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- data/clustering_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl +0 -1
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data/clustering_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
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data/clustering_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
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data/clustering_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
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data/clustering_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
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data/clustering_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
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data/clustering_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
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data/clustering_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
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data/clustering_individual-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720655454.8039, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720655454.6751, "finish": 1720655454.8039, "ip": "", "conv_id": "076b072ffe604e748ee8245bc0629020", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": ["Shanghai", "Beijing", "Shenzhen", "Hangzhou", "Seattle", "Boston", "New York", "San Francisco"], "ncluster": 2, "output": ""}
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{"tstamp": 1720655461.6218, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720655461.5879, "finish": 1720655461.6218, "ip": "", "conv_id": "076b072ffe604e748ee8245bc0629020", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": ["Shanghai", "Beijing", "Shenzhen", "Hangzhou", "Seattle", "Boston", "New York", "San Francisco", "Thorn between the Chevy Malibu Premier and the Honda Accord Touring. Please HELP!!", "How should I go about scheduling a meeting with the dean of my department?", "Thinking about moving to a downtown apartment without a personal garage; how to deal?", "You gotta admire his optimism... The Billy Mays of Craigslist", "First Driving Footage - Koenigsegg Regera", "[OC] This is a song I wrote/recorded that is about the meaning of the Sun in our lives and identities - as a subscriber to r/astrology, I felt it would be a good share here - thank you for listening :-)", "Get back Ex-Love in india", "Wall Street Journal Ferrari Makes Stand-Alone Debut on Milan Stock Exchange", "Sagittarius - In the latest episode of The Zodiac Studies [5:00]", "What happens when you get an F in community college?", "Daenerys Targaryen (Stormborn) \u2013 Sagittarius, a Ruler with High Ideals", "Sol em Sagit\u00e1rio na casa 1"], "ncluster": 3, "output": ""}
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{"tstamp": 1720655480.9975, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720655480.9647, "finish": 1720655480.9975, "ip": "", "conv_id": "076b072ffe604e748ee8245bc0629020", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": ["Shanghai", "Beijing", "Shenzhen", "Hangzhou", "Seattle", "Boston", "New York", "San Francisco", "Thorn between the Chevy Malibu Premier and the Honda Accord Touring. Please HELP!!", "How should I go about scheduling a meeting with the dean of my department?", "Thinking about moving to a downtown apartment without a personal garage; how to deal?", "You gotta admire his optimism... The Billy Mays of Craigslist", "First Driving Footage - Koenigsegg Regera", "[OC] This is a song I wrote/recorded that is about the meaning of the Sun in our lives and identities - as a subscriber to r/astrology, I felt it would be a good share here - thank you for listening :-)", "Get back Ex-Love in india", "Wall Street Journal Ferrari Makes Stand-Alone Debut on Milan Stock Exchange", "Sagittarius - In the latest episode of The Zodiac Studies [5:00]", "What happens when you get an F in community college?", "Daenerys Targaryen (Stormborn) \u2013 Sagittarius, a Ruler with High Ideals", "Sol em Sagit\u00e1rio na casa 1"], "ncluster": 3, "output": ""}
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{"tstamp": 1720986106.5882, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720986095.0959, "finish": 1720986106.5882, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7099bc1c003240309aedb47d035e384f", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": ["Shanghai", "Beijing", "Shenzhen", "Hangzhou", "Seattle", "Boston", "New York", "San Francisco"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "3D", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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data/clustering_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1721157282.6769, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["### Model A: GritLM/GritLM-7B", "### Model B: voyage-multilingual-2"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "23f16ad023404ffa9a182f635e085b53", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": ["Pikachu", "Charmander", "Squirtle", "Chikorita", "Electabuzz", "Ponyta", "Poliwhirl", "Sunflora", "Mareep", "Slugma", "Staryu", "Grovyle", "Bellossom", "Voltorb"], "0_ncluster": 4, "0_output": "", "0_ndim": "3D (press for 2D)", "0_dim_method": "PCA", "0_clustering_method": "KMeans", "1_conv_id": "a0da087631a543c0b9e5c10dd3b5cb6b", "1_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "1_prompt": ["Pikachu", "Charmander", "Squirtle", "Chikorita", "Electabuzz", "Ponyta", "Poliwhirl", "Sunflora", "Mareep", "Slugma", "Staryu", "Grovyle", "Bellossom", "Voltorb"], "1_ncluster": 4, "1_output": "", "1_ndim": "3D (press for 2D)", "1_dim_method": "PCA", "1_clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1720655662.1601, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "upvote", "models": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "ip": "", "conv_id": "b51ac208e73045bebf647c3608c1e7ad", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": ["Shanghai", "Beijing", "Shenzhen", "Hangzhou", "Seattle", "Boston", "New York", "San Francisco"], "ncluster": 2, "output": ""}
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data/clustering_single_choice-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720655475.0144, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "flag", "models": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "ip": "", "conv_id": "076b072ffe604e748ee8245bc0629020", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": ["Shanghai", "Beijing", "Shenzhen", "Hangzhou", "Seattle", "Boston", "New York", "San Francisco", "Thorn between the Chevy Malibu Premier and the Honda Accord Touring. Please HELP!!", "How should I go about scheduling a meeting with the dean of my department?", "Thinking about moving to a downtown apartment without a personal garage; how to deal?", "You gotta admire his optimism... The Billy Mays of Craigslist", "First Driving Footage - Koenigsegg Regera", "[OC] This is a song I wrote/recorded that is about the meaning of the Sun in our lives and identities - as a subscriber to r/astrology, I felt it would be a good share here - thank you for listening :-)", "Get back Ex-Love in india", "Wall Street Journal Ferrari Makes Stand-Alone Debut on Milan Stock Exchange", "Sagittarius - In the latest episode of The Zodiac Studies [5:00]", "What happens when you get an F in community college?", "Daenerys Targaryen (Stormborn) \u2013 Sagittarius, a Ruler with High Ideals", "Sol em Sagit\u00e1rio na casa 1"], "ncluster": 3, "output": ""}
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data/retrieval_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720659467.3902, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "493c7253eca448f8b2b534b4c1f05494", "0_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "0_prompt": "the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "0_output": [["the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "Title: 1001\u00b0 Centigrades\n\nPassage: , alternative title 2, is the second album by French rock band Magma, released on 5 October 1971. Future reissues use both titles as 2: .\nThe first track, \"R\u00efah Sah\u00efltaahk\", was later re-recorded as a full-length studio album, R\u00efah Sah\u00efltaahk, in 2014, as Christian Vander did not consider himself satisfied with the arrangement on this album.\nThe backside of the original record sleeve contains Christian Vander\u2019s poem \u2018\u00cftah\u2019 as well as a French translation, making it one of two official Koba\u00efan-French translations by the band itself.\nBackground\nFor this album,\nTrack listing\nLegacy\nOn the \"zeuhl\" sound that later came to define Magma develops, but it lacks the operatic female vocals and primal driving rhythm of the following album, M\u00ebkan\u00efk D\u00ebstrukt\u00ef\u1e81 K\u00f6mmand\u00f6h.\nBetween the release of this album and MDK, a number of band members left the band due to disagreements on its future sound. Two (saxophonist Yochk'o \"Jeff\" Seffer and keyboardist Fran\u00e7ois Cahen) left to form Zao, a band which follows in the footsteps of Magma's first two releases.\nMusicians\nKlaus Blasquiz\u00a0\u2013 vocals, percussion\nTeddy Lasry\u00a0\u2013 clarinet, saxophone, flute, voice\nYochk'o \"Jeff\" Seffer\u00a0\u2013 saxophone, bass clarinet\nLouis Toesca\u00a0\u2013 trumpet\nFran\u00e7ois Cahen\u00a0\u2013 acoustic & electric pianos\nFrancis Moze\u00a0\u2013 bass\nChristian Vander\u00a0\u2013 vocals, drums, percussion\nProduction\nProduced by Roland Hilda\nEngineered by Dominique Blanc-Francard\nLouis Sarkissian\u00a0\u2013 manager\nLiterature"]], "1_conv_id": "7efbe5505de547f7b3f69638f4d70945", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "1_output": [["the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "Title: C\u00b0\n\nPassage: can mean:\nCelsius degrees\nIn chemistry, the standard state for solute concentration"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659531.2761, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "213a72d9388d4ca8acfdd15ef08394b2", "0_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "0_prompt": "who has won the most united states championships", "0_output": [["who has won the most united states championships", "Title: A HelloWord \\textsc{Bib}\\negthinspace\\TeX~stile file .\\textbf{bst}\n\nPassage: A HelloWord \\textsc{Bib}\\negthinspace\\TeX~stile file .\\textbf{bst} is\ndescribed\n"]], "1_conv_id": "ac9ae449f4dd47e0ae3fd4fa1efe4c88", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "who has won the most united states championships", "1_output": [["who has won the most united states championships", "Title: Dominance, Intimidation, and `Choking' on the PGA Tour\n\nPassage: Extending the work of Connolly and Rendleman (2008), we document the\ndominance of Tiger Woods during the 1998-2001 PGA Tour seasons. We show that by\nplaying \"average,\" Woods could have won some tournaments and placed no worse\nthan fourth in the tournaments in which he participated in year 2000, his best\non the PGA Tour. No other PGA Tour player in our sample could have come close\nto such a feat. We also are able to quantify the intimidation factor associated\nwith playing with Woods. On average, players who were paired with Woods during\nthe 1998-2001 period scored 0.462 strokes per round worse than normal. Although\nwe find that Woods' presence in a tournament may have had a small, but\nstatistically significant adverse impact on the entire field, this effect was\nswamped by the apparent intimidation factor associated with having to play with\nTiger side-by-side.\n We also demonstrate that Phil Mickelson's performance in major golf\nchampionships over the 1998-2001 period was not nearly as bad as was frequently\nmentioned in the golf press. Although Mickelson won no majors during this\nperiod, he played sufficiently well to have won one or two majors under normal\ncircumstances. Moreover, his overall performance in majors, relative to his\nestimated skill level, was comparable to that of Tiger Woods, who won five of\n16 major golf championships during our four-year sample period. Thus, the\ngeneral characterization of Woods as golf's dominant player over the 1998-2001\nperiod was accurate, but the frequent characterization of Phil Mickelson\nchoking in majors was not.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659933.2851, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "79183715605b4e3581ed635a5ebba9a6", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "when did taylor swift's first album release", "0_output": [["when did taylor swift's first album release", "Title: List of Billboard 200 number-one albums of 2009\n\nPassage: These are the US number one albums of 2009, per the Billboard 200. Note that Billboard publishes charts with an issue date approximately 7\u201310 days in advance. Fearless, the second studio album by American country singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, was the best selling album of 2009, and ended atop the Billboard 200 year-end chart of the year.\nChart history"]], "1_conv_id": "1a3a255107c445aa854a1ca012c9cfce", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_prompt": "when did taylor swift's first album release", "1_output": [["when did taylor swift's first album release", "Title: Fearless (Taylor Swift album)\n\nPassage: At the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards in February 2010, Fearless won Album of the Year and Best Country Album. The Album of the Year made Swift, then 20 years old, the youngest artist to win the award, a record she held until the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards in 2020, when Billie Eilish won Album of the Year at 18. Swift is the second country-music artist to win the three highest awards for a country-music album by the ACM, the CMA, and the Grammys\u2014after the Chicks with their 1999 album, Fly\u2014and the first to further win the Grammy for Album of the Year for the same album. \"White Horse\" won two Grammy Awards that year: Best Female Country Vocal Performance and Best Country Song.\nImpact\nAccording to Billboard, as of 2022, Fearless is one of the 15 best-performing 21st-century albums without any number-one singles on the Billboard Hot 100. The album's critical and commercial successes established Swift as a mainstream star beyond the country-music scene. Though Swift identified as a country-music artist, some critics considered Swift more of a pop artist after the crossover success of \"Love Story\" and \"You Belong with Me\"; she officially abandoned country with the release of her fifth studio album, 1989 (2014). Perone remarked that Fearless moved Swift's status from a \"singer-songwriter prodigy to singer-songwriter superstar\". In addition to Swift's musicianship, Perone attributed the album's commercial success to her marketing strategy: with enhanced bonus material for the CD instead of download, Fearless became \"indicative of a 21st century marketing trend in CD recordings\". Swift's rising fame prompted media scrutiny on her public image and personal life. Despite her popularity with music critics and a teenage audience, some media took issue with Fearless's themes as somewhat antifeminist and supposedly harmful to teenage girls.\nSwift's songwriting on Fearless cemented her trademark confessional narratives. Writing for Slate, Carl Wilson dubbed this technique \"Swiftian\". In a 2019 retrospective review of the album for Pitchfork, Cills commented that Fearless was a testament to Swift's abilities of writing timeless songs, noting the album's simplicity and earnestness. Cills remarked that amidst sexualized teen idols, \"there was something novel about Swift being a teenager and writing about her reality in her own terms coming into that same mainstream space, redefining what 'teen pop' could sound like in the process\". Other retrospective reviews attributed the album's enduring popularity to songs about universal feelings\u2014heartbreak, frustration, first love, and aspirations. It placed at number 99 on NPR's 2017 list of the \"150 Greatest Albums Made by Women\" and number 10 on Rolling Stone 2022 list of the \"100 Greatest Country Albums of All Time\". According to Billboard's Andrew Unterberger, the album expanded country music's audience to teenage girls and its Grammy win for Album of the Year was a testament for Swift being \"one of the most important singer-songwriters of her generation\"."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1721297590.2552, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "986f89fb56734fd0b76db89bb13e4680", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "0_output": [["Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: List of possible dwarf planets\n\nPassage: Assessment by Brown\nMike Brown considers 130 trans-Neptunian bodies to be \"probably\" dwarf planets, ranked them by estimated size. He does not consider asteroids, stating \"in the asteroid belt Ceres, with a diameter of 900 km, is the only object large enough to be round.\"\nThe terms for varying degrees of likelihood he split these into:\nNear certainty: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Sufficient confidence to say these must be in hydrostatic equilibrium, even if predominantly rocky. 10 objects as of 2020.\nHighly likely: diameter estimated/measured to be over . The size would have to be \"grossly in error\" or they would have to be primarily rocky to not be dwarf planets. 17 objects as of 2020.\nLikely: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Uncertainties in measurement mean that some of these will be significantly smaller and thus doubtful. 41 objects as of 2020.\nProbably: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Expected to be dwarf planets, if they are icy, and that figure is correct. 62 objects as of 2020.\nPossibly: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Icy moons transition from a round to irregular shape in the 200\u2013400\u00a0km range, suggesting that the same figure holds true for KBOs. Thus, some of these objects could be dwarf planets. 611 objects as of 2020.\nProbably not: diameter estimated/measured to be under 200\u00a0km. No icy moon under 200\u00a0km is round, and the same may be true of KBOs. The estimated size of these objects would have to be in error for them to be dwarf planets.\nBeside the five accepted by the IAU, the 'nearly certain' category includes , , , , , and . Note that although Brown's site claims to be updated daily, these largest objects haven't been updated since late 2013, and indeed the current best diameter estimates for Salacia and are less than 900\u00a0km. (Orcus is just above the threshold.)\nAssessment by Grundy et al.\nGrundy et al. propose that dark, low-density TNOs in the size range of approximately are transitional between smaller, porous (and thus low-density) bodies and larger, denser, brighter, and geologically differentiated planetary bodies (such as dwarf planets). Bodies in this size range should have begun to collapse the interstitial spaces left over from their formation, but not fully, leaving some residual porosity."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a5d2ff02b722493ea8ba3ef23b7afdf2", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "1_output": [["Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: Despite this, studies are strongly suggestive of past liquid water on the surface of Venus, Mars, Vesta and Ceres, suggesting a more common phenomenon than previously thought. Since sustainable liquid water is thought to be essential to support complex life, most estimates, therefore, are inferred from the effect that a repositioned orbit would have on the habitability of Earth or Venus as their surface gravity allows sufficient atmosphere to be retained for several billion years.\nAccording to the extended habitable zone concept, planetary-mass objects with atmospheres capable of inducing sufficient radiative forcing could possess liquid water farther out from the Sun. Such objects could include those whose atmospheres contain a high component of greenhouse gas and terrestrial planets much more massive than Earth (super-Earth class planets), that have retained atmospheres with surface pressures of up to 100\u00a0kbar. There are no examples of such objects in the Solar System to study; not enough is known about the nature of atmospheres of these kinds of extrasolar objects, and their position in the habitable zone cannot determine the net temperature effect of such atmospheres including induced albedo, anti-greenhouse or other possible heat sources.\nFor reference, the average distance from the Sun of some major bodies within the various estimates of the habitable zone is: Mercury, 0.39\u00a0AU; Venus, 0.72\u00a0AU; Earth, 1.00\u00a0AU; Mars, 1.52\u00a0AU; Vesta, 2.36\u00a0AU; Ceres and Pallas, 2.77\u00a0AU; Jupiter, 5.20\u00a0AU; Saturn, 9.58\u00a0AU. In the most conservative estimates, only Earth lies within the zone; in the most permissive estimates, even Saturn at perihelion, or Mercury at aphelion, might be included.\nExtrasolar extrapolation\nAstronomers use stellar flux and the inverse-square law to extrapolate circumstellar habitable zone models created for the Solar System to other stars. For example, according to Kopparapu's habitable zone estimate, although the Solar System has a circumstellar habitable zone centered at 1.34 AU from the Sun, a star with 0.25 times the luminosity of the Sun would have a habitable zone centered at , or 0.5, the distance from the star, corresponding to a distance of 0.67 AU. Various complicating factors, though, including the individual characteristics of stars themselves, mean that extrasolar extrapolation of the HZ concept is more complex.\nSpectral types and star-system characteristics\nSome scientists argue that the concept of a circumstellar habitable zone is actually limited to stars in certain types of systems or of certain spectral types. Binary systems, for example, have circumstellar habitable zones that differ from those of single-star planetary systems, in addition to the orbital stability concerns inherent with a three-body configuration. If the Solar System were such a binary system, the outer limits of the resulting circumstellar habitable zone could extend as far as 2.4 AU."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721322807.6626, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d64057fa53d14b8e92c40499f750e14f", "0_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "0_prompt": "who wrote the song going to kansas city", "0_output": [["who wrote the song going to kansas city", "Title: Going for a Song\n\nPassage: Going for a Song is a British game show that originally aired on BBC1 from 6 October 1965 to 16 October 1977 and hosted by Max Robertson, with Arthur Negus appearing as the resident expert and antique valuer. It was revived on the same channel from 29 August 1995 to 3 February 2002, the revival was first hosted by Michael Parkinson from 1995 to 1999, then by Anne Robinson in 2000 and finally by Michael Aspel from 2001 to 2002, with Eric Knowles as the resident antiques expert for the entire run of the revival.\nFormat\nThe host would introduce an antique to a panel of antique experts, valuers and celebrity panellists who would examine the object and give its date and value. The antiques expert would then present its actual age and worth. Midway through the show, the host would also present a piece of furniture which he would give detailed information about; this was done to effectively break the show into two segments and allow the panelists to relax and listen midway through the show.\nTransmissions\nOriginal\nRevival"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "ae1597019687489589d057401735f610", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "who wrote the song going to kansas city", "1_output": [["who wrote the song going to kansas city", "Title: Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey!\n\nPassage: The song \"Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey\", also known as \"Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey! (Goin' Back to Birmingham)\", was written by Little Richard and recorded on May 9, 1956 at J&M Studio, New Orleans, Louisiana, (supervised by Bumps Blackwell).\nRecording and releases\nIn 1955, Little Richard recorded two different versions of \"Kansas City\" by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller: one on September 13 (supervised by Bumps Blackwell), and one on November 29 (with five vocalists, supervised by Art Rupe). The first version, which adheres closely to the original 1952 recording by Little Willie Littlefield for the first two verses, was not released until November 1970, on the compilation album Well Alright! The second version, which had been substantially re-worked by Little Richard (in particular, it featured a new refrain starting with words, \"Hey, hey, hey, hey; Hey baby, hey child, hey now\") was released in March 1959 on The Fabulous Little Richard and in April 1959 as single after the success of the Wilbert Harrison hit.\n\"Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey\" was recorded six months after the second version of \"Kansas City\", incorporating the same refrain. However, as \"Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey\" was released in 1958with the writing credited solely to Richard Wayne Penniman (Little Richard)the public perceived it as an earlier recording than \"Kansas City\".\nIn January 1958, Specialty Records released the song as B-side of \"Good Golly, Miss Molly\" and, in July 1958, on the compilation Little Richard.\nPersonnel\nLittle Richard \u2013 vocal, piano\nLee Allen \u2013 leader, tenor saxophone\nAlvin \"Red\" Tyler \u2013 baritone saxophone\nEdgar Blanchard \u2013 guitar\nErnest McLean \u2013 guitar\nFrank Fields \u2013 bass\nEarl Palmer \u2013 drums\nCover versions\nThe Beatles performed the song as early as September 5, 1962, at the Cavern Club in Liverpool, and in December of that year at the Star-Club in Hamburg. In 1964, the group released the albums Beatles for Sale (UK) and Beatles VI (US) featuring an arrangement of \"Kansas City\" based on the issued Little Richard version.\n\"Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey\" was recorded by Bob Seger during the recording session that produced his cover of Fats Domino's \"Blue Monday\" for the 1989 Road House soundtrack album. Seger's take remained unreleased until 2011, when it was released as the lead single on the retrospective album Ultimate Hits: Rock and Roll Never Forgets."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1720838995.7785, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "a09a103d86a54991b31c024748db1cc5", "0_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "0_prompt": "what is the genus of a bald eagle", "0_output": [["what is the genus of a bald eagle", "Title: Sea eagle\n\nPassage: A sea eagle or fish eagle (also called erne or ern, mostly in reference to the white-tailed eagle) is any of the birds of prey in the subfamily Haliaeetinae of the bird of prey family Accipitridae. Ten extant species exist, currently described with this label.\nThe subfamily has a significant reach, with a scholarly article in 2005 reporting that they were \"found in riverine and coastal habitat[s] throughout the world\". However, Haliaeetinae inhabited areas have experienced particular threats given the context of human impacts on the environment.\nTaxonomy and evolution\nThe genus Haliaeetus was introduced in 1809 by French naturalist Marie Jules C\u00e9sar Savigny in his chapter on birds in the Description de l'\u00c9gypte. The two fish eagles in the genus Ichthyophaga were found to lie within Haliaeetus in a genetic study in 2005. They were then moved accordingly. They are very similar to the tropical Haliaeetus species. A prehistoric (i.e. extinct before 1500) form from Maui in the Hawaiian Islands may represent a species or subspecies in this genus.\nThe relationships to other genera in the family are less clear; they have long been considered closer to the genus Milvus (kites) than to the true eagles in the genus Aquila on the basis of their morphology and display behaviour; more recent genetic evidence agrees with this, but points to their being related to the genus Buteo (buzzards/hawks), as well, a relationship not previously thought close.\nA 2005 molecular study found that the genus is paraphyletic and subsumes Ichthyophaga, the species diverging into a temperate and tropical group.\nEvolution\nHaliaeetus is possibly one of the oldest genera of living birds. A distal left tarsometatarsus (DPC 1652) recovered from early Oligocene deposits of Fayyum, Egypt (Jebel Qatrani Formation, about 33 million years ago (Mya)) is similar in general pattern and some details to that of a modern sea eagle. The genus was present in the middle Miocene (12-16 Mya) with certainty."]], "1_conv_id": "79e922a3362640ec834ff22166b02b1e", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "what is the genus of a bald eagle", "1_output": [["what is the genus of a bald eagle", "Title: Haliaeetus\n\nPassage: Haliaeetus is a genus of four species of eagles, closely related to the sea eagles in the genus Ichthyophaga.\nThis genus includes the following four species:"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720905325.1376, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e3cbb1da405d498db5cf1ab80ff11403", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "0_output": [["In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "Title: Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: 42 Puzzle\nThe 42 Puzzle is a game devised by Douglas Adams in 1994 for the United States series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books. The puzzle is an illustration consisting of 42 multi-coloured balls, in 7 columns and 6 rows. Douglas Adams has said,\nIn the puzzle the question is unknown, but the answer is already known to be 42. This is similar to the book where the \"Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything\" is known but not the question. The puzzle first appeared in The Illustrated Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It was later incorporated into the covers of all five reprinted \"Hitchhiker's\" novels in the United States.\nAdams has described the puzzle as depicting the number 42 in ten different ways. Six possible questions are:\nOn the Internet and in software\nThe number 42 and its associated phrase, \"Life, the universe, and everything\", have attained cult status on the Internet. \"Life, the universe, and everything\" is a common name for the off-topic section of an Internet forum, and the phrase is invoked in similar ways to mean \"anything at all\". Many chatbots, when asked about the meaning of life, will answer \"42\". Several online calculators are also programmed with the Question. Google Calculator will give the result to \"the answer to life the universe and everything\" as 42, as will Wolfram's Computational Knowledge Engine. Similarly, DuckDuckGo also gives the result of \"the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe and everything\" as 42. In the online community Second Life, there is a section on a sim called \"42nd Life\". It is devoted to this concept in the book series, and several attempts at recreating Milliways, the Restaurant at the End of the Universe, were made.\nIn OpenOffice.org software (prior to version 3.4) if \"=ANTWORT(\"Das Leben, das Universum und der ganze Rest\") (German for =ANSWER(\"life, the universe and everything\")) is typed into any cell of a spreadsheet, the result is 42.\nISO/IEC 14519-2001/ IEEE Std 1003.5-1999, IEEE Standard for Information Technology \u2013 POSIX(R) Ada Language Interfaces \u2013 Part 1: Binding for System Application Program Interface (API) , uses the number 42 as the required return value from a process that terminates due to an unhandled exception. The Rationale says \"the choice of the value 42 is arbitrary\" and cites the Adams book as the source of the value."]], "1_conv_id": "4342dfa715fe4ab3a3101e0cb23bc27d", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "1_output": [["In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "Title: Meaning of life\n\nPassage: Arthur Schopenhauer answered: \"What is the meaning of life?\" by stating that one's life reflects one's will, and that the will (life) is an aimless, irrational, and painful drive. Salvation, deliverance, and escape from suffering are in aesthetic contemplation, sympathy for others, and asceticism.\nFor Friedrich Nietzsche, life is worth living only if there are goals inspiring one to live. Accordingly, he saw nihilism (\"all that happens is meaningless\") as without goals. He stated that asceticism denies one's living in the world; stated that values are not objective facts, that are rationally necessary, universally binding commitments: our evaluations are interpretations, and not reflections of the world, as it is, in itself, and, therefore, all ideations take place from a particular perspective.\nAbsurdism\nIn absurdist philosophy, the Absurd arises out of the fundamental disharmony between the individual's search for meaning and the apparent meaninglessness of the universe. As beings looking for meaning in a meaningless world, humans have three ways of resolving the dilemma. Kierkegaard and Camus describe the solutions in their works, The Sickness Unto Death (1849) and The Myth of Sisyphus (1942):\nSuicide (or, \"escaping existence\"): a solution in which a person simply ends one's own life. Both Kierkegaard and Camus dismiss the viability of this option.\nReligious belief in a transcendent realm or being: a solution in which one believes in the existence of a reality that is beyond the Absurd, and, as such, has meaning. Kierkegaard stated that a belief in anything beyond the Absurd requires a non-rational but perhaps necessary religious acceptance in such an intangible and empirically unprovable thing (now commonly referred to as a \"leap of faith\"). However, Camus regarded this solution as \"philosophical suicide\".\nAcceptance of the Absurd: a solution in which one accepts and even embraces the Absurd and continues to live in spite of it. Camus endorsed this solution (notably in his 1947 allegorical novel The Plague or La Peste), while Kierkegaard regarded this solution as \"demoniac madness\": \"He rages most of all at the thought that eternity might get it into its head to take his misery from him!\"\nSecular humanism\nPer secular humanism, the human species came to be by reproducing successive generations in a progression of unguided evolution as an integral expression of nature, which is self-existing. Human knowledge comes from human observation, experimentation, and rational analysis (the scientific method), and not from supernatural sources; the nature of the universe is what people discern it to be. Likewise, \"values and realities\" are determined \"by means of intelligent inquiry\" and \"are derived from human need and interest as tested by experience\", that is, by critical intelligence. \"As far as we know, the total personality is [a function] of the biological organism transacting in a social and cultural context.\""]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912093.1618, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "166d4ed05249416d98ef4c0cf901c1c4", "0_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]], "1_conv_id": "aebcb01070d340929ae5b67c8198be49", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912104.3278, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d431b558e3e045ecb835251ade2e277c", "0_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]], "1_conv_id": "cf63b18ef49740b1a933b9e6f3d146c5", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Isaac Asimov's Guide to Earth and Space\n\nPassage: Guide to Earth and Space () is a non-fiction work by American writer Isaac Asimov and published by Random House in 1991. The book differs somewhat in structure from typical literature by presenting its information in the form of answers to a series of questions, presumably posed by the reader. Like many of Asimov's non-fiction pieces, this \"Guide\" starts with the basics, answering relatively simple (to the modern reader) questions about the Earth - is it flat, does it spin, is it the center of the universe, etc...\nFrom there, the questions progress roughly through the evolution of astronomy and discovery to introduce more complex topics, from the orbits of the planets to the formation of stars and the characteristics of quasars and black holes.\nMany of the concepts discussed in the latter sections of the books can be compared with those presented in Asimov's 1966 work The Universe: From Flat Earth to Quasar; furthermore, they serve in several cases to update the state of the art from the intervening 25 years between publications."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912135.1025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d6af4ab295e24e27aeb726ee28fd8853", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Hitchhiker's Guide (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: Hitchhiker's Guide usually refers to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams' science fiction comedy franchise, partly inspired by the European guidebook.\nHitchhiker's Guide may also refer to:\nHitch-hiker's Guide to Europe, a travel guide"]], "1_conv_id": "63d5adebc3de461bb4c212b407621727", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912153.6341, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "4221d598be5143d1926078429ed358eb", "0_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Encyclopedia Galactica is the name of a number of fictional or hypothetical encyclopedias containing all the knowledge accumulated by a galaxy-spanning civilization, most notably in Isaac Asimov's Foundation series. The concept of a \"future encyclopedia\" has become \"something iconic among many lovers of the science fiction\", and has been reused by numerous other writers.