Instructions to use microsoft/dit-base with libraries, inference providers, notebooks, and local apps. Follow these links to get started.
- Libraries
- Transformers
How to use microsoft/dit-base with Transformers:
# Load model directly from transformers import AutoImageProcessor, BeitForMaskedImageModeling processor = AutoImageProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/dit-base") model = BeitForMaskedImageModeling.from_pretrained("microsoft/dit-base") - Notebooks
- Google Colab
- Kaggle
| tags: | |
| - dit | |
| inference: false | |
| # Document Image Transformer (base-sized model) | |
| Document Image Transformer (DiT) model pre-trained on IIT-CDIP (Lewis et al., 2006), a dataset that includes 42 million document images. It was introduced in the paper [DiT: Self-supervised Pre-training for Document Image Transformer](https://arxiv.org/abs/2203.02378) by Li et al. and first released in [this repository](https://github.com/microsoft/unilm/tree/master/dit). Note that DiT is identical to the architecture of [BEiT](https://huggingface.co/docs/transformers/model_doc/beit). | |
| Disclaimer: The team releasing DiT did not write a model card for this model so this model card has been written by the Hugging Face team. | |
| ## Model description | |
| The Document Image Transformer (DiT) is a transformer encoder model (BERT-like) pre-trained on a large collection of images in a self-supervised fashion. The pre-training objective for the model is to predict visual tokens from the encoder of a discrete VAE (dVAE), based on masked patches. | |
| Images are presented to the model as a sequence of fixed-size patches (resolution 16x16), which are linearly embedded. One also adds absolute position embeddings before feeding the sequence to the layers of the Transformer encoder. | |
| By pre-training the model, it learns an inner representation of images that can then be used to extract features useful for downstream tasks: if you have a dataset of labeled document images for instance, you can train a standard classifier by placing a linear layer on top of the pre-trained encoder. | |
| ## Intended uses & limitations | |
| You can use the raw model for encoding document images into a vector space, but it's mostly meant to be fine-tuned on tasks like document image classification, table detection or document layout analysis. See the [model hub](https://huggingface.co/models?search=microsoft/dit) to look for fine-tuned versions on a task that interests you. | |
| ### How to use | |
| Here is how to use this model in PyTorch: | |
| ```python | |
| from transformers import BeitImageProcessor, BeitForMaskedImageModeling | |
| import torch | |
| from PIL import Image | |
| image = Image.open('path_to_your_document_image').convert('RGB') | |
| processor = BeitImageProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/dit-base") | |
| model = BeitForMaskedImageModeling.from_pretrained("microsoft/dit-base") | |
| num_patches = (model.config.image_size // model.config.patch_size) ** 2 | |
| pixel_values = processor(images=image, return_tensors="pt").pixel_values | |
| # create random boolean mask of shape (batch_size, num_patches) | |
| bool_masked_pos = torch.randint(low=0, high=2, size=(1, num_patches)).bool() | |
| outputs = model(pixel_values, bool_masked_pos=bool_masked_pos) | |
| loss, logits = outputs.loss, outputs.logits | |
| ``` | |
| ### BibTeX entry and citation info | |
| ```bibtex | |
| @article{Lewis2006BuildingAT, | |
| title={Building a test collection for complex document information processing}, | |
| author={David D. Lewis and Gady Agam and Shlomo Engelson Argamon and Ophir Frieder and David A. Grossman and Jefferson Heard}, | |
| journal={Proceedings of the 29th annual international ACM SIGIR conference on Research and development in information retrieval}, | |
| year={2006} | |
| } | |
| ``` |