TasksSotADatasetsPapersMethodsSubmitAbout
Papers With Code 2

A community resource for machine learning research: papers, code, benchmarks, and state-of-the-art results.

Explore

Notable BenchmarksAll SotADatasetsPapersMethods

Community

Submit ResultsAbout

Data sourced from the PWC Archive (CC-BY-SA 4.0). Built by the community, for the community.

Papers/Universal Transformers

Universal Transformers

Mostafa Dehghani, Stephan Gouws, Oriol Vinyals, Jakob Uszkoreit, Łukasz Kaiser

2018-07-10ICLR 2019 5Machine TranslationTranslationLanguage ModellingLAMBADA
PaperPDFCodeCode(official)CodeCodeCodeCodeCodeCode

Abstract

Recurrent neural networks (RNNs) sequentially process data by updating their state with each new data point, and have long been the de facto choice for sequence modeling tasks. However, their inherently sequential computation makes them slow to train. Feed-forward and convolutional architectures have recently been shown to achieve superior results on some sequence modeling tasks such as machine translation, with the added advantage that they concurrently process all inputs in the sequence, leading to easy parallelization and faster training times. Despite these successes, however, popular feed-forward sequence models like the Transformer fail to generalize in many simple tasks that recurrent models handle with ease, e.g. copying strings or even simple logical inference when the string or formula lengths exceed those observed at training time. We propose the Universal Transformer (UT), a parallel-in-time self-attentive recurrent sequence model which can be cast as a generalization of the Transformer model and which addresses these issues. UTs combine the parallelizability and global receptive field of feed-forward sequence models like the Transformer with the recurrent inductive bias of RNNs. We also add a dynamic per-position halting mechanism and find that it improves accuracy on several tasks. In contrast to the standard Transformer, under certain assumptions, UTs can be shown to be Turing-complete. Our experiments show that UTs outperform standard Transformers on a wide range of algorithmic and language understanding tasks, including the challenging LAMBADA language modeling task where UTs achieve a new state of the art, and machine translation where UTs achieve a 0.9 BLEU improvement over Transformers on the WMT14 En-De dataset.

Results

TaskDatasetMetricValueModel
Machine TranslationWMT2014 English-GermanBLEU score28.9universal transformer base
Language ModellingLAMBADAAccuracy56.25Universal Transformer (w/ dynamic halting)

Related Papers

Visual-Language Model Knowledge Distillation Method for Image Quality Assessment2025-07-21A Translation of Probabilistic Event Calculus into Markov Decision Processes2025-07-17Making Language Model a Hierarchical Classifier and Generator2025-07-17VisionThink: Smart and Efficient Vision Language Model via Reinforcement Learning2025-07-17The Generative Energy Arena (GEA): Incorporating Energy Awareness in Large Language Model (LLM) Human Evaluations2025-07-17Inverse Reinforcement Learning Meets Large Language Model Post-Training: Basics, Advances, and Opportunities2025-07-17Assay2Mol: large language model-based drug design using BioAssay context2025-07-16Describe Anything Model for Visual Question Answering on Text-rich Images2025-07-16