\nAsimov's Encyclopedia Galactica\nEncyclopedia Galactica first appeared in Isaac Asimov's short story \"Foundation\" (Astounding Science Fiction, May 1942), later republished as \"The Encyclopedists\" in the short-story collection Foundation (1951). Asimov's Encyclopedia Galactica was a compendium of all knowledge then available in the Galactic Empire, intended to preserve that knowledge in a remote region of the galaxy in the event of a foreseen galactic catastrophe. The Encyclopedia is later revealed to be an element in an act of misdirection, with its real purpose being to concentrate a group of knowledgeable scientists on a remote, resource-poor planet named Terminus, with the long-term aim of revitalizing the technologically stagnant and scientifically dormant empire. Originally published in a physical medium, it later becomes computerized and subject to continual change.\nAsimov used the Encyclopedia Galactica as a literary device throughout his Foundation series, beginning many of the book sections or chapters with a short extract from the Encyclopedia as epigraphs, discussing a key character or event in the story. This provides the reader with a hazy idea of what is to come.\nTheodore Wein considers the Encyclopedia Galactica as possibly inspired by a reference in H. G. Wells's The Shape of Things to Come (1933). The future world envisioned by Wells includes an \"Encyclopaedic organization which centres upon Barcelona, with seventeen million active workers\" and which is tasked with creating \"the Fundamental Knowledge System which accumulates, sorts, keeps in order and renders available everything that is known\". As pointed out by Wein, this Wells book was at its best-known and most influential in the late 1930s \u2013 coinciding with \"the period of incubation\" when the young Asimov became interested in science fiction, reading a lot of it and starting to formulate his own ideas."]], "1_conv_id": "a7728eb6e0164784b66268591a87fdaf", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Isaac Asimov's Guide to Earth and Space\n\nPassage: Guide to Earth and Space () is a non-fiction work by American writer Isaac Asimov and published by Random House in 1991. The book differs somewhat in structure from typical literature by presenting its information in the form of answers to a series of questions, presumably posed by the reader. Like many of Asimov's non-fiction pieces, this \"Guide\" starts with the basics, answering relatively simple (to the modern reader) questions about the Earth - is it flat, does it spin, is it the center of the universe, etc...\nFrom there, the questions progress roughly through the evolution of astronomy and discovery to introduce more complex topics, from the orbits of the planets to the formation of stars and the characteristics of quasars and black holes.\nMany of the concepts discussed in the latter sections of the books can be compared with those presented in Asimov's 1966 work The Universe: From Flat Earth to Quasar; furthermore, they serve in several cases to update the state of the art from the intervening 25 years between publications."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912208.6833, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e1518c00ff2b4c7298a4c4335d84e06b", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]], "1_conv_id": "ab88b43ea171403aa2219f6bdb7b2785", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912231.2051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "736465a7bcca4b6b823676b4ab584210", "0_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Encyclopedia Galactica is the name of a number of fictional or hypothetical encyclopedias containing all the knowledge accumulated by a galaxy-spanning civilization, most notably in Isaac Asimov's Foundation series. The concept of a \"future encyclopedia\" has become \"something iconic among many lovers of the science fiction\", and has been reused by numerous other writers.\nAsimov's Encyclopedia Galactica\nEncyclopedia Galactica first appeared in Isaac Asimov's short story \"Foundation\" (Astounding Science Fiction, May 1942), later republished as \"The Encyclopedists\" in the short-story collection Foundation (1951). Asimov's Encyclopedia Galactica was a compendium of all knowledge then available in the Galactic Empire, intended to preserve that knowledge in a remote region of the galaxy in the event of a foreseen galactic catastrophe. The Encyclopedia is later revealed to be an element in an act of misdirection, with its real purpose being to concentrate a group of knowledgeable scientists on a remote, resource-poor planet named Terminus, with the long-term aim of revitalizing the technologically stagnant and scientifically dormant empire. Originally published in a physical medium, it later becomes computerized and subject to continual change.\nAsimov used the Encyclopedia Galactica as a literary device throughout his Foundation series, beginning many of the book sections or chapters with a short extract from the Encyclopedia as epigraphs, discussing a key character or event in the story. This provides the reader with a hazy idea of what is to come.\nTheodore Wein considers the Encyclopedia Galactica as possibly inspired by a reference in H. G. Wells's The Shape of Things to Come (1933). The future world envisioned by Wells includes an \"Encyclopaedic organization which centres upon Barcelona, with seventeen million active workers\" and which is tasked with creating \"the Fundamental Knowledge System which accumulates, sorts, keeps in order and renders available everything that is known\". As pointed out by Wein, this Wells book was at its best-known and most influential in the late 1930s \u2013 coinciding with \"the period of incubation\" when the young Asimov became interested in science fiction, reading a lot of it and starting to formulate his own ideas."]], "1_conv_id": "9af3613942c94f0f989568a5c08bd9d8", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912253.0487, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ca3a16142f4e4473bdd6067e16a203d0", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]], "1_conv_id": "441e8c7aa89242bc8405aa94729e05c1", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912259.9191, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "b1360cf659f249f8a92c539f296d2f76", "0_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Encyclopedia Galactica is the name of a number of fictional or hypothetical encyclopedias containing all the knowledge accumulated by a galaxy-spanning civilization, most notably in Isaac Asimov's Foundation series. The concept of a \"future encyclopedia\" has become \"something iconic among many lovers of the science fiction\", and has been reused by numerous other writers.\nAsimov's Encyclopedia Galactica\nEncyclopedia Galactica first appeared in Isaac Asimov's short story \"Foundation\" (Astounding Science Fiction, May 1942), later republished as \"The Encyclopedists\" in the short-story collection Foundation (1951). Asimov's Encyclopedia Galactica was a compendium of all knowledge then available in the Galactic Empire, intended to preserve that knowledge in a remote region of the galaxy in the event of a foreseen galactic catastrophe. The Encyclopedia is later revealed to be an element in an act of misdirection, with its real purpose being to concentrate a group of knowledgeable scientists on a remote, resource-poor planet named Terminus, with the long-term aim of revitalizing the technologically stagnant and scientifically dormant empire. Originally published in a physical medium, it later becomes computerized and subject to continual change.\nAsimov used the Encyclopedia Galactica as a literary device throughout his Foundation series, beginning many of the book sections or chapters with a short extract from the Encyclopedia as epigraphs, discussing a key character or event in the story. This provides the reader with a hazy idea of what is to come.\nTheodore Wein considers the Encyclopedia Galactica as possibly inspired by a reference in H. G. Wells's The Shape of Things to Come (1933). The future world envisioned by Wells includes an \"Encyclopaedic organization which centres upon Barcelona, with seventeen million active workers\" and which is tasked with creating \"the Fundamental Knowledge System which accumulates, sorts, keeps in order and renders available everything that is known\". As pointed out by Wein, this Wells book was at its best-known and most influential in the late 1930s \u2013 coinciding with \"the period of incubation\" when the young Asimov became interested in science fiction, reading a lot of it and starting to formulate his own ideas."]], "1_conv_id": "08d88f7f7220434988353dc60a7dae92", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720912278.6569, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["BM25", "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "5ff2aad4bd9641a0a006950487cf790e", "0_model_name": "BM25", "0_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "0_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Later instances in fiction\nVarious authors have invoked the Encyclopedia Galactica in both science and science fiction. The first may have been author Frank Holby's short story \"The Strange Case of the Missing Hero\" in the July 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction which featured Sebastian Lelong, editor of the Encyclopedia. It was also a common fixture in previous incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes comic books, and has appeared in the Star Wars expanded universe and Superman comics set in the future. The \"Encyclopedia Galactica\" was also mentioned as being a collection of all the knowledge of a galactic Empire in the 1989 science fiction short story \"The Originist\" by American novelist Orson Scott Card, and took place in Isaac Asimov's fictional \"Foundation\" Universe.\nIn the comic science fiction series by Douglas Adams, the Galactica is frequently contrasted with the apparently more popular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:\nRobert A. Heinlein mentioned the Encyclopedia in chapter three of To Sail Beyond the Sunset (1987): \"... the computer that led the Lunar Revolution on time line three, code 'Neil Armstrong.' Let's skip the details; it's all in Encyclopedia Galacta (sic) and other books.\"\nIn Arthur C. Clarke's and Gentry Lee's novel Rama II (1989), Nicole des Jardins says to Richard Wakefield, \"Just think, the sum of everything all human beings know or have ever known might be nothing more than an infinitesimal fraction of the Encyclopedia Galactica.\"\n\"Encyclopedia Galactica\" is mentioned by Charlie Sheen's character in The Arrival (1996), and by Jodie Foster's character in Contact (1997).\nThe Orion's Arm worldbuilding project uses a fictional database called the Encyclopaedia Galactica as its primary framing device, each page presenting itself as an individual article of the Encyclopaedia and focusing on a specific aspect of the Orion's Arm universe.\nOther uses\nThere was a series of five video documentaries in 1993, collectively called Encyclop\u00e6dia Galactica, with the episode titles \u201cThe Inner Solar System\u201d, \u201cThe Outer Solar System\u201d, \u201cStar Trekking\u201d, \u201cDiscovery\u201d, and \u201cAstronomy and the Stars\u201d. The videos were produced by York Films of England and distributed by Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica (Australia). Other entities associated with the production of the video series were Encyclop\u00e6dia Britannica Educational Corporation, The Learning Channel, The Discovery Channel Europe, S4C Wales, System TV France and Yleisradio Finland.\nThere was an Encyclopedia Galactica: from the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica published in 1978. Aimed at a juvenile audience, this was a tie in to the Battlestar Galactica television series being broadcast at the time.\nThe term has been used in non-fictional contexts as well. One example is its use by Carl Sagan (1934\u20131996) in his 1980 book Cosmos, and the 12th episode of his documentary of the same name, to refer to a text where hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations could store all of their information and knowledge."]], "1_conv_id": "18b05d9921154208a5b1081e1f50731f", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "1_output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Isaac Asimov's Guide to Earth and Space\n\nPassage: Guide to Earth and Space () is a non-fiction work by American writer Isaac Asimov and published by Random House in 1991. The book differs somewhat in structure from typical literature by presenting its information in the form of answers to a series of questions, presumably posed by the reader. Like many of Asimov's non-fiction pieces, this \"Guide\" starts with the basics, answering relatively simple (to the modern reader) questions about the Earth - is it flat, does it spin, is it the center of the universe, etc...\nFrom there, the questions progress roughly through the evolution of astronomy and discovery to introduce more complex topics, from the orbits of the planets to the formation of stars and the characteristics of quasars and black holes.\nMany of the concepts discussed in the latter sections of the books can be compared with those presented in Asimov's 1966 work The Universe: From Flat Earth to Quasar; furthermore, they serve in several cases to update the state of the art from the intervening 25 years between publications."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720913289.1699, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d854d8a7afac4b658499c8c30c2d4e3f", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "0_output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Title: Turing test\n\nPassage: The Turing test, originally called the imitation game by Alan Turing in 1950, is a test of a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour equivalent to, or indistinguishable from, that of a human. Turing proposed that a human evaluator would judge natural language conversations between a human and a machine designed to generate human-like responses. The evaluator would be aware that one of the two partners in conversation was a machine, and all participants would be separated from one another. The conversation would be limited to a text-only channel, such as a computer keyboard and screen, so the result would not depend on the machine's ability to render words as speech. If the evaluator could not reliably tell the machine from the human, the machine would be said to have passed the test. The test results would not depend on the machine's ability to give correct answers to questions, only on how closely its answers resembled those a human would give. Since the Turing test is a test of indistinguishability in performance capacity, the verbal version generalizes naturally to all of human performance capacity, verbal as well as nonverbal (robotic).\nThe test was introduced by Turing in his 1950 paper \"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" while working at the University of Manchester. It opens with the words: \"I propose to consider the question, 'Can machines think? Because \"thinking\" is difficult to define, Turing chooses to \"replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" Turing describes the new form of the problem in terms of a three-person game called the \"imitation game\", in which an interrogator asks questions of a man and a woman in another room in order to determine the correct sex of the two players. Turing's new question is: \"Are there imaginable digital computers which would do well in the imitation game?\" This question, Turing believed, was one that could actually be answered. In the remainder of the paper, he argued against all the major objections to the proposition that \"machines can think\".\nSince Turing introduced his test, it has been both highly influential and widely criticized, and has become an important concept in the philosophy of artificial intelligence. Philosopher John Searle would comment on the Turing test in his Chinese room argument, a thought experiment that stipulates that a machine cannot have a \"mind\", \"understanding\", or \"consciousness\", regardless of how intelligently or human-like the program may make the computer behave. Searle criticizes Turing's test and claims it is insufficient to detect the presence of consciousness.\nHistory\nPhilosophical background"]], "1_conv_id": "2d4015290ce84e85a1fb09990fe36f13", "1_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "1_prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "1_output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Title: Machines That Think\n\nPassage: Machines That Think is a compilation of 29 science fiction stories probing the scientific, spiritual, and moral facets of computers and robots and speculating on their future. It was edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Patricia S. Warrick.\nPublished in 1984 by Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, it features a foreword by Asimov, the celebrated creator of the Three Laws of Robotics. (At five stories, Asimov's contributions dominate the book's contents.) Machines That Think was reprinted in 1992 by Wings Books as War with the Robots. (However, one story \u2014 \"I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream\" by Harlan Ellison \u2014 was removed.)\nEach story has introductory notes by Warrick, author of The Cybernetic Imagination in Science Fiction (1981), explaining the significance of the story in the context of science fiction's evolution of ideas concerning artificial intelligence. This anthology is a companion piece to that non-fiction book, providing the source material upon which Warrick's analysis is based.\nContents"]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-3c024354-1f91-4cbd-9efb-98a422340116.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720829246.3946, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "8a0a87ed1d1d421a9558780a259ee83c", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "0_output": [["In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "Title: Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: 42 Puzzle\nThe 42 Puzzle is a game devised by Douglas Adams in 1994 for the United States series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books. The puzzle is an illustration consisting of 42 multi-coloured balls, in 7 columns and 6 rows. Douglas Adams has said,\nIn the puzzle the question is unknown, but the answer is already known to be 42. This is similar to the book where the \"Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything\" is known but not the question. The puzzle first appeared in The Illustrated Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It was later incorporated into the covers of all five reprinted \"Hitchhiker's\" novels in the United States.\nAdams has described the puzzle as depicting the number 42 in ten different ways. Six possible questions are:\nOn the Internet and in software\nThe number 42 and its associated phrase, \"Life, the universe, and everything\", have attained cult status on the Internet. \"Life, the universe, and everything\" is a common name for the off-topic section of an Internet forum, and the phrase is invoked in similar ways to mean \"anything at all\". Many chatbots, when asked about the meaning of life, will answer \"42\". Several online calculators are also programmed with the Question. Google Calculator will give the result to \"the answer to life the universe and everything\" as 42, as will Wolfram's Computational Knowledge Engine. Similarly, DuckDuckGo also gives the result of \"the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe and everything\" as 42. In the online community Second Life, there is a section on a sim called \"42nd Life\". It is devoted to this concept in the book series, and several attempts at recreating Milliways, the Restaurant at the End of the Universe, were made.\nIn OpenOffice.org software (prior to version 3.4) if \"=ANTWORT(\"Das Leben, das Universum und der ganze Rest\") (German for =ANSWER(\"life, the universe and everything\")) is typed into any cell of a spreadsheet, the result is 42.\nISO/IEC 14519-2001/ IEEE Std 1003.5-1999, IEEE Standard for Information Technology \u2013 POSIX(R) Ada Language Interfaces \u2013 Part 1: Binding for System Application Program Interface (API) , uses the number 42 as the required return value from a process that terminates due to an unhandled exception. The Rationale says \"the choice of the value 42 is arbitrary\" and cites the Adams book as the source of the value."]], "1_conv_id": "205a3083409f4fa88d94728efe46137a", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "1_output": [["In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "Title: Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a comic science fiction series created by Douglas Adams that has become popular among fans of the genre and members of the scientific community. Phrases from it are widely recognised and often used in reference to, but outside the context of, the source material. Many writers on popular science, such as Fred Alan Wolf, Paul Davies, and Michio Kaku, have used quotations in their books to illustrate facts about cosmology or philosophy.\nThe Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything is 42\nIn the radio series and the first novel, a group of hyper-intelligent pan-dimensional beings demand to learn the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, The Universe, and Everything from the supercomputer Deep Thought, specially built for this purpose. It takes Deep Thought million years to compute and check the answer, which turns out to be 42. Deep Thought points out that the answer seems meaningless because the beings who instructed it never knew what the question was."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720829425.7723, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6177414870cd470bbc243adb06c71fc4", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "I read this paper about handling data constraints when training large language models. Among others, it investigated repeating data as one solution & the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "0_output": [["I read this paper about handling data constraints when training large language models. Among others, it investigated repeating data as one solution & the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both\nparameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests\nthat training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data\navailable on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling\nlanguage models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set\nof experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget,\nranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We\nfind that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to\n4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having\nunique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute\neventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law\nfor compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated\ntokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating\ndata scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or\nremoving commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs\nare freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations.\n"]], "1_conv_id": "fc01e83915a24b8f9f75daa8bf07498d", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "I read this paper about handling data constraints when training large language models. Among others, it investigated repeating data as one solution & the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "1_output": [["I read this paper about handling data constraints when training large language models. Among others, it investigated repeating data as one solution & the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both\nparameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests\nthat training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data\navailable on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling\nlanguage models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set\nof experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget,\nranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We\nfind that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to\n4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having\nunique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute\neventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law\nfor compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated\ntokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating\ndata scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or\nremoving commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs\nare freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations.\n"]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1721424388.8123, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "57bfe39ed44a4a7c80ba96334b8a2b9d", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "A system that enhances the trustworthiness of language model outputs by enabling attribution to external evidence.", "0_output": [["A system that enhances the trustworthiness of language model outputs by enabling attribution to external evidence.", "Title: Measuring Attribution in Natural Language Generation Models\n\nAbstract: With recent improvements in natural language generation (NLG) models for various applications, it has become imperative to have the means to identify and evaluate whether NLG output is only sharing verifiable information about the external world. In this work, we present a new evaluation framework entitled Attributable to Identified Sources (AIS) for assessing the output of natural language generation models, when such output pertains to the external world. We first define AIS and introduce a two-stage annotation pipeline for allowing annotators to appropriately evaluate model output according to AIS guidelines. We empirically validate this approach on generation datasets spanning three tasks (two conversational QA datasets, a summarization dataset, and a table-to-text dataset) via human evaluation studies that suggest that AIS could serve as a common framework for measuring whether model-generated statements are supported by underlying sources. We release guidelines for the human evaluation studies."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "35d8bf952323400482d2b5b5638a6d79", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "A system that enhances the trustworthiness of language model outputs by enabling attribution to external evidence.", "1_output": [["A system that enhances the trustworthiness of language model outputs by enabling attribution to external evidence.", "Title: Establishing Trustworthiness: Rethinking Tasks and Model Evaluation\n\nAbstract: Language understanding is a multi-faceted cognitive capability, which the Natural Language Processing (NLP) community has striven to model computationally for decades. Traditionally, facets of linguistic intelligence have been compartmentalized into tasks with specialized model architectures and corresponding evaluation protocols. With the advent of large language models (LLMs) the community has witnessed a dramatic shift towards general purpose, task-agnostic approaches powered by generative models. As a consequence, the traditional compartmentalized notion of language tasks is breaking down, followed by an increasing challenge for evaluation and analysis. At the same time, LLMs are being deployed in more real-world scenarios, including previously unforeseen zero-shot setups, increasing the need for trustworthy and reliable systems. Therefore, we argue that it is time to rethink what constitutes tasks and model evaluation in NLP, and pursue a more holistic view on language, placing trustworthiness at the center. Towards this goal, we review existing compartmentalized approaches for understanding the origins of a model's functional capacity, and provide recommendations for more multi-faceted evaluation protocols."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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data/retrieval_battle-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720893979.6324, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "GritLM/GritLM-7B"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e98e6cce0d5e47e78c66775d2c7b0ba5", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "Which book talks about Arthur Dent?", "0_output": [["Which book talks about Arthur Dent?", "Title: Arthur Dent\n\nPassage: Arthur's story\nAlong with Ford Prefect, Arthur Dent barely escapes from Earth as it is demolished to make way for a hyperspace bypass. Arthur spends the next several years, still wearing his dressing gown, helplessly launched from crisis to crisis while trying to straighten out his lifestyle. He rather enjoys tea, but seems to have trouble obtaining it in the far reaches of the galaxy. In time, he learns how to fly and carves a niche for himself as a sandwich-maker.\nIn most versions of the series, Arthur and Ford eventually find themselves back on Earth, but two million years in the past, marooned with a third of the Golgafrincham population (consisting of hairdressers, account executives, film-makers, security guards, telephone sanitisers, and the like). The Golgafrincham arrival spurs the extinction of the native \"cavemen\" (although, as Ford Prefect pointed out, they did not live in caves, to which a witty repartee was that they 'might have been getting their caves redecorated'), resulting in the human race's eventual replacement by a shipload of middle managers, telephone sanitisers and hairdressers.\nThe original radio series and the television series end at this point, although a second radio series was made in which Ford and Arthur are rescued by Ford's cousin Zaphod Beeblebrox and have further adventures, and which ends with Arthur stealing Zaphod's spaceship, the Heart of Gold (which Zaphod had himself stolen) and striking out with only Marvin the Paranoid Android, Eddie the shipboard computer, a cloned archaeologist named Lintilla, a bunch of appliances with Genuine People Personalities, and a rather battered copy of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy for companionship.\nIn the novels and the new (series 3 and onwards) radio series (the latter of which dismisses the events of the second radio series as one of Zaphod's \"psychotic episodes\"), Ford and Arthur escape prehistoric Earth via an eddy in the space-time continuum and a time-travelling Chesterfield sofa that deposits them in the middle of Lord's Cricket Ground at the climax of the final (in more ways than one, it turns out) match in the Ashes series, the day before the destruction of Earth by the Vogons. Having escaped the destruction of Earth once more and survived further adventures, Arthur eventually finds himself once more back on Earth (or rather an alternative Earth founded by the Dolphins to save the human race from extinction). Here he falls in love with a woman named Fenchurch and seems set to live happily ever after \u2013 at least until the following \u2013 and final \u2013 novel, Mostly Harmless. By the end of this fifth novel, Earth and all of its possible permutations and alternate versions are destroyed once and for all, and everybody dies, at least as far as the novel goes. However, it is subtly hinted that Arthur, his friends, and a few Earths might have survived."]], "1_conv_id": "0d82a223b5c043d1b9607a85b77963f3", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "Which book talks about Arthur Dent?", "1_output": [["Which book talks about Arthur Dent?", "Title: Arthur Dent\n\nPassage: Arthur Philip Dent is a fictional character and the hapless protagonist of the comic science fiction series The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams."]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720599615.5378, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ce8bc3de56bc406394ab1d5e898f194b", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_prompt": "how many wars held between india and pakistan", "0_output": [["how many wars held between india and pakistan", "Title: Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts\n\nPassage: Since the Partition of British India in 1947 and subsequent creation of the dominions of India and Pakistan, the two countries have been involved in a number of wars, conflicts, and military standoffs. A long-running dispute over Kashmir and cross-border terrorism have been the predominant cause of conflict between the two states, with the exception of the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, which occurred as a direct result of hostilities stemming from the Bangladesh Liberation War in erstwhile East Pakistan (now Bangladesh).\nBackground"]], "1_conv_id": "fa68c02aefec42189c8d00d093676c61", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "how many wars held between india and pakistan", "1_output": [["how many wars held between india and pakistan", "Title: List of wars involving Afghanistan\n\nPassage: This is a list of wars involving Afghanistan."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720638526.4012, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "472bd3be2f2a4929bea65b6bc088abc4", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "who was the aztec ruler when the spanish arrived", "0_output": [["who was the aztec ruler when the spanish arrived", "Title: The birth of a genius. 1905\n\nPassage: arXiv admin note: This submission has been withdrawn by arXiv administrators\ndue to inflammatory content and unprofessional language\n"]], "1_conv_id": "e43d32f5619d41feacbc77864a0b7b1d", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_prompt": "who was the aztec ruler when the spanish arrived", "1_output": [["who was the aztec ruler when the spanish arrived", "Title: Eclipses in the Aztec Codices\n\nPassage: This paper centers on the collection of accounts on solar eclipses from the\nera of the Aztecs in Mesoamerica, about 1300 to 1550 AD. We present a list of\nall eclipse events complying with the topological visibility from the capital\nTenochtitlan. Forty records of 23 eclipses entered the various Aztec\nmanuscripts (codices), usually those of large magnitude. Each event is\ndiscussed with regard to its historical context, as we try to comprehend the\nimportance the Aztecs gave to the phenomenon. It seems that this culture paid\nnoticeably less attention to eclipses than the civilisations in the \"Old\nWorld\". People did not understand the cause of it and did not care as much\nabout astronomy as in Babylonia and ancient China. Furthermore, we discuss the\nlegend on the comet of Moctezuma II. It turns out that the post-conquest\nwriters misconceived what the sighting was meant to be.\n"]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720597482.652, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e255916866d747e0bee95d745bf8c18f", "0_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "0_prompt": "when did the animal rights movement began in the us", "0_output": [["when did the animal rights movement began in the us", "Title: The Case for Animal Rights\n\nPassage: Regan, to critique consequentialist ethics, provides a hypothetical in which he describes murdering a rich relative for a fortune in wealth, some of which he donates for a tax cut to a local children's hospital, resulting in the wellbeing of the children, their relatives, and their friends. He maintains that most people would find such an action unpalatable, and uses this to critique Peter Singer's hedonic utilitarianism. He further asserts that as the motives in the hypothetical were not noble to begin with, such an action was actually immoral, even if it did result in some positive consequences.\nFinally, Regan concludes that animal exploitation in modern society is not justifiable, as animal industries view animals as a means to an end for trivial reasons - meat is not necessary for health, most cases of animal testing are for unnecessary consumer products, and hunting is similarly unnecessary. He therefore advocates abolishing the exploitation of animals for food, animal testing, and commercial hunting.\nReviews\nThe moral philosopher Mary Midgley notes in the London Review of Books that Regan builds on the work of Peter Singer, commenting that \"utilitarianism [Singer's position], though strong today, is only one side of our current morality\". Midgley states, \"Essentially I think he [Regan] is right ... Persuasion is needed, not in the sense of illicit emotional pressure, but of imaginative restatement. From this angle, the strategy of Regan\u2019s book is faulty. It is too abstract and too contentious. As tends to happen with American academic books in the Rawlsian tradition, the relation between theory and practice is oversimplified. There is too much attention paid to the winning of arguments and too little to the complexities of the world.\"\nMidgley also notes, \"Ought it [the Kantian idea of morality] really to be used \u2013 as it still very often is \u2013 to exclude animals from serious consideration? This is Regan\u2019s question and he deals with it soundly. He does not find it hard to show that the notion of humanity which this Kantian view encapsulates is far too narrow, hard to defend at any time, and increasingly so today.\", and \"The core of Regan\u2019s argument is, then, this concept of an independent, conscious being. Reversing the traditional approach, he puts the burden of proof on those who claim that some such beings do not matter\"\nWith regard to future debate, Midgley states:\nIt would certainly be better to relate \u2018rights\u2019 more clearly to a background of other moral concepts, with much more attention to the priority systems by which we deal with conflicts. And \u2013 to consider the future \u2013 we urgently need now to move the controversy in the direction of asking what we mean by rights and by equality, rather than continuing with any more simple yes-or-no battles about whether animals have them. Regan\u2019s book is certainly important and in many ways admirable \u2013 a serious, substantial contribution to giving animals their proper place on the philosophical map."]], "1_conv_id": "543e4606da07436dac380e3346a35146", "1_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "1_prompt": "when did the animal rights movement began in the us", "1_output": [["when did the animal rights movement began in the us", "Title: History of animal rights\n\nPassage: Ren\u00e9 Descartes\nThe great influence of the 17th century was the French philosopher Ren\u00e9 Descartes (1596\u20131650), whose Meditations (1641) informed attitudes about animals well into the 20th century. Writing during the scientific revolution, Descartes proposed a mechanistic theory of the universe, the aim of which was to show that the world could be mapped out without allusion to subjective experience. His mechanistic approach was extended to the issue of animal consciousness. Mind, for Descartes, was a thing apart from the physical universe, a separate substance, linking human beings to the mind of God. The nonhuman, on the other hand, were for Descartes nothing but complex automata, with no souls, minds, or reason.