A Comparative Study of Pre-trained Encoders for Low-Resource Named Entity Recognition

Abstract

Pre-trained language models (PLM) are effective components of few-shot named entity recognition (NER) approaches when augmented with continued pre-training on task-specific out-of-domain data or fine-tuning on in-domain data. However, their performance in low-resource scenarios, where such data is not available, remains an open question. We introduce an encoder evaluation framework, and use it to systematically compare the performance of state-of-the-art pre-trained representations on the task of low-resource NER. We analyze a wide range of encoders pre-trained with different strategies, model architectures, intermediate-task fine-tuning, and contrastive learning. Our experimental results across ten benchmark NER datasets in English and German show that encoder performance varies significantly, suggesting that the choice of encoder for a specific low-resource scenario needs to be carefully evaluated.

Publication
Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on Representation Learning for NLP
Yuxuan Chen
Yuxuan Chen
PhD Candidate
Arne Binder
Arne Binder
PhD Candidate
Leonhard Hennig
Leonhard Hennig
Senior Researcher