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Collaborating Authors

 Casper, Jared


Nemotron-4 340B Technical Report

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We release the Nemotron-4 340B model family, including Nemotron-4-340B-Base, Nemotron-4-340B-Instruct, and Nemotron-4-340B-Reward. Our models are open access under the NVIDIA Open Model License Agreement, a permissive model license that allows distribution, modification, and use of the models and its outputs. These models perform competitively to open access models on a wide range of evaluation benchmarks, and were sized to fit on a single DGX H100 with 8 GPUs when deployed in FP8 precision. We believe that the community can benefit from these models in various research studies and commercial applications, especially for generating synthetic data to train smaller language models. Notably, over 98% of data used in our model alignment process is synthetically generated, showcasing the effectiveness of these models in generating synthetic data. To further support open research and facilitate model development, we are also open-sourcing the synthetic data generation pipeline used in our model alignment process.


Nemotron-4 15B Technical Report

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

For example, (Hoffmann et al., 2022) shows that given two roughly IsoFLOP GPT models with a similar data distribution, a 65-billion-parameter model on 1.4 trillion tokens and a 280-billion-parameter model on 300 billion tokens, the 65B model has better accuracy on downstream tasks. This trade-off of allocating compute towards training on more data as opposed to increasing model size is particularly appealing from an inference perspective, reducing latency and the amount of compute needed to serve models. As a consequence, a major focus of language modeling training efforts has shifted to collecting high-quality multi-trillion token datasets from public sources such as Common Crawl.


BLOOM: A 176B-Parameter Open-Access Multilingual Language Model

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Large language models (LLMs) have been shown to be able to perform new tasks based on a few demonstrations or natural language instructions. While these capabilities have led to widespread adoption, most LLMs are developed by resource-rich organizations and are frequently kept from the public. As a step towards democratizing this powerful technology, we present BLOOM, a 176B-parameter open-access language model designed and built thanks to a collaboration of hundreds of researchers. BLOOM is a decoder-only Transformer language model that was trained on the ROOTS corpus, a dataset comprising hundreds of sources in 46 natural and 13 programming languages (59 in total). We find that BLOOM achieves competitive performance on a wide variety of benchmarks, with stronger results after undergoing multitask prompted finetuning. To facilitate future research and applications using LLMs, we publicly release our models and code under the Responsible AI License.