span of characters that answers the question. This is more similar to
             existing reading comprehension datasets (as opposed to the information-seeking task outlined above).
             This task is constructed with two goals in mind: (1) more directly comparing with prior work and (2) providing
             a simplified way for researchers to use TyDi QA by providing compatibility with existing code for SQuAD 1.1,
             XQuAD, and MLQA. Toward these goals, the gold passage task differs from the primary task in several ways:
             only the gold answer passage is provided rather than the entire Wikipedia article;
             unanswerable questions have been discarded, similar to MLQA and XQuAD;
             we evaluate with the SQuAD 1.1 metrics like XQuAD; and
            Thai and Japanese are removed since the lack of whitespace breaks some tools.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'train' 49881
'validation' 5077
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

Equipo

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/SQuAD')
  • Descripción :
Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) is a reading comprehension     dataset, consisting of questions posed by crowdworkers on a set of Wikipedia     articles, where the answer to every question is a segment of text, or span,     from the corresponding reading passage, or the question might be unanswerable.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'train' 87599
'validation' 10570
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.af

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.af')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 5000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ar')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.bg

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.bg')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.bn

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.bn')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 10000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.de')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.el

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.el')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.en')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.es')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.et

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.et')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 15000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.eu

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.eu')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 10000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.fa

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.fa')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.fi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.fi')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.fr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.fr')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.he

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.he')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.hi')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 5000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.hu

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.hu')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.id

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.id')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.it

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.it')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ja

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ja')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.jv

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.jv')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 100
'train' 100
'validation' 100
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ka

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ka')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 10000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.kk

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.kk')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 1000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ko

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ko')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ml

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ml')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 10000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.mr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.mr')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 5000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ms

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ms')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 20000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.mi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.my')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 100
'train' 100
'validation' 100
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.nl

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.nl')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.pt

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.pt')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ru

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ru')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.sw

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.sw')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 1000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ta

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ta')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 15000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.te

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.te')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 1000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.th

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.th')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.tl

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.tl')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 10000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.tr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.tr')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.ur

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.ur')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
'train' 20000
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.vi')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.yo

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.yo')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 100
'train' 100
'validation' 100
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

PAN-X.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAN-X.zh')
  • Descripción :
The WikiANN dataset (Pan et al. 2017) is a dataset with NER annotations for PER, ORG and LOC. It has been
constructed using the linked entities in Wikipedia pages for 282 different languages including Danish. The dataset
can be loaded with the DaNLP package:
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 10000
'train' 20000
'validation' 10000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "ner_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 7,
            "names": [
                "O",
                "B-PER",
                "I-PER",
                "B-ORG",
                "I-ORG",
                "B-LOC",
                "I-LOC"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "langs": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5335
'validation' 517
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1649
'validation' 207
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2047
'validation' 163
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1912
'validation' 188
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5335
'validation' 517
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1978
'validation' 161
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.ar.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.ar.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1831
'validation' 186
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1649
'validation' 207
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4517
'validation' 512
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1675
'validation' 182
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1621
'validation' 190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.en

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4517
'validation' 512
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1776
'validation' 196
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.de.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.de.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1430
'validation' 163
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2047
'validation' 163
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1675
'validation' 182
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5495
'validation' 511
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1943
'validation' 184
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5495
'validation' 511
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2018
'validation' 189
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.vi.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.vi.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1947
'validation' 177
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1912
'validation' 188
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1621
'validation' 190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1943
'validation' 184
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5137
'validation' 504
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.en

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5137
'validation' 504
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1947
'validation' 161
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.zh.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.zh.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1767
'validation' 189
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.en.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5335
'validation' 517
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.en.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4517
'validation' 512
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.en.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5495
'validation' 511
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.en.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5137
'validation' 504
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 11590
'validation' 1148
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.en.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5253
'validation' 500
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.en.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.en.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4918
'validation' 507
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1978
'validation' 161
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1776
'validation' 196
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2018
'validation' 189
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1947
'validation' 161
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5253
'validation' 500
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5253
'validation' 500
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.es.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.es.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1723
'validation' 187
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.ar')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1831
'validation' 186
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.de')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1430
'validation' 163
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.vi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1947
'validation' 177
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.zh')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1767
'validation' 189
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.en')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4918
'validation' 507
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.es')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1723
'validation' 187
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

