size_categories: 1K<n<10K
tags:
- rlfh
- argilla
- human-feedback
Dataset Card for text-descriptives-metadata
This dataset has been created with Argilla.
As shown in the sections below, this dataset can be loaded into Argilla as explained in Load with Argilla, or used directly with the datasets
library in Load with datasets
.
Dataset Description
- Homepage: https://argilla.io
- Repository: https://github.com/argilla-io/argilla
- Paper:
- Leaderboard:
- Point of Contact:
Dataset Summary
This dataset contains:
A dataset configuration file conforming to the Argilla dataset format named
argilla.yaml
. This configuration file will be used to configure the dataset when using theFeedbackDataset.from_huggingface
method in Argilla.Dataset records in a format compatible with HuggingFace
datasets
. These records will be loaded automatically when usingFeedbackDataset.from_huggingface
and can be loaded independently using thedatasets
library viaload_dataset
.The annotation guidelines that have been used for building and curating the dataset, if they've been defined in Argilla.
Load with Argilla
To load with Argilla, you'll just need to install Argilla as pip install argilla --upgrade
and then use the following code:
import argilla as rg
ds = rg.FeedbackDataset.from_huggingface("argilla/text-descriptives-metadata")
Load with datasets
To load this dataset with datasets
, you'll just need to install datasets
as pip install datasets --upgrade
and then use the following code:
from datasets import load_dataset
ds = load_dataset("argilla/text-descriptives-metadata")
Supported Tasks and Leaderboards
This dataset can contain multiple fields, questions and responses so it can be used for different NLP tasks, depending on the configuration. The dataset structure is described in the Dataset Structure section.
There are no leaderboards associated with this dataset.
Languages
[More Information Needed]
Dataset Structure
Data in Argilla
The dataset is created in Argilla with: fields, questions, suggestions, metadata, and guidelines.
The fields are the dataset records themselves, for the moment just text fields are supported. These are the ones that will be used to provide responses to the questions.
Field Name | Title | Type | Required | Markdown |
---|---|---|---|---|
prompt | Prompt | text | True | True |
context | Context | text | False | True |
The questions are the questions that will be asked to the annotators. They can be of different types, such as rating, text, label_selection, multi_label_selection, or ranking.
Question Name | Title | Type | Required | Description | Values/Labels |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
response | Response | text | True | N/A | N/A |
The suggestions are human or machine generated recommendations for each question to assist the annotator during the annotation process, so those are always linked to the existing questions, and named appending "-suggestion" and "-suggestion-metadata" to those, containing the value/s of the suggestion and its metadata, respectively. So on, the possible values are the same as in the table above, but the column name is appended with "-suggestion" and the metadata is appended with "-suggestion-metadata".
✨ NEW The metadata is a dictionary that can be used to provide additional information about the dataset record. This can be useful to provide additional context to the annotators, or to provide additional information about the dataset record itself. For example, you can use this to provide a link to the original source of the dataset record, or to provide additional information about the dataset record itself, such as the author, the date, or the source. The metadata is always optional, and can be potentially linked to the metadata_properties
defined in the dataset configuration file in argilla.yaml
.
The guidelines, are optional as well, and are just a plain string that can be used to provide instructions to the annotators. Find those in the annotation guidelines section.
Data Instances
An example of a dataset instance in Argilla looks as follows:
{
"external_id": null,
"fields": {
"prompt": "Can brain cells move? By movement I mean long distance migration (preferably within the brain only)."