\nTreatment of animals as man's duty towards himself\nJohn Locke, Immanuel Kant\nAgainst Descartes, the British philosopher John Locke (1632\u20131704) commented, in Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693), that animals did have feelings, and that unnecessary cruelty toward them was morally wrong, but that the right not to be harmed adhered either to the animal's owner, or to the human being who was being damaged by being cruel. Discussing the importance of preventing children from tormenting animals, he wrote: \"For the custom of tormenting and killing of beasts will, by degrees, harden their minds even towards men.\"\nLocke's position echoed that of Thomas Aquinas (1225\u20131274). Paul Waldau writes that the argument can be found at 1 Corinthians (9:9\u201310), when Paul asks: \"Is it for oxen that God is concerned? Does he not speak entirely for our sake? It was written for our sake.\" Christian philosophers interpreted this to mean that humans had no direct duty to nonhuman animals, but had a duty only to protect them from the effects of engaging in cruelty.\nThe German philosopher Immanuel Kant (1724\u20131804), following Aquinas, opposed the idea that humans have direct duties toward nonhumans. For Kant, cruelty to animals was wrong only because it was bad for humankind. He argued in 1785 that \"cruelty to animals is contrary to man's duty to himself, because it deadens in him the feeling of sympathy for their sufferings, and thus a natural tendency that is very useful to morality in relation to other human beings is weakened.\"\n18th century: Centrality of sentience\nJean-Jacques Rousseau"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720598801.2756, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "f6cf6453eac5440fb555fcb84abcb05c", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "where did the term hot rod come from", "0_output": [["where did the term hot rod come from", "Title: Hot Rod (magazine)\n\nPassage: Hot Rod is an American car magazine devoted to hot rodding, drag racing, and muscle cars\u2014modifying automobiles for performance and appearance. It was published monthly until 2024, when it transitioned to quarterly publication.\nHistory\nHot Rod is the oldest magazine devoted to hot rodding, having been published since January 1948. Robert E. Petersen founded the magazine and his Petersen Publishing Company was the original publisher. The first editor of Hot Rod was Wally Parks, who went on to found the National Hot Rod Association (NHRA). Petersen Publishing was sold to British publisher EMAP in 1998, who then sold the former Petersen magazines to Primedia in 2001. Today, it was published by Motor Trend Group, formerly known as TEN: The Enthusiast Network and Source Interlink Media. Source Interlink acquired the magazine along with Primedia's Consumer Magazine division in 2007.\nHot Rod has a strategic relationship with Universal Technical Institute, referring to UTI as its sponsor.\nIn March 1948, Hot Rod published the first appearance of Tom Medley's cartoon hot rodder, Stroker McGurk. The feature would survive until 1955.\nSponsored events\nBetween 1961 and 1969, the Hot Rod Magazine Championship Drag Races, \"one of the most significant drag racing events\" of that era, were hosted by the magazine at Riverside Raceway. The championship offered a US$37,000 prize, greater even than a National Hot Rod Association national event prize at the time.\nThe \"Hot Rod Power Tour\" is an organized tour where hot rodders drive a pre-planned route throughout the United States. It began in 1995 when Hot Rod staff members decided to take some of their project cars on a cross-country drive from Los Angeles, California to Norwalk, Ohio. Thousands of people participated along the way but only seven participants (other than staff members) made the entire journey and were inducted into the original \"Long Hauler Gang\". Since its inception, this event has continued to gain in popularity and is now one of the most anticipated automotive events each year. It is typically six to eight days in length and held in late May or early June. In recent years, the tour has evolved to become what is essentially a continuous trek around the United States in that it begins in or near the location that it ended in the previous year. Each stop is combined with events or activities that vary as much as the participants themselves.\nThe starting points can change from year to year on the power tour. Tour Stops along the way on the power tour often feature entertainment, celebrities, contests, and games.\nVideo games\nBurnout: Championship Drag Racing (1998) was licensed by Hot Rod. ValuSoft has published Hot Rod: American Street Drag and Hot Rod: Garage to Glory, drag racing video games in which the goal is to win the cover feature of Hot Rod magazine."]], "1_conv_id": "dba3eda614ca450e9f9c81f2c9e8b0f0", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "where did the term hot rod come from", "1_output": [["where did the term hot rod come from", "Title: Hot-Rod and Reel!\n\nPassage: Hot-Rod and Reel! is a 1959 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Chuck Jones. The script was written by Michael Maltese, and the film score was composed by Milt Franklyn.\nThe short was released on May 9, 1959, and stars Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner.\nPlot"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720598823.5222, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "1ccc83b1a5ae47aab892da2590a9ee3e", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "who won the battle of stirling bridge 1297", "0_output": [["who won the battle of stirling bridge 1297", "Title: First War of Scottish Independence\n\nPassage: The confederacy of men that Bruce joined included James the Steward, Robert Wishart and William Douglas. Dissension broke out in the Scottish camp when the Scottish and English armies met in July 1297 near Irvine. The aristocratic revolt apparently halted before it even started, but its leaders led long and futile negotiations. It has been suggested that this was a deliberate move in order to provide space and time for Wallace to levy and train men. Percy and Clifford assumed that this was the end of the problem and retired back to the south, only to be followed once more by Wallace and Moray. These two divided their forces and in a short time again forced the English south of the Forth, leaving them holding only the castle of Dundee.\nWhile laying siege to Dundee Castle, Wallace heard that an English army was again advancing north, this time under John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. Wallace put the leading men of the town of Dundee in charge of the castle's siege and moved to halt the advance of the English army. Wallace and Moray, who had recently combined their forces, deployed on the Ochil Hills overlooking the bridge crossing the River Forth at Stirling and prepared to meet the English in battle.\nAt the time, Wallace and Moray were both in their late twenties and neither could yet claim to be Scottish national heroes. Whereas some of the Scottish nobility had given in to English demands for allegiance (whilst still supporting the Scottish cause), Wallace's force remained unequivocally dedicated to the struggle for Scottish independence.\nStirling Bridge and Guardian of Scotland\nOn 11 September 1297, Scottish forces, under the joint command of Moray and Wallace, met the Earl of Surrey's army, at the Battle of Stirling Bridge. The Scottish army deployed to the north-east of the bridge, and let the vanguard of Surrey's army cross the bridge before attacking. The English cavalry proved ineffective on the boggy ground around the bridge, and many of them were killed. The bridge collapsed when English reinforcements were crossing. The English on the opposite side of the river then fled the battlefield. The Scots suffered relatively light casualties, but the death from wounds of Andrew Moray dealt a profound blow to the Scottish cause. Stirling Bridge was the first key victory for the Scots."]], "1_conv_id": "02e658742fef464caeb3a2975472281e", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "who won the battle of stirling bridge 1297", "1_output": [["who won the battle of stirling bridge 1297", "Title: Battle of Stirling\n\nPassage: Battle of Stirling may refer to:\nBattle of Stirling Bridge, battle of the First War of Scottish Independence in 1297\nBattle of Stirling (1648), battle of the Scottish Civil War of the 17th century"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720599289.7306, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "f711f5b82cb34f50b46af9829713841a", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "0_output": [["I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "Title: Minority interest\n\nPassage: In accounting, minority interest (or non-controlling interest) is the portion of a subsidiary corporation's stock that is not owned by the parent corporation. The magnitude of the minority interest in the subsidiary company is generally less than 50% of outstanding shares, or the corporation would generally cease to be a subsidiary of the parent.\nIt is, however, possible (such as through special voting rights) for a controlling interest requiring consolidation to be achieved without exceeding 50% ownership, depending on the accounting standards being employed. Minority interest belongs to other investors and is reported on the consolidated balance sheet of the owning company to reflect the claim on assets belonging to other, non-controlling shareholders. Also, minority interest is reported on the consolidated income statement as a share of profit belonging to minority shareholders.\nThe reporting of 'minority interest' is a consequence of the requirement by accounting standards to 'fully' consolidate partly owned subsidiaries. Full consolidation, as opposed to partial consolidation, results in financial statements that are constructed as if the parent corporation fully owns these partly owned subsidiaries; except for two line items that reflect partial ownership of subsidiaries: net income to common shareholders and common equity. The two minority interest line items are the net difference between what would have been the common equity and net income to common, if all subsidiaries were fully owned, and the actual ownership of the group. All the other line items in the financial statements assume a fictitious 100% ownership.\nSome investors have expressed concern that the minority interest line items cause significant uncertainty for the assessment of value, leverage and liquidity. A key concern of investors is that they cannot be sure what part of the reported cash position is owned by a 100% subsidiary and what part is owned by a 51% subsidiary.\nMinority interest is an integral part of the enterprise value of a company. The converse concept is an associate company.\nAccounting treatment\nUnder the International Financial Reporting Standards, the non-controlling interest is reported in accordance with IFRS 5 and is shown at the very bottom of the Equity section on the consolidated balance sheet and subsequently on the statement of changes in equity. Under US GAAP minority interest can be reported either in the liabilities section, the equity section or, preceding changes to acceptable accounting standards, the mezzanine section of the balance sheet. The mezzanine section is located between liabilities and equity. FASB FAS 160 and FAS 141r significantly alter the way a parent company accounts for non-controlling interest (NCI) in a subsidiary. It is no longer acceptable to report minority interest in the mezzanine section of the balance sheet.\nPublic sector usage\nFrom 2013 onwards, the UK Government stated that it would become a minority equity co-investor in future Private Finance Initiative projects, which thereafter were referred to as \"PF2 projects\"."]], "1_conv_id": "3e786b1af0cf4f82bfc7a3c0d20d3953", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "1_output": [["I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "Title: Instruments used in general medicine\n\nPassage: Image gallery"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720599315.1287, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "88d00dfc90b84308a08d74c07faaf76c", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "0_output": [["who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "Title: Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre\n\nPassage: The primary custodians are the Greek Orthodox Church, which has the lion's share; the Custodian of the Holy Land, an official of the Franciscans affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox, Armenian Apostolic Churches. In the 19th century, the Coptic Orthodox, the Ethiopian Orthodox and the Syriac Orthodox acquired lesser responsibilities, which include shrines and other structures within and around the building. Times and places of worship for each community are strictly regulated in common areas.\nUnder the status quo, no part of what is designated as common territory may be so much as rearranged without consent from all communities. This often leads to the neglect of badly needed repairs when the communities cannot come to an agreement among themselves about the final shape of a project. Just such a disagreement has delayed the renovation of the edicule, where the need is now dire, but also where any change in the structure might result in a change to the status quo disagreeable to one or more of the communities.\nA less grave sign of this state of affairs is located on a window ledge over the church's entrance. Someone placed a wooden ladder there sometime before 1852, when the status quo defined both the doors and the window ledges as common ground. The ladder remains there to this day, in almost exactly the same position. It can be seen to occupy the ledge in century-old photographs and engravings.\nNone of the communities controls the main entrance. In 1192, Saladin assigned responsibility for it to a Muslim family. The Joudeh Al-Goudia a noble family with a long history were entrusted with the keys as custodians. This arrangement has persisted into modern times.\nBreaches of the status quo\nThe establishment of the status quo did not halt the violence, which continues to break out every so often even in modern times. For example, on a hot summer day in 2002, a Coptic monk, who was stationed on the roof to express Coptic claims over Ethiopian territory there, moved his chair from its agreed spot into the shade; this was interpreted as a hostile move by the Ethiopians, leading to an altercation that left eleven people hospitalized.\nIn another incident in 2004 during Orthodox celebrations of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, a door to the Franciscan chapel was left open. This was taken as a sign of disrespect by the Orthodox and a fistfight broke out. Some participants were arrested, but no one was seriously injured.\nOn Palm Sunday, in April 2008, a brawl broke out due to a Greek monk being ejected from the building by a rival faction. Police were called to the scene but were also attacked by the enraged brawlers. A clash erupted between Armenian and Greek monks on Sunday 9 November 2008, during celebrations for the Feast of the Holy Cross."]], "1_conv_id": "4b54a020308f4870bf1800e83d5b0e62", "1_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "1_prompt": "who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "1_output": [["who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "Title: Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre\n\nPassage: The Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre, or Holy Community of the All-Holy Sepulchre, is an Eastern Orthodox monastic fraternity guarding the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and other Christian holy places in the Holy Land. It was founded in its present form during the British Mandate in Palestine (1920-1948). Headed by the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, the brotherhood also administers the Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem, such as metropolitans, archbishops, bishops, archimandrites, hieromonks, hierodeacons, and monks.\nThe brotherhood's symbol is the taphos, a monogram of the Greek letters tau () and phi (), for the word (, meaning \"sepulchre, grave\"). It can be seen on most Greek Orthodox buildings in Jerusalem.\nThe brotherhood is seated in the Central Monastery of Saints Constantine and Helen, Jerusalem, northeast of Megali Panagia Nunnery.\nName\nThe Holy Sepulchre refers to the burial chamber, or sepulchre, of Jesus, which is believed to be inside the eponymous Church.\nThe organization is also known as the Hagiotaphite Brotherhood, and its members referred to as Hagiotaphites or Agiotaphites, from the Greek (\"holy\") and (\"sepulchre\").\nHistory\nOrganisation\nJordanian Law No. 227, dated 16 January 1958, regulates the Brotherhood's government.\nHoly places\nChurch of the Nativity in Bethlehem\nSite of Christ's baptism in the River Jordan (Al-Maghtas & Qasr el Yahud)\nMount Tabor\nNazareth, the city of the Annunciation (the Church of St Gabriel)\nThe Sea of Galilee (also known as the Lake of Gennesaret and the Sea of Tiberias)\nCapernaum, the \"Town of Jesus\"\nCana\nJacob's Well in Nablus.\nStatus quo"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720599332.8098, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "14ac5db8044e47228c30f888ba3fe056", "0_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "0_prompt": "who sings jungle book i wanna be like you", "0_output": [["who sings jungle book i wanna be like you", "Title: I Only Wanna Be with You\n\nPassage: I Only Wanna Be with You may refer to:\n\"I Only Want to Be with You\", a 1963 song by Dusty Springfield\n\"Only Wanna Be with You\", a 1995 song by Hootie & the Blowfish\nI Only Wanna Be with You, a 1994 album by Bridgette Wilson"]], "1_conv_id": "aaf68970341f44799826b02102fa886e", "1_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "1_prompt": "who sings jungle book i wanna be like you", "1_output": [["who sings jungle book i wanna be like you", "Title: The Jungle Book\n\nPassage: The Jungle Book (1894) is a collection of stories by the English author Rudyard Kipling. Most of the characters are animals such as Shere Khan the tiger and Baloo the bear, though a principal character is the boy or \"man-cub\" Mowgli, who is raised in the jungle by wolves. Most stories are set in a forest in India; one place mentioned repeatedly is \"Seeonee\" (Seoni), in the central\nstate of Madhya Pradesh."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720599350.8399, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "9cd9c57e32b548d98499ffab4f139e41", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "who presides over the highest criminal court in a district", "0_output": [["who presides over the highest criminal court in a district", "Title: High Court of Justice (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: High Court of Justice is the name of several courts:\nIn the United Kingdom:\nHigh Court of Justice (England and Wales)\nHigh Court of Justice in Northern Ireland\nHigh Court of Justice for the trial of Charles I\nIn Ireland:\nHigh Court of Justice in Ireland, a historic court in Ireland\nHigh Court (Ireland), formerly known as the \"High Court of Justice of Ireland\"\nOthers\nHigh Court of Justice (France)\nHigh Court of Justice (Cameroon)\nHigh Court of Justice in Rivers State, Nigeria\nHigh Court of Justice (Israel)\nCourt of First Instance of the High Court of Hong Kong, formerly the High Court of Justice of the Supreme Court of Hong Kong"]], "1_conv_id": "dacfa484034b448087d7b40556624880", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "who presides over the highest criminal court in a district", "1_output": [["who presides over the highest criminal court in a district", "Title: Sessions Court\n\nPassage: A Sessions Court or even known as the Court of Sessions Judge is a court of law which exists in several Commonwealth countries. A Court of Session is the highest criminal court in a district and the court of first instance for trying serious offences, i.e., those carrying punishment of imprisonment of more than seven years, life imprisonment, or death.\nBangladesh"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720599385.7559, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "301eeda78bb742c6a5449ae420629cc9", "0_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "0_prompt": "who brought the idea of castles to england", "0_output": [["who brought the idea of castles to england", "Title: Hylton Castle\n\nPassage: History\nEarly history\nThe Hylton family had been settled in England since the reign of King Athelstan (c.895\u2013939). At this time, Adam de Hylton gave to the monastery of Hartlepool a pyx or crucifix, weighing in silver and emblazoned with his coat of arms \u2013 argent, two bars azure. On the arrival of William the Conqueror, Lancelot de Hilton and his two sons, Robert and Henry, joined the Conqueror's forces, but Lancelot was killed at Faversham during William's advance to London. In gratitude, the king granted the eldest son, Henry, a large tract of land on the banks of the River Wear.\nThe first castle on the site, built by Henry de Hilton in about 1072, was likely to have been built of wood. It was subsequently re-built in stone by Sir William Hylton (1376\u20131435) as a four-storey, gatehouse-style, fortified manor house, similar in design to Lumley and Raby. Although called a gatehouse, it belongs to a type of small, late-14th-century castle, similar to Old Wardour, Bywell and Nunney castles. The castle was first mentioned in a household inventory taken in 1448, as \"a gatehouse constructed of stone\" and although no construction details survive, it is believed the stone castle was built sometime between 1390 and the early 15th century, due to the coat of arms featured above the west entrance (see Heraldry below). It has been suggested that Sir William intended to erect a larger castle in addition to the gatehouse, but abandoned his plan.\nThe household inventory taken on Sir William's death in 1435 mentions, in addition to the castle, a hall, four chambers, two barns, a kitchen, and the chapel, indicating the existence of other buildings on the site at that time. Apart from the castle and chapel, the other buildings were probably all of timber. In 1559, the gatehouse featured in another household inventory as the \"Tower\", when floors and galleries were inserted to subdivide the great hall.\nThe eccentric Henry Hylton, de jure 12th Baron Hylton left the castle to the City of London Corporation on his death in 1641, to be used for charitable purposes for ninety-nine years. It was returned to the family after the Restoration, to Henry's nephew, John Hylton, de jure 15th Baron Hylton.\n18th century\nEarly in the 18th century, John Hylton (died 1712), the second son of Henry Hylton, de jure 16th Baron Hylton, gutted the interior to form a three-storeyed block (one room on each floor). He also inserted large, alternating, pedimented sash windows in the Italianate style and added a three-storeyed north wing to the castle (as seen in Bucks' engraving of 1728). A doorway to the new wing was added and approached by a semi-circular staircase. Above the doorway was a coat of arms, believed to be the one created to commemorate the marriage between John Hylton and his wife, Dorothy Musgrave. It is now located above the doorway to The Golden Lion Inn at South Hylton, on the opposite side of the River Wear."]], "1_conv_id": "3fffadbc1c4846778310b48ea3c7b4f2", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "who brought the idea of castles to england", "1_output": [["who brought the idea of castles to england", "Title: Castles in Great Britain and Ireland\n\nPassage: Castles have played an important military, economic and social role in Great Britain and Ireland since their introduction following the Norman invasion of England in 1066. Although a small number of castles had been built in England in the 1050s, the Normans began to build motte and bailey and ringwork castles in large numbers to control their newly occupied territories in England and the Welsh Marches. During the 12th century the Normans began to build more castles in stone \u2013 with characteristic square keep \u2013 that played both military and political roles. Royal castles were used to control key towns and the economically important forests, while baronial castles were used by the Norman lords to control their widespread estates. David I invited Anglo-Norman lords into Scotland in the early 12th century to help him colonise and control areas of his kingdom such as Galloway; the new lords brought castle technologies with them and wooden castles began to be established over the south of the kingdom. Following the Norman invasion of Ireland in the 1170s, under Henry II, castles were established there too.\nCastles continued to grow in military sophistication and comfort during the 12th century, leading to a sharp increase in the complexity and length of sieges in England. While in Ireland and Wales castle architecture continued to follow that of England, after the death of Alexander III the trend in Scotland moved away from the construction of larger castles towards the use of smaller tower houses. The tower house style would also be adopted in the north of England and Ireland in later years. In North Wales Edward I built a sequence of militarily powerful castles after the destruction of the last Welsh polities in the 1270s. By the 14th century castles were combining defences with luxurious, sophisticated living arrangements and heavily landscaped gardens and parks."]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-635bd7fb-fc6f-41c5-88d8-b40c736ed682.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720819774.2315, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "8a2bb80fdba047dbafc35f48d18adb1f", "0_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "0_prompt": "where does the coral sea meet the pacific ocean", "0_output": [["where does the coral sea meet the pacific ocean", "Title: Pacific Ocean\n\nPassage: The Pacific Ocean's mean depth is . Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, located in the northwestern Pacific, is the deepest known point in the world, reaching a depth of . The Pacific also contains the deepest point in the Southern Hemisphere, the Horizon Deep in the Tonga Trench, at . The third deepest point on Earth, the Sirena Deep, is also located in the Mariana Trench.\nThe western Pacific has many major marginal seas, including the Philippine Sea, South China Sea, East China Sea, Sea of Japan, Sea of Okhotsk, Bering Sea, Gulf of Alaska, Mar de Grau, Tasman Sea, and the Coral Sea.\nEtymology\nIn the early 16th century, Spanish explorer Vasco N\u00fa\u00f1ez de Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama in 1513 and sighted the great \"Southern Sea\" which he named (in Spanish). Afterwards, the ocean's current name was coined by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan during the Spanish circumnavigation of the world in 1521, as he encountered favorable winds on reaching the ocean. He called it , which in Spanish and Portuguese means 'peaceful sea'.\nLargest seas in the Pacific Ocean\nTop large seas:\nAustralasian Mediterranean Sea \u2013 9.080 million km2 (includes other seas)\nPhilippine Sea \u2013 5.695 million km2 (largest single sea)\nCoral Sea \u2013 4.791 million km2\nChilean Sea \u2013 3.6 million\u00a0km2\nSouth China Sea \u2013 3.5 million km2\nTasman Sea \u2013 2.3 million km2\nBering Sea \u2013 2 million km2\nSea of Okhotsk \u2013 1.583 million km2\nGulf of Alaska \u2013 1.533 million km2\nEast China Sea \u2013 1.249 million km2\nMar de Grau \u2013 1.14 million km2\nSea of Japan \u2013 978,000\u00a0km2\nSolomon Sea \u2013 720,000\u00a0km2\nBanda Sea \u2013 695,000\u00a0km2\nArafura Sea \u2013 650,000\u00a0km2\nTimor Sea \u2013 610,000\u00a0km2\nYellow Sea \u2013 380,000\u00a0km2\nJava Sea \u2013 320,000\u00a0km2\nGulf of Thailand \u2013 320,000\u00a0km2\nGulf of Carpentaria \u2013 300,000\u00a0km2\nCelebes Sea \u2013 280,000\u00a0km2\nSulu Sea \u2013 260,000\u00a0km2\nBismarck Sea \u2013 250,400\u00a0km2\nGulf of Anadyr \u2013 200,000\u00a0km2\nMolucca Sea \u2013 200,000\u00a0km2\nGulf of California \u2013 160,000\u00a0km2\nGulf of Tonkin \u2013 126,250\u00a0km2\nHalmahera Sea \u2013 95,000\u00a0km2\nBohai Sea \u2013 78,000\u00a0km2\nGulf of Papua \u2013 70,400\u00a0km2\nKoro Sea \u2013 58,000\u00a0km2\nBali Sea \u2013 45,000\u00a0km2\nSavu Sea \u2013 35,000\u00a0km2\nSeto Inland Sea \u2013 23,203\u00a0km2\nSalish Sea \u2013 18,000\u00a0km2\nSeram Sea \u2013 12,000\u00a0km2\nHistory\nPrehistory\nAcross the continents of Asia, Australia and the Americas, more than 25,000 islands, large and small, rise above the surface of the Pacific Ocean. Multiple islands were the shells of former active volcanoes that have lain dormant for thousands of years. Close to the equator, without vast areas of blue ocean, are a dot of atolls that have over intervals of time been formed by seamounts as a result of tiny coral islands strung in a ring within surroundings of a central lagoon.\nEarly migrations"]], "1_conv_id": "a0e39f76d00840bc96c9284b53cc29d8", "1_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "1_prompt": "where does the coral sea meet the pacific ocean", "1_output": [["where does the coral sea meet the pacific ocean", "Title: Pacific Ocean\n\nPassage: The coral reefs of the South Pacific are low-lying structures that have built up on basaltic lava flows under the ocean's surface. One of the most dramatic is the Great Barrier Reef off northeastern Australia with chains of reef patches. A second island type formed of coral is the uplifted coral platform, which is usually slightly larger than the low coral islands. Examples include Banaba (formerly Ocean Island) and Makatea in the Tuamotu group of French Polynesia.\nWater characteristics\nThe volume of the Pacific Ocean, representing about 50.1 percent of the world's oceanic water, has been estimated at some . Surface water temperatures in the Pacific can vary from , the freezing point of seawater, in the poleward areas to about near the equator. Salinity also varies latitudinally, reaching a maximum of 37 parts per thousand in the southeastern area. The water near the equator, which can have a salinity as low as 34 parts per thousand, is less salty than that found in the mid-latitudes because of abundant equatorial precipitation throughout the year. The lowest counts of less than 32 parts per thousand are found in the far north as less evaporation of seawater takes place in these frigid areas. The motion of Pacific waters is generally clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere (the North Pacific gyre) and counter-clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere. The North Equatorial Current, driven westward along latitude 15\u00b0N by the trade winds, turns north near the Philippines to become the warm Japan or Kuroshio Current.\nTurning eastward at about 45\u00b0N, the Kuroshio forks and some water moves northward as the Aleutian Current, while the rest turns southward to rejoin the North Equatorial Current. The Aleutian Current branches as it approaches North America and forms the base of a counter-clockwise circulation in the Bering Sea. Its southern arm becomes the chilled slow, south-flowing California Current. The South Equatorial Current, flowing west along the equator, swings southward east of New Guinea, turns east at about 50\u00b0S, and joins the main westerly circulation of the South Pacific, which includes the Earth-circling Antarctic Circumpolar Current. As it approaches the Chilean coast, the South Equatorial Current divides; one branch flows around Cape Horn and the other turns north to form the Peru or Humboldt Current.\nClimate\nThe climate patterns of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres generally mirror each other. The trade winds in the southern and eastern Pacific are remarkably steady while conditions in the North Pacific are far more varied with, for example, cold winter temperatures on the east coast of Russia contrasting with the milder weather off British Columbia during the winter months due to the preferred flow of ocean currents."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1721181515.4419, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6a3a710f993045919e3520036cc22ded", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture", "0_output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture", "Title: Structure of a Zn monolayer on Ag(111) and Ag(110) substrates: an AES, LEED and STM study\n\nPassage: Auger Electron Spectroscopy, Low Energy Electron Diffraction and Scanning Tunneling Microscopy have been used to study the atomic structure of a Zn monolayer deposited on Ag(111) and Ag(110) substrates at room temperature. On both faces, there is formation of a close packed monolayer of Zn covering the entire substrate surface and giving rise to specific Moir{\\'e} patterns. From a comprehensive LEED and STM data analysis, we deduce that the Zn monolayer adopts a (111) structure equivalent to a pure Zn layer rotated with respect to the silver substrate, of about $1.5^\\circ$ on the Ag(111) face and of about $4.5^\\circ$ on the Ag(110) face giving rise respectively to ($\\sqrt{156}\\times\\sqrt{156})R18^\\circ$ and c(12x6) superstructures."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "4167df263e374dc0a3b25b3ef5c1cb0e", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture", "1_output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture", "Title: Formal Algorithms for Transformers\n\nPassage: This document aims to be a self-contained, mathematically precise overview of transformer architectures and algorithms (*not* results). It covers what transformers are, how they are trained, what they are used for, their key architectural components, and a preview of the most prominent models. The reader is assumed to be familiar with basic ML terminology and simpler neural network architectures such as MLPs."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721208969.3546, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e4290e612d7d4f82a811b64224392b00", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "what happened to gerrard's foot", "0_output": [["what happened to gerrard's foot", "Title: William Tyrer Gerrard\n\nPassage: William Tyrer Gerrard (1831 \u2013 9 July 1866) was an English botanical collector in Natal and Madagascar in the 1860s. The genus Gerrardanthus is named in his honor.\nGerrard was born in Knowsley, Merseyside, England, and died at age 34 of yellow fever in July 1866, in Foulepointe (now Mahavelona), Madagascar. He was active as a botanical collector in Australia and then Natal, where he first collected several genera and over 150 previously unknown species, and from which he sent a stuffed aardvark to the Free Public Library, Derby Museum. He left Natal in April 1865 for coastal Madagascar, where he made large collections of plants, insects, and birds, before succumbing to illness. He last bequest of specimens to Derby Museum in Liverpool was in 1867."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "88e7393839c746068e760734065ecc56", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "what happened to gerrard's foot", "1_output": [["what happened to gerrard's foot", "Title: Xabi Alonso\n\nPassage: Liverpool\n2004\u201305: Champions League victory\nAlonso arrived at Liverpool along with Luis Garc\u00eda from Barcelona, marking the beginning of a new era at Anfield. New Liverpool manager Rafael Ben\u00edtez sought to revolutionise the club and completely overhauled the squad, impressing his own management style and tactics upon the team. The technical Spaniards were Ben\u00edtez's first signings and he remarked that their emphasis of skill over strength offered the team something different. Alonso made his Premier League debut against Bolton Wanderers at the Reebok Stadium on 29 August 2004. Liverpool lost the fixture 1\u20130 but Alonso was already receiving praise for his passing skills from the press. A Premier League tie away against Fulham displayed more of Alonso's talents. Liverpool were losing 2\u20130 at half-time and Ben\u00edtez brought on Alonso as a substitute after the break. He revived a deflated Liverpool and the game finished 2\u20134 to the Merseyside team. Furthermore, Alonso scored his first goal for the team from a free kick to bring Liverpool ahead of the opposition.\nAlonso continued to provide important goals for the club, scoring his first goal at Anfield against Arsenal in a 2\u20131 victory. Alonso was elated at the achievement and felt he was settling in well in England. The Arsenal game marked the return of Steven Gerrard from injury but Alonso's midfield partnership with the team captain came to a halt when Alonso suffered his first setback at Liverpool. Alonso's ankle was broken following a tackle from Frank Lampard in Liverpool's 0\u20131 home defeat against Chelsea on New Year's Day 2005 and the Spaniard was ruled out of action for three months.\nAlonso made his return to the first team in the second leg of the Champions League quarter-final against Juventus. Alonso was not at full fitness but, as Steven Gerrard was injured, he played for the full 90 minutes and Liverpool held the score at 0\u20130 in Italy, defeating the eventual Italian champions on aggregate. Kevin McCarra of The Guardian paid testament to Alonso's skill and dedication to the game, saying, \"This marvellously accomplished footballer testified in the Stadio delle Alpi that technique can overcome a serious physical disadvantage.