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beir-v1.0.0-fever.splade-pp-ed.onnx.template
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beir-v1.0.0-fever.splade-pp-ed.onnx.template
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# Anserini Regressions: BEIR (v1.0.0) — FEVER
**Model**: [SPLADE++ CoCondenser-EnsembleDistil](https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.04733) (using ONNX for on-the-fly query encoding)
This page describes regression experiments, integrated into Anserini's regression testing framework, using [SPLADE++ CoCondenser-EnsembleDistil](https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.04733) on [BEIR (v1.0.0) — FEVER](http://beir.ai/).
The model itself can be download [here](https://huggingface.co/naver/splade-cocondenser-ensembledistil).
See the [official SPLADE repo](https://github.com/naver/splade) and the following paper for more details:
> Thibault Formal, Carlos Lassance, Benjamin Piwowarski, and Stéphane Clinchant. [From Distillation to Hard Negative Sampling: Making Sparse Neural IR Models More Effective.](https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3477495.3531857) _Proceedings of the 45th International ACM SIGIR Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval_, pages 2353–2359.
In these experiments, we are using ONNX to perform query encoding on the fly.
The exact configurations for these regressions are stored in [this YAML file](${yaml}).
Note that this page is automatically generated from [this template](${template}) as part of Anserini's regression pipeline, so do not modify this page directly; modify the template instead and then run `bin/build.sh` to rebuild the documentation.
From one of our Waterloo servers (e.g., `orca`), the following command will perform the complete regression, end to end:
```
python src/main/python/run_regression.py --index --verify --search --regression ${test_name}
```
All the BEIR corpora, encoded by the SPLADE++ CoCondenser-EnsembleDistil model, are available for download:
```bash
wget https://rgw.cs.uwaterloo.ca/pyserini/data/beir-v1.0.0-splade-pp-ed.tar -P collections/
tar xvf collections/beir-v1.0.0-splade-pp-ed.tar -C collections/
```
The tarball is 42 GB and has MD5 checksum `9c7de5b444a788c9e74c340bf833173b`.
After download and unpacking the corpora, the `run_regression.py` command above should work without any issue.
## Indexing
Sample indexing command:
```
${index_cmds}
```
The important indexing options to note here are `-impact -pretokenized`: the first tells Anserini not to encode BM25 doclengths into Lucene's norms (which is the default) and the second option says not to apply any additional tokenization on the pre-encoded tokens.
For additional details, see explanation of [common indexing options](${root_path}/docs/common-indexing-options.md).
## Retrieval
Topics and qrels are stored [here](https://github.com/castorini/anserini-tools/tree/master/topics-and-qrels), which is linked to the Anserini repo as a submodule.
After indexing has completed, you should be able to perform retrieval as follows:
```
${ranking_cmds}
```
Evaluation can be performed using `trec_eval`:
```
${eval_cmds}
```
## Effectiveness
With the above commands, you should be able to reproduce the following results:
${effectiveness}