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Blog Post: Advancing Search Quality and Inference Speed with v2 Series Neural Sparse Models #3169

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merged 10 commits into from
Aug 21, 2024
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Expand Up @@ -479,4 +479,12 @@ Use the following recommendations to select a sparse encoding model:
- For more information about neural sparse search, see [Neural sparse search](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/search-plugins/neural-sparse-search/).
- For an end-to-end neural search tutorial, see [Neural search tutorial](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/search-plugins/neural-search-tutorial/).
- For a list of all search methods OpenSearch supports, see [Search methods](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/search-plugins/index/#search-methods).
- Provide your feedback on the [OpenSearch Forum](https://forum.opensearch.org/).
- Provide your feedback on the [OpenSearch Forum](https://forum.opensearch.org/).

## Further reading

Read more about neural sparse search:

1. [A deep dive into faster semantic sparse retrieval in OpenSearch 2.12]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/A-deep-dive-into-faster-semantic-sparse-retrieval-in-OS-2.12)
1. [Introducing the neural sparse two-phase algorithm]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/Introducing-a-neural-sparse-two-phase-algorithm)
1. [Advancing Search Quality and Inference Speed with v2 Series Neural Sparse Models]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/neural-sparse-v2-models)
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1. Model inference is a throughput bottleneck for neural sparse ingestion and bi-encoder search. Using a GPU can significantly accelerate model inference, leading to a higher throughput and better cost/performance ratio.

This study provides insights to help you scale your resources effectively when migrating from BM25 to neural sparse search in a new cluster. Refer to the quantitative data to estimate the workload requirements for your specific use case. If you require a high ingestion throughput or a high query throughput for searching in the bi-encoder mode, we recommend using a GPU. For more information about configuring neural sparse search, see the [Neural sparse search documentation](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/search-plugins/neural-sparse-search/).

## Further reading

Read more about neural sparse search:

1. [Improving document retrieval with sparse semantic encoders]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/improving-document-retrieval-with-sparse-semantic-encoders)
1. [Introducing the neural sparse two-phase algorithm]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/Introducing-a-neural-sparse-two-phase-algorithm)
1. [Advancing Search Quality and Inference Speed with v2 Series Neural Sparse Models]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/neural-sparse-v2-models)
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For more information about the two-phase processor, see [Neural sparse query two-phase processor](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/search-plugins/search-pipelines/neural-sparse-query-two-phase-processor/).

## Further reading

Read more about neural sparse search:

1. [Improving document retrieval with sparse semantic encoders]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/improving-document-retrieval-with-sparse-semantic-encoders)
1. [A deep dive into faster semantic sparse retrieval in OpenSearch 2.12]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/A-deep-dive-into-faster-semantic-sparse-retrieval-in-OS-2.12)
1. [Advancing Search Quality and Inference Speed with v2 Series Neural Sparse Models]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/neural-sparse-v2-models)
180 changes: 180 additions & 0 deletions _posts/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models.md
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---
layout: post
title: Improving search efficiency and accuracy with the newest v2 neural sparse models
authors:
- zhichaog
- congguan
- yych
- dylantong
- kolchfa
date: 2024-08-19
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Please update the date to 2024-08-21

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Done

categories:
- technical-posts
has_science_table: true
meta_keywords: OpenSearch semantic search, neural sparse search, semantic sparse retrieval
meta_description: Accelerating inference and improving search with v2 neural sparse encoding models
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Please update the blog with the following meta:

meta_keywords: neural sparse models, OpenSearch semantic search, semantic sparse retrieval, neural search

meta_description: OpenSearch announces the availability of v2 series neural sparse models that enhance the efficiency of semantic sparse retrieval while accelerating inference and improving search.

