Neural document ranking approaches, specifically transformer models, have achieved impressive gains in ranking performance. However, query processing using such over-parameterized models is both resource and time intensive. In this paper, we propose the Fast-Forward index -- a simple vector forward index that facilitates ranking documents using interpolation of lexical and semantic scores -- as a replacement for contextual re-rankers and dense indexes based on nearest neighbor search. Fast-Forward indexes rely on efficient sparse models for retrieval and merely look up pre-computed dense transformer-based vector representations of documents and passages in constant time for fast CPU-based semantic similarity computation during query processing. We propose index pruning and theoretically grounded early stopping techniques to improve the query processing throughput. We conduct extensive large-scale experiments on TREC-DL datasets and show improvements over hybrid indexes in performance and query processing efficiency using only CPUs. Fast-Forward indexes can provide superior ranking performance using interpolation due to the complementary benefits of lexical and semantic similarities.
Efficient Neural Ranking using Forward Indexes
Fast-Forward indexes improve query processing efficiency and ranking performance by using sparse models and precomputed dense vector representations, while also applying index pruning and early stopping techniques.
- Year
- 2021
- Venue
- arXiv 2021
- Authors
- 5
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2110.06051v2ARXIV-DEFAULT
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