EttinX Cross-Encoder: Semantic Similarity (STS)
Cross encoders are high performing encoder models that compare two texts and output a 0-1 score.
I've found the cross-encoders/roberta-large-stsb
model to be very useful in creating evaluators for LLM outputs.
They're simple to use, fast and very accurate.
The Ettin series followed up with new encoders trained on the ModernBERT architecture, with a range of sizes, starting at 17M. The reduced parameters and computationally efficient interleaved local/global attention layers make this a very fast model, which can easily process a few hundred sentence pairs per second on CPU, and a few thousand per second on my A6000.
Features
- High performing: Achieves Pearson: 0.9143 and Spearman: 0.9102 on the STS-Benchmark test set.
- Efficient architecture: Based on the Ettin-encoder design (149M parameters), offering very fast inference speeds.
- Extended context length: Processes sequences up to 8192 tokens, great for LLM output evals.
- Diversified training: Pretrained on
dleemiller/wiki-sim
and fine-tuned onsentence-transformers/stsb
.
Performance
Model | STS-B Test Pearson | STS-B Test Spearman | Context Length | Parameters | Speed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ModernCE-large-sts |
0.9256 | 0.9215 | 8192 | 395M | Medium |
ModernCE-base-sts |
0.9162 | 0.9122 | 8192 | 149M | Fast |
stsb-roberta-large |
0.9147 | - | 512 | 355M | Slow |
EttinX-sts-m |
0.9143 | 0.9102 | 8192 | 149M | Fast |
EttinX-sts-s |
0.9004 | 0.8926 | 8192 | 68M | Very Fast |
stsb-distilroberta-base |
0.8792 | - | 512 | 82M | Fast |
EttinX-sts-xs |
0.8763 | 0.8689 | 8192 | 32M | Very Fast |
EttinX-sts-xxs |
0.8414 | 0.8311 | 8192 | 17M | Very Fast |
Usage
To use EttinX for semantic similarity tasks, you can load the model with the Hugging Face sentence-transformers
library:
from sentence_transformers import CrossEncoder
# Load EttinX model
model = CrossEncoder("dleemiller/EttinX-sts-m")
# Predict similarity scores for sentence pairs
sentence_pairs = [
("It's a wonderful day outside.", "It's so sunny today!"),
("It's a wonderful day outside.", "He drove to work earlier."),
]
scores = model.predict(sentence_pairs)
print(scores) # Outputs: array([0.9184, 0.0123], dtype=float32)
Output
The model returns similarity scores in the range [0, 1]
, where higher scores indicate stronger semantic similarity.
Training Details
Pretraining
The model was pretrained on the pair-score-sampled
subset of the dleemiller/wiki-sim
dataset. This dataset provides diverse sentence pairs with semantic similarity scores, helping the model build a robust understanding of relationships between sentences.
- Classifier Dropout: a somewhat large classifier dropout of 0.3, to reduce overreliance on teacher scores.
- Objective: STS-B scores from
cross-encoder/stsb-roberta-large
.
Fine-Tuning
Fine-tuning was performed on the sentence-transformers/stsb
dataset.
Validation Results
The model achieved the following test set performance after fine-tuning:
- Pearson Correlation: 0.9143
- Spearman Correlation: 0.9102
Model Card
- Architecture: Ettin-encoder-150m
- Tokenizer: Custom tokenizer trained with modern techniques for long-context handling.
- Pretraining Data:
dleemiller/wiki-sim (pair-score-sampled)
- Fine-Tuning Data:
sentence-transformers/stsb
Thank You
Thanks to the Johns Hopkins team for providing the ModernBERT models, and the Sentence Transformers team for their leadership in transformer encoder models.
Seq vs Seq: An Open Suite of Paired Encoders and Decoders
Citation
If you use this model in your research, please cite:
@misc{ettinxstsb2025,
author = {Miller, D. Lee},
title = {EttinX STS: An STS cross encoder model},
year = {2025},
publisher = {Hugging Face Hub},
url = {https://huggingface.co/dleemiller/EttinX-sts-m},
}
License
This model is licensed under the MIT License.
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Evaluation results
- Pearson Cosine on sts testself-reported0.914
- Spearman Cosine on sts testself-reported0.910
- Pearson Cosine on sts devself-reported0.923
- Spearman Cosine on sts devself-reported0.924