},
"metadata": {
"alpha_ratio": 0.8,
"automated_readability_index": 6.414375,
"coleman_liau_index": 10.267499999999998,
"dependency_distance_mean": 2.0,
"dependency_distance_std": 0.7999999999999999,
"doc_length": 20.0,
"duplicate_line_chr_fraction": 0.0,
"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_10": 0.0,
"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_5": 0.0,
"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_6": 0.0,
"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_7": 0.0,
"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_8": 0.0,
"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_9": 0.0,
"entropy": 0.4352176404374839,
"first_order_coherence": 0.2952488958835602,
"flesch_kincaid_grade": 3.7550000000000026,
"flesch_reading_ease": 82.39000000000001,
"gunning_fog": 5.7,
"lix": 33.0,
"mean_word_length": 4.25,
"n_characters": 85,
"n_sentences": 2,
"n_stop_words": 7.0,
"n_tokens": 16,
"n_unique_tokens": 15,
"oov_ratio": 0.0,
"passed_quality_check": "True",
"per_word_perplexity": 0.07726496709902252,
"perplexity": 1.5452993419804504,
"pos_prop_adj": 0.05,
"pos_prop_adp": 0.1,
"pos_prop_adv": 0.1,
"pos_prop_aux": 0.05,
"pos_prop_cconj": 0.0,
"pos_prop_det": 0.05,
"pos_prop_intj": 0.0,
"pos_prop_noun": 0.3,
"pos_prop_num": 0.0,
"pos_prop_part": 0.0,
"pos_prop_pron": 0.05,
"pos_prop_propn": 0.0,
"pos_prop_punct": 0.2,
"pos_prop_sconj": 0.0,
"pos_prop_space": 0.0,
"pos_prop_sym": 0.0,
"pos_prop_verb": 0.1,
"pos_prop_x": 0.0,
"prop_adjacent_dependency_relation_mean": 0.5333333333333333,
"prop_adjacent_dependency_relation_std": 0.06666666666666665,
"proportion_bullet_points": 0.0,
"proportion_ellipsis": 0.0,
"proportion_unique_tokens": 0.9375,
"rix": 2.0,
"second_order_coherence": 0.0,
"sentence_length_mean": 8.0,
"sentence_length_median": 8.0,
"sentence_length_std": 4.0,
"smog": 0.0,
"source": "stackexchange",
"syllables_per_token_mean": 1.375,
"syllables_per_token_median": 1.0,
"syllables_per_token_std": 0.5994789404140899,
"symbol_to_word_ratio_#": 0.0,
"token_length_mean": 5.0625,
"token_length_median": 4.5,
"token_length_std": 2.461421083439402,
"top_ngram_chr_fraction_2": 0.0,
"top_ngram_chr_fraction_3": 0.0,
"top_ngram_chr_fraction_4": 0.0
},
"responses": [],
"suggestions": [
{
"agent": null,
"question_name": "response",
"score": null,
"type": null,
"value": "The question is relatively broad and one should take into account that the brain not only consists of neurons, but also glial cells (supportive cells) and pre-mitotic neuronal stem cells. Furthermore, as critical fellow-scientists have indicated, developmental stage is very important, as the developing embryonic brain is very different from the adult brain.\nHowever, after sifting through various publications, the answer to the question is actually remarkably simple: Yes, brain cells migrate.\nIn the adult brain glial cells migrate in the brain (Kl\u00e4mbt, 2009). Glial cells are involved in a myriad of functions, but a notable example of migrating glial cells are the oligodendrocytes that migrate relative long distances to find their target axons onto which they wrap themselves to form the insulating myelin sheath (Tsai and Miller, 2002).\nNeuronal stem cells migrate over long distances in response to injury (Imitola et al., 2004) and they migrate from specific stem-cell locations (e.g., hippocampus and subventricular zone) to other regions (Clarke, 2003).\nPost-mitotic, but non-differentiated neurons have been shown to migrate in the adult brain in fish (Scott et al., 2012), and in mammals and non-human primates as well (Sawada et al., 2011).\nNot surprisingly, glial cells, stem cells and neurons also migrate during embryonic development. Most notably, post-mitotic neurons destined to fulfill peripheral functions have to migrate over relatively long distances from the neural crest to their target locations (Neuroscience, 2nd ed, Neuronal Migration)."
}
]
}
While the same record in HuggingFace datasets
looks as follows:
{
"context": null,
"external_id": null,
"metadata": "{\"pos_prop_adj\": 0.05, \"pos_prop_adp\": 0.1, \"pos_prop_adv\": 0.1, \"pos_prop_aux\": 0.05, \"pos_prop_cconj\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_det\": 0.05, \"pos_prop_intj\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_noun\": 0.3, \"pos_prop_num\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_part\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_pron\": 0.05, \"pos_prop_propn\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_punct\": 0.2, \"pos_prop_sconj\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_sym\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_verb\": 0.1, \"pos_prop_x\": 0.0, \"passed_quality_check\": \"True\", \"n_stop_words\": 7.0, \"alpha_ratio\": 0.8, \"mean_word_length\": 4.25, \"doc_length\": 20.0, \"symbol_to_word_ratio_#\": 0.0, \"proportion_ellipsis\": 0.0, \"proportion_bullet_points\": 0.0, \"duplicate_line_chr_fraction\": 0.0, \"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_5\": 0.0, \"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_6\": 0.0, \"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_7\": 0.0, \"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_8\": 0.0, \"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_9\": 0.0, \"duplicate_ngram_chr_fraction_10\": 0.0, \"top_ngram_chr_fraction_2\": 0.0, \"top_ngram_chr_fraction_3\": 0.0, \"top_ngram_chr_fraction_4\": 0.0, \"oov_ratio\": 0.0, \"entropy\": 0.4352176404374839, \"perplexity\": 1.5452993419804504, \"per_word_perplexity\": 0.07726496709902252, \"dependency_distance_mean\": 2.0, \"dependency_distance_std\": 0.7999999999999999, \"prop_adjacent_dependency_relation_mean\": 