Datasets:

Sub-tasks:
text-scoring
Languages:
English
Multilinguality:
monolingual
Size Categories:
1K<n<10K
Language Creators:
expert-generated
Annotations Creators:
expert-generated
Source Datasets:
original
License:
system HF staff commited on
Commit
ea73e75
1 Parent(s): d6e0beb

Update files from the datasets library (from 1.3.0)

Browse files

Release notes: https://github.com/huggingface/datasets/releases/tag/1.3.0

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  1. README.md +5 -0
README.md CHANGED
@@ -43,6 +43,7 @@ task_ids:
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  - [Dataset Curators](#dataset-curators)
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  - [Licensing Information](#licensing-information)
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  - [Citation Information](#citation-information)
 
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  ## Dataset Description
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@@ -190,3 +191,7 @@ Hippocorpus is distributed under the [Open Use of Data Agreement v1.0](https://m
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  abstract = "We investigate the use of NLP as a measure of the cognitive processes involved in storytelling, contrasting imagination and recollection of events. To facilitate this, we collect and release Hippocorpus, a dataset of 7,000 stories about imagined and recalled events. We introduce a measure of narrative flow and use this to examine the narratives for imagined and recalled events. Additionally, we measure the differential recruitment of knowledge attributed to semantic memory versus episodic memory (Tulving, 1972) for imagined and recalled storytelling by comparing the frequency of descriptions of general commonsense events with more specific realis events. Our analyses show that imagined stories have a substantially more linear narrative flow, compared to recalled stories in which adjacent sentences are more disconnected. In addition, while recalled stories rely more on autobiographical events based on episodic memory, imagined stories express more commonsense knowledge based on semantic memory. Finally, our measures reveal the effect of narrativization of memories in stories (e.g., stories about frequently recalled memories flow more linearly; Bartlett, 1932). Our findings highlight the potential of using NLP tools to study the traces of human cognition in language.",
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  }
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  ```
 
 
 
 
 
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  - [Dataset Curators](#dataset-curators)
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  - [Licensing Information](#licensing-information)
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  - [Citation Information](#citation-information)
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+ - [Contributions](#contributions)
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  ## Dataset Description
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  abstract = "We investigate the use of NLP as a measure of the cognitive processes involved in storytelling, contrasting imagination and recollection of events. To facilitate this, we collect and release Hippocorpus, a dataset of 7,000 stories about imagined and recalled events. We introduce a measure of narrative flow and use this to examine the narratives for imagined and recalled events. Additionally, we measure the differential recruitment of knowledge attributed to semantic memory versus episodic memory (Tulving, 1972) for imagined and recalled storytelling by comparing the frequency of descriptions of general commonsense events with more specific realis events. Our analyses show that imagined stories have a substantially more linear narrative flow, compared to recalled stories in which adjacent sentences are more disconnected. In addition, while recalled stories rely more on autobiographical events based on episodic memory, imagined stories express more commonsense knowledge based on semantic memory. Finally, our measures reveal the effect of narrativization of memories in stories (e.g., stories about frequently recalled memories flow more linearly; Bartlett, 1932). Our findings highlight the potential of using NLP tools to study the traces of human cognition in language.",
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  }
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  ```
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+
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+ ### Contributions
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+
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+ Thanks to [@manandey](https://github.com/manandey) for adding this dataset.