Llama-3-8B-Web-GGUf
- This is quantized version of McGill-NLP/Llama-3-8B-Web created using llama.cpp
Model Description
Our first agent is a finetuned Meta-Llama-3-8B-Instruct
model, which was recently released by Meta GenAI team. We have finetuned this model on the WebLINX
dataset, which contains over 100K instances of web navigation and dialogue, each collected and verified by expert annotators. We use a 24K curated subset for training the data. The training and evaluation data is available on Huggingface Hub as McGill-NLP/WebLINX
.
It surpasses GPT-4V (zero-shot *
) by over 18% on the WebLINX
benchmark, achieving an overall score of 28.8% on the out-of-domain test splits (compared to 10.5% for GPT-4V). It chooses more useful links (34.1% vs 18.9% seg-F1), clicks on more relevant elements (27.1% vs 13.6% IoU) and formulates more aligned responses (37.5% vs 3.1% chr-F1).
About WebLlama
WebLlama |
The goal of our project is to build effective human-centric agents for browsing the web. We don't want to replace users, but equip them with powerful assistants. |
---|---|
Modeling | We are build on top of cutting edge libraries for training Llama agents on web navigation tasks. We will provide training scripts, optimized configs, and instructions for training cutting-edge Llamas. |
Evaluation | Benchmarks for testing Llama models on real-world web browsing. This include human-centric browsing through dialogue (WebLINX ), and we will soon add more benchmarks for automatic web navigation (e.g. Mind2Web). |
Data | Our first model is finetuned on over 24K instances of web interactions, including click , textinput , submit , and dialogue acts. We want to continuously curate, compile and release datasets for training better agents. |
Deployment | We want to make it easy to integrate Llama models with existing deployment platforms, including Playwright, Selenium, and BrowserGym. We are currently focusing on making this a reality. |
Evaluation
We believe short demo videos showing how well an agent performs is NOT enough to judge an agent. Simply put, we do not know if we have a good agent if we do not have good benchmarks. We need to systematically evaluate agents on wide range of tasks, spanning from simple instruction-following web navigation to complex dialogue-guided browsing.
This is why we chose WebLINX
as our first benchmark. In addition to the training split, the benchmark has 4 real-world splits, with the goal of testing multiple dimensions of generalization: new websites, new domains, unseen geographic locations, and scenarios where the user cannot see the screen and relies on dialogue. It also covers 150 websites, including booking, shopping, writing, knowledge lookup, and even complex tasks like manipulating spreadsheets.
Data
Although the 24K training examples from WebLINX
provide a good starting point for training a capable agent, we believe that more data is needed to train agents that can generalize to a wide range of web navigation tasks. Although it has been trained and evaluated on 150 websites, there are millions of websites that has never been seen by the model, with new ones being created every day.
This motivates us to continuously curate, compile and release datasets for training better agents. As an immediate next step, we will be incorporating Mind2Web
's training data into the equation, which also covers over 100 websites.
Deployment
We are working hard to make it easy for you to deploy Llama web agents to the web. We want to integrate WebLlama
with existing deployment platforms, including Microsoft's Playwright, ServiceNow Research's BrowserGym, and other partners.
Code
The code for finetuning the model and evaluating it on the WebLINX
benchmark is available now. You can find the detailed instructions in modeling.
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McGill-NLP/Llama-3-8B-Web