contextualized language embedding
An embedding that comes close to "understanding" words and phrases in ways that fluent human speakers can.
Plain English Explanation
An embedding that comes close to "understanding" words and phrases in ways that fluent human speakers can. Contextualized language embeddings can understand complex syntax, semantics, and context. For example, consider embeddings of the English word cow. Older embeddings such as word2vec can represent English words such that the distance in the embedding space from cow to bull is similar to the distance from ewe (female sheep) to ram (male sheep) or from female to male. Contextualized language embeddings can go a step further by recognizing that English speakers sometimes casually use the word cow to mean either cow or bull.
How is it used?
Practitioners refer to contextualized language embedding when building, training, or evaluating machine learning systems. It appears in research papers, product documentation, and technical discussions about AI capabilities and limitations.