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metadata
license: apache-2.0
base_model: princeton-nlp/Sheared-Pythia-160m
datasets:
  - THUDM/webglm-qa
widget:
  - text: >-
      <|references|>

      [1] Volcanoes erupt because of density and pressure. The lower density of
      the magma relative to the surrounding rocks causes it to rise (like air
      bubbles in syrup). It will rise to the surface or to a depth that is
      determined by the density of the magma and the weight of the rocks above
      it. As the magma rises, bubbles start to form from the gas dissolved in
      the magma. The gas bubbles exert tremendous pressure. This pressure helps
      to bring the magma to the surface and forces it in the air, sometimes to
      great heights.

      [2] Volcanic eruptions are among the most stunning phenomena in the
      natural world. Volcanoes erupt because of the way heat moves beneath
      Earth’s surface. Heat is conveyed from the planet’s interior to its
      surface largely by convection—the transfer of heat by movement of a heated
      fluid. In this case, the fluid is magma—molten or partially molten
      rock—which is formed by the partial melting of Earth's mantle and crust.
      The magma rises, and, in the last step in this heat-releasing process,
      erupts at the surface through volcanoes.

      [3] Magma rises from the hot spots and erupts as lava through cracks in
      the Earth's surface forming volcanoes.

      [4] A volcano is an opening or rupture in the earth’s surface that allows
      magma (hot liquid and semi-liquid rock), volcanic ash and gases to escape.
      They are generally found where tectonic plates come together or separate
      but they can also occur in the middle of plates due to volcanic hotspots.
      A volcanic eruption is when lava and gas are released from a
      volcano—sometimes explosively. The most dangerous type of eruption is
      called a 'glowing avalanche' which is when freshly erupted magma flows
      down the sides of a volcano. They can travel quickly and reach
      temperatures of up to 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit. Other hazards include ash
      fall, and lahars (mud or debris flows). Volcanoes often cause population
      displacement and food shortages.

      [5] An erupting volcano may include varying types of activity, along with
      a range of intensity. Volcanic activity includes earthquakes caused by
      magma movement, gas emissions, effusive emissions of lava, and cataclysmic
      eruptions.</s>

      <|question|>

      How does a volcano erupt?</s>

      <|answer|>
inference:
  parameters:
    max_new_tokens: 250
    repetition_penalty: 1.025
    do_sample: true
    temperature: 0.4
    top_p: 0.25
    top_k: 7

Princeton NLP's Sheared-Pythia-160m trained on the WebGLM-QA dataset

Recommended prompt format

<|references|>
{references}</s>
<|question|>
{question}</s>
<|answer|>