\" In the next round against Chelsea, Alonso received a yellow card in a tense and scrappy 0\u20130 draw at Stamford Bridge, making him suspended for the following fixture. Alonso was distraught that he would miss the game and vehemently contested the referee's decision to no avail. Gerrard returned from injury for the second leg, however, and the captain steered his team to a 1\u20130 win with the help of a Luis Garc\u00eda goal, qualifying for the final against Milan."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1720821453.2237, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "dcd577557ce84026a861e6a8b2f95f2a", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "where did the british empire control an entire continent", "0_output": [["where did the british empire control an entire continent", "Title: Territorial evolution of the British Empire\n\nPassage: Several countries (dominions) within the British Empire gained independence in stages during the earlier part of the 20th century. Much of the rest of the empire was dismantled in the twenty years following the end of the Second World War, starting with the independence of India and Pakistan in 1947, and continued until the handover of Hong Kong to the People's Republic of China in 1997. There remain, however, fourteen territories around the world known as the British Overseas Territories which remain under the jurisdiction and sovereignty of the United Kingdom.\nMany of the former territories of the British Empire are members of the Commonwealth of Nations. Fourteen of these (known, with the United Kingdom, as the 15 Commonwealth realms) retain the British monarch (currently Charles III) as head of state. The British monarch is also Head of the Commonwealth, but this is a purely symbolic and personal title; members of the Commonwealth (including the Commonwealth realms) are fully sovereign states.\nFrom the 16th to the 20th centuries, the British Empire stretched from a total area at its peak in 1920 to over , the largest empire in the world. In terms of population, on the eve of World War II, Britain and her colonial possessions totaled 500 million inhabitants. The British Empire had an enormous impact on world history. The United Kingdom had about 120 colonies throughout its history, the most colonies in the world, the French colonial empire came second, which had about 80 colonies. Around 54 countries gained independence from the United Kingdom throughout its history, the most in the world, ahead of the French colonial empire, which 40 countries gained independence from France.\nGovernance\nThe British Empire refers to the possessions, dominions, and dependencies under the control of the Crown. In addition to the areas formally under the sovereignty of the British monarch, various \"foreign\" territories were controlled as protectorates; territories transferred to British administration under the authority of the League of Nations or the United Nations; and miscellaneous other territories, such as the condominium of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. The natures of the administration of the Empire changed both by time and place, and there was no uniform system of government in the Empire.\nColonies\nColonies were territories that were intended to be places of permanent settlement, providing land for their settlers. The Crown claimed absolute sovereignty over them, although they were not formally part of the United Kingdom itself. Generally, their law was the common law of England together with whatever British Acts of Parliament were also applied to them. Over time, a number of colonies were granted \"responsible government\", making them largely self-governing.\nCrown Colony\nA Crown colony: a type of colonial administration of the English and later the British Empire, whose legislature and administration was controlled by the Crown."]], "1_conv_id": "5e23f8df05c145dda075c0c4bdc023a1", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "where did the british empire control an entire continent", "1_output": [["where did the british empire control an entire continent", "Title: Territorial evolution of the British Empire\n\nPassage: The territorial evolution of the British Empire is considered to have begun with the foundation of the English colonial empire in the late 16th century. Since then, many territories around the world have been under the control of the United Kingdom or its predecessor states.\nWhen the Kingdom of Great Britain was formed in 1707 by the union of the Kingdoms of Scotland and England, the latter country's colonial possessions passed to the new state. Similarly, when Great Britain was united with the Kingdom of Ireland in 1801 to form the United Kingdom, control over its colonial possessions passed to the latter state. Collectively, these territories are referred to as the British Empire. When much of Ireland gained independence in 1922 as the Irish Free State, the other territories of the empire remained under the control of the United Kingdom.\nFrom 1714 to 1837, the British throne was held by a series of kings who were also the rulers of the German state of Hanover. However, this was purely a personal union, with Hanover maintaining its political independence otherwise, and so it is not usually considered to have formed part of the British Empire."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720821707.7585, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d244fae7233c422f9c1629727c20a399", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "who abolished the monarchy and declared france a republic", "0_output": [["who abolished the monarchy and declared france a republic", "Title: Bonaparte and the astronomers of Brera Observatory\n\nPassage: In Northern Italy, between 1796 and 1814, Napoleon Bonaparte formed a\nRepublic, and then a Kingdom, controlled by France. Milan was the capital of\nthe State, and the Brera Palace was the main cultural centre, as regards both\nthe arts and the sciences. Bonaparte probably intended to strengthen this\ncharacteristic of Brera, aiming at increasing its Italian and European\nrelevance. We will discuss in detail in which way he interacted with the\nastronomers of Brera Observatory, and in particular with Barnaba Oriani, that\nwas considered the local main representative of the 'republique des lettres',\nthat is, the world of literature, arts and sciences. We propose a possible\nreconstruction of the effects of those complicated historical events on the\nItalian astronomy and on its relations with the European one.\n"]], "1_conv_id": "d1146b72e6ec4e38897f7ed5cc4e796b", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "who abolished the monarchy and declared france a republic", "1_output": [["who abolished the monarchy and declared france a republic", "Title: A HelloWord \\textsc{Bib}\\negthinspace\\TeX~stile file .\\textbf{bst}\n\nPassage: A HelloWord \\textsc{Bib}\\negthinspace\\TeX~stile file .\\textbf{bst} is\ndescribed\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1721351348.2146, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ef6a09fd9cb0451c88710a31b2b3421a", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "Which paper presents ViLBERT for task-agnostic visiolinguistic pretraining and achieves SoTA on multiple vision-and-language tasks?", "0_output": [["Which paper presents ViLBERT for task-agnostic visiolinguistic pretraining and achieves SoTA on multiple vision-and-language tasks?", "Title: ViLBERT: Pretraining Task-Agnostic Visiolinguistic Representations for Vision-and-Language Tasks\n\nAbstract: We present ViLBERT (short for Vision-and-Language BERT), a model for learning task-agnostic joint representations of image content and natural language. We extend the popular BERT architecture to a multi-modal two-stream model, pro-cessing both visual and textual inputs in separate streams that interact through co-attentional transformer layers. We pretrain our model through two proxy tasks on the large, automatically collected Conceptual Captions dataset and then transfer it to multiple established vision-and-language tasks -- visual question answering, visual commonsense reasoning, referring expressions, and caption-based image retrieval -- by making only minor additions to the base architecture. We observe significant improvements across tasks compared to existing task-specific models -- achieving state-of-the-art on all four tasks. Our work represents a shift away from learning groundings between vision and language only as part of task training and towards treating visual grounding as a pretrainable and transferable capability."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "7f4fbc0f798d4ebaa7159d4bd996adf6", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "Which paper presents ViLBERT for task-agnostic visiolinguistic pretraining and achieves SoTA on multiple vision-and-language tasks?", "1_output": [["Which paper presents ViLBERT for task-agnostic visiolinguistic pretraining and achieves SoTA on multiple vision-and-language tasks?", "Title: ViLBERT: Pretraining Task-Agnostic Visiolinguistic Representations for\n Vision-and-Language Tasks\n\nAbstract: We present ViLBERT (short for Vision-and-Language BERT), a model for learning\ntask-agnostic joint representations of image content and natural language. We\nextend the popular BERT architecture to a multi-modal two-stream model,\npro-cessing both visual and textual inputs in separate streams that interact\nthrough co-attentional transformer layers. We pretrain our model through two\nproxy tasks on the large, automatically collected Conceptual Captions dataset\nand then transfer it to multiple established vision-and-language tasks --\nvisual question answering, visual commonsense reasoning, referring expressions,\nand caption-based image retrieval -- by making only minor additions to the base\narchitecture. We observe significant improvements across tasks compared to\nexisting task-specific models -- achieving state-of-the-art on all four tasks.\nOur work represents a shift away from learning groundings between vision and\nlanguage only as part of task training and towards treating visual grounding as\na pretrainable and transferable capability.\n"]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351558.2774, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "25324781d3fe4bb7b9e2309526613900", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_prompt": "I'm looking for a paper that introduces a visual interface to refine and improve language model prompts interactively", "0_output": [["I'm looking for a paper that introduces a visual interface to refine and improve language model prompts interactively", "Title: Conical emission, pulse splitting and X-wave parametric amplification in nonlinear dynamics of ultrashort light pulses\n\nAbstract: The precise observation of the angle-frequency spectrum of light filaments in water reveals a scenario incompatible with current models of conical emission (CE). Its description in terms of linear X-wave modes leads us to understand filamentation dynamics requiring a phase- and group-matched, Kerr-driven four-wave-mixing process that involves two highly localized pumps and two X-waves. CE and temporal splitting arise naturally as two manifestations of this process."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "ef1c6b7a74b647759eea3812b9400cb6", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "I'm looking for a paper that introduces a visual interface to refine and improve language model prompts interactively", "1_output": [["I'm looking for a paper that introduces a visual interface to refine and improve language model prompts interactively", "Title: Dynamics of a stochastically driven running sandpile\n\nAbstract: We analyze in detail a one-dimensional stochastically driven running sandpile. The dynamics shows three different phases, depending on the on-site relaxation rate and stochastic driving rate. Two phases are characterized by the presence of travelling waves. The third shows algebraic relaxation."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351573.8499, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "1ebd4563bbb548a9a6136aa56eb4d2a2", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "Study that demonstrates a novel approach called GoT improving sorting tasks and reducing costs by leveraging graph structures in LLMs.", "0_output": [["Study that demonstrates a novel approach called GoT improving sorting tasks and reducing costs by leveraging graph structures in LLMs.", "Title: Graph of Thoughts: Solving Elaborate Problems with Large Language Models\n\nAbstract: We introduce Graph of Thoughts (GoT): a framework that advances prompting capabilities in large language models (LLMs) beyond those offered by paradigms such as Chain-of-Thought or Tree of Thoughts (ToT). The key idea and primary advantage of GoT is the ability to model the information generated by an LLM as an arbitrary graph, where units of information (\"LLM thoughts\") are vertices, and edges correspond to dependencies between these vertices. This approach enables combining arbitrary LLM thoughts into synergistic outcomes, distilling the essence of whole networks of thoughts, or enhancing thoughts using feedback loops. We illustrate that GoT offers advantages over state of the art on different tasks, for example increasing the quality of sorting by 62% over ToT, while simultaneously reducing costs by >31%. We ensure that GoT is extensible with new thought transformations and thus can be used to spearhead new prompting schemes. This work brings the LLM reasoning closer to human thinking or brain mechanisms such as recurrence, both of which form complex networks."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "86857c23abab45f99dfbe0da33a206ab", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "Study that demonstrates a novel approach called GoT improving sorting tasks and reducing costs by leveraging graph structures in LLMs.", "1_output": [["Study that demonstrates a novel approach called GoT improving sorting tasks and reducing costs by leveraging graph structures in LLMs.", "Title: Dynamics of a stochastically driven running sandpile\n\nAbstract: We analyze in detail a one-dimensional stochastically driven running sandpile. The dynamics shows three different phases, depending on the on-site relaxation rate and stochastic driving rate. Two phases are characterized by the presence of travelling waves. The third shows algebraic relaxation."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351585.5473, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "918927b6a8aa4b59a26d51c706242b0e", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "A paper demonstrating significant improvements in NLP tasks by integrating structured knowledge into pre-trained language models.", "0_output": [["A paper demonstrating significant improvements in NLP tasks by integrating structured knowledge into pre-trained language models.", "Title: Combining pre-trained language models and structured knowledge\n\nAbstract: In recent years, transformer-based language models have achieved state of the art performance in various NLP benchmarks. These models are able to extract mostly distributional information with some semantics from unstructured text, however it has proven challenging to integrate structured information, such as knowledge graphs into these models. We examine a variety of approaches to integrate structured knowledge into current language models and determine challenges, and possible opportunities to leverage both structured and unstructured information sources. From our survey, we find that there are still opportunities at exploiting adapter-based injections and that it may be possible to further combine various of the explored approaches into one system."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "a83f347b8af24e0c980c790d49309c4b", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "A paper demonstrating significant improvements in NLP tasks by integrating structured knowledge into pre-trained language models.", "1_output": [["A paper demonstrating significant improvements in NLP tasks by integrating structured knowledge into pre-trained language models.", "Title: Combining pre-trained language models and structured knowledge\n\nAbstract: In recent years, transformer-based language models have achieved state of the art performance in various NLP benchmarks. These models are able to extract mostly distributional information with some semantics from unstructured text, however it has proven challenging to integrate structured information, such as knowledge graphs into these models. We examine a variety of approaches to integrate structured knowledge into current language models and determine challenges, and possible opportunities to leverage both structured and unstructured information sources. From our survey, we find that there are still opportunities at exploiting adapter-based injections and that it may be possible to further combine various of the explored approaches into one system."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351645.4503, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "dddf29f331e049ebbd7eb96df23cab54", "0_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "0_prompt": "Research on fine-grained human feedback to enhance reinforcement learning in language models.", "0_output": [["Research on fine-grained human feedback to enhance reinforcement learning in language models.", "Title: Fine-Grained Human Feedback Gives Better Rewards for Language Model Training\n\nAbstract: Language models (LMs) often exhibit undesirable text generation behaviors, including generating false, toxic, or irrelevant outputs. Reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) - where human preference judgments on LM outputs are transformed into a learning signal - has recently shown promise in addressing these issues. However, such holistic feedback conveys limited information on long text outputs; it does not indicate which aspects of the outputs influenced user preference; e.g., which parts contain what type(s) of errors. In this paper, we use fine-grained human feedback (e.g., which sentence is false, which sub-sentence is irrelevant) as an explicit training signal. We introduce Fine-Grained RLHF, a framework that enables training and learning from reward functions that are fine-grained in two respects: (1) density, providing a reward after every segment (e.g., a sentence) is generated; and (2) incorporating multiple reward models associated with different feedback types (e.g., factual incorrectness, irrelevance, and information incompleteness). We conduct experiments on detoxification and long-form question answering to illustrate how learning with such reward functions leads to improved performance, supported by both automatic and human evaluation. Additionally, we show that LM behaviors can be customized using different combinations of fine-grained reward models. We release all data, collected human feedback, and codes at https://FineGrainedRLHF.github.io."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "86d214a4407b446d898cb6424249fc1d", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "Research on fine-grained human feedback to enhance reinforcement learning in language models.", "1_output": [["Research on fine-grained human feedback to enhance reinforcement learning in language models.", "Title: Fine-Grained Human Feedback Gives Better Rewards for Language Model Training\n\nAbstract: Language models (LMs) often exhibit undesirable text generation behaviors, including generating false, toxic, or irrelevant outputs. Reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) - where human preference judgments on LM outputs are transformed into a learning signal - has recently shown promise in addressing these issues. However, such holistic feedback conveys limited information on long text outputs; it does not indicate which aspects of the outputs influenced user preference; e.g., which parts contain what type(s) of errors. In this paper, we use fine-grained human feedback (e.g., which sentence is false, which sub-sentence is irrelevant) as an explicit training signal. We introduce Fine-Grained RLHF, a framework that enables training and learning from reward functions that are fine-grained in two respects: (1) density, providing a reward after every segment (e.g., a sentence) is generated; and (2) incorporating multiple reward models associated with different feedback types (e.g., factual incorrectness, irrelevance, and information incompleteness). We conduct experiments on detoxification and long-form question answering to illustrate how learning with such reward functions leads to improved performance, supported by both automatic and human evaluation. Additionally, we show that LM behaviors can be customized using different combinations of fine-grained reward models. We release all data, collected human feedback, and codes at https://FineGrainedRLHF.github.io."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351681.229, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "f589800914034bdc994ec4caccf69a68", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "A novel method for document ranking using a sequence-to-sequence model instead of the typical encoder-only method.", "0_output": [["A novel method for document ranking using a sequence-to-sequence model instead of the typical encoder-only method.", "Title: Document Ranking with a Pretrained Sequence-to-Sequence Model\n\nAbstract: This work proposes a novel adaptation of a pretrained sequence-to-sequence model to the task of document ranking. Our approach is fundamentally different from a commonly-adopted classification-based formulation of ranking, based on encoder-only pretrained transformer architectures such as BERT. We show how a sequence-to-sequence model can be trained to generate relevance labels as \"target words\", and how the underlying logits of these target words can be interpreted as relevance probabilities for ranking. On the popular MS MARCO passage ranking task, experimental results show that our approach is at least on par with previous classification-based models and can surpass them with larger, more-recent models. On the test collection from the TREC 2004 Robust Track, we demonstrate a zero-shot transfer-based approach that outperforms previous state-of-the-art models requiring in-dataset cross-validation. Furthermore, we find that our approach significantly outperforms an encoder-only model in a data-poor regime (i.e., with few training examples). We investigate this observation further by varying target words to probe the model's use of latent knowledge."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "401dc9c610d241eba75803f05349f388", "1_model_name": "text-embedding-004", "1_prompt": "A novel method for document ranking using a sequence-to-sequence model instead of the typical encoder-only method.", "1_output": [["A novel method for document ranking using a sequence-to-sequence model instead of the typical encoder-only method.", "Title: Document Ranking with a Pretrained Sequence-to-Sequence Model\n\nAbstract: This work proposes a novel adaptation of a pretrained sequence-to-sequence model to the task of document ranking. Our approach is fundamentally different from a commonly-adopted classification-based formulation of ranking, based on encoder-only pretrained transformer architectures such as BERT. We show how a sequence-to-sequence model can be trained to generate relevance labels as \"target words\", and how the underlying logits of these target words can be interpreted as relevance probabilities for ranking. On the popular MS MARCO passage ranking task, experimental results show that our approach is at least on par with previous classification-based models and can surpass them with larger, more-recent models. On the test collection from the TREC 2004 Robust Track, we demonstrate a zero-shot transfer-based approach that outperforms previous state-of-the-art models requiring in-dataset cross-validation. Furthermore, we find that our approach significantly outperforms an encoder-only model in a data-poor regime (i.e., with few training examples). We investigate this observation further by varying target words to probe the model's use of latent knowledge."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351696.8109, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "c9c36c95e67d4e658620ca218090a70d", "0_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "0_prompt": "Research on joint learning of word and paragraph embeddings with Riemannian optimization for state-of-the-art text embeddings.", "0_output": [["Research on joint learning of word and paragraph embeddings with Riemannian optimization for state-of-the-art text embeddings.", "Title: Riemannian Adaptive Optimization Algorithm and Its Application to Natural Language Processing\n\nAbstract: This paper proposes a Riemannian adaptive optimization algorithm to optimize the parameters of deep neural networks. The algorithm is an extension of both AMSGrad in Euclidean space and RAMSGrad on a Riemannian manifold. The algorithm helps to resolve two issues affecting RAMSGrad. The first is that it can solve the Riemannian stochastic optimization problem directly, in contrast to RAMSGrad which only achieves a low regret. The other is that it can use constant learning rates, which makes it implementable in practice. Additionally, we apply the proposed algorithm to Poincar{\\'e} embeddings, which embed the transitive closure of the WordNet nouns into the Poincar{\\'e} ball model of hyperbolic space. Numerical experiments show that regardless of the initial value of the learning rate, our algorithm stably converges to the optimal solution and converges faster than RSGD, the most basic Riemannian stochastic optimization algorithm."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "b0fd1b77d5e3451687d008fd1ba3a40a", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "Research on joint learning of word and paragraph embeddings with Riemannian optimization for state-of-the-art text embeddings.", "1_output": [["Research on joint learning of word and paragraph embeddings with Riemannian optimization for state-of-the-art text embeddings.", "Title: Spherical Text Embedding\n\nAbstract: Unsupervised text embedding has shown great power in a wide range of NLP tasks. While text embeddings are typically learned in the Euclidean space, directional similarity is often more effective in tasks such as word similarity and document clustering, which creates a gap between the training stage and usage stage of text embedding. To close this gap, we propose a spherical generative model based on which unsupervised word and paragraph embeddings are jointly learned. To learn text embeddings in the spherical space, we develop an efficient optimization algorithm with convergence guarantee based on Riemannian optimization. Our model enjoys high efficiency and achieves state-of-the-art performances on various text embedding tasks including word similarity and document clustering."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721351722.0793, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "1174052ef6d445f9807aad0df907118b", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_prompt": "Survey on the evolution of image captioning models using visual encoders and language models", "0_output": [["Survey on the evolution of image captioning models using visual encoders and language models", "Title: The Multiplexing Gain of MIMO X-Channels with Partial Transmit Side-Information\n\nAbstract: In this paper, we obtain the scaling laws of the sum-rate capacity of a MIMO X-channel, a 2 independent sender, 2 independent receiver channel with messages from each transmitter to each receiver, at high signal to noise ratios (SNR). The X-channel has sparked recent interest in the context of cooperative networks and it encompasses the interference, multiple access, and broadcast channels as special cases. Here, we consider the case with partially cooperative transmitters in which only partial and asymmetric side-information is available at one of the transmitters. It is proved that when there are M antennas at all four nodes, the sum-rate scales like 2Mlog(SNR) which is in sharp contrast to [\\lfloor 4M/3 \\rfloor,4M/3]log(SNR) for non-cooperative X-channels \\cite{maddah-ali,jafar_degrees}. This further proves that, in terms of sum-rate scaling at high SNR, partial side-information at one of the transmitters and full side-information at both transmitters are equivalent in the MIMO X-channel."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "b8a14f02c7724be98146785fb649f7bb", "1_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "1_prompt": "Survey on the evolution of image captioning models using visual encoders and language models", "1_output": [["Survey on the evolution of image captioning models using visual encoders and language models", "Title: From Show to Tell: A Survey on Deep Learning-based Image Captioning\n\nAbstract: Connecting Vision and Language plays an essential role in Generative Intelligence. For this reason, large research efforts have been devoted to image captioning, i.e. describing images with syntactically and semantically meaningful sentences. Starting from 2015 the task has generally been addressed with pipelines composed of a visual encoder and a language model for text generation. During these years, both components have evolved considerably through the exploitation of object regions, attributes, the introduction of multi-modal connections, fully-attentive approaches, and BERT-like early-fusion strategies. However, regardless of the impressive results, research in image captioning has not reached a conclusive answer yet. This work aims at providing a comprehensive overview of image captioning approaches, from visual encoding and text generation to training strategies, datasets, and evaluation metrics. In this respect, we quantitatively compare many relevant state-of-the-art approaches to identify the most impactful technical innovations in architectures and training strategies. Moreover, many variants of the problem and its open challenges are discussed. The final goal of this work is to serve as a tool for understanding the existing literature and highlighting the future directions for a research area where Computer Vision and Natural Language Processing can find an optimal synergy."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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data/retrieval_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1722221784.0524, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "150ae0497ff5425ea7127f9917d91d7c", "0_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "0_prompt": "what is the capital of China?", "0_output": [["what is the capital of China?", "List of capitals in China\n\nThe scope of this list is limited to capital cities of first-level administrative divisions such as provinces, autonomous regions, municipalities, and special administrative regions, also including sub-provincial cities which are governed by a province but administered independently in many ways from a province.\n__TOC__\nProvincial-level capitals\nNote: The People's Republic of China claims Taiwan as one of its provinces, which it does not control.\nSub-provincial cities that are not themselves provincial capitals\nSub-provincial cities have a status that is below that of the municipalities, which are independent and equivalent to provinces, but above other, regular prefecture-level cities, which are completely ruled by their respective provinces. However, these sub-provincial cities are marked the same as other provincial capitals (or a prefecture-level city if the city is not a provincial capital) on almost all maps.\nIn total, there are five sub-provincial cities that are not themselves provincial capitals. These five cities have been designated as \"Cities with Independent Planning Status\" ().\nList of the Cities with Independent Planning Status\nWith the exception of Fuzhou, the provincial capital of Fujian Province, the provincial capitals of the other four provinces listed above \u2013 Guangzhou, Shenyang, Jinan, and Hangzhou \u2013 are themselves sub-provincial cities. Before 1997, when Chongqing was a sub-provincial city of Sichuan Province, provincial capital Chengdu was also a sub-provincial city."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "da09b3bba82446cab28796c69760a401", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "what is the capital of China?", "1_output": [["what is the capital of China?", "Beijing\n\nBeijing, previously romanized as Peking, is the capital of China. With more than 22 million residents, Beijing is the world's most populous national capital city as well as China's second largest city after Shanghai. It is located in Northern China, and is governed as a municipality under the direct administration of the State Council with 16 urban, suburban, and rural districts. Beijing is mostly surrounded by Hebei Province with the exception of neighboring Tianjin to the southeast; together, the three divisions form the Jingjinji megalopolis and the national capital region of China.\nBeijing is a global city and one of the world's leading centres for culture, diplomacy, politics, finance, business and economics, education, research, language, tourism, media, sport, science and technology and transportation and art. It is home to the headquarters of most of China's largest state-owned companies and houses the largest number of Fortune Global 500 companies in the world, as well as the world's four biggest financial institutions by total assets. It is also a major hub for the national highway, expressway, railway, and high-speed rail networks. For a decade before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Beijing Capital International Airport was Asia's busiest airport (2009\u20132019) and the second busiest airport in the world (2010\u20132019). In 2020, the Beijing subway was the fourth busiest and second longest in the world. The Beijing Daxing International Airport, Beijing's second international airport, is the largest single-structure airport terminal in the world."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722222217.7069, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "73a364513b0d4418980e9c5664923ad9", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "what is the difference between drinking chocolate and cocoa powder?", "0_output": [["what is the difference between drinking chocolate and cocoa powder?", "Chocoholic\n\nDark chocolates' high caffeine and theobromine content can cause addiction due to both of their psychological effects. This is as a result of its higher content of cacao compared to other forms of chocolate. The amount of caffeine in dark chocolate can vary from 35 to 200\u00a0mg\u200950\u2009g\u22121 while milk chocolate contains lower amounts of caffeine (14\u00a0mg\u200950\u2009g\u22121).\nAdditives\nThe additives of sugar and fat in both milk chocolate and white chocolate trigger sweet taste receptors which releases dopamine and entice consumption to be repeated. This experience is seen to be more enjoyable compared to dark chocolate which upholds bitter aftertastes.\nAlcohol\nChocolate liqueur is a liqueur made from a base liquor of whisky or vodka with chocolate as an additive. Unlike chocolate liquor, chocolate liqueur does contain alcohol and is often used as a sweetening ingredient in mixology, baking, and cooking.\nChronic alcohol abuse that results in significant health problems is the cause of alcoholism.\nSugars\nMost products (except dark chocolate) includes both significant amount of sugars and the psychoactive substances' cocoa solids. In combining these two components, milk chocolate is the most preferred by consumers. Commercial products which most typically contains sugar may lead to addiction and continued use despite negative consequences.\nProducts with sugars, including milk sugar:\nWhite chocolate: White sugar, powdered milk.\nMilk chocolate: White sugar, powdered milk.\nChocolate milk: Milk."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "87aec97fab664e188c93f1c55a0b7029", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_prompt": "what is the difference between drinking chocolate and cocoa powder?", "1_output": [["what is the difference between drinking chocolate and cocoa powder?", "Cocoa bean\n\nGlobal market share for processing has remained stable, even as grindings increase to meet demand. One of the largest processing countries by volume is the Netherlands, handling around 13% of global grindings. Europe and Russia as a whole handle about 38% of the processing market. Average year after year demand growth has been just over 3% since 2008. While Europe and North America are relatively stable markets, increasing household income in developing countries is the main reason of the stable demand growth. As demand is awaited to keep growing, supply growth may slow down due to changing weather conditions in the largest cocoa production areas.\nChocolate production\nTo make 1\u00a0kg (2.2\u00a0lb) of chocolate, about 300 to 600 beans are processed, depending on the desired cocoa content. In a factory, the beans are roasted. Next, they are cracked and then deshelled by a \"winnower\". The resulting pieces of beans are called nibs. They are sometimes sold in small packages at specialty stores and markets to be used in cooking, snacking, and chocolate dishes. Since nibs are directly from the cocoa tree, they contain high amounts of theobromine. Most nibs are ground, using various methods, into a thick, creamy paste, known as chocolate liquor or cocoa paste. This \"liquor\" is then further processed into chocolate by mixing in (more) cocoa butter and sugar (and sometimes vanilla and lecithin as an emulsifier), and then refined, conched and tempered. Alternatively, it can be separated into cocoa powder and cocoa butter using a hydraulic press or the Broma process. This process produces around 50% cocoa butter and 50% cocoa powder. Cocoa powder may have a fat content of about 12%, but this varies significantly. Cocoa butter is used in chocolate bar manufacture, other confectionery, soaps, and cosmetics."