English

What's In My Big Data?

Computation and Language 2024-03-07 v2 Machine Learning

Abstract

Large text corpora are the backbone of language models. However, we have a limited understanding of the content of these corpora, including general statistics, quality, social factors, and inclusion of evaluation data (contamination). In this work, we propose What's In My Big Data? (WIMBD), a platform and a set of sixteen analyses that allow us to reveal and compare the contents of large text corpora. WIMBD builds on two basic capabilities -- count and search -- at scale, which allows us to analyze more than 35 terabytes on a standard compute node. We apply WIMBD to ten different corpora used to train popular language models, including C4, The Pile, and RedPajama. Our analysis uncovers several surprising and previously undocumented findings about these corpora, including the high prevalence of duplicate, synthetic, and low-quality content, personally identifiable information, toxic language, and benchmark contamination. For instance, we find that about 50% of the documents in RedPajama and LAION-2B-en are duplicates. In addition, several datasets used for benchmarking models trained on such corpora are contaminated with respect to important benchmarks, including the Winograd Schema Challenge and parts of GLUE and SuperGLUE. We open-source WIMBD's code and artifacts to provide a standard set of evaluations for new text-based corpora and to encourage more analyses and transparency around them.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2310.20707,
  title  = {What's In My Big Data?},
  author = {Yanai Elazar and Akshita Bhagia and Ian Magnusson and Abhilasha Ravichander and Dustin Schwenk and Alane Suhr and Pete Walsh and Dirk Groeneveld and Luca Soldaini and Sameer Singh and Hanna Hajishirzi and Noah A. Smith and Jesse Dodge},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2310.20707},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Published at ICLR 2024 spotlight

R2 v1 2026-06-28T13:07:46.331Z