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Done


excerpt: We're excited to introduce the neural sparse v2 series models---a significant upgrade that enhances performance across key metrics. Our benchmarks reveal improved ingestion speed, faster search performance, and better search relevance.
featured_blog_post: true
featured_image: false # /assets/media/blog-images/__example__image__name.jpg
---

Neural sparse search is a novel and efficient method for semantic retrieval, [introduced in OpenSearch 2.11](https://opensearch.org/blog/improving-document-retrieval-with-sparse-semantic-encoders/). Sparse encoding models encode text into (token, weight) entries, allowing OpenSearch to build indexes and perform searches using Lucene's inverted index. Neural sparse search is efficient and generalizes well in out-of-domain (OOD) scenarios. We are excited to announce the release of our v2 series neural sparse models:

- **v2-distill model**: This model **reduces model parameters by 50%**, resulting in lower memory requirements and costs. It **increases ingestion throughput by 1.39 on GPU and 1.74x on CPU**. The v2-distill architecture supports both the doc-only and bi-encoder modes.
- **v2-mini model**: This model **reduces model parameters by 75%**, also reducing memory requirements and costs. It **increases ingestion throughput by 1.74x on GPUs and 4.18x on CPUs**. The v2-mini architecture supports the doc-only mode.

Additionally, all v2 models achieve **better search relevance**. The following table compares search relevance between the v1 and v2 models. All v2 models are now available in both [OpenSearch](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/ml-commons-plugin/pretrained-models/#sparse-encoding-models) and [Hugging Face](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project).

| Model | Requires no inference for retrieval | Model parameters | AVG NDCG@10 |
|-------|------------------------------|------------------|-------------|
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v1](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v1) | | 133M | 0.524 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v2-distill](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v2-distill) | | 67M | 0.528 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v1](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v1) | ✔️ | 133M | 0.490 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-distill](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-distill) | ✔️ | 67M | 0.504 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-mini](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-mini) | ✔️ | 23M | 0.497 |

## From v1 to v2 series models

The transition from v1 to v2 models in OpenSearch represents a significant advancement in neural sparse search capabilities.

### Limitations of v1 models

For neural sparse search, the sparse encoding model is critical because it influences document scoring and ranking, directly impacting search relevance. The model's inference speed also affects ingestion throughput and client-side search latency in bi-encoder mode. When we released neural sparse search in OpenSearch, we also launched two neural sparse models supporting doc-only and bi-encoder mode, respectively.

The primary challenge for v1 models is their large size. The v1 series models are based on the BERT base model, a 12-layer transformer with 133 million parameters. Compared to popular dense embedding models like [`tas-b`](https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers/msmarco-distilbert-base-tas-b) and [`all-MiniLM-L6-v2`](https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2), the inference cost of the v1 models is 2x to 4x higher. Therefore, reducing model parameters without compromising search accuracy became essential for the v2 series.

### Knowledge distillation from an ensemble of heterogeneous teacher models

In neural models, performance is closely tied to the number of parameters. When using a smaller architecture, the training algorithm must be enhanced to offset any performance drop. For retrieval tasks, common techniques include **pretraining** and **knowledge distillation**:

- **Pretraining**: This involves training models on large datasets often constructed using specific rules. Examples of such dataset elements are `(title, body)` pairs in news articles or `(question, answer)` pairs on Q&A websites. Pretraining enhances the model's search relevance and ability to generalize.
- **Knowledge distillation**: Some models are powerful but suffer from inefficiencies because of their large size or complex structure. An example of such a model is the cross-encoder reranker. Distillation transfers knowledge from these teacher models to smaller ones, preserving high performance while eliminating these drawbacks.

Dense retrievers are usually pretrained using Information Noise-Contrastive Estimation (InfoNCE) loss, which improves consistency and uniformity of dense representations. However, we found that InfoNCE loss does not enhance sparse embeddings in doc-only mode as it does for dense models. Instead, knowledge distillation loss is a more effective optimization technique for sparse encoding models. Finding a suitable teacher model for large-scale pretraining is challenging. Siamese encoders are generally not strong models, while cross-encoders struggle with handling large pretraining datasets. Inspired by the performance boost demonstrated by dense and lexical (sparse) [hybrid search](https://opensearch.org/blog/hybrid-search/), we decided to combine a bi-encoder sparse retriever with Siamese dense models to create a strong teacher model. This model combines the strengths of heterogeneous retrievers and is efficient enough for pretraining. We plan to publish a paper detailing the training procedure.

Pretraining with knowledge distillation allows you to reduce the number of model parameters without compromising performance. Because we performed pretraining on a massive corpus[^1], the **v2 series models** achieved **improved search relevance** while significantly **reducing the number of model parameters**. We have released distill-BERT-based models for both the doc-only and bi-encoder modes (similar in size to [tas-b](https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers/msmarco-distilbert-base-tas-b)) and a miniLM-based model for the doc-only mode (similar in size to [all-MiniLM-L6-v2](https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2)).