MLQA.hi.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/MLQA.hi.hi')
  • Descripción :
MLQA (MultiLingual Question Answering) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question answering performance.
MLQA consists of over 5K extractive QA instances (12K in English) in SQuAD format in seven languages - English, Arabic,
German, Spanish, Hindi, Vietnamese and Simplified Chinese. MLQA is highly parallel, with QA instances parallel between
4 different languages on average.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4918
'validation' 507
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "title": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.ar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.ar')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.de')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.vi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.vi')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.zh')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.en')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.es')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.hi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.hi')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.el

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.el')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.ru

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.ru')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.th

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.th')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

XQuAD.tr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/XQuAD.tr')
  • Descripción :
XQuAD (Cross-lingual Question Answering Dataset) is a benchmark dataset for evaluating cross-lingual question
answering performance. The dataset consists of a subset of 240 paragraphs and 1190 question-answer pairs from
the development set of SQuAD v1.1 (Rajpurkar et al., 2016) together with their professional translations into
ten languages: Spanish, German, Greek, Russian, Turkish, Arabic, Vietnamese, Thai, Chinese, and Hindi. Consequently,
the dataset is entirely parallel across 11 languages.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1190
  • Características :
{
    "id": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "context": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "question": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "answers": {
        "feature": {
            "answer_start": {
                "dtype": "int32",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            },
            "text": {
                "dtype": "string",
                "id": null,
                "_type": "Value"
            }
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

bucc18.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/bucc18.de')
  • Descripción :
Building and Using Comparable Corpora

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 9580
'validation' 1038
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

bucc18.fr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/bucc18.fr')
  • Descripción :
Building and Using Comparable Corpora

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 9086
'validation' 929
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

bucc18.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/bucc18.zh')
  • Descripción :
Building and Using Comparable Corpora

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1899
'validation' 257
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

bucc18.ru

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/bucc18.ru')
  • Descripción :
Building and Using Comparable Corpora

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 14435
'validation' 2374
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PAWS-X.de

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.de')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2000
'train' 49380
'validation' 2000
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PAWS-X.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.en')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2000
'train' 49175
'validation' 2000
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PAWS-X.es

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.es')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2000
'train' 49401
'validation' 1961
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PAWS-X.fr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.fr')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2000
'train' 49399
'validation' 1988
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PAWS-X.ja

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.ja')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2000
'train' 49401
'validation' 2000
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PAWS-X.ko

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.ko')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1999
'train' 49164
'validation' 2000
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

PATAS-X.zh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/PAWS-X.zh')
  • Descripción :
This dataset contains 23,659 human translated PAWS evaluation pairs and 296,406 machine translated training
pairs in six typologically distinct languages: French, Spanish, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean. All
translated pairs are sourced from examples in PAWS-Wiki.
The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2000
'train' 49401
'validation' 2000
  • Características :
{
    "sentence1": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "sentence2": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "label": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.afr

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.afr')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.ara

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.ara')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.ben

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.ben')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.bul

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.bul')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.deu

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.deu')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.cmn

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.cmn')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.ell

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.ell')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.est

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.est')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.eus

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.eus')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.fin

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.fin')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.fra

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.fra')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.heb

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.heb')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.hin

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.hin')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.hun

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.hun')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.ind

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.ind')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.ita

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.ita')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.jav

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.jav')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 205
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.jpn

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.jpn')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.kat

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.kat')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 746
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.kaz

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.kaz')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 575
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.kor

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.kor')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.mal

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.mal')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 687
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.mar

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.mar')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.nld

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.nld')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.pes

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.pes')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.por

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.por')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.rus

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.rus')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.spa

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.spa')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.swh

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.swh')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 390
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.tam

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.tam')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 307
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.tel

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.tel')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 234
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.tgl

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.tgl')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.tha

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.tha')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 548
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.tur

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.tur')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.urd

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.urd')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

tatoeba.vie

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/tatoeba.vie')
  • Descripción :
his data is extracted from the Tatoeba corpus, dated Saturday 2018/11/17.
For each languages, we have selected 1000 English sentences and their translations, if available. Please check
this paper for a description of the languages, their families and scripts as well as baseline results.
Please note that the English sentences are not identical for all language pairs. This means that the results are
not directly comparable across languages. In particular, the sentences tend to have less variety for several
low-resource languages, e.g. "Tom needed water", "Tom needs water", "Tom is getting water", ...

