--- title: WikiSplit emoji: 🤗 colorFrom: blue colorTo: red sdk: gradio sdk_version: 3.0.2 app_file: app.py pinned: false tags: - evaluate - metric --- # Metric Card for WikiSplit ## Metric description WikiSplit is the combination of three metrics: [SARI](https://huggingface.co/metrics/sari), [exact match](https://huggingface.co/metrics/exact_match) and [SacreBLEU](https://huggingface.co/metrics/sacrebleu). It can be used to evaluate the quality of sentence splitting approaches, which require rewriting a long sentence into two or more coherent short sentences, e.g. based on the [WikiSplit dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/wiki_split). ## How to use The WIKI_SPLIT metric takes three inputs: `sources`: a list of source sentences, where each sentence should be a string. `predictions`: a list of predicted sentences, where each sentence should be a string. `references`: a list of lists of reference sentences, where each sentence should be a string. ```python >>> wiki_split = evaluate.load("wiki_split") >>> sources = ["About 95 species are currently accepted ."] >>> predictions = ["About 95 you now get in ."] >>> references= [["About 95 species are currently known ."]] >>> results = wiki_split.compute(sources=sources, predictions=predictions, references=references) ``` ## Output values This metric outputs a dictionary containing three scores: `sari`: the [SARI](https://huggingface.co/metrics/sari) score, whose range is between `0.0` and `100.0` -- the higher the value, the better the performance of the model being evaluated, with a SARI of 100 being a perfect score. `sacrebleu`: the [SacreBLEU](https://huggingface.co/metrics/sacrebleu) score, which can take any value between `0.0` and `100.0`, inclusive. `exact`: the [exact match](https://huggingface.co/metrics/exact_match) score, which represents the sum of all of the individual exact match scores in the set, divided by the total number of predictions in the set. It ranges from `0.0` to `100`, inclusive. Here, `0.0` means no prediction/reference pairs were matches, while `100.0` means they all were. ```python >>> print(results) {'sari': 21.805555555555557, 'sacrebleu': 14.535768424205482, 'exact': 0.0} ``` ### Values from popular papers This metric was initially used by [Rothe et al.(2020)](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1907.12461.pdf) to evaluate the performance of different split-and-rephrase approaches on the [WikiSplit dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/wiki_split). They reported a SARI score of 63.5, a SacreBLEU score of 77.2, and an EXACT_MATCH score of 16.3. ## Examples Perfect match between prediction and reference: ```python >>> wiki_split = evaluate.load("wiki_split") >>> sources = ["About 95 species are currently accepted ."] >>> predictions = ["About 95 species are currently accepted ."] >>> references= [["About 95 species are currently accepted ."]] >>> results = wiki_split.compute(sources=sources, predictions=predictions, references=references) >>> print(results) {'sari': 100.0, 'sacrebleu': 100.00000000000004, 'exact': 100.0 ``` Partial match between prediction and reference: ```python >>> wiki_split = evaluate.load("wiki_split") >>> sources = ["About 95 species are currently accepted ."] >>> predictions = ["About 95 you now get in ."] >>> references= [["About 95 species are currently known ."]] >>> results = wiki_split.compute(sources=sources, predictions=predictions, references=references) >>> print(results) {'sari': 21.805555555555557, 'sacrebleu': 14.535768424205482, 'exact': 0.0} ``` No match between prediction and reference: ```python >>> wiki_split = evaluate.load("wiki_split") >>> sources = ["About 95 species are currently accepted ."] >>> predictions = ["Hello world ."] >>> references= [["About 95 species are currently known ."]] >>> results = wiki_split.compute(sources=sources, predictions=predictions, references=references) >>> print(results) {'sari': 14.047619047619046, 'sacrebleu': 0.0, 'exact': 0.0} ``` ## Limitations and bias This metric is not the official metric to evaluate models on the [WikiSplit dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/wiki_split). It was initially proposed by [Rothe et al.(2020)](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1907.12461.pdf), whereas the [original paper introducing the WikiSplit dataset (2018)](https://aclanthology.org/D18-1080.pdf) uses different metrics to evaluate performance, such as corpus-level [BLEU](https://huggingface.co/metrics/bleu) and sentence-level BLEU. ## Citation ```bibtex @article{rothe2020leveraging, title={Leveraging pre-trained checkpoints for sequence generation tasks}, author={Rothe, Sascha and Narayan, Shashi and Severyn, Aliaksei}, journal={Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, volume={8}, pages={264--280}, year={2020}, publisher={MIT Press} } ``` ## Further References - [WikiSplit dataset](https://huggingface.co/datasets/wiki_split) - [WikiSplit paper (Botha et al., 2018)](https://aclanthology.org/D18-1080.pdf)