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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data/retrieval_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720648690.4616, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6cdb1ebef3c547e2b51a4aadd7cfbbe7", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "i only have eyes for you buffy episode", "0_output": [["i only have eyes for you buffy episode", "Title: Buffy\n\nPassage: Buffy may refer to:\nBuffy (given name)\nBuffy (album), a 1974 album by Buffy Sainte-Marie for MCA Records\nBuffy (color), a color often used in description of birds\nBuffy (dog), Russian President Vladimir Putin's dog\nBuffy coat, a component of blood\nBuffy Sainte-Marie, an American singer-songwriter and musician\nThe Buffy EP, 1999 EP by Velvet Chain\n, trans-Neptunian object, nicknamed Buffy"]], "1_conv_id": "4cb4151fcac04a919e5511dcf131e5f4", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "i only have eyes for you buffy episode", "1_output": [["i only have eyes for you buffy episode", "Title: Buffy\n\nPassage: Buffy may refer to:\nBuffy (given name)\nBuffy (album), a 1974 album by Buffy Sainte-Marie for MCA Records\nBuffy (color), a color often used in description of birds\nBuffy (dog), Russian President Vladimir Putin's dog\nBuffy coat, a component of blood\nBuffy Sainte-Marie, an American singer-songwriter and musician\nThe Buffy EP, 1999 EP by Velvet Chain\n, trans-Neptunian object, nicknamed Buffy"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720648701.1774, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "89664e9145c24f5aa4ac9f5e480961d3", "0_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "0_prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "0_output": [["who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "Title: Shot heard round the world\n\nPassage: The \"shot heard round the world\" is a phrase that refers to the opening shot of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, which sparked the American Revolutionary War and led to the creation of the United States. It originates from the opening stanza of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1837 poem \"Concord Hymn\". The phrase has subsequently been applied to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, a catalyst event for World War I, and hyperbolically applied to feats in sports.\nAmerican Revolutionary War\nEmerson's \"Concord Hymn\", which originated the phrase, was written about the skirmish at the Old North Bridge, which was an early engagement on that day. Emerson lived in a house known as the Old Manse at the time when he was composing the poem, from which his grandfather and father (then a young child) had witnessed the skirmish. The house is located approximately from the Old North Bridge.\nThere is no consensus whether the shots fired at the North Bridge were truly the first shots of the American Revolution; it is an unprovable matter of opinion and of contention, particularly between the towns of Concord and Lexington, Massachusetts. There had been an earlier encounter at the Lexington Battle Green, when a column of British troops encountered a group of minutemen led by Captain John Parker. Neither side had orders to open fire, but the British soldiers fired a spontaneous ragged volley anyway and then made a bayonet charge (whether the first shot was fired by a British soldier or an American sniper is unknown). Eight Americans were killed, the Americans quit the field, and the British continued their march toward Concord. One British soldier suffered a flesh wound from a shot from an unknown source."]], "1_conv_id": "ec056f9ed1824b2db2436540f42446b0", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "1_output": [["who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "Title: Shot heard round the world\n\nPassage: The \"shot heard round the world\" is a phrase that refers to the opening shot of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, which sparked the American Revolutionary War and led to the creation of the United States. It originates from the opening stanza of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1837 poem \"Concord Hymn\". The phrase has subsequently been applied to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, a catalyst event for World War I, and hyperbolically applied to feats in sports.\nAmerican Revolutionary War\nEmerson's \"Concord Hymn\", which originated the phrase, was written about the skirmish at the Old North Bridge, which was an early engagement on that day. Emerson lived in a house known as the Old Manse at the time when he was composing the poem, from which his grandfather and father (then a young child) had witnessed the skirmish. The house is located approximately from the Old North Bridge.\nThere is no consensus whether the shots fired at the North Bridge were truly the first shots of the American Revolution; it is an unprovable matter of opinion and of contention, particularly between the towns of Concord and Lexington, Massachusetts. There had been an earlier encounter at the Lexington Battle Green, when a column of British troops encountered a group of minutemen led by Captain John Parker. Neither side had orders to open fire, but the British soldiers fired a spontaneous ragged volley anyway and then made a bayonet charge (whether the first shot was fired by a British soldier or an American sniper is unknown). Eight Americans were killed, the Americans quit the field, and the British continued their march toward Concord. One British soldier suffered a flesh wound from a shot from an unknown source."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720648740.9474, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "cec73c435dbe40809b33d15aec783cae", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world\n\n\n", "0_output": [["who shot first in the shot heard around the world\n\n\n", "Title: Shot heard round the world\n\nPassage: The \"shot heard round the world\" is a phrase that refers to the opening shot of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, which sparked the American Revolutionary War and led to the creation of the United States. It originates from the opening stanza of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1837 poem \"Concord Hymn\". The phrase has subsequently been applied to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, a catalyst event for World War I, and hyperbolically applied to feats in sports.\nAmerican Revolutionary War\nEmerson's \"Concord Hymn\", which originated the phrase, was written about the skirmish at the Old North Bridge, which was an early engagement on that day. Emerson lived in a house known as the Old Manse at the time when he was composing the poem, from which his grandfather and father (then a young child) had witnessed the skirmish. The house is located approximately from the Old North Bridge.\nThere is no consensus whether the shots fired at the North Bridge were truly the first shots of the American Revolution; it is an unprovable matter of opinion and of contention, particularly between the towns of Concord and Lexington, Massachusetts. There had been an earlier encounter at the Lexington Battle Green, when a column of British troops encountered a group of minutemen led by Captain John Parker. Neither side had orders to open fire, but the British soldiers fired a spontaneous ragged volley anyway and then made a bayonet charge (whether the first shot was fired by a British soldier or an American sniper is unknown). Eight Americans were killed, the Americans quit the field, and the British continued their march toward Concord. One British soldier suffered a flesh wound from a shot from an unknown source."]], "1_conv_id": "7451322906c248149d46ba3fd369921e", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world\n\n\n", "1_output": [["who shot first in the shot heard around the world\n\n\n", "Title: Shot heard round the world\n\nPassage: The \"shot heard round the world\" is a phrase that refers to the opening shot of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, which sparked the American Revolutionary War and led to the creation of the United States. It originates from the opening stanza of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1837 poem \"Concord Hymn\". The phrase has subsequently been applied to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, a catalyst event for World War I, and hyperbolically applied to feats in sports.\nAmerican Revolutionary War\nEmerson's \"Concord Hymn\", which originated the phrase, was written about the skirmish at the Old North Bridge, which was an early engagement on that day. Emerson lived in a house known as the Old Manse at the time when he was composing the poem, from which his grandfather and father (then a young child) had witnessed the skirmish. The house is located approximately from the Old North Bridge.\nThere is no consensus whether the shots fired at the North Bridge were truly the first shots of the American Revolution; it is an unprovable matter of opinion and of contention, particularly between the towns of Concord and Lexington, Massachusetts. There had been an earlier encounter at the Lexington Battle Green, when a column of British troops encountered a group of minutemen led by Captain John Parker. Neither side had orders to open fire, but the British soldiers fired a spontaneous ragged volley anyway and then made a bayonet charge (whether the first shot was fired by a British soldier or an American sniper is unknown). Eight Americans were killed, the Americans quit the field, and the British continued their march toward Concord. One British soldier suffered a flesh wound from a shot from an unknown source."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720648799.0809, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d8e64ad36336498aa3586ae451fddf33", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "0_output": [["who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "Title: Shot heard round the world\n\nPassage: The towns of Lexington and Concord have debated over the point where the first shot was fired since at least 1824, when Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette visited the two towns during his visit to the United States. He was welcomed to Lexington by the municipal authorities, who described it as the \"birthplace of American liberty\"; the Marquis de Lafayette was subsequently informed in Concord that the \"first forcible resistance\" was made there. President Ulysses S. Grant considered not attending the 1875 centennial celebrations in the area to evade the issue. In 1894, Lexington petitioned the Massachusetts General Court to proclaim April 19 as \"Lexington Day\", to which Concord objected; the current name for the holiday is Patriots' Day.\nAssassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand\nInternationally, the phrase \"shot heard round the world\", alternatively written as \"shots heard round the world\" or \"shot heard around the world\", has become primarily associated with the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914. The event is considered to be one of the immediate causes of World War I. Serbian Gavrilo Princip fired two shots, the first hitting Franz Ferdinand's wife Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, and the second hitting the Archduke himself. The death of Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, propelled Austria-Hungary and the rest of Europe into World War I.\nWidespread idiomatic use\nThe phrase \"Shot heard round the world\" continues to be a stock phrase in the 21st century, widely used to refer to extraordinary events in general. The phrase has been applied to several dramatic moments in sports history.\nIn baseball, the \"Shot Heard 'Round the World\" refers to the game-winning walk-off home run by New York Giants outfielder Bobby Thomson off Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Ralph Branca to win the National League pennant on October 3, 1951. The Giants won the game 5\u20134 as a result of the home run, defeating their traditional rivals in the pennant playoff series, although they eventually lost the World Series to the Yankees.\nIn association football, the shot heard round the world refers to Paul Caligiuri's winning goal for the United States men's national soccer team in the final qualifying round for the 1990 FIFA World Cup on 19 November 1989. The US had not qualified for the World Cup since 1950. The team was in third position of the CONCACAF playoffs before their final game against Trinidad and Tobago in Port of Spain. The US had to win to go to the finals, their opponents only needed a draw. Defensive midfielder Caligiuri received the ball 40 yards out from goal, and instead of passing it to a striker, beat one defender and launched a 30-yard shot that looped into the goal.\nIn golf, the shot heard round the world refers to an albatross (or double eagle) made by Gene Sarazen on the 15th hole in the final round of the 1935 Masters. Sarazen would go on to win the tournament in a 36-hole playoff."]], "1_conv_id": "1b38dedb8f1d4d78b590121081f68fd7", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "1_output": [["who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "Title: Shot heard round the world\n\nPassage: The \"shot heard round the world\" is a phrase that refers to the opening shot of the battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, which sparked the American Revolutionary War and led to the creation of the United States. It originates from the opening stanza of Ralph Waldo Emerson's 1837 poem \"Concord Hymn\". The phrase has subsequently been applied to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, a catalyst event for World War I, and hyperbolically applied to feats in sports.\nAmerican Revolutionary War\nEmerson's \"Concord Hymn\", which originated the phrase, was written about the skirmish at the Old North Bridge, which was an early engagement on that day. Emerson lived in a house known as the Old Manse at the time when he was composing the poem, from which his grandfather and father (then a young child) had witnessed the skirmish. The house is located approximately from the Old North Bridge.\nThere is no consensus whether the shots fired at the North Bridge were truly the first shots of the American Revolution; it is an unprovable matter of opinion and of contention, particularly between the towns of Concord and Lexington, Massachusetts. There had been an earlier encounter at the Lexington Battle Green, when a column of British troops encountered a group of minutemen led by Captain John Parker. Neither side had orders to open fire, but the British soldiers fired a spontaneous ragged volley anyway and then made a bayonet charge (whether the first shot was fired by a British soldier or an American sniper is unknown). Eight Americans were killed, the Americans quit the field, and the British continued their march toward Concord. One British soldier suffered a flesh wound from a shot from an unknown source."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720648813.5045, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "9b76707de9924c569e52d98ae1fdd143", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "where did the indian myna bird come from", "0_output": [["where did the indian myna bird come from", "Title: Bank myna\n\nPassage: The distribution was formerly noted to be restricted north, roughly, of a line between Bombay and Balasore in Orissa, but the species may be expanding its range. They are also common in Pakistan in the districts of Sind and Punjab. A specimen from Kandahar was earlier considered the westernmost record of a vagrant, but the birds have since established themselves in the region. Although mainly resident, they make movements in response to food and weather. The species name of the bird is based on the name given by Latham from a description by Pierre Sonnerat who described Le petit Martin de Gingi in 1782, referring to Gingee near Pondicherry in southern India. Thomas C. Jerdon noted in 1863 that the species did not occur in southern India however the species was recorded in the region in 1914 at Vandalur near Madras. Records from further south in India are, however, increasing since 2000. Breeding colonies have been found in Assam.\nThese mynas have been introduced into Kuwait, where they have become established in the wild. Flocks have also been found in the Maldives, Taiwan and Japan.\nBehaviour and ecology\nBank mynas are gregarious foraging in flocks, breeding colonially and roosting together in trees. They perch on livestock and live in crowded towns allowing close approach, often picking up scraps in markets and dumps. They are vociferous and use a wide range of calls that include clucks, croaks, screeches, whistles and warbling elements.\nBank mynas feed on grain, insects and fruits. Like the common myna, they sometimes follow grazing animals picking up disturbed insects or even ticks on the animals. They feed on ripening crops such as those of sorghum, grape and pearl millet. They feed on a variety of insects, including some that are crop pests such as Achaea janata whose caterpillars feed on castor.\nBank mynas have a nesting season from April to July or August, most birds breeding in May and June. The nest is always built in earth walls, on the banks of rivers, embankments or the sides of open wells. They will sometimes make use of holes in brick walls. Nests have also been recorded between stacked bales of sugarcane stalks. They excavate the nest hole, the egg chamber sometimes 4 to 7 feet from the entrance. The nest is lined with grass, feathers and sometimes snake sloughs. About four of five pale sky blue or greenish-blue eggs is the usual clutch. Two broods may be raised in the same season. The eggs hatch after about 13 to 14 days. Nestlings open their eyes after about 5 days and fledge in about 21 days. About 38% of the eggs hatched into young that fledged in one study.\nA species of coccidian parasite, Isospora ginginiana, and several species of nematode (Oxyspirura, Choanotaenia, Hymenolepis sp.) have been described from the species."]], "1_conv_id": "abbc8fbbf19c41a591340227c53ec7ec", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_prompt": "where did the indian myna bird come from", "1_output": [["where did the indian myna bird come from", "Title: Indian blackbird\n\nPassage: The Indian blackbird (Turdus simillimus) is a member of the thrush family Turdidae. It was formerly considered a subspecies of the common blackbird. It is found only in India and Sri Lanka. The subspecies from most of the Indian subcontinent, simillimus, nigropileus, bourdilloni and spencei, are small, only long, and have broad eye-rings. They also differ in proportions, wing formula, egg colour and voice from the common blackbird.\nSubspecies\nThe Nilgiri blackbird (T. s. simillimus) is resident up to 2,000\u00a0metres in the Western Ghats from Biligirirangans and Nilgiris till about Nelliampathies where it integrates with Bourdillon's blackbird.\nThe black-capped blackbird (T. s. nigropileus) is resident up to about in the Western Ghats of western India and the northern and central parts of the Western Ghats. Some populations migrate further south in winter. The male is brownish slate-grey with a dark cap, and the female is mid-brown, paler below. It is small with a relatively broad yellow eye-ring.\nSpence's blackbird (T. s. spencei), named for William Spence, British entomologist, is very similar to nigropileus, but has a less distinct cap. It is resident in the Eastern Ghats of India. It is of dubious validity, and is often included in nigropileus with which it is said to integrate in the Nallamala Hills.\nBourdillon's blackbird (T. s. bourdilloni), named for Thomas Fulton Bourdillon, Conservator of Forests in the then princely state of Travancore, is a common resident of the hills above in southern Kerala and Tamil Nadu. It resembles simillimus and intergrades with it in the Palni Hills, but the male is uniform slate brown.\nKinnis' blackbird (T. s. kinnisii), named for John Kinnis, medical superintendent to the British military forces in Ceylon, is endemic to montane forests of Sri Lanka. Main breeding season is known to starts March to April and probably again from August to September as well."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720648825.573, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ea8ca71800884631b88ccbe03b1baaf5", "0_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "0_prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "0_output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: Charles Q. Williams\n\nPassage: "]], "1_conv_id": "c5de26b5bc4346dd8602107ed42461e8", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "1_output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: In the Heat of the Night (film)\n\nPassage: In the Heat of the Night was the film debut for several of its actors - Scott Wilson, Anthony James, Quentin Dean, and Eldon Quick. Clegg Hoyt's unbilled appearance in this film was his final acting role. He died two months after the film's release.\nFilming\nAlthough the film was set in Sparta, Mississippi, most of the movie was filmed in Sparta, Illinois (no relation), where many of the town's landmarks can still be seen. The original novel was set in the (fictional) town of \"Wells, South Carolina\", but the name of the town was changed to Sparta so that the filmmakers could use the existing signage and storefronts. The producers were unaware that \"Sparta, Mississippi\" was a real town, and the film's depiction bears little resemblance to the real community. For example, the film's Sparta is situated along Interstate 20, while the real town is nowhere near any interstate.\nJewison, Poitier, and Steiger worked together and got along well during the filming, but Jewison had problems with the Southern authorities, and Poitier had reservations about coming south of the Mason\u2013Dixon line for filming. However, despite their reservations, Jewison decided to shoot part of the film in Dyersburg and Union City, Tennessee anyway, while the rest was filmed in Sparta, Chester (Harvey Oberst chase scene), and Freeburg (Compton's diner), Illinois.\nThe film is important for being the first major Hollywood film in color that was lit with proper consideration for a Black person. Haskell Wexler recognized that standard strong lighting used in filming tended to produce too much glare on dark complexions and rendered the features indistinct. Accordingly, Wexler adjusted the lighting to feature Poitier with better photographic results.\nSlapping scene\nThe scene of Tibbs slapping Endicott is not present in the novel. According to Poitier, the scene was almost not in the movie, and it was he who had proposed the idea of Tibbs slapping Endicott back. In the textbook Civil Rights and Race Relations in the USA, Poitier states: \"I said, 'I'll tell you what, I'll make this movie for you if you give me your absolute guarantee when he slaps me I slap him right back and you guarantee that it will play in every version of this movie. I try not to do things that are against nature.\" Mark Harris, in his book, Pictures at a Revolution, states that copies of the original draft of the screenplay clearly depict the scene as filmed, which has been confirmed by both Jewison and Silliphant. Nevertheless, Poitier is correct that Tibbs' slapping of Endicott was not originally envisioned. After Endicott's slap, Silliphant's initial step-outline reads: \"Tibbs has all he can do to restrain himself. The butler drops his head, starts to pray. 'For him, Uncle Tom', Tibbs says furiously, 'not for me! Tibbs' counter slap first appears in Silliphant's revised step-outline."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720648999.8497, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "483145c78ffb4dadbccfe2b2535c8b2c", "0_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "0_prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "0_output": [["where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "Title: University of Wisconsin System\n\nPassage: The Universities of Wisconsin (officially the University of Wisconsin System and sometimes referred to as the UW System) is a university system of public universities in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. It is one of the largest public higher-education systems in the country, enrolling more than 160,000 students each year and employing approximately 41,000 faculty and staff statewide. The system is headquartered in the state capital of Madison.\nThe UW System comprises two major doctoral research universities, eleven other comprehensive universities, and twelve two-year branch campuses.\nHistory\nThe present-day University of Wisconsin System was created on October 11, 1971, by Chapter 100, Laws of 1971, which combined the former University of Wisconsin and Wisconsin State Universities systems into an enlarged University of Wisconsin System. The final legislation passed in May 1974, combining two chapters of the Wisconsin statutes. The merger took effect July 9, 1974.\nFormer University of Wisconsin\nThe University of Wisconsin was created by the state constitution in 1848, and held its first classes in Madison in 1849.\nIn 1956, pressed by the growing demand for a large public university that offered graduate programs in Milwaukee, Wisconsin's largest city, Wisconsin lawmakers merged Wisconsin State College of Milwaukee (WSCM) and the University of Wisconsin\u2013Extension's Milwaukee division as the University of Wisconsin\u2013Milwaukee. The new campus comprised the WSCM campus near the lakefront and the UW extension in downtown Milwaukee."]], "1_conv_id": "b27ddfea90634dfa977da2b639c64781", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "1_output": [["where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "Title: Northwestern University\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720649240.8562, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e1260c515ac348fab52d201decf3bb00", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "0_output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: The April First Phenomenon\n\nPassage: A true quantum reason for why people fib on April first.\n"]], "1_conv_id": "6c7177fa93a743afb6f69e1d0f47eaf8", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "1_output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: Are we scoring calories correct?\n\nPassage: A new method of food stuff energetic value scoring is offered\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720649265.7422, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6f09e4ba52dd428ea235b282eadeeeb7", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "0_output": [["when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "Title: HHAR-net: Hierarchical Human Activity Recognition using Neural Networks\n\nPassage: Activity recognition using built-in sensors in smart and wearable devices\nprovides great opportunities to understand and detect human behavior in the\nwild and gives a more holistic view of individuals' health and well being.\nNumerous computational methods have been applied to sensor streams to recognize\ndifferent daily activities. However, most methods are unable to capture\ndifferent layers of activities concealed in human behavior. Also, the\nperformance of the models starts to decrease with increasing the number of\nactivities. This research aims at building a hierarchical classification with\nNeural Networks to recognize human activities based on different levels of\nabstraction. We evaluate our model on the Extrasensory dataset; a dataset\ncollected in the wild and containing data from smartphones and smartwatches. We\nuse a two-level hierarchy with a total of six mutually exclusive labels namely,\n\"lying down\", \"sitting\", \"standing in place\", \"walking\", \"running\", and\n\"bicycling\" divided into \"stationary\" and \"non-stationary\". The results show\nthat our model can recognize low-level activities (stationary/non-stationary)\nwith 95.8% accuracy and overall accuracy of 92.8% over six labels. This is 3%\nabove our best performing baseline.\n"]], "1_conv_id": "987cf7019123426997aba1c034be9a08", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "1_output": [["when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "Title: Not Available\n\nPassage: withdrawn by author\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720649481.5375, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "1038daef9c1841d4baa70694471fae5f", "0_model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "0_prompt": "Scaling Data", "0_output": [["Scaling Data", "Title: Correction. Efficient parameter estimation for self-similar processes\n\nPassage: Correction to The Annals of Statistics (1989) 17 1749--1766 [URL:\nhttp://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0090-5364%28198912%2917%3A4%3C1749%3AEPEFSP%3E\n2.0.CO%3B2-9]\n"]], "1_conv_id": "6c43531646c54b7a86b3cd5f39f04745", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "Scaling Data", "1_output": [["Scaling Data", "Title: Adaptive Scaling\n\nPassage: Preprocessing data is an important step before any data analysis. In this\npaper, we focus on one particular aspect, namely scaling or normalization. We\nanalyze various scaling methods in common use and study their effects on\ndifferent statistical learning models. We will propose a new two-stage scaling\nmethod. First, we use some training data to fit linear regression model and\nthen scale the whole data based on the coefficients of regression. Simulations\nare conducted to illustrate the advantages of our new scaling method. Some real\ndata analysis will also be given.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720649807.4909, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "63dd06afb61c4205823d6fe129300193", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "0_output": [["who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "Title: Who discovered Universe expansion?\n\nPassage: Lundmark established observational evidence that the Universe is expanding.\nLema\\^itre established theoretical evidence. Hubble established observational\nproof.\n"]], "1_conv_id": "52cc528dc08146e193c91874d5cccd19", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "1_output": [["who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "Title: This is withdrown\n\nPassage: This paper is withdrown\n"]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720814302.2729, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "40b2d108265a4b708328e2e181599ed6", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "motion of earth is a combination of motion", "0_output": [["motion of earth is a combination of motion", "Title: Polar motion\n\nPassage: Polar motion of the Earth is the motion of the Earth's rotational axis relative to its crust. This is measured with respect to a reference frame in which the solid Earth is fixed (a so-called Earth-centered, Earth-fixed or ECEF reference frame). This variation is a few meters on the surface of the Earth.\nAnalysis"]], "1_conv_id": "5b4a15582c6f4cc8a538e9849215667b", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "motion of earth is a combination of motion", "1_output": [["motion of earth is a combination of motion", "Title: Citizen science\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720814338.6463, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "80169178995645699c64e3e3de9199e9", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "where is connective tissue found in the body", "0_output": [["where is connective tissue found in the body", "Title: Connective tissue neoplasm\n\nPassage: A connective tissue neoplasm or connective tissue tumor is a neoplasm arising from the tissues of the connective tissue. (Not all tumors in the connective tissue are of the connective tissue.)"]], "1_conv_id": "4cb9c81ee9aa4ee194b88dee45408c8a", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "where is connective tissue found in the body", "1_output": [["where is connective tissue found in the body", "Title: Connective tissue\n\nPassage: Type I collagen is present in many forms of connective tissue, and makes up about 25% of the total protein content of the mammalian body.\nFunction\nConnective tissue has a wide variety of functions that depend on the types of cells and the different classes of fibers involved. Loose and dense irregular connective tissue, formed mainly by fibroblasts and collagen fibers, have an important role in providing a medium for oxygen and nutrients to diffuse from capillaries to cells, and carbon dioxide and waste substances to diffuse from cells back into circulation. They also allow organs to resist stretching and tearing forces. Dense regular connective tissue, which forms organized structures, is a major functional component of tendons, ligaments and aponeuroses, and is also found in highly specialized organs such as the cornea. Elastic fibers, made from elastin and fibrillin, also provide resistance to stretch forces. They are found in the walls of large blood vessels and in certain ligaments, particularly in the ligamenta flava.\nIn hematopoietic and lymphatic tissues, reticular fibers made by reticular cells provide the stroma\u2014or structural support\u2014for the parenchyma (that is, the bulk of functional substance) of the organ.\nMesenchyme is a type of connective tissue found in developing organs of embryos that is capable of differentiation into all types of mature connective tissue. Another type of relatively undifferentiated connective tissue is the mucous connective tissue known as Wharton's jelly, found inside the umbilical cord. This tissue is no longer present after birth, leaving only scattered mesenchymal cells throughout the body.\nVarious types of specialized tissues and cells are classified under the spectrum of connective tissue, and are as diverse as brown and white adipose tissue, blood, cartilage and bone. Cells of the immune system\u2014such as macrophages, mast cells, plasma cells, and eosinophils\u2014are found scattered in loose connective tissue, providing the ground for starting inflammatory and immune responses upon the detection of antigens.\nClinical significance\nThere are many types of connective tissue disorders, such as:\nConnective tissue neoplasms including sarcomas such as hemangiopericytoma and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor in nervous tissue.\nCongenital diseases include Marfan syndrome and Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome.\nMyxomatous degeneration \u2013 a pathological weakening of connective tissue.\nMixed connective tissue disease \u2013 a disease of the autoimmune system, also undifferentiated connective tissue disease.\nSystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) \u2013 a major autoimmune disease of connective tissue\nScurvy, caused by a deficiency of vitamin C which is necessary for the synthesis of collagen.\nFibromuscular dysplasia is a disease of the blood vessels that leads to an abnormal growth in the arterial wall."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720814564.4975, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "18d8de230370402cb4cee9b95ab78cdf", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "0_output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Nicki Minaj\n\nPassage: "]], "1_conv_id": "90b22182e91f4a10a0b8f1c9792ef23d", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "1_output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Dennis Brown\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720816459.4899, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "41e14d282ff8450b8722f3a9e2975b0a", "0_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "0_prompt": "where do you find the adjusted gross income", "0_output": [["where do you find the adjusted gross income", "Title: Adjusted gross income\n\nPassage: Gross income is sales price of goods or property, minus cost of the property sold, plus other income. It includes wages, interest, dividends, business income, rental income, and all other types of income. Adjusted gross income is gross income less deductions from a business or rental activity and 21 other specific items.\nSeveral deductions (e.g. medical expenses and miscellaneous itemized deductions) are limited based on a percentage of AGI. Certain phase outs, including those of lower tax rates and itemized deductions, are based on levels of AGI. Many states base state income tax on AGI with certain deductions.\nAdjusted gross income is calculated by subtracting above-the-line deduction from gross income.\nGross income\nGross income includes \"all income from whatever source\", and is not limited to cash received. It specifically includes wages, salary, bonuses, interest, dividends, rents, royalties, income from operating a business, alimony, pensions and annuities, share of income from partnerships and S corporations, and income tax refunds. Gross income includes net gains for disposal of assets, including capital gains and capital losses. Losses on personal assets are not deducted in computing gross income or adjusted gross income. Gifts and inheritances are excluded.\nAdjustments\nGross income is reduced by certain items to arrive at adjusted gross income. These include:\nExpenses of carrying on a trade or business including most rental activities (other than as an employee)\nCertain business expenses of teachers, reservists, performing artists, and fee-basis government officials,\nHealth savings account deductions,\nCertain moving expenses\nOne-half of self-employment tax,\nAllowable contributions to certain retirement arrangements (SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, and qualified plans) and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs),\nPenalties imposed by financial institutions and others on early withdrawal of savings,\nAlimony paid (which the recipient must include in gross income),\nCollege tuition, fees, and student loan interest (with limitations and exceptions),\nJury duty pay remitted to the juror's employer,\nDomestic production activities deduction, and\nCertain other items of limited applicability.