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---
language:
  - en
tags:
  - JobBERT
  - job postings
---

# JobBERT

This is the JobBERT model from:

Mike Zhang, Kristian Nørgaard Jensen, Sif Dam Sonniks, and Barbara Plank. __SkillSpan: Hard and Soft Skill Extraction from Job Postings__. Proceedings of the 2022 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies.

This model is continuously pre-trained from a `bert-base-cased` checkpoint on ~3.2M sentences from job postings. More information can be found in the paper.

If you use this model, please cite the following paper:

```
@inproceedings{zhang-etal-2022-skillspan,
    title = "{S}kill{S}pan: Hard and Soft Skill Extraction from {E}nglish Job Postings",
    author = "Zhang, Mike  and
      Jensen, Kristian N{\o}rgaard  and
      Sonniks, Sif  and
      Plank, Barbara",
    booktitle = "Proceedings of the 2022 Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies",
    month = jul,
    year = "2022",
    address = "Seattle, United States",
    publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
    url = "https://aclanthology.org/2022.naacl-main.366",
    pages = "4962--4984",
    abstract = "Skill Extraction (SE) is an important and widely-studied task useful to gain insights into labor market dynamics. However, there is a lacuna of datasets and annotation guidelines; available datasets are few and contain crowd-sourced labels on the span-level or labels from a predefined skill inventory. To address this gap, we introduce SKILLSPAN, a novel SE dataset consisting of 14.5K sentences and over 12.5K annotated spans. We release its respective guidelines created over three different sources annotated for hard and soft skills by domain experts. We introduce a BERT baseline (Devlin et al., 2019). To improve upon this baseline, we experiment with language models that are optimized for long spans (Joshi et al., 2020; Beltagy et al., 2020), continuous pre-training on the job posting domain (Han and Eisenstein, 2019; Gururangan et al., 2020), and multi-task learning (Caruana, 1997). Our results show that the domain-adapted models significantly outperform their non-adapted counterparts, and single-task outperforms multi-task learning.",
}
```