## Accelerating model inference

The v2 models continue to use the transformer architecture, reducing the number of parameters by decreasing the number of layers and the hidden dimension size. As a result, the smaller v2 models offer higher ingestion throughput and lower search latency. We benchmarked the v2 models in ingestion and search scenarios using the MS MARCO passage retrieval dataset on an OpenSearch 2.16 cluster with three nodes running on r7a.8xlarge Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instances.

**GPU deployment**: We used an Amazon SageMaker GPU endpoint to host the neural sparse model, connecting to it using a remote connector. For the complete deployment code, see [this example](https://github.com/zhichao-aws/neural-search/blob/neural_sparse_sagemaker/neural_sparse_sagemaker_example/run.ipynb). The model was hosted on a **g5.xlarge** GPU instance.
**CPU deployment**: The model was deployed on **all three nodes** in the cluster.


In these experiments, we set the `batch_size` of the `sparse_encoding` ingestion processor to `2`. We recorded the mean ingestion throughput and the p99 client-side latency for the Bulk API, using 20 clients for ingestion.

#### Remote deployment using GPU
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"a GPU"? "a GPU instance"?


The bulk size was set to 24. The experiment results are presented in the following figure. Compared with the v1 model, the **v2-distill** model provided a **1.39x increase in mean throughput**, and the **v2-mini** model provided a **1.74x increase in mean throughput**.

<img src="/assets/media/blog-images/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models/gpu_ingest.png"/>

#### Local deployment on a CPU

The bulk size was set to 8. Compared with the v1 model, the **v2-distill** model provided a **1.58x increase in mean throughput**, and the **v2-mini** model provided a **4.18x increase in mean throughput**, as shown in the following figure.

<img src="/assets/media/blog-images/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models/cpu_ingest.png"/>

### Search

In these experiments, we ingested 1 million documents into an index and used 20 clients to perform concurrent searches. We recorded the p99 latency for both client-side search and model inference. We tested search performance for the **bi-encoder** mode.

#### Remote deployment using GPU
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"a GPU"? "a GPU instance"?

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Suggested change
#### Remote deployment using GPU
#### Remote deployment on a GPU


Compared with the v1 model, the **v2-distill** model **decreased client-side search latency by 11.7% and model inference latency by 23%**, as shown in the following figure.

<img src="/assets/media/blog-images/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models/gpu_search.png"/>

#### Local deployment on a CPU

Compared with the v1 model, the **v2-distill** model **decreased client-side search latency by 30.2% and model inference latency by 33.3%**, as shown in the following figure.

<img src="/assets/media/blog-images/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models/cpu_search.png"/>

## Search relevance benchmarks

Similarly to the tests described in our previous [blog post](https://opensearch.org/blog/improving-document-retrieval-with-sparse-semantic-encoders/), we evaluated model search relevance on a subset of the BEIR benchmark. The search relevance results are provided in the following table. **All v2-series models outperform the v1 models with the same architecture**, indicating that distillation from a heterogeneous teacher model is a more effective method than pretraining using InfoNCE loss.

| Model | Average | Trec-Covid | NFCorpus | NQ | HotpotQA | FiQA | ArguAna | Touche | DBPedia | SciDocs | FEVER | Climate FEVER | SciFact | Quora |

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[vale] reported by reviewdog 🐶 [OpenSearch.TableHeadings] 'HotpotQA' is a table heading and should be in sentence case. Raw Output: {"message": "[OpenSearch.TableHeadings] 'HotpotQA' is a table heading and should be in sentence case.", "location": {"path": "_posts/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models.md", "range": {"start": {"line": 100, "column": 50}}}, "severity": "ERROR"}

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[vale] reported by reviewdog 🐶 [OpenSearch.TableHeadings] 'FiQA' is a table heading and should be in sentence case. Raw Output: {"message": "[OpenSearch.TableHeadings] 'FiQA' is a table heading and should be in sentence case.", "location": {"path": "_posts/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models.md", "range": {"start": {"line": 100, "column": 61}}}, "severity": "ERROR"}