\nReporting on Form 1040\nGross income is reported on U.S. federal individual income tax returns (Form 1040 series) type of income. Supporting schedules and forms are required in some cases, e.g., Schedule B for interest and dividends. Income of business and rental activities, including those through partnerships or S corporations, is reported net of the expenses of the business. These are reported on Schedule C for business income, Schedule E for rental income, and Schedule F for farm income.\nModified AGI\nCertain tax calculations are based on modified versions of AGI. The definition of \"modified AGI\" varies according to the purpose for which the related calculation is being used. These modified versions of AGI may add certain items to AGI that were excluded in computing both gross income and adjusted gross income. Common additions include tax exempt interest, the excluded portion of Social Security benefits and tax-free foreign earned income."]], "1_conv_id": "f8016bb46d154864a1aabf030fa7f9ed", "1_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "1_prompt": "where do you find the adjusted gross income", "1_output": [["where do you find the adjusted gross income", "Title: Adjusted gross income\n\nPassage: Gross income is sales price of goods or property, minus cost of the property sold, plus other income. It includes wages, interest, dividends, business income, rental income, and all other types of income. Adjusted gross income is gross income less deductions from a business or rental activity and 21 other specific items.\nSeveral deductions (e.g. medical expenses and miscellaneous itemized deductions) are limited based on a percentage of AGI. Certain phase outs, including those of lower tax rates and itemized deductions, are based on levels of AGI. Many states base state income tax on AGI with certain deductions.\nAdjusted gross income is calculated by subtracting above-the-line deduction from gross income.\nGross income\nGross income includes \"all income from whatever source\", and is not limited to cash received. It specifically includes wages, salary, bonuses, interest, dividends, rents, royalties, income from operating a business, alimony, pensions and annuities, share of income from partnerships and S corporations, and income tax refunds. Gross income includes net gains for disposal of assets, including capital gains and capital losses. Losses on personal assets are not deducted in computing gross income or adjusted gross income. Gifts and inheritances are excluded.\nAdjustments\nGross income is reduced by certain items to arrive at adjusted gross income. These include:\nExpenses of carrying on a trade or business including most rental activities (other than as an employee)\nCertain business expenses of teachers, reservists, performing artists, and fee-basis government officials,\nHealth savings account deductions,\nCertain moving expenses\nOne-half of self-employment tax,\nAllowable contributions to certain retirement arrangements (SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, and qualified plans) and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs),\nPenalties imposed by financial institutions and others on early withdrawal of savings,\nAlimony paid (which the recipient must include in gross income),\nCollege tuition, fees, and student loan interest (with limitations and exceptions),\nJury duty pay remitted to the juror's employer,\nDomestic production activities deduction, and\nCertain other items of limited applicability.\nReporting on Form 1040\nGross income is reported on U.S. federal individual income tax returns (Form 1040 series) type of income. Supporting schedules and forms are required in some cases, e.g., Schedule B for interest and dividends. Income of business and rental activities, including those through partnerships or S corporations, is reported net of the expenses of the business. These are reported on Schedule C for business income, Schedule E for rental income, and Schedule F for farm income.\nModified AGI\nCertain tax calculations are based on modified versions of AGI. The definition of \"modified AGI\" varies according to the purpose for which the related calculation is being used. These modified versions of AGI may add certain items to AGI that were excluded in computing both gross income and adjusted gross income. Common additions include tax exempt interest, the excluded portion of Social Security benefits and tax-free foreign earned income."]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720596993.7165, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "share", "models": ["### Model A: intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "### Model B: GritLM/GritLM-7B"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e50d4e4744ab48a5bcdc4948f6bf6e80", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "0_output": [["when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "Title: February 10\n\nPassage: Events\nPre-1600"]], "1_conv_id": "f72f65953948488db55f613d8289fea8", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "1_output": [["when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "Title: Birth certificate\n\nPassage: The United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 17, an integral part of the 2030 Agenda, has a target to increase the timely availability of data regarding age, gender, race, ethnicity, and other relevant characteristics which documents like a birth certificate have the capacity to provide.\nHistory and contemporary times\nThe documentation of births is a practice widely held throughout human civilization. The original purpose of vital statistics was for tax purposes and for the determination of available military manpower. In England, births were initially registered with churches, who maintained registers of births. This practice continued into the 19th century. The compulsory registration of births with the United Kingdom government is a practice that originated at least as far back as 1853. The entire United States did not get a standardized system until 1902.\nMost countries have statutes and laws that regulate the registration of births. In all countries, it is the responsibility of the mother's physician, midwife, hospital administrator, or the parent(s) of the child to see that the birth is properly registered with the appropriate government agency.\nThe actual record of birth is stored with a government agency. That agency will issue certified copies or representations of the original birth record upon request, which can be used to apply for government benefits, such as passports. The certification is signed and/or sealed by the registrar or other custodian of birth records, who is commissioned by the government.\nThe right of every child to a name and nationality, and the responsibility of national governments to achieve this are contained in Articles 7 and 8 in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: \"The child shall be registered immediately after birth and shall have the right from birth to a name, the right to acquire a nationality...\" (CRC Article 7) and \"States Parties undertake to respect the right of the child to preserve his or her identity, including nationality, name and family relations...\" (CRC Article 8).\nDespite 191 countries ratifying the convention, the births of millions of children worldwide go unregistered. By their very nature, data concerning unregistered children are approximate. About 29% of countries do not have available or sufficient data to assess global progress toward the SDG goal of universal coverage. However, from the data that is available, UNICEF estimates that more than a quarter of children under 5 worldwide are unregistered. The lowest levels of birth registration are found in sub-Saharan Africa (43 percent). This phenomenon disproportionately impacts poor households and indigenous populations. Even in many developed countries, it contributes to difficulties in fully accessing civic rights."]]}
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data/retrieval_battle-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720823286.4456, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "92876908e90449f38203ea8badbf27ef", "0_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "0_prompt": "what is the meaning of the dragon boat festival", "0_output": [["what is the meaning of the dragon boat festival", "Title: Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in New York\n\nPassage: The Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in New York is an annual sporting and multicultural event held in August on Meadow Lake in Flushing Meadows\u2013Corona Park in Queens, New York to celebrate the fifth moon (or the fifth month) of the lunar calendar. In addition to providing audiences with traditional Chinese foods and performances, the festival, now in its 18th year, hosts over 150 dragon boat teams from across North America, making it one of the largest dragon boat festivals in the United States. Depending on the competitive division, teams compete for cash prizes or airline tickets.\nIn 1986, the Hong Kong Tourism Board donated traditional teak wood boats to several cities including New York. In 1990, the locally based Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office promoted and organized the inaugural Hong Kong Dragon Boat Festival in New York, which was held on the Hudson River in Battery Park City. Several of the original organizers are still involved with the festival, including Henry Wan, who now serves as the festival's chairman.\nThe festival is now an independent non-profit company organized under the laws of the State of New York and receives its funding through sponsorships by various companies. The Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office continues to be a substantial supporter of the festival.\nIn addition to the change in corporate structure, the festival's fleet of dragon boats has grown from 4 teak wood dragon boats to over 30 dragon boats. Many of the boats are made of fiberglass. All the boats are approved by the International Dragon Boat Federation for international dragon boat racing."]], "1_conv_id": "75b49da866fb4da6bc08b6704c33e5bb", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "what is the meaning of the dragon boat festival", "1_output": [["what is the meaning of the dragon boat festival", "Title: Houston Dragon Boat Festival\n\nPassage: The Houston Dragon Boat Festival is held in Houston, Texas. The Houston Dragon Boat Festival is a race down Buffalo Bayou, using decorated canoes called \"dragon boats\".\nHistory\nThe first festival was held in October 2001 at Allen's Landing in downtown Houston. In 2004, the festival added a second event \u2013 the Gulf Coast International Dragon Boat Regatta held in October at Clear Lake Park. 2005 saw the festival host the U.S. Central Region Championships in conjunction with the Gulf Coast International regatta.\nBoathouse\nThe Texas Dragon Association plans to build the first boathouse along the downtown Bayou for non-motor boat craft. The Houston Endowment donated $75,000 to build the boathouse at 501 N. York Street."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720814464.474, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "86dfaf8cfdc940539affcc1dd3ec99ff", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "0_output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Nicki Minaj\n\nPassage: "]], "1_conv_id": "27168e3a8efa437d9dfec6a106fc351e", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "1_output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Rip It Up (Little Richard song)\n\nPassage: \"Rip It Up\" is a rock and roll song written by Robert Blackwell and John Marascalco. In June 1956, Specialty Records released it as a single by Little Richard with \"Ready Teddy\" as the B-side. The song reached the top position on the Billboard Rhythm & Blues Records chart as well as number 17 on the magazine's broader Billboard Hot 100. The version peaked at number 30 in the UK Singles Chart. The song was also recorded by Elvis Presley in 1956.\nIn the Richards recording, the tenor saxophone solo is by Lee Allen.\nAlso in 1956, Bill Haley & His Comets released a version of the song which reached number 25 on the Hot 100, and number four in the UK Singles Chart.\nThe song, which was recorded at J&M Recording Studio in New Orleans, is included as a full-length performance by Earl Palmer with guest vocalist Ivan Neville and house band in the 2005 documentary film Make It Funky!, which presents a history of New Orleans music and its influence on rhythm and blues, rock and roll, funk and jazz. Los Lobos recorded the song for the 1987 Ritchie Valens biography film La Bamba. The song hasn't been officially released on the album but is released on their album El Cancionero Mas y Mas."]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-04b41a16-8446-4c25-b993-5f682d3e6561.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1721769363.8924, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769300.6251, "finish": 1721769363.8924, "ip": "", "conv_id": "faa34f3bb1d443cfa04cdff0ba13cf8c", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Title: Machines That Think\n\nPassage: Machines That Think is a compilation of 29 science fiction stories probing the scientific, spiritual, and moral facets of computers and robots and speculating on their future. It was edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Patricia S. Warrick.\nPublished in 1984 by Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, it features a foreword by Asimov, the celebrated creator of the Three Laws of Robotics. (At five stories, Asimov's contributions dominate the book's contents.) Machines That Think was reprinted in 1992 by Wings Books as War with the Robots. (However, one story \u2014 \"I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream\" by Harlan Ellison \u2014 was removed.)\nEach story has introductory notes by Warrick, author of The Cybernetic Imagination in Science Fiction (1981), explaining the significance of the story in the context of science fiction's evolution of ideas concerning artificial intelligence. This anthology is a companion piece to that non-fiction book, providing the source material upon which Warrick's analysis is based.\nContents"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769860.7282, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769860.6083, "finish": 1721769860.7282, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2e15c7ad8dc24e0dbca07e92889b2cb7", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: Love\n\nPassage: The color wheel theory of love defines three primary, three secondary, and nine tertiary love styles, describing them in terms of the traditional color wheel. The triangular theory of love suggests intimacy, passion, and commitment are core components of love. Love has additional religious or spiritual meaning. This diversity of uses and meanings, combined with the complexity of the feelings involved, makes love unusually difficult to consistently define, compared to other emotional states.\nDefinitions\nThe word \"love\" can have a variety of related but distinct meanings in different contexts. Many other languages use multiple words to express some of the different concepts that in English are denoted as \"love\"; one example is the plurality of Greek concepts for \"love\" (, , , ). Cultural differences in conceptualizing love make it difficult to establish a universal definition.\nAlthough the nature or essence of love is a subject of frequent debate, different aspects of the word can be clarified by determining what is not love (antonyms of \"love\"). Love, as a general expression of positive sentiment (a stronger form of like), is commonly contrasted with hate (or neutral apathy). As a less sexual and more emotionally intimate form of romantic attachment, love is commonly contrasted with lust. As an interpersonal relationship with romantic overtones, love is sometimes contrasted with friendship, although the word love is often applied to close friendships or platonic love. Further possible ambiguities come with usages like \"girlfriend\", \"boyfriend\", and \"just good friends\".\nAbstractly discussed, love usually refers to a feeling one person experiences for another person. Love often involves caring for, or identifying with, a person or thing (cf. vulnerability and care theory of love), including oneself (cf. narcissism). In addition to cross-cultural differences in understanding love, ideas about love have also changed greatly over time. Some historians date modern conceptions of romantic love to courtly Europe during or after the Middle Ages, although the prior existence of romantic attachments is attested by ancient love poetry.\nThe complex and of love often reduces its discourse to a thought-terminating clich\u00e9. Several common proverbs regard love, from Virgil's \"Love conquers all\" to The Beatles' \"All You Need Is Love\". St. Thomas Aquinas, following Aristotle, defines love as \"to will the good of another.\" Bertrand Russell describes love as \"absolute value,\" as opposed to relative value. Philosopher Gottfried Leibniz said that love is \"to be delighted by the happiness of another.\" Meher Baba stated that in love there is a \"feeling of unity\" and an \"active appreciation of the intrinsic worth of the object of love.\" Biologist Jeremy Griffith defines love as \"unconditional selflessness\". According to Ambrose Bierce, love is a temporary insanity curable by marriage.\nImpersonal\nPeople can express love towards things other than humans; this can range from expressing a strong liking of something, such as \"I love popcorn\" or that something is essential to one's identity, such as \"I love being an actor\"."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769894.1302, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769894.0134, "finish": 1721769894.1302, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ba24ff3d49c6464b983d07ad9fd1492a", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: List of possible dwarf planets\n\nPassage: Assessment by Brown\nMike Brown considers 130 trans-Neptunian bodies to be \"probably\" dwarf planets, ranked them by estimated size. He does not consider asteroids, stating \"in the asteroid belt Ceres, with a diameter of 900 km, is the only object large enough to be round.\"\nThe terms for varying degrees of likelihood he split these into:\nNear certainty: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Sufficient confidence to say these must be in hydrostatic equilibrium, even if predominantly rocky. 10 objects as of 2020.\nHighly likely: diameter estimated/measured to be over . The size would have to be \"grossly in error\" or they would have to be primarily rocky to not be dwarf planets. 17 objects as of 2020.\nLikely: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Uncertainties in measurement mean that some of these will be significantly smaller and thus doubtful. 41 objects as of 2020.\nProbably: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Expected to be dwarf planets, if they are icy, and that figure is correct. 62 objects as of 2020.\nPossibly: diameter estimated/measured to be over . Icy moons transition from a round to irregular shape in the 200\u2013400\u00a0km range, suggesting that the same figure holds true for KBOs. Thus, some of these objects could be dwarf planets. 611 objects as of 2020.\nProbably not: diameter estimated/measured to be under 200\u00a0km. No icy moon under 200\u00a0km is round, and the same may be true of KBOs. The estimated size of these objects would have to be in error for them to be dwarf planets.\nBeside the five accepted by the IAU, the 'nearly certain' category includes , , , , , and . Note that although Brown's site claims to be updated daily, these largest objects haven't been updated since late 2013, and indeed the current best diameter estimates for Salacia and are less than 900\u00a0km. (Orcus is just above the threshold.)\nAssessment by Grundy et al.\nGrundy et al. propose that dark, low-density TNOs in the size range of approximately are transitional between smaller, porous (and thus low-density) bodies and larger, denser, brighter, and geologically differentiated planetary bodies (such as dwarf planets). Bodies in this size range should have begun to collapse the interstitial spaces left over from their formation, but not fully, leaving some residual porosity."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769912.3169, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769912.2086, "finish": 1721769912.3169, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d06b2c3ac03843f28d56a95d95d9b8b0", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Title: Machines That Think\n\nPassage: Machines That Think is a compilation of 29 science fiction stories probing the scientific, spiritual, and moral facets of computers and robots and speculating on their future. It was edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Patricia S. Warrick.\nPublished in 1984 by Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, it features a foreword by Asimov, the celebrated creator of the Three Laws of Robotics. (At five stories, Asimov's contributions dominate the book's contents.) Machines That Think was reprinted in 1992 by Wings Books as War with the Robots. (However, one story \u2014 \"I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream\" by Harlan Ellison \u2014 was removed.)\nEach story has introductory notes by Warrick, author of The Cybernetic Imagination in Science Fiction (1981), explaining the significance of the story in the context of science fiction's evolution of ideas concerning artificial intelligence. This anthology is a companion piece to that non-fiction book, providing the source material upon which Warrick's analysis is based.\nContents"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769930.2118, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769930.0929, "finish": 1721769930.2118, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0eb996c2b59042eb92e16191cc80b777", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nPassage: Encyclopedia Galactica is the name of a number of fictional or hypothetical encyclopedias containing all the knowledge accumulated by a galaxy-spanning civilization, most notably in Isaac Asimov's Foundation series. The concept of a \"future encyclopedia\" has become \"something iconic among many lovers of the science fiction\", and has been reused by numerous other writers.\nAsimov's Encyclopedia Galactica\nEncyclopedia Galactica first appeared in Isaac Asimov's short story \"Foundation\" (Astounding Science Fiction, May 1942), later republished as \"The Encyclopedists\" in the short-story collection Foundation (1951). Asimov's Encyclopedia Galactica was a compendium of all knowledge then available in the Galactic Empire, intended to preserve that knowledge in a remote region of the galaxy in the event of a foreseen galactic catastrophe. The Encyclopedia is later revealed to be an element in an act of misdirection, with its real purpose being to concentrate a group of knowledgeable scientists on a remote, resource-poor planet named Terminus, with the long-term aim of revitalizing the technologically stagnant and scientifically dormant empire. Originally published in a physical medium, it later becomes computerized and subject to continual change.\nAsimov used the Encyclopedia Galactica as a literary device throughout his Foundation series, beginning many of the book sections or chapters with a short extract from the Encyclopedia as epigraphs, discussing a key character or event in the story. This provides the reader with a hazy idea of what is to come.\nTheodore Wein considers the Encyclopedia Galactica as possibly inspired by a reference in H. G. Wells's The Shape of Things to Come (1933). The future world envisioned by Wells includes an \"Encyclopaedic organization which centres upon Barcelona, with seventeen million active workers\" and which is tasked with creating \"the Fundamental Knowledge System which accumulates, sorts, keeps in order and renders available everything that is known\". As pointed out by Wein, this Wells book was at its best-known and most influential in the late 1930s \u2013 coinciding with \"the period of incubation\" when the young Asimov became interested in science fiction, reading a lot of it and starting to formulate his own ideas."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721770053.9213, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721770053.8037, "finish": 1721770053.9213, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3b5c5090cd7d4d3284843e011cba527a", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Habitable planets besides Earth", "output": [["Habitable planets besides Earth", "Title: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: The habitability of natural satellites is the potential of moons to provide habitats for life, though it is not an indicator that they harbor it. Natural satellites are expected to outnumber planets by a large margin and the study of their habitability is therefore important to astrobiology and the search for extraterrestrial life. There are, nevertheless, significant environmental variables specific to moons.\nIt is projected that parameters for surface habitats will be comparable to those of planets like Earth, namely stellar properties, orbit, planetary mass, atmosphere and geology. Of the natural satellites in the Solar System's habitable zone \u2013 the Moon, two Martian satellites (though some estimates put those outside it) and numerous minor-planet moons \u2013 all lack the conditions for surface water. Unlike the Earth, all planetary mass moons of the Solar System are tidally locked and it is not yet known to what extent this and tidal forces influence habitability.\nResearch suggests that deep biospheres like that of Earth are possible. The strongest candidates therefore are currently icy satellites such as those of Jupiter and Saturn\u2014Europa and Enceladus respectively, in which subsurface liquid water is thought to exist. While the lunar surface is hostile to life as we know it, a deep lunar biosphere (or that of similar bodies) cannot yet be ruled out; deep exploration would be required for confirmation.\nExomoons are not yet confirmed to exist and their detection may be limited to transit-timing variation, which is not currently sufficiently sensitive. It is possible that some of their attributes could be found through study of their transits. Despite this, some scientists estimate that there are as many habitable exomoons as habitable exoplanets. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, gas giants in the habitable zone are thought to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons.\nTidal forces are likely to play as significant a role providing heat as stellar radiation.\nPresumed conditions\nThe conditions of habitability for natural satellites are similar to those of planetary habitability. However, there are several factors which differentiate natural satellite habitability and additionally extend their habitability outside the planetary habitable zone.\nLiquid water\nLiquid water is thought by most astrobiologists to be an essential prerequisite for extraterrestrial life. There is growing evidence of subsurface liquid water on several moons in the Solar System orbiting the gas giants Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. However, none of these subsurface bodies of water has been confirmed to date.\nOrbital stability"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721770210.0334, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721770209.9123, "finish": 1721770210.0334, "ip": "", "conv_id": "02cb81405f4e4cd18bfd65d462df0a2f", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: Love\n\nPassage: The color wheel theory of love defines three primary, three secondary, and nine tertiary love styles, describing them in terms of the traditional color wheel. The triangular theory of love suggests intimacy, passion, and commitment are core components of love. Love has additional religious or spiritual meaning. This diversity of uses and meanings, combined with the complexity of the feelings involved, makes love unusually difficult to consistently define, compared to other emotional states.\nDefinitions\nThe word \"love\" can have a variety of related but distinct meanings in different contexts. Many other languages use multiple words to express some of the different concepts that in English are denoted as \"love\"; one example is the plurality of Greek concepts for \"love\" (, , , ). Cultural differences in conceptualizing love make it difficult to establish a universal definition.\nAlthough the nature or essence of love is a subject of frequent debate, different aspects of the word can be clarified by determining what is not love (antonyms of \"love\"). Love, as a general expression of positive sentiment (a stronger form of like), is commonly contrasted with hate (or neutral apathy). As a less sexual and more emotionally intimate form of romantic attachment, love is commonly contrasted with lust. As an interpersonal relationship with romantic overtones, love is sometimes contrasted with friendship, although the word love is often applied to close friendships or platonic love. Further possible ambiguities come with usages like \"girlfriend\", \"boyfriend\", and \"just good friends\".\nAbstractly discussed, love usually refers to a feeling one person experiences for another person. Love often involves caring for, or identifying with, a person or thing (cf. vulnerability and care theory of love), including oneself (cf. narcissism). In addition to cross-cultural differences in understanding love, ideas about love have also changed greatly over time. Some historians date modern conceptions of romantic love to courtly Europe during or after the Middle Ages, although the prior existence of romantic attachments is attested by ancient love poetry.\nThe complex and of love often reduces its discourse to a thought-terminating clich\u00e9. Several common proverbs regard love, from Virgil's \"Love conquers all\" to The Beatles' \"All You Need Is Love\". St. Thomas Aquinas, following Aristotle, defines love as \"to will the good of another.\" Bertrand Russell describes love as \"absolute value,\" as opposed to relative value. Philosopher Gottfried Leibniz said that love is \"to be delighted by the happiness of another.\" Meher Baba stated that in love there is a \"feeling of unity\" and an \"active appreciation of the intrinsic worth of the object of love.\" Biologist Jeremy Griffith defines love as \"unconditional selflessness\". According to Ambrose Bierce, love is a temporary insanity curable by marriage.\nImpersonal\nPeople can express love towards things other than humans; this can range from expressing a strong liking of something, such as \"I love popcorn\" or that something is essential to one's identity, such as \"I love being an actor\"."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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data/retrieval_individual-07382a20-4ab0-48ff-b6a9-d0e108ae5043.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1721055934.4804, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055883.1373, "finish": 1721055934.4804, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0f069301e2b342c3b57beb1ad639c281", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who owned the colts when they left baltimore", "output": [["who owned the colts when they left baltimore", "Title: History of the Indianapolis Colts\n\nPassage: The Indianapolis Colts are a professional American football team based in Indianapolis, Indiana. They play in the South Division of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL). The organization began play in 1953 as the Baltimore Colts with the team located in Baltimore, Maryland; it relocated to Indianapolis following the 1983 season.\nCarroll Rosenbloom brought an NFL franchise to Baltimore in 1953 and owned the team until 1972 when he traded the franchise to Robert Irsay. The Baltimore Colts won the NFL Championship in 1958, 1959 and 1968, with the Colts losing to the New York Jets in Super Bowl III. The Colts won their first Super Bowl title in 1970 over the Dallas Cowboys. During this time the organization was led by star quarterback Johnny Unitas until 1973 when he was traded to the San Diego Chargers. Following disappointing seasons and poor fan attendance, the franchise moved to Indianapolis in 1984. While in Baltimore the team achieved ten postseason appearances and won four championships.\nThe Colts organization struggled in the early days in Indianapolis, compiling an 88\u2013135 record from 1984 to 1997. During that time the Colts were led by seven different head coaches and seventeen different starting quarterbacks. The organization made three postseason appearances during the time, with the most success coming in 1995 and 1996 under quarterback Jim Harbaugh. The 1995 team made it to the AFC Championship Game, which they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers. Robert Irsay remained the principal owner of the Colts until his death in 1997 when the franchise was turned over to his son Jim Irsay, who is the current owner of the team.\nFollowing a 3\u201313 season in 1997, the organization drafted quarterback Peyton Manning, who started for the Colts for thirteen seasons from 1998 until 2010. Under Manning, the Colts saw their greatest success and during his time with the team made 11 postseason appearances, with nine consecutive appearances from 2002 to 2010. The Colts won eight division titles during this time along with two conference championships in 2006 and 2009. The Colts won their second Super Bowl title overall and their first while in Indianapolis during the 2006 season. From 1998 to 2011, the Colts were coached by Jim Mora, Tony Dungy and Jim Caldwell. Following a 2\u201314 record in 2011 when Manning had been sidelined for the whole season, the Peyton Manning era came to an end in 2012, when the organization released him following multiple neck surgeries. The Colts began to rebuild and drafted quarterback Andrew Luck; Luck retired in 2019.\nNFL Baltimore Colts"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721055934.4804, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055883.1373, "finish": 1721055934.4804, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ab58535fd58b45d7a1516d579ffef104", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who owned the colts when they left baltimore", "output": [["who owned the colts when they left baltimore", "Title: History of the Indianapolis Colts\n\nPassage: The Indianapolis Colts are a professional American football team based in Indianapolis, Indiana. They play in the South Division of the American Football Conference (AFC) in the National Football League (NFL). The organization began play in 1953 as the Baltimore Colts with the team located in Baltimore, Maryland; it relocated to Indianapolis following the 1983 season.\nCarroll Rosenbloom brought an NFL franchise to Baltimore in 1953 and owned the team until 1972 when he traded the franchise to Robert Irsay. The Baltimore Colts won the NFL Championship in 1958, 1959 and 1968, with the Colts losing to the New York Jets in Super Bowl III. The Colts won their first Super Bowl title in 1970 over the Dallas Cowboys. During this time the organization was led by star quarterback Johnny Unitas until 1973 when he was traded to the San Diego Chargers. Following disappointing seasons and poor fan attendance, the franchise moved to Indianapolis in 1984. While in Baltimore the team achieved ten postseason appearances and won four championships.\nThe Colts organization struggled in the early days in Indianapolis, compiling an 88\u2013135 record from 1984 to 1997. During that time the Colts were led by seven different head coaches and seventeen different starting quarterbacks. The organization made three postseason appearances during the time, with the most success coming in 1995 and 1996 under quarterback Jim Harbaugh. The 1995 team made it to the AFC Championship Game, which they lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers. Robert Irsay remained the principal owner of the Colts until his death in 1997 when the franchise was turned over to his son Jim Irsay, who is the current owner of the team.\nFollowing a 3\u201313 season in 1997, the organization drafted quarterback Peyton Manning, who started for the Colts for thirteen seasons from 1998 until 2010. Under Manning, the Colts saw their greatest success and during his time with the team made 11 postseason appearances, with nine consecutive appearances from 2002 to 2010. The Colts won eight division titles during this time along with two conference championships in 2006 and 2009. The Colts won their second Super Bowl title overall and their first while in Indianapolis during the 2006 season. From 1998 to 2011, the Colts were coached by Jim Mora, Tony Dungy and Jim Caldwell. Following a 2\u201314 record in 2011 when Manning had been sidelined for the whole season, the Peyton Manning era came to an end in 2012, when the organization released him following multiple neck surgeries. The Colts began to rebuild and drafted quarterback Andrew Luck; Luck retired in 2019.\nNFL Baltimore Colts"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721055983.0702, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055947.3463, "finish": 1721055983.0702, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c6543b1e435d4339b9a72c039a193bea", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when did little house on the praire air", "output": [["when did little house on the praire air", "Title: Little House on the Prairie (film)\n\nPassage: Little House on the Prairie is a 1974 American television film which served as the backdoor pilot to the homonymous NBC television series it started. It is closely based on the novel of the same title; the second of the Little House book series by Laura Ingalls Wilder. The pilot film was produced by Ed Friendly with the script written by Blanche Hanalis and directed by Michael Landon.