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'validation' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "source_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_sentence": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "source_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    },
    "target_lang": {
        "dtype": "string",
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Value"
    }
}

udpos.Afrikaans

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Afrikaans')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 425
'train' 1315
'validation' 194
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.árabe

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Arabic')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1680
'train' 6075
'validation' 909
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.euskera

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Basque')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1799
'train' 5396
'validation' 1798
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.búlgaro

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Bulgarian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1116
'train' 8907
'validation' 1115
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.holandés

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Dutch')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1471
'train' 18051
'validation' 1394
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Inglés

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.English')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5440
'train' 21253
'validation' 3974
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Estonio

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Estonian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 3760
'train' 25749
'validation' 3125
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.finlandés

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Finnish')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4422
'train' 27198
'validation' 3239
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Francés

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.French')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 9465
'train' 47308
'validation' 5979
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.alemán

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.German')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 22458
'train' 166849
'validation' 19233
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.griego

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Greek')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2809
'train' 28152
'validation' 2559
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.hebreo

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Hebrew')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 491
'train' 5241
'validation' 484
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Hindi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Hindi')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2684
'train' 13304
'validation' 1659
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.húngaro

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Hungarian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 449
'train' 910
'validation' 441
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Indonesio

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Indonesian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1557
'train' 4477
'validation' 559
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Italiano

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Italian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 3518
'train' 29685
'validation' 2278
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Japonés

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Japanese')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2372
'train' 7125
'validation' 511
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.kazajo

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Kazakh')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1047
'train' 31
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.coreano

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Korean')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4276
'train' 27410
'validation' 3016
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.chino

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Chinese')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 5528
'train' 18998
'validation' 3038
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Marathi

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Marathi')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 47
'train' 373
'validation' 46
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.persa

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Persian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 600
'train' 4798
'validation' 599
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Portugués

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Portuguese')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 2681
'train' 17992
'validation' 1770
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.ruso

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Russian')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 11336
'train' 67435
'validation' 9960
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Español

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Spanish')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 3147
'train' 28492
'validation' 3054
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.tagalo

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Tagalog')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 55
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Tamil

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Tamil')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 120
'train' 400
'validation' 80
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Telugu

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Telugu')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 146
'train' 1051
'validation' 131
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Tailandés

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Thai')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 1000
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.turco

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Turkish')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 4785
'train' 3664
'validation' 988
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Urdu

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Urdu')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 535
'train' 4043
'validation' 552
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.vietnamita

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Vietnamese')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 800
'train' 1400
'validation' 800
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}

udpos.Yoruba

Utilice el siguiente comando para cargar este conjunto de datos en TFDS:

ds = tfds.load('huggingface:xtreme/udpos.Yoruba')
  • Descripción :
Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for consistent annotation of grammar (parts of speech, morphological
features, and syntactic dependencies) across different human languages. UD is an open community effort with over 200
contributors producing more than 100 treebanks in over 70 languages. If you’re new to UD, you should start by reading
the first part of the Short Introduction and then browsing the annotation guidelines.

The Cross-lingual TRansfer Evaluation of Multilingual Encoders (XTREME) benchmark is a benchmark for the evaluation of
the cross-lingual generalization ability of pre-trained multilingual models. It covers 40 typologically diverse languages
(spanning 12 language families) and includes nine tasks that collectively require reasoning about different levels of
syntax and semantics. The languages in XTREME are selected to maximize language diversity, coverage in existing tasks,
and availability of training data. Among these are many under-studied languages, such as the Dravidian languages Tamil
(spoken in southern India, Sri Lanka, and Singapore), Telugu and Malayalam (spoken mainly in southern India), and the
Niger-Congo languages Swahili and Yoruba, spoken in Africa.
  • Licencia : Sin licencia conocida
  • Versión : 1.0.0
  • Divisiones :
Separar Ejemplos
'test' 100
  • Características :
{
    "tokens": {
        "feature": {
            "dtype": "string",
            "id": null,
            "_type": "Value"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    },
    "pos_tags": {
        "feature": {
            "num_classes": 17,
            "names": [
                "ADJ",
                "ADP",
                "ADV",
                "AUX",
                "CCONJ",
                "DET",
                "INTJ",
                "NOUN",
                "NUM",
                "PART",
                "PRON",
                "PROPN",
                "PUNCT",
                "SCONJ",
                "SYM",
                "VERB",
                "X"
            ],
            "names_file": null,
            "id": null,
            "_type": "ClassLabel"
        },
        "length": -1,
        "id": null,
        "_type": "Sequence"
    }
}