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[vale] reported by reviewdog 🐶 [OpenSearch.TableHeadings] 'ArguAna' is a table heading and should be in sentence case. Raw Output: {"message": "[OpenSearch.TableHeadings] 'ArguAna' is a table heading and should be in sentence case.", "location": {"path": "_posts/2024-08-19-neural-sparse-v2-models.md", "range": {"start": {"line": 100, "column": 68}}}, "severity": "ERROR"}
|-------|---------|------------|----------|----|----------|------|---------|--------|---------|---------|-------|---------------|---------|-------|
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v1](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v1) | 0.524 | 0.771 | 0.360 | 0.553 | 0.697 | 0.376 | 0.508 | 0.278 | 0.447 | 0.164 | 0.821 | 0.263 | 0.723 | 0.856 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v2-distill](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v2-distill) | 0.528 | 0.775 | 0.347 | 0.561 | 0.685 | 0.374 | 0.551 | 0.278 | 0.435 | 0.173 | 0.849 | 0.249 | 0.722 | 0.863 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v1](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v1) | 0.490 | 0.707 | 0.352 | 0.521 | 0.677 | 0.344 | 0.461 | 0.294 | 0.412 | 0.154 | 0.743 | 0.202 | 0.716 | 0.788 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-distill](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-distill) | 0.504 | 0.690 | 0.343 | 0.528 | 0.675 | 0.357 | 0.496 | 0.287 | 0.418 | 0.166 | 0.818 | 0.224 | 0.715 | 0.841 |
| [opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-mini](https://huggingface.co/opensearch-project/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-mini) | 0.497 | 0.709 | 0.336 | 0.510 | 0.666 | 0.338 | 0.480 | 0.285 | 0.407 | 0.164 | 0.812 | 0.216 | 0.699 | 0.837 |

## Registering and deploying v2 models

OpenSearch now provides [pretrained v2 sparse encoding models](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/ml-commons-plugin/pretrained-models/#sparse-encoding-models). Depending on the search mode, you need to register different models:

- In **doc-only mode**, you need to register a sparse encoding model for ingestion and a tokenizer for search.
- In **bi-encoder mode**, you need to register a sparse encoding model that will be used for ingestion and search.

For detailed setup instructions and tutorials, see [Neural sparse search](https://opensearch.org/docs/latest/search-plugins/neural-sparse-search/).

### Registering and deploying models in doc-only mode

To register and deploy models in doc-only mode, use the following steps.

1. Register and deploy a sparse encoding model for ingestion:

```json
POST /_plugins/_ml/models/_register?deploy=true
{
"name": "amazon/neural-sparse/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-doc-v2-distill",
"version": "1.0.0",
"model_format": "TORCH_SCRIPT"
}
```

1. Register and deploy a tokenizer for search:

```json
POST /_plugins/_ml/models/_register?deploy=true
{
"name": "amazon/neural-sparse/opensearch-neural-sparse-tokenizer-v1",
"version": "1.0.1",
"model_format": "TORCH_SCRIPT"
}
```

1. Get model IDs for the model and tokenizer by calling the Tasks API:

```
GET /_plugins/_ml/tasks/{task_id}
```

### Registering and deploying models in bi-encoder mode

To register and deploy models in bi-encoder mode, use the following steps.

1. Register and deploy a sparse encoding model for ingestion and search:

```json
POST /_plugins/_ml/models/_register?deploy=true
{
"name": "amazon/neural-sparse/opensearch-neural-sparse-encoding-v2-distill",
"version": "1.0.0",
"model_format": "TORCH_SCRIPT"
}
```

1. Get the model ID for the sparse encoding model by calling the Tasks API:

```
GET /_plugins/_ml/tasks/{task_id}
```

## Further reading

For more information about neural sparse search, see these previous blog posts:

- [Improving document retrieval with sparse semantic encoders]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/improving-document-retrieval-with-sparse-semantic-encoders)
- [A deep dive into faster semantic sparse retrieval in OpenSearch 2.12]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/A-deep-dive-into-faster-semantic-sparse-retrieval-in-OS-2.12)
- [Introducing the neural sparse two-phase algorithm]({{site.baseurl}}/blog/Introducing-a-neural-sparse-two-phase-algorithm)

---

[^1]: For pretraining, we selected a portion of the sentence transformer [training data](https://huggingface.co/sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2#training-data). We removed any data that also appeared in BEIR in order to maintain a zero-shot evaluation environment.
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