0.5333333333333333, \"prop_adjacent_dependency_relation_std\": 0.06666666666666665, \"flesch_reading_ease\": 82.39000000000001, \"flesch_kincaid_grade\": 3.7550000000000026, \"smog\": 0.0, \"gunning_fog\": 5.7, \"automated_readability_index\": 6.414375, \"coleman_liau_index\": 10.267499999999998, \"lix\": 33.0, \"rix\": 2.0, \"token_length_mean\": 5.0625, \"token_length_median\": 4.5, \"token_length_std\": 2.461421083439402, \"sentence_length_mean\": 8.0, \"sentence_length_median\": 8.0, \"sentence_length_std\": 4.0, \"syllables_per_token_mean\": 1.375, \"syllables_per_token_median\": 1.0, \"syllables_per_token_std\": 0.5994789404140899, \"n_tokens\": 16, \"n_unique_tokens\": 15, \"proportion_unique_tokens\": 0.9375, \"n_characters\": 85, \"n_sentences\": 2, \"first_order_coherence\": 0.2952488958835602, \"second_order_coherence\": 0.0, \"pos_prop_space\": 0.0, \"source\": \"stackexchange\"}",
"prompt": "Can brain cells move? By movement I mean long distance migration (preferably within the brain only).",
"response": [],
"response-suggestion": "The question is relatively broad and one should take into account that the brain not only consists of neurons, but also glial cells (supportive cells) and pre-mitotic neuronal stem cells. Furthermore, as critical fellow-scientists have indicated, developmental stage is very important, as the developing embryonic brain is very different from the adult brain.\nHowever, after sifting through various publications, the answer to the question is actually remarkably simple: Yes, brain cells migrate.\nIn the adult brain glial cells migrate in the brain (Kl\u00e4mbt, 2009). Glial cells are involved in a myriad of functions, but a notable example of migrating glial cells are the oligodendrocytes that migrate relative long distances to find their target axons onto which they wrap themselves to form the insulating myelin sheath (Tsai and Miller, 2002).\nNeuronal stem cells migrate over long distances in response to injury (Imitola et al., 2004) and they migrate from specific stem-cell locations (e.g., hippocampus and subventricular zone) to other regions (Clarke, 2003).\nPost-mitotic, but non-differentiated neurons have been shown to migrate in the adult brain in fish (Scott et al., 2012), and in mammals and non-human primates as well (Sawada et al., 2011).\nNot surprisingly, glial cells, stem cells and neurons also migrate during embryonic development. Most notably, post-mitotic neurons destined to fulfill peripheral functions have to migrate over relatively long distances from the neural crest to their target locations (Neuroscience, 2nd ed, Neuronal Migration).",
"response-suggestion-metadata": {
"agent": null,
"score": null,
"type": null
}
}
Data Fields
Among the dataset fields, we differentiate between the following:
Fields: These are the dataset records themselves, for the moment just text fields are supported. These are the ones that will be used to provide responses to the questions.
- prompt is of type
text
. - (optional) context is of type
text
.
- prompt is of type
Questions: These are the questions that will be asked to the annotators. They can be of different types, such as
RatingQuestion
,TextQuestion
,LabelQuestion
,MultiLabelQuestion
, andRankingQuestion
.- response is of type
text
.
- response is of type
Suggestions: As of Argilla 1.13.0, the suggestions have been included to provide the annotators with suggestions to ease or assist during the annotation process. Suggestions are linked to the existing questions, are always optional, and contain not just the suggestion itself, but also the metadata linked to it, if applicable.
- (optional) response-suggestion is of type
text
.
- (optional) response-suggestion is of type
Additionally, we also have two more fields that are optional and are the following:
- ✨ NEW metadata: This is an optional field that can be used to provide additional information about the dataset record. This can be useful to provide additional context to the annotators, or to provide additional information about the dataset record itself. For example, you can use this to provide a link to the original source of the dataset record, or to provide additional information about the dataset record itself, such as the author, the date, or the source. The metadata is always optional, and can be potentially linked to the
metadata_properties
defined in the dataset configuration file inargilla.yaml
. - external_id: This is an optional field that can be used to provide an external ID for the dataset record. This can be useful if you want to link the dataset record to an external resource, such as a database or a file.
Data Splits
The dataset contains a single split, which is train
.
Dataset Creation
Curation Rationale
[More Information Needed]
Source Data
Initial Data Collection and Normalization
[More Information Needed]
Who are the source language producers?
[More Information Needed]
Annotations
Annotation guidelines
This is a supervised fine-tuning dataset that contains instructions. Please write the response to the instruction in the response field. Take the context into account when writing the response.
Annotation process
[More Information Needed]
Who are the annotators?
[More Information Needed]
Personal and Sensitive Information
[More Information Needed]
Considerations for Using the Data
Social Impact of Dataset
[More Information Needed]
Discussion of Biases
[More Information Needed]
Other Known Limitations
[More Information Needed]
Additional Information
Dataset Curators
[More Information Needed]
Licensing Information
[More Information Needed]
Citation Information
[More Information Needed]
Contributions
[More Information Needed]