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Prompting language models (LMs) with training examples and task descriptions has been seen as critical to recent successes in few-shot learning. In this work, we show that finetuning LMs in the few-shot setting can considerably reduce the need for prompt engineering. In fact, one can use null prompts, prompts that contain neither task-specific templates nor training examples, and achieve competitive accuracy to manually-tuned prompts across a wide range of tasks. While finetuning LMs does introduce new parameters for each downstream task, we show that this memory overhead can be substantially reduced-finetuning only the bias terms can achieve comparable or better accuracy than standard finetuning while only updating 0.1% of the parameters. All in all, we recommend finetuning LMs for few-shot learning as it is more accurate, has relatively stable performance across different prompts, and can be made nearly as efficient as using frozen LMs.
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Robert Logan
Ivana Balažević
Eric Wallace
University of California, Berkeley
University College London
Berkeley College
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Logan et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a08b69a7de338f10b10f155 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.18653/v1/2022.findings-acl.222