\nPlot\nThe movie starts with the Ingalls family leaving their little house in the Big Woods and starting west. After a long and adventurous journey, they stop in Indian Country. Charles builds a house and starts farming, Indians visit them, and they meet Mr. Edwards. After a year, soldiers come and tell the family they have to leave. After packing everything they own, they set off on a new journey.\nCast\nMelissa Gilbert as Laura Ingalls\nMichael Landon as Charles Ingalls\nKaren Grassle as Caroline Ingalls\nMelissa Sue Anderson as Mary Ingalls\nLindsay and Sidney Greenbush as Carrie Ingalls\nVictor French as Isaiah Edwards\nVictor Mohica as Soldat Du Ch\u00eane\nCal Bellini as Brave\nSam Vlahos as 1st Indian\nRichard Alarian as 2nd Indian\nMarian Beeler as Charlotte Holbrook\nJohn Steadman as Frederick Holbrook\nRuth Foster as Aunt Ruby (uncredited)\nProduction notes\nFilmed in early 1974 near Stockton, California.\nFirst broadcast March 30, 1974\nBroadcast in the series' first season on September 11, 1974"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721055983.0702, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055947.3463, "finish": 1721055983.0702, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7b58ab2df2304e349534227626ccc58a", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when did little house on the praire air", "output": [["when did little house on the praire air", "Title: Activision Blizzard\n\nPassage: To resolve these issues, Microsoft agreed to give rights to cloud gaming of Activision Blizzard's games to Ubisoft, which was cleared by regulators. The acquisition was completed on October 13, 2023. The last time Activision Blizzard reported their annual financial results for its shareholders before Microsoft acquired them was on February 6, 2023. Activision Blizzard reported $7.54 billion in revenue and $1.52 billion in net income. As part of the acquisition deal, Kotick announced his resignation as CEO the same day, along with other high level executives, though Kotick will remain onboard through the end of 2023 to help with the transition. Bobby Kotick departed Activision Blizzard on December 29, 2023.\nIn May 2022, QA testers of Activision Blizzard subsidiary Raven Software went public as the Game Workers Alliance (GWA) with the support of Campaign to Organize Digital Employees-CWA and voted to unionize with a count of 19 \u2013 2 in favor. The National Labor Relations Board recognized GWA as a union.\nFollowing the Raven Software's successful unionization, the 20-member QA team of Blizzard Albany announced a unionization drive in July 2022 as GWA Albany. The vote passed (14\u20130), forming the second union at an Activision Blizzard subsidiary.\nIn February 2023, Activision Blizzard announced to employees that it would end its full-time remote policy starting between April and June that year. On November 30, quality assurance staffers were told that the company would end its hybrid work model and bring employees in Austin, Texas, Eden Praire, Minnesota and El Segundo, California back to the office full time in 2024. ABK Workers Alliance accused the company of forcing out employees with this decision.\nOn 8 March 2024, 600 QA testers at 3 Activision studios in Austin, Eden Praire, and El Segundo formed the union \"Activision Quality Assurance United-CWA\" and voted to unionize (390\u20138) in favor, making it the largest video game union in the United States. Microsoft voluntarily recognized the union.\nGames\nList of Activision video games\nList of Blizzard Entertainment games\nList of King games\nCorporate structure\nActivision Blizzard is divided into three key business segments:\nActivision Publishing, which handles the development, production, and distribution of video games from its subsidiary studios. It also houses the Call of Duty League.\nBlizzard Entertainment, which handles the development, production, and distribution of Blizzard's games. It also maintains Battle.net, organizes BlizzCon, and houses the company's esports activities including MLG and the Overwatch League.\nKing, which handles the development and distribution of its mobile games.\nThere are also two non-reporting segments within Activision Blizzard. Activision Blizzard Studios oversees the production of film and television entertainment based on the company's properties. Activision Blizzard Distribution provides logistical support for Activision Blizzard's distribution within Europe.\nEsports initiatives"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056057.249, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055995.2536, "finish": 1721056057.249, "ip": "", "conv_id": "976ad16958994105a3c97c647aa03927", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "what's the difference between peanuts and spanish peanuts", "output": [["what's the difference between peanuts and spanish peanuts", "Title: Deep-fried peanuts\n\nPassage: Deep-fried peanuts are a snack food created by deep frying peanuts in an oil. The resulting product is a snack food that can be eaten in its entirety, both shell and nut. The deep-frying process does not change the flavor or texture of the nutmeats, but changes the texture and flavor of the shells\u2014especially if seasonings are used\u2014to make them more palatable."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056057.249, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055995.2536, "finish": 1721056057.249, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5500fe4ed88f4526a200780ce4da4a84", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "what's the difference between peanuts and spanish peanuts", "output": [["what's the difference between peanuts and spanish peanuts", "Title: Beer Nuts\n\nPassage: Beer Nuts is an American brand of snack food building on the original product, peanuts with a sweet-and-salty glazing. According to the manufacturer, the ingredients include peanuts, coconut oil, corn syrup and salt. In the United States, Beer Nuts are a staple of bar snacks and are often referred to as \"the quintessential American bar food\".\nAlthough Beer Nuts do not contain any beer, the name suggests that they are intended as a side dish to beer consumption.\nHistory\nThe company began in 1937 when Edward Shirk and his son Arlo took over the Caramel Crisp confectionery store in Bloomington, Illinois, which sold a product called \"Redskins,\" \"slightly sweet, lightly salted\" glazed peanuts with their red skins intact. Beginning in 1950, this product was sold packaged as \"Shirk's Glazed Peanuts\" in local liquor stores.\nBy 1953, local food distributor Eldredge C. Brewster helped expand the product to a national brand, and the Beer Nuts trademark was registered. By the 1960s, the product was available in all 50 states, and by the 1970s, the Shirks shipped 10 million pounds of Beer Nuts nationally. The company's product line has since expanded to other nuts, such as cashews and almonds, and various snack mixes, gift baskets and holiday packaged items.\nThe Beer Nuts brand has been registered as a trademark since 1955 and has been successfully protected in court on several occasions from competing brands who used similar names. Beer Nuts has been described as \u201dsomething of a case study in brands avoiding genericization\u201d.\nThe company remains family owned with production still based in Bloomington, operating out of the 100,000-square-foot facility it relocated to in 1973.\nOther countries\nIn Australia, beer nuts refers to salted roasted peanuts with the testa (red skin) intact. They are sold unglazed."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056118.437, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056072.2413, "finish": 1721056118.437, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e4fbda6ceb5b4ce5840fe937d6b1120a", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who was involved in the mapp vs ohio case", "output": [["who was involved in the mapp vs ohio case", "Title: Doyle v. Ohio\n\nPassage: Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610 (1976), is a United States Supreme Court case regarding the Due Process rights of the Fourteenth Amendment.\nHolding\nThe Supreme Court held that the criminal defendant's silence in response to a Miranda warning cannot be used to impeach them during cross examination.\nIn 1980 a similar case, Jenkins v. Anderson, reached the Supreme Court, its ruling distinguishing it from Doyle. The Court ruled that the prosecution is permitted to exploit as inculpatory evidence a defendant's failure to disclose an exculpatory testimony eventually presented in trial as defense, to government officials such as police in a prompt manner before the arrest. The petitioner in this case had committed murder and, weeks later, confessed to the crime but, in the process, embroidered the narrative by claiming self-defense as the justification.\nThe prosecution mooted this during trial as evidence of guilt and perjury. After habeas corpus relief, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction, recognizing no breach of the Fourteenth Amendment.\nSalinas v. Texas (2013), a plurality opinion, held that mere silence during prearrest interrogations is inadequate to establish invocation of the right to remain silent, if the defendant has already chosen to speak. Specifically, if the defendant has elected to speak to police and then suddenly stops when confronted with inculpatory evidence, the defendant must explicitly invoke his right to remain silent in order for the silence not to be held against him."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056118.437, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056072.2413, "finish": 1721056118.437, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7f55553974ea4189acb319de43649b67", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who was involved in the mapp vs ohio case", "output": [["who was involved in the mapp vs ohio case", "Title: Michael H. Watson\n\nPassage: Michael Harrison Watson (born November 7, 1956) is a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio.\nEducation and career\nWatson was born in Akron, Ohio. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Ohio State University in 1983 and his Juris Doctor from Capital University Law School in 1987. He was a member of the United States Air Force from 1975 to 1978 and was in the Ohio Air National Guard from 1978 to 1984. He rose to the rank of E5.\nWatson was a bailiff/law clerk of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas from 1983 to 1988. He was in private practice in Ohio from 1988 to 1991 and was chief legal counsel of the Ohio Department of Commerce from 1991 to 1992. He was a deputy chief legal counsel in the Office of the Governor of Ohio from 1992 to 1994 and was chief legal counsel from 1994 to 1995. Watson was a judge to the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas from 1996 to 2003. He was a judge to the Tenth District Ohio Court of Appeal from 2003 to 2004.\nFederal judicial service\nPresident George W. Bush nominated Watson to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio on April 6, 2004, to the seat vacated by Judge James L. Graham. He was confirmed by the Senate on September 7, 2004, he received his commission on September 10, 2004.\nSince 2018, Watson has presided over the Ohio State University abuse scandal lawsuits, which has stalled in mediation for over 3 years and favored OSU defendants In September 2021, it was revealed that Judge Watson failed to disclose that his wife has a licensing agreement with the university to sell OSU flags; the judge offered to hear arguments requesting his recusal. Watson is also an adjunct faculty member at OSU, which would typically be a disqualification from presiding over his employer. The plaintiffs and Strauss survivors in these lawsuits are frustrated with the Judge and OSU. However, the Sixth Circuit later ruled that none of these grounds required Judge Watson's recusal. The case was remanded, and Judge Watson continues to preside over the matters."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056178.8073, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056141.3128, "finish": 1721056178.8073, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d67a82bcb424465083f221b2a93440e6", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "surface area in many kinds of organs is important because the amount of surface determines", "output": [["surface area in many kinds of organs is important because the amount of surface determines", "Title: Lamella (surface anatomy)\n\nPassage: In surface anatomy, a lamella is a thin plate-like structure, often one amongst many lamellae very close to one another, with open space between. Aside from respiratory organs, they appear in other biological roles including filter feeding and the traction surfaces of geckos.\nIn fish, gill lamellae are used to increase the surface area in contact with the environment to maximize gas exchange (both to attain oxygen and to expel carbon dioxide) between the water and the blood. In fish gills, there are two types of lamellae, primary and secondary. The primary gill lamellae (also called gill filament) extends from the gill arch, and the secondary gill lamellae extends from the primary gill lamellae. Gas exchange primarily occurs at the secondary gill lamellae, where the tissue is notably only one cell layer thick. Furthermore, countercurrent gas exchange at the secondary gill lamellae further maximizes oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide release."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056178.8073, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056141.3128, "finish": 1721056178.8073, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0054a00e8f8949aeb2155230b392983d", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "surface area in many kinds of organs is important because the amount of surface determines", "output": [["surface area in many kinds of organs is important because the amount of surface determines", "Title: Subcommissural organ\n\nPassage: Some studies indicate the presence of both tyrosine-hydroxylase-immunoreactive nerve fibers and dopamine receptors in the SCO ependyma. In addition, there is evidence suggesting that the SCO activity in adult animals may be regulated by serotonin.\nAll capillaries in the central nervous system with a functional blood-brain barrier express glucose transporters (GLUT1). These transporters are generally absent in leaky barrier structures. The circumventricular organs that are known to have leaky barrier capillaries were stained by fibronectin antibodies but not by GLUT1 antibodies. The subcommissural organ appears to be unique in that it shows neither GLUT1 nor capillary.\nReissner's fiber\nReissner's fiber is also thought to be important in morphogenetic neuronal processes, being involved in neuronal survival, aggregation and neurite extension. In vitro studies demonstrated that the presence of RF, in conjunction with glial cells, is essential to the survival of neuronal cells. The studies seem to point that the RF might bind some of the growth factors produced by glial cells and transport them to the neurons. On the process of neuronal aggregation, RF seems to serve as a control factor in direct cell-to-cell communication, favoring neuronal aggregation when the density of neurons is low and preventing this aggregation when the density gets higher. Although the mechanism behind this is not well understood, it is known to be linked to the different domains in SCO-spondin that are related to coagulation factors and TSRs, as referred above. Furthermore, the RF as a part on the neurite extension, promoting neurite outgrowth from both spinal and cortical neurons, in cell cultures, which may also be connected to the TSR domains of SCO-spondin.\nSCO-spondin, a glycoprotein of the SCO/RF complex\nThe primary structure of the major constituent of bovine RF, SCO-spondin, has been fully established as a large N-glycosylated protein (450 kDa). Many lines of evidence denote that SCO-spondin plays a role in CNS development. This molecule belongs to a protein superfamily exhibiting conserved motifs of the thrombospondin type 1 repeat. Proteins of this family are strongly expressed during mammalian CNS development, being involved in mechanisms of cellular adhesion and axonal pathfinding (a process by which neurons send out axons to reach the correct targets during neural development).\nNumerous investigations have been directed towards the identification and characterization of the secretory compounds of the SCO, clarifying partially its function. Immunoblot analyses of bovine SCO using antibodies against RF glycoproteins allowed the identification of high molecular weight glycoproteins of 540, 450, 320 and 190 kDa.\nThe 540 and the 320 kDa compounds would correspond to precursor forms.\nMultidomain organization\nThe main SCO-spondin isoform consists of multiple domains. This multidomain organization is a special feature of the Chordate Phylum, and there is a high degree of conservation in the amino acids composition in mammals. The complete sequence and modular organization of SCO-spondin was first characterized in Bos taurus.\nThe structure of this protein is unique as it presents a mosaic arrangement of these domains along the backbone."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056213.8622, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056187.3569, "finish": 1721056213.8622, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ba101e326df463bb5d64d253ff4a43b", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "when did dragon ball z air in australia", "output": [["when did dragon ball z air in australia", "Title: Electron-electron interaction effects in quantum point contacts\n\nPassage: We consider interaction effects in quantum point contacts on the first quantization plateau, taking into account all non momentum-conserving processes. We compute low-temperature linear and non-linear conductance, shot noise, and thermopower by perturbation theory, and show that they are consistent with experimental observations on the so-called \"0.7 anomaly\". The full temperature-dependent conductance is obtained from self-consistent second-order perturbation theory and approaches ~ e^2/h at higher temperatures, but still smaller than the Fermi temperature."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056213.8622, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056187.3569, "finish": 1721056213.8622, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ab64a0df5fba45fbab3a71bf594542ea", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when did dragon ball z air in australia", "output": [["when did dragon ball z air in australia", "Title: Hall Viscosity of the Composite-Fermion Fermi Seas for Fermions and Bosons\n\nPassage: The Hall viscosity has been proposed as a topological property of incompressible fractional quantum Hall states and can be evaluated as Berry curvature. This paper reports on the Hall viscosities of composite-fermion Fermi seas at $\\nu=1/m$, where $m$ is even for fermions and odd for bosons. A well-defined value for the Hall viscosity is not obtained by viewing the $1/m$ composite-fermion Fermi seas as the $n\\rightarrow \\infty$ limit of the Jain $\\nu=n/(nm\\pm 1)$ states, whose Hall viscosities $(\\pm n+m)\\hbar \\rho/4$ ($\\rho$ is the two-dimensional density) approach $\\pm \\infty$ in the limit $n\\rightarrow \\infty$. A direct calculation shows that the Hall viscosities of the composite-fermion Fermi sea states are finite, and also relatively stable with system size variation, although they are not topologically quantized in the entire $\\tau$ space. I find that the $\\nu=1/2$ composite-fermion Fermi sea wave function for a square torus yields a Hall viscosity that is expected from particle-hole symmetry and is also consistent with the orbital spin of $1/2$ for Dirac composite fermions. I compare my numerical results with some theoretical conjectures."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056231.4346, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056231.0738, "finish": 1721056231.4346, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c6627e14d6fd4cc9aa96fa366ba163a8", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "tools made from high-speed tool steel are generally used for what type of machining operations", "output": [["tools made from high-speed tool steel are generally used for what type of machining operations", "Title: Optimal and Suboptimal Finger Selection Algorithms for MMSE Rake Receivers in Impulse Radio UWB Systems\n\nPassage: The problem of choosing the optimal multipath components to be employed at a minimum mean square error (MMSE) selective Rake receiver is considered for an impulse radio ultra-wideband system. First, the optimal finger selection problem is formulated as an integer programming problem with a non-convex objective function. Then, the objective function is approximated by a convex function and the integer programming problem is solved by means of constraint relaxation techniques. The proposed algorithms are suboptimal due to the approximate objective function and the constraint relaxation steps. However, they perform better than the conventional finger selection algorithm, which is suboptimal since it ignores the correlation between multipath components, and they can get quite close to the optimal scheme that cannot be implemented in practice due to its complexity. In addition to the convex relaxation techniques, a genetic algorithm (GA) based approach is proposed, which does not need any approximations or integer relaxations. This iterative algorithm is based on the direct evaluation of the objective function, and can achieve near-optimal performance with a reasonable number of iterations. Simulation results are presented to compare the performance of the proposed finger selection algorithms with that of the conventional and the optimal schemes."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056231.4346, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056231.0738, "finish": 1721056231.4346, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2a0ddeb7f3d544cea09d94aa74a8a4bd", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "tools made from high-speed tool steel are generally used for what type of machining operations", "output": [["tools made from high-speed tool steel are generally used for what type of machining operations", "Title: On Richtmyer-Meshkov unstable dynamics of three-dimensional interfacial coherent structures with time-dependent acceleration\n\nPassage: Richtmyer-Meshkov instability (RMI) plays an important role in many areas of science and engineering, from supernovae and fusion to scramjets and nano-fabrication. Classical Richtmyer-Meshkov instability is induced by a steady shock and impulsive acceleration, whereas in realistic environments the acceleration is usually variable. We focus on RMI induced by acceleration with power-law time-dependence and apply group theory to solve the long-standing problem. For early-time dynamics, we find the dependence of the growth-rate on the initial conditions and show that it is independent of the acceleration parameters. For late-time dynamics, we find a continuous family of regular asymptotic solutions, including their curvature, velocity, Fourier amplitudes, and interfacial shear, and we study their stability. For each solution, the interface dynamics is directly linked to the interfacial shear, the non-equilibrium velocity field has intense fluid motion near the interface and effectively no motion in the bulk. The quasi-invariance of the fastest stable solution suggests that nonlinear coherent dynamics in RMI is characterized by two macroscopic length-scales -- the wavelength and the amplitude, in agreement with observations. The properties of a number of special solutions are outlined, these being respectively, the Atwood, Taylor, convergence, minimum-shear, and critical bubbles, among others. We also elaborate new theory benchmarks for future experiments and simulations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056269.3887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056253.6142, "finish": 1721056269.3887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6528a5c3f8e746f6837888347eb59ad6", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "is the sky garden in the walkie talkie", "output": [["is the sky garden in the walkie talkie", "Title: Tethered Balloon Technology for Green Communication in Smart Cities and Healthy Environment\n\nPassage: The development and adopting of advanced communication technologies provide mobile users more convenience to connect any wireless network anytime and anywhere. Therefore, a large number of base stations (BS) are demanded keeping users connectivity, enhancing network capacity, and guarantee a sustained users Quality of Experiences (QoS). However, increasing the number of BS leads to an increase in the ecological ad radiation hazards. In order to green communication, many factors should be taken into consideration, i.e., saving energy, guarantee QoS, and reducing pollution hazards. Therefore, we propose tethered balloon technology that can replace a large number of BS and reduce ecological and radiation hazards due to its high altitude and feasible green and healthy broadband communication. The main contribution of this paper is to deploy tethered balloon technology at different altitude and measure the power density. Furthermore, we evaluate the measurement of power density from different height of tethered balloon comparison with traditional wireless communication technologies. The simulation results showed that tethered balloon technology can deliver green communication effectively and efficiently without any hazardous impacts."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056269.3887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056253.6142, "finish": 1721056269.3887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2a265197192a4d39b023a2cb94c097da", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "is the sky garden in the walkie talkie", "output": [["is the sky garden in the walkie talkie", "Title: Deep Fingerprinting: Undermining Website Fingerprinting Defenses with\n Deep Learning\n\nPassage: Website fingerprinting enables a local eavesdropper to determine which\nwebsites a user is visiting over an encrypted connection. State-of-the-art\nwebsite fingerprinting attacks have been shown to be effective even against\nTor. Recently, lightweight website fingerprinting defenses for Tor have been\nproposed that substantially degrade existing attacks: WTF-PAD and\nWalkie-Talkie. In this work, we present Deep Fingerprinting (DF), a new website\nfingerprinting attack against Tor that leverages a type of deep learning called\nConvolutional Neural Networks (CNN) with a sophisticated architecture design,\nand we evaluate this attack against WTF-PAD and Walkie-Talkie. The DF attack\nattains over 98% accuracy on Tor traffic without defenses, better than all\nprior attacks, and it is also the only attack that is effective against WTF-PAD\nwith over 90% accuracy. Walkie-Talkie remains effective, holding the attack to\njust 49.7% accuracy. In the more realistic open-world setting, our attack\nremains effective, with 0.99 precision and 0.94 recall on undefended traffic.\nAgainst traffic defended with WTF-PAD in this setting, the attack still can get\n0.96 precision and 0.68 recall. These findings highlight the need for effective\ndefenses that protect against this new attack and that could be deployed in\nTor.\n"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056306.3447, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056278.2317, "finish": 1721056306.3447, "ip": "", "conv_id": "31ff2f8cbe784248943da25b0b34c044", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who has won the most world series in baseball", "output": [["who has won the most world series in baseball", "Title: Undestanding Baseball Team Standings and Streaks\n\nPassage: Can one understand the statistics of wins and losses of baseball teams? Are their consecutive-game winning and losing streaks self-reinforcing or can they be described statistically? We apply the Bradley-Terry model, which incorporates the heterogeneity of team strengths in a minimalist way, to answer these questions. Excellent agreement is found between the predictions of the Bradley-Terry model and the rank dependence of the average number team wins and losses in major-league baseball over the past century when the distribution of team strengths is taken to be uniformly distributed over a finite range. Using this uniform strength distribution, we also find very good agreement between model predictions and the observed distribution of consecutive-game team winning and losing streaks over the last half-century; however, the agreement is less good for the previous half-century. The behavior of the last half-century supports the hypothesis that long streaks are primarily statistical in origin with little self-reinforcing component. The data further show that the past half-century of baseball has been more competitive than the preceding half-century."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056306.3447, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056278.2317, "finish": 1721056306.3447, "ip": "", "conv_id": "96db4d075f3640dd869316e1e54a1685", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who has won the most world series in baseball", "output": [["who has won the most world series in baseball", "Title: Undestanding Baseball Team Standings and Streaks\n\nPassage: Can one understand the statistics of wins and losses of baseball teams? Are their consecutive-game winning and losing streaks self-reinforcing or can they be described statistically? We apply the Bradley-Terry model, which incorporates the heterogeneity of team strengths in a minimalist way, to answer these questions. Excellent agreement is found between the predictions of the Bradley-Terry model and the rank dependence of the average number team wins and losses in major-league baseball over the past century when the distribution of team strengths is taken to be uniformly distributed over a finite range. Using this uniform strength distribution, we also find very good agreement between model predictions and the observed distribution of consecutive-game team winning and losing streaks over the last half-century; however, the agreement is less good for the previous half-century. The behavior of the last half-century supports the hypothesis that long streaks are primarily statistical in origin with little self-reinforcing component. The data further show that the past half-century of baseball has been more competitive than the preceding half-century."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056362.5957, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056337.3904, "finish": 1721056362.5957, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ce20c07bb724d6fb94ee147f433401c", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who played mrs warboys in one foot in the grave", "output": [["who played mrs warboys in one foot in the grave", "Title: Eulogy for Andrew Wiles\n\nPassage: The text of an oration to present Prof Andrew Wiles for the degree of Doctor of Science, Honoris Causa, at the University of Warwick"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1721056362.5957, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721056337.3904, "finish": 1721056362.5957, "ip": "", "conv_id": "09361be917274360bd91f63b6d7deef7", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who played mrs warboys in one foot in the grave", "output": [["who played mrs warboys in one foot in the grave", "Title: Cross-artform performance using networked interfaces: Last Man to Die's Vital LMTD\n\nPassage: In 2009 the cross artform group, Last Man to Die, presented a series of performances using new interfaces and networked performance to integrate the three artforms of its members (actor, Hanna Cormick, visual artist, Benjamin Forster and percussionist, Charles Martin). This paper explains our artistic motivations and design for a computer vision surface and networked heartbeat sensor as well as the experience of mounting our first major work, Vital LMTD."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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data/retrieval_individual-073afe0e-f34e-497a-b29b-b191cd43aabe.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720834240.8202, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834239.3212, "finish": 1720834240.8202, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fe873fe7631a4d62baa65a97a374860d", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "output": [["In which book 42 is mentioned as the meaning of life?", "Title: Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: 42 Puzzle\nThe 42 Puzzle is a game devised by Douglas Adams in 1994 for the United States series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books. The puzzle is an illustration consisting of 42 multi-coloured balls, in 7 columns and 6 rows. Douglas Adams has said,\nIn the puzzle the question is unknown, but the answer is already known to be 42. This is similar to the book where the \"Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything\" is known but not the question. The puzzle first appeared in The Illustrated Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. It was later incorporated into the covers of all five reprinted \"Hitchhiker's\" novels in the United States.\nAdams has described the puzzle as depicting the number 42 in ten different ways. Six possible questions are:\nOn the Internet and in software\nThe number 42 and its associated phrase, \"Life, the universe, and everything\", have attained cult status on the Internet. \"Life, the universe, and everything\" is a common name for the off-topic section of an Internet forum, and the phrase is invoked in similar ways to mean \"anything at all\". Many chatbots, when asked about the meaning of life, will answer \"42\". Several online calculators are also programmed with the Question. Google Calculator will give the result to \"the answer to life the universe and everything\" as 42, as will Wolfram's Computational Knowledge Engine. Similarly, DuckDuckGo also gives the result of \"the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe and everything\" as 42. In the online community Second Life, there is a section on a sim called \"42nd Life\". It is devoted to this concept in the book series, and several attempts at recreating Milliways, the Restaurant at the End of the Universe, were made.\nIn OpenOffice.org software (prior to version 3.4) if \"=ANTWORT(\"Das Leben, das Universum und der ganze Rest\") (German for =ANSWER(\"life, the universe and everything\")) is typed into any cell of a spreadsheet, the result is 42.\nISO/IEC 14519-2001/ IEEE Std 1003.5-1999, IEEE Standard for Information Technology \u2013 POSIX(R) Ada Language Interfaces \u2013 Part 1: Binding for System Application Program Interface (API) , uses the number 42 as the required return value from a process that terminates due to an unhandled exception. The Rationale says \"the choice of the value 42 is arbitrary\" and cites the Adams book as the source of the value."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720834347.2295, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834284.1069, "finish": 1720834347.2295, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5dccd9abc2d04787bda7130b60e540a7", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "I read this paper about handling data constraints when training large language models. Among others, it investigated repeating data as one solution & the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "output": [["I read this paper about handling data constraints when training large language models. Among others, it investigated repeating data as one solution & the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "Title: MLOps: A Primer for Policymakers on a New Frontier in Machine Learning\n\nPassage: This chapter is written with the Data Scientist or MLOps professional in mind\nbut can be used as a resource for policy makers, reformists, AI Ethicists,\nsociologists, and others interested in finding methods that help reduce bias in\nalgorithms. I will take a deployment centered approach with the assumption that\nthe professionals reading this work have already read the amazing work on the\nimplications of algorithms on historically marginalized groups by Gebru,\nBuolamwini, Benjamin and Shane to name a few. If you have not read those works,\nI refer you to the \"Important Reading for Ethical Model Building\" list at the\nend of this paper as it will help give you a framework on how to think about\nMachine Learning models more holistically taking into account their effect on\nmarginalized people. In the Introduction to this chapter, I root the\nsignificance of their work in real world examples of what happens when models\nare deployed without transparent data collected for the training process and\nare deployed without the practitioners paying special attention to what happens\nto models that adapt to exploit gaps between their training environment and the\nreal world. The rest of this chapter builds on the work of the aforementioned\nresearchers and discusses the reality of models performing post production and\ndetails ways ML practitioners can identify bias using tools during the MLOps\nlifecycle to mitigate bias that may be introduced to models in the real world.