MultiHeadAttention
classtf_keras.layers.MultiHeadAttention(
num_heads,
key_dim,
value_dim=None,
dropout=0.0,
use_bias=True,
output_shape=None,
attention_axes=None,
kernel_initializer="glorot_uniform",
bias_initializer="zeros",
kernel_regularizer=None,
bias_regularizer=None,
activity_regularizer=None,
kernel_constraint=None,
bias_constraint=None,
**kwargs
)
MultiHeadAttention layer.
This is an implementation of multi-headed attention as described in the
paper "Attention is all you Need" (Vaswani et al., 2017).
If query
, key,
value
are the same, then
this is self-attention. Each timestep in query
attends to the
corresponding sequence in key
, and returns a fixed-width vector.
This layer first projects query
, key
and value
. These are
(effectively) a list of tensors of length num_attention_heads
, where the
corresponding shapes are (batch_size, <query dimensions>, key_dim)
,
(batch_size, <key/value dimensions>, key_dim)
,
(batch_size, <key/value dimensions>, value_dim)
.
Then, the query and key tensors are dot-producted and scaled. These are softmaxed to obtain attention probabilities. The value tensors are then interpolated by these probabilities, then concatenated back to a single tensor.
Finally, the result tensor with the last dimension as value_dim can take an linear projection and return.
When using MultiHeadAttention
inside a custom layer, the custom layer must
implement its own build()
method and call MultiHeadAttention
's
_build_from_signature()
there.
This enables weights to be restored correctly when the model is loaded.
Examples
Performs 1D cross-attention over two sequence inputs with an attention mask. Returns the additional attention weights over heads.
>>> layer = MultiHeadAttention(num_heads=2, key_dim=2)
>>> target = tf.keras.Input(shape=[8, 16])
>>> source = tf.keras.Input(shape=[4, 16])
>>> output_tensor, weights = layer(target, source,
... return_attention_scores=True)
>>> print(output_tensor.shape)
(None, 8, 16)
>>> print(weights.shape)
(None, 2, 8, 4)
Performs 2D self-attention over a 5D input tensor on axes 2 and 3.
>>> layer = MultiHeadAttention(
... num_heads=2, key_dim=2, attention_axes=(2, 3))
>>> input_tensor = tf.keras.Input(shape=[5, 3, 4, 16])
>>> output_tensor = layer(input_tensor, input_tensor)
>>> print(output_tensor.shape)
(None, 5, 3, 4, 16)
Arguments
None
means
attention over all axes, but batch, heads, and features.Call arguments
Tensor
of shape (B, T, dim)
.Tensor
of shape (B, S, dim)
.Tensor
of shape (B, S, dim)
. If not given, will
use value
for both key
and value
, which is the most common
case.(B, T, S)
, that prevents
attention to certain positions. The boolean mask specifies which
query elements can attend to which key elements, 1 indicates
attention and 0 indicates no attention. Broadcasting can happen for
the missing batch dimensions and the head dimension.(attention_output, attention_scores)
if True
, or
attention_output
if False
. Defaults to False
.Returns
(B, T, E)
,
where T
is for target sequence shapes and E
is the query input
last dimension if output_shape
is None
. Otherwise, the
multi-head outputs are projected to the shape specified by
output_shape
.