Scaling Effects on Zero-Shot Cross-Lingual Robustness in XTREME-R Adversarial Subsets
Description
Intermediate-task training---fine-tuning a pretrained model on an intermediate task before fine-tuning again on the target task---often improves model performance substantially on language understanding tasks in monolingual English settings. We investigate whether English intermediate-task training is still helpful on non-English target tasks. Using nine intermediate language-understanding tasks, we evaluate intermediate-task transfer in a zero-shot cross-lingual setting on the XTREME benchmark. We see large improvements from intermediate training on the BUCC and Tatoeba sentence retrieval tas
Research goal: How does scaling model size (e.g., 1B vs. 10B parameters) affect the robustness of zero-shot cross-lingual transfer on XTREME-R adversarial subsets when trained on English vs. non-English intermediate tasks, measured by accuracy degradation under perturbation?
Autonomous synthesis report generated by Assignee Research. Tribunal consensus score: 9.3/10.
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