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720834543.673, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834543.331, "finish": 1720834543.673, "ip": "", "conv_id": "77debe654e864ace80d97755425fc0d8", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "Title: Turing test\n\nPassage: The Turing test, originally called the imitation game by Alan Turing in 1950, is a test of a machine's ability to exhibit intelligent behaviour equivalent to, or indistinguishable from, that of a human. Turing proposed that a human evaluator would judge natural language conversations between a human and a machine designed to generate human-like responses. The evaluator would be aware that one of the two partners in conversation was a machine, and all participants would be separated from one another. The conversation would be limited to a text-only channel, such as a computer keyboard and screen, so the result would not depend on the machine's ability to render words as speech. If the evaluator could not reliably tell the machine from the human, the machine would be said to have passed the test. The test results would not depend on the machine's ability to give correct answers to questions, only on how closely its answers resembled those a human would give. Since the Turing test is a test of indistinguishability in performance capacity, the verbal version generalizes naturally to all of human performance capacity, verbal as well as nonverbal (robotic).\nThe test was introduced by Turing in his 1950 paper \"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" while working at the University of Manchester. It opens with the words: \"I propose to consider the question, 'Can machines think? Because \"thinking\" is difficult to define, Turing chooses to \"replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" Turing describes the new form of the problem in terms of a three-person game called the \"imitation game\", in which an interrogator asks questions of a man and a woman in another room in order to determine the correct sex of the two players. Turing's new question is: \"Are there imaginable digital computers which would do well in the imitation game?\" This question, Turing believed, was one that could actually be answered. In the remainder of the paper, he argued against all the major objections to the proposition that \"machines can think\".\nSince Turing introduced his test, it has been both highly influential and widely criticized, and has become an important concept in the philosophy of artificial intelligence. Philosopher John Searle would comment on the Turing test in his Chinese room argument, a thought experiment that stipulates that a machine cannot have a \"mind\", \"understanding\", or \"consciousness\", regardless of how intelligently or human-like the program may make the computer behave. Searle criticizes Turing's test and claims it is insufficient to detect the presence of consciousness.\nHistory\nPhilosophical background"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720834550.7012, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834550.5589, "finish": 1720834550.7012, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0cf45c7d2dbc4e55bde8c8425dd64370", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "I am searching for a good and large-scale benchmark for testing the performance of text embeddings.", "output": [["I am searching for a good and large-scale benchmark for testing the performance of text embeddings.", "Title: Text and Code Embeddings by Contrastive Pre-Training\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are useful features in many applications such as semantic\nsearch and computing text similarity. Previous work typically trains models\ncustomized for different use cases, varying in dataset choice, training\nobjective and model architecture. In this work, we show that contrastive\npre-training on unsupervised data at scale leads to high quality vector\nrepresentations of text and code. The same unsupervised text embeddings that\nachieve new state-of-the-art results in linear-probe classification also\ndisplay impressive semantic search capabilities and sometimes even perform\ncompetitively with fine-tuned models. On linear-probe classification accuracy\naveraging over 7 tasks, our best unsupervised model achieves a relative\nimprovement of 4% and 1.8% over previous best unsupervised and supervised text\nembedding models respectively. The same text embeddings when evaluated on\nlarge-scale semantic search attains a relative improvement of 23.4%, 14.7%, and\n10.6% over previous best unsupervised methods on MSMARCO, Natural Questions and\nTriviaQA benchmarks, respectively. Similarly to text embeddings, we train code\nembedding models on (text, code) pairs, obtaining a 20.8% relative improvement\nover prior best work on code search.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720834559.6564, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834559.4726, "finish": 1720834559.6564, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f9ba70fa63164b7aaf08edc274d011a7", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced HumanEvalPack and talks about instruction tuning Code Large Language Models.", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced HumanEvalPack and talks about instruction tuning Code Large Language Models.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast\nperformance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning\nusing code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code\nchanges with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git\ncommits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other\nnatural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B\nparameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among\nmodels not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2%\npass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark\nto a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis)\nacross 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models,\nOctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among\nall permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a\nwider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are\nfreely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack.\n"]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720659446.4569, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659400.2183, "finish": 1720659446.4569, "ip": "", "conv_id": "493c7253eca448f8b2b534b4c1f05494", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "output": [["the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "Title: 1001\u00b0 Centigrades\n\nPassage: , alternative title 2, is the second album by French rock band Magma, released on 5 October 1971. Future reissues use both titles as 2: .\nThe first track, \"R\u00efah Sah\u00efltaahk\", was later re-recorded as a full-length studio album, R\u00efah Sah\u00efltaahk, in 2014, as Christian Vander did not consider himself satisfied with the arrangement on this album.\nThe backside of the original record sleeve contains Christian Vander\u2019s poem \u2018\u00cftah\u2019 as well as a French translation, making it one of two official Koba\u00efan-French translations by the band itself.\nBackground\nFor this album,\nTrack listing\nLegacy\nOn the \"zeuhl\" sound that later came to define Magma develops, but it lacks the operatic female vocals and primal driving rhythm of the following album, M\u00ebkan\u00efk D\u00ebstrukt\u00ef\u1e81 K\u00f6mmand\u00f6h.\nBetween the release of this album and MDK, a number of band members left the band due to disagreements on its future sound. Two (saxophonist Yochk'o \"Jeff\" Seffer and keyboardist Fran\u00e7ois Cahen) left to form Zao, a band which follows in the footsteps of Magma's first two releases.\nMusicians\nKlaus Blasquiz\u00a0\u2013 vocals, percussion\nTeddy Lasry\u00a0\u2013 clarinet, saxophone, flute, voice\nYochk'o \"Jeff\" Seffer\u00a0\u2013 saxophone, bass clarinet\nLouis Toesca\u00a0\u2013 trumpet\nFran\u00e7ois Cahen\u00a0\u2013 acoustic & electric pianos\nFrancis Moze\u00a0\u2013 bass\nChristian Vander\u00a0\u2013 vocals, drums, percussion\nProduction\nProduced by Roland Hilda\nEngineered by Dominique Blanc-Francard\nLouis Sarkissian\u00a0\u2013 manager\nLiterature"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659446.4569, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659400.2183, "finish": 1720659446.4569, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7efbe5505de547f7b3f69638f4d70945", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "output": [["the boiling point of water is 100 degrees celsius express this in si units", "Title: C\u00b0\n\nPassage: can mean:\nCelsius degrees\nIn chemistry, the standard state for solute concentration"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659499.0454, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659477.9048, "finish": 1720659499.0454, "ip": "", "conv_id": "213a72d9388d4ca8acfdd15ef08394b2", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who has won the most united states championships", "output": [["who has won the most united states championships", "Title: A HelloWord \\textsc{Bib}\\negthinspace\\TeX~stile file .\\textbf{bst}\n\nPassage: A HelloWord \\textsc{Bib}\\negthinspace\\TeX~stile file .\\textbf{bst} is\ndescribed\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659499.0454, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659477.9048, "finish": 1720659499.0454, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ac9ae449f4dd47e0ae3fd4fa1efe4c88", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who has won the most united states championships", "output": [["who has won the most united states championships", "Title: Dominance, Intimidation, and `Choking' on the PGA Tour\n\nPassage: Extending the work of Connolly and Rendleman (2008), we document the\ndominance of Tiger Woods during the 1998-2001 PGA Tour seasons. We show that by\nplaying \"average,\" Woods could have won some tournaments and placed no worse\nthan fourth in the tournaments in which he participated in year 2000, his best\non the PGA Tour. No other PGA Tour player in our sample could have come close\nto such a feat. We also are able to quantify the intimidation factor associated\nwith playing with Woods. On average, players who were paired with Woods during\nthe 1998-2001 period scored 0.462 strokes per round worse than normal. Although\nwe find that Woods' presence in a tournament may have had a small, but\nstatistically significant adverse impact on the entire field, this effect was\nswamped by the apparent intimidation factor associated with having to play with\nTiger side-by-side.\n We also demonstrate that Phil Mickelson's performance in major golf\nchampionships over the 1998-2001 period was not nearly as bad as was frequently\nmentioned in the golf press. Although Mickelson won no majors during this\nperiod, he played sufficiently well to have won one or two majors under normal\ncircumstances. Moreover, his overall performance in majors, relative to his\nestimated skill level, was comparable to that of Tiger Woods, who won five of\n16 major golf championships during our four-year sample period. Thus, the\ngeneral characterization of Woods as golf's dominant player over the 1998-2001\nperiod was accurate, but the frequent characterization of Phil Mickelson\nchoking in majors was not.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659922.0661, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659897.2968, "finish": 1720659922.0661, "ip": "", "conv_id": "79183715605b4e3581ed635a5ebba9a6", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "when did taylor swift's first album release", "output": [["when did taylor swift's first album release", "Title: List of Billboard 200 number-one albums of 2009\n\nPassage: These are the US number one albums of 2009, per the Billboard 200. Note that Billboard publishes charts with an issue date approximately 7\u201310 days in advance. Fearless, the second studio album by American country singer-songwriter Taylor Swift, was the best selling album of 2009, and ended atop the Billboard 200 year-end chart of the year.\nChart history"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659922.0661, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659897.2968, "finish": 1720659922.0661, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1a3a255107c445aa854a1ca012c9cfce", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when did taylor swift's first album release", "output": [["when did taylor swift's first album release", "Title: Fearless (Taylor Swift album)\n\nPassage: At the 52nd Annual Grammy Awards in February 2010, Fearless won Album of the Year and Best Country Album. The Album of the Year made Swift, then 20 years old, the youngest artist to win the award, a record she held until the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards in 2020, when Billie Eilish won Album of the Year at 18. Swift is the second country-music artist to win the three highest awards for a country-music album by the ACM, the CMA, and the Grammys\u2014after the Chicks with their 1999 album, Fly\u2014and the first to further win the Grammy for Album of the Year for the same album. \"White Horse\" won two Grammy Awards that year: Best Female Country Vocal Performance and Best Country Song.\nImpact\nAccording to Billboard, as of 2022, Fearless is one of the 15 best-performing 21st-century albums without any number-one singles on the Billboard Hot 100. The album's critical and commercial successes established Swift as a mainstream star beyond the country-music scene. Though Swift identified as a country-music artist, some critics considered Swift more of a pop artist after the crossover success of \"Love Story\" and \"You Belong with Me\"; she officially abandoned country with the release of her fifth studio album, 1989 (2014). Perone remarked that Fearless moved Swift's status from a \"singer-songwriter prodigy to singer-songwriter superstar\". In addition to Swift's musicianship, Perone attributed the album's commercial success to her marketing strategy: with enhanced bonus material for the CD instead of download, Fearless became \"indicative of a 21st century marketing trend in CD recordings\". Swift's rising fame prompted media scrutiny on her public image and personal life. Despite her popularity with music critics and a teenage audience, some media took issue with Fearless's themes as somewhat antifeminist and supposedly harmful to teenage girls.\nSwift's songwriting on Fearless cemented her trademark confessional narratives. Writing for Slate, Carl Wilson dubbed this technique \"Swiftian\". In a 2019 retrospective review of the album for Pitchfork, Cills commented that Fearless was a testament to Swift's abilities of writing timeless songs, noting the album's simplicity and earnestness. Cills remarked that amidst sexualized teen idols, \"there was something novel about Swift being a teenager and writing about her reality in her own terms coming into that same mainstream space, redefining what 'teen pop' could sound like in the process\". Other retrospective reviews attributed the album's enduring popularity to songs about universal feelings\u2014heartbreak, frustration, first love, and aspirations. It placed at number 99 on NPR's 2017 list of the \"150 Greatest Albums Made by Women\" and number 10 on Rolling Stone 2022 list of the \"100 Greatest Country Albums of All Time\". According to Billboard's Andrew Unterberger, the album expanded country music's audience to teenage girls and its Grammy win for Album of the Year was a testament for Swift being \"one of the most important singer-songwriters of her generation\"."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659953.8935, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659938.7426, "finish": 1720659953.8935, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8df83512c5814c0ebad285c6e81650fe", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where is the heart of palm on a palm tree", "output": [["where is the heart of palm on a palm tree", "Title: Palm heart\n\nPassage: Palm heart can refer to:\nPalmier, a French pastry in a palm leaf shape\nHeart of palm, a vegetable harvested from the inner core and growing bud of certain palm trees"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659953.8935, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659938.7426, "finish": 1720659953.8935, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a6fa2e71c5bb4a8b96f492e167c388d4", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "where is the heart of palm on a palm tree", "output": [["where is the heart of palm on a palm tree", "Title: Heart of palm\n\nPassage: Heart of palm is a vegetable harvested from the inner core and growing bud of certain palm trees, most notably the coconut (Cocos nucifera), ju\u00e7ara (Euterpe edulis), a\u00e7a\u00ed palm (Euterpe oleracea), palmetto (Sabal spp.), and peach palm. Harvesting of many uncultivated or wild single-stemmed palms (e.g. Geonoma edulis) results in palm tree death. However, other palm species are clonal or multi-stemmed plants (e.g. Prestoea acuminata, Euterpe oleracea), and moderate harvesting will not kill the entire clonal palm. Heart of palm may be eaten on its own, and often it is eaten in a salad.\nThere are palm varieties that have become domesticated farm species as an alternative to sourcing from wild palms. The main variety that has been domesticated is Bactris gasipaes, known in English as peach palm. This variety is the most widely used for canning. Peach palms are self-suckering and produce multiple stems, with up to 40 on one plant. This lets producers lower costs by harvesting several stems from a plant while avoiding the death of the palm. Another advantage is that the peach palm has been selectively bred to eliminate the thorns of its wild cousins. Since harvesting is still labor-intensive, palm hearts are regarded as a delicacy.\nNames\nMajor local names for heart of palm include palm cabbage or palmetto in Florida and Trinidad; palmito in South and Central America; ubod in the Philippines; c\u1ee7 h\u1ee7 d\u1eeba in Vietnam; c\u0153ur de palmier in French; coraz\u00f3n de palma or col de palma in Spanish; cora\u00e7\u00e3o de palma or palmito in Portuguese; and cuore di palma in Italian.\nNutrition\nHearts of palm are rich in fiber, potassium, iron, zinc, phosphorus, copper, vitamins B2, B6, and C. They are ranked as a \"good\" source of protein, riboflavin, and potassium, and as a \"very good source\" of dietary fiber, vitamin C, folate, calcium, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, zinc, copper, and especially, manganese, along with being a good ratio between omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. The high sodium content noted on the chart for hearts of palm relates to the canned product; it is not present in the fresh product.\nCultivation"]]}
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9 |
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{"tstamp": 1720659976.7538, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659961.5752, "finish": 1720659976.7538, "ip": "", "conv_id": "25c26da120f846aeadcabb98b02b2504", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "what is the plot of bendy and the ink machine", "output": [["what is the plot of bendy and the ink machine", "Title: Space Brat\n\nPassage: Blork, Lunk, and all the Things throw a celebration that night but Blork realizes that despite all this he is homesick. The Things eventually help him pack for his journey home (including half of Squat's broken gun) and send him off on the rocket car that Blork had stolen earlier. On his way back, Blork realizes that they never left for deep space--they had actually went into the unexplored zone of the planet Splat. Upon arriving at his nursery, one of the Childkeeper robots is elated to see Blork return. Leaving Lunk home, both Blork and the Childkeeper pay a visit to Modra Ploogsik who is also glad to see Blork. Blork pleads his case with Modra Ploogsik to call off the Big Pest Squad, taking responsibility for his actions and volunteering to do a lot of work to make up for all the trouble he had caused. This unexpected apology causes Modra to faint and the Childkeeper to wonder if Blork is the same Blork that was in his care. Blork then proceeds to tell his story of what happened. Eventually, Blork does plead his case to the Big Pest Squad with a lot of apologies and patience with success, even returning the rocket car he had stolen. At the end of the story, Blork returns home and calls for Lunk--who excitedly races to him and licks his face with all three tongues.\nSpace Brat 2: Blork's Evil Twin\nBlork and his classmates take a trip to a museum that showcases various Splatoonian inventions. The class troublemaker, Appus Meeko, hooks Blork's female crush to a machine that makes them large. Blork saves her, but cannot prove that Appus Meeko was responsible. While there, Blork accidentally finds his way into a forbidden room containing a seemingly harmless copying machine and decides to copy himself. While nothing happens, he returns home and discovers that he's getting blamed for several instances. Blork realizes that the copy machine created a mischievous clone of himself named Krolb and also realizes that it extracted all the negative qualities of Blork's personality and is running amok. In some cases, any action Blork does, Krolb does the opposite. Krolb also stole an experimental shrinking device and plans to use it on the entire city. Blork, aided by one of his classmates, Moomie Peevik--decide to go after Krolb and try to use reverse psychology to prevent Krolb from using the shrinking device. However, they are unsuccessful until Blork throws a tantrum, which ends up fusing him and Krolb back whole again. At Krolb's lair, they also encounter a creature that gets shrunk with the shrinking device, and it becomes Moomie Peevik's new pet. The story ends with the mayor of the city wanting to congratulate Blork by awarding him with a medal for saving the city. This also makes Appus Meeko jealous.\nSpace Brat 3: The Wrath of Squat"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659976.7538, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659961.5752, "finish": 1720659976.7538, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63ec5a73ceec4a4895738efe77d5799e", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what is the plot of bendy and the ink machine", "output": [["what is the plot of bendy and the ink machine", "Title: Inky\n\nPassage: Inky may refer to:\nPeople\nPeople with the given name Inky\nInky Mark (born 1947), Canadian politician\nInky Moore (1925\u20132000), American conservationist\nPeople with the nickname Inky\nPete Incaviglia (born 1964), American professional baseball player\nKeith Ingram (headmaster) (1929\u20132007), British head teacher\nArts, entertainment, and media\nInky (ghost), the cyan ghost in the arcade game Pac-Man\nInky, a nickname for The Philadelphia Inquirer\nOther uses\nInky (police dog), a police dog who appeared in the British police drama Softly, Softly: Taskforce\nInky, slang for a printer"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659998.3274, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659998.1133, "finish": 1720659998.3274, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a296ffe23cc644988c95b304ca283263", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "what are poseidon's symbols and what do they mean", "output": [["what are poseidon's symbols and what do they mean", "Title: Symbolism\n\nPassage: Symbolism or symbolist may refer to:\nArts\nSymbolism (arts), a 19th-century movement rejecting Realism\nSymbolist movement in Romania, symbolist literature and visual arts in Romania during the late 19th and early 20th centuries\nRussian symbolism, the Russian branch of the symbolist movement in European art\nSymbol, something that represents, stands for or suggests an idea, belief, action, or entity\nColor symbolism, the use of colors within various cultures to express a variety of symbolic meanings\nReligion\nReligious symbol, an iconic representation of a religion or religious concept\nBuddhist symbolism, the use of Buddhist art to represent certain aspects of dharma\nChristian symbolism, the use of symbols, including archetypes, acts, artwork or events, by Christianity\nSymbols of Islam, the use of symbols in Islamic literature, art and architecture\nJewish symbolism, a visible religious token of the relation between God and man\nScience\nSymbolic anthropology, the study of cultural symbols and how those symbols can be interpreted to better understand a particular society\nSymbolic system, a system of interconnected symbolic meanings\nSolar symbol, a symbol which represents the Sun in psychoanalysis, symbolism, semiotics, or other fields"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720659998.3274, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659998.1133, "finish": 1720659998.3274, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3925124e9b674a3f80eed2c7b46a6639", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what are poseidon's symbols and what do they mean", "output": [["what are poseidon's symbols and what do they mean", "Title: Poseidon (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: Poseidon () is the god of the sea in ancient Greek mythology.\nPoseidon may also refer to:\nPeople\nPosidonius, ancient Greek astronomer and geographer\nFictional characters\nPoseidon (Saint Seiya), manga deity character based on the Greek god\nPoseidon (DC Comics), a deity character based on the Greek god\nJacob Anton Ness, a fictional character from Prison Break known as \"Poseidon\"\nPoseidon \"Postie\" Paterson, a fictional character from the Selby novel series\nPlaces"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660002.058, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660001.8692, "finish": 1720660002.058, "ip": "", "conv_id": "55a15641df404d0bbaaa9e3a3d7f5831", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "states that have adopted the model rules of professional conduct", "output": [["states that have adopted the model rules of professional conduct", "Title: American Bar Association Model Code of Professional Responsibility\n\nPassage: The American Bar Association Model Code of Professional Responsibility, created by the American Bar Association (ABA) in 1969, was a set of professional standards designed to establish the minimum baseline of legal ethics and professional responsibility generally required of lawyers in the United States.\nIt was replaced with the Model Rules of Professional Conduct in 1983 for a number of reasons, especially the Watergate scandal. The Code was also subject to widespread criticism from bench and bar that it was structurally flawed, difficult to understand, hard to obey, and impossible to enforce. The Code consisted of Canons, Ethical Considerations, and Disciplinary Rules, of which the first two were aspirational and only the third was mandatory. This forced judges and lawyers to sort through a maze of Canons and Ethical Considerations just to understand the Disciplinary Rule that controlled a particular ethical issue. During a key debate in late January 1982 over whether to replace the Model Code with the Model Rules, one delegate \"referred to the nine canons, 129 ethical considerations and forty-three disciplinary rules as a three-dimensional chess game that lawyers played at their own peril.\" The American legal community demanded simple bright-line rules that its members could quickly read, comprehend, and follow. In response, the Model Rules consists simply of Rules.\nAccording to the Code's Preface, it was derived from the ABA's Canons of Professional Ethics (1908), which in turn were borrowed from the Canons of the Alabama State Bar (1887), which in turn were inspired by several sources such as ethics resolutions in an 1830s legal textbook.\nThe U.S. state of New York was the last state using the Code for many years, long after all other states\u2013except California and Maine\u2013had adopted the Model Rules. On December 17, 2008, the administrative committee of the New York courts announced that it had adopted a heavily modified version of the Model Rules, effective April 1, 2009. New York's version of the Model Rules was created by adjusting the standard Model Rules to reflect indigenous New York rules that had been incorporated over the years into its version of the Model Code. Even though New York did not adopt the Model Rules verbatim, the advantage of adopting its overall structure is that it simplifies the professional responsibility training of New York lawyers, and makes it easier for out-of-state lawyers to conform their conduct to New York rules by simply comparing their home state's version of the Model Rules to New York's version."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660002.058, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660001.8692, "finish": 1720660002.058, "ip": "", "conv_id": "983f7861791844ce837bc32514e9bb23", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "states that have adopted the model rules of professional conduct", "output": [["states that have adopted the model rules of professional conduct", "Title: United States labor law\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660004.8997, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660004.7816, "finish": 1720660004.8997, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d0dd5b7a444b4caf99863fa41f81674b", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who took over the dutch colony in north america", "output": [["who took over the dutch colony in north america", "Title: Evolution of the Dutch colonial empire\n\nPassage: All three were repeatedly captured by the British, finally being ceded at the close of the Napoleonic Wars and reformed as Demerara-Essequibo and Berbice and then united as British Guiana. By 1814 the Netherlands surrendered Guyana to the United Kingdom.\nNew Holland (Brazil)\nNew Holland (Nieuw-Holland) comprised territories captured from the Iberian Union in northern and northeastern Brazil, held between 1630 and 1654, and claimed until the 1661 Treaty of the Hague. The conquest was the culmination of the \"Grand Design\", a plan by the West India Company to control the sugar trade by seizing the rich Brazilian plantations and the African slave ports necessary to resupply their labor force. A 1624 attempt held the Brazilian capital of Salvador da Bahia for a year but failed in Africa and finally yielded to a combined Luso-Spanish force. The Battle of Matanzas Bay provided the West India Company with a huge windfall of Spanish silver, which it used to successfully renew the plan. At its height, New Holland spread from Sergipe to Maranh\u00e3o. Governor Maurits successfully managed the colony for years but, upon his recall to the Netherlands in 1643, the Portuguese planters began a long campaign against his successors. This struggle against the Dutch was later considered formative for later Brazilian independence. Newly independent, Portugal finally agreed to pay the Netherlands 4 million reais (63 metric tons of gold) for abandoning its claims to the territory.\nChile\nIn 1643 a Dutch fleet sailed from Dutch Brazil to Southern Chile with the goal of establishing a base in the ruins of the abandoned Spanish city of Valdivia. The expedition led by Hendrik Brouwer sacked the Spanish Fort at Carelmapu and the settlement of Castro in Chilo\u00e9 Archipelago before sailing to Valdivia. The Dutch arrived to Valdivia on 24 August 1643, built a fort and named the colony Brouwershaven after Brouwer who had died several weeks earlier. The short-lived colony was abandoned on 28 October 1643 as they did not find the gold mines they had expected. Nevertheless, the occupation caused great alarm among Spanish authorities and the Spanish resettled Valdivia and begun the construction of an extensive network of fortifications in 1645 to prevent any similar intrusions from happening again. Although contemporaries considered the possibility of a new incursion, the expedition was the last one undertaken by the Dutch on the west coast of the Americas."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660004.8997, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660004.7816, "finish": 1720660004.8997, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4f91f5eb25bd430dbdf2a3e9ef6d9ecd", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who took over the dutch colony in north america", "output": [["who took over the dutch colony in north america", "Title: Evolution of the Dutch colonial empire\n\nPassage: Dutch East India Company (VOC)\nThe VOC name came from the Dutch East Indies Company (Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compangnie). This trading company was founded in the Dutch Republic, started in 1602 to protect their trade along the Indian Ocean. The VOC main trade location was in Indonesia. The company became the only power of the peninsula. According to the Dutch colonial archive, the communication between Batavia and the government in Hague were distinguished during the British attacks on the VOC. However, it was restored when Java returned to the Dutch in 1816, after five years under British rule. The structure of the company factories was to control the supplies of some products such as cloves, nutmeg and mace. They used a forceful system as a form of tax, to control the locals to sell at a set price. The purpose of this system was to bring all these products to Europe; and VOC profits were only for the company not to the indigenous traders.\nDutch West India Company\nThe GWC name came from the Dutch West India Company (Geoctrooieerde Westindische Compagnie). When the VOC took control in the eastern shores, Amsterdam decided to establish the GWC. The Dutch arrival in Africa and the Americas had a great effect on the political culture of both countries. According to historians, the Dutch played an important role in the Atlantic countries. They brought their culture and politics to Africa and the Americas. The Dutch were at war with Spain; but Amsterdam was only interested in taking over the Spanish colonies in the Caribbean and South America, the reason behind the war with Spain, due to the Spanish invasion of the southern Netherlands between the 15th and the 16th centuries. The government did not care about investment or trade, which angered the merchants because they did not have any financial guarantees. It was obvious that the West India Company was interested in war more than trade. On the other hand, Spain did not intend to wage war against the Dutch, as a result, the Spanish made them sign a truce to force the Dutch to withdraw from the Americas. The Dutch were not impressed with the Spanish ban on their trade, except the Dutch were more knowledgeable in map-making across the globe. The most famous Dutch cartographer of the 17th century was Hessel Gerritsz.\nEconomy"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660022.4847, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660007.2353, "finish": 1720660022.4847, "ip": "", "conv_id": "12cf7bd8eb444ef596b4cf9469605b0d", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who wrote the theme song to law and order", "output": [["who wrote the theme song to law and order", "Title: Law & Order\n\nPassage: According to Allan, 2021:\n\"The tone moves the viewer from scene to scene, jumping forward in time with all the importance and immediacy of a judge's gavel \u2013 which is exactly what Post was aiming for when he created it. While reminiscent of a jail door slamming...\n\"...it is actually an amalgamation of 'six or seven' sounds, including the sound made by 500 Japanese men walking across a hardwood floor.\" The sound has become so associated with the Law & Order brand that it was also carried over to other series of the franchise.\"\nThe UK-aired Channel Five versions of seasons 7\u201316 of Law & Order feature the song \"I'm Not Driving Anymore\" by Rob Dougan in the opening credits, while seasons 17\u201320 used the US theme.\nCasting and characters\nPilot\nFor the 1988 pilot, George Dzundza and Chris Noth were cast as the original detectives, Sergeant Max Greevey and Detective Mike Logan. The producers felt that Dzundza would be a perfect senior police officer as he was someone the producers felt they could see themselves riding along with in a police cruiser. Noth and Michael Madsen were candidates for the role of Logan. Madsen initially was considered the perfect choice for the role, but, in a final reading, it was felt that Madsen's acting mannerisms were repetitive, and Noth received the role instead. Rounding out the police cast, Dann Florek was cast as Captain Donald Cragen.\nOn the prosecutor's side, Michael Moriarty was Dick Wolf's choice to play Executive Assistant District Attorney Benjamin \"Ben\" Stone. The network, however, preferred James Naughton, but, in the end, Wolf's choice would prevail, and Moriarty received the role. As his A.D.A., Richard Brooks and Eriq La Salle were being considered for the role of Paul Robinette. The network favored La Salle but, once again, the producers' choice prevailed, and Brooks received the role. As their boss, Roy Thinnes was cast as District Attorney Alfred Wentworth.\nSeasons 1\u20133\nNearly two years passed between the pilot and production of the series. The producers held options on Dzundza, Noth, Moriarty and Brooks. Each was paid holding money for the additional year and brought back. Florek also returned. Thinnes, however, was starring in Dark Shadows and declined to return. In his place, the producers tapped Steven Hill to portray District Attorney Adam Schiff, a character loosely based on real-life New York County District Attorney Robert Morgenthau. Hill brought prestige and experience to the show, and as such, the producers allowed Hill to give insight on the direction he thought the character should go."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660022.4847, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660007.2353, "finish": 1720660022.4847, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d19c9a643bcc42668b8da09afc18e36c", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who wrote the theme song to law and order", "output": [["who wrote the theme song to law and order", "Title: Law & Order\n\nPassage: According to Allan, 2021:\n\"The tone moves the viewer from scene to scene, jumping forward in time with all the importance and immediacy of a judge's gavel \u2013 which is exactly what Post was aiming for when he created it. While reminiscent of a jail door slamming...\n\"...it is actually an amalgamation of 'six or seven' sounds, including the sound made by 500 Japanese men walking across a hardwood floor.\" The sound has become so associated with the Law & Order brand that it was also carried over to other series of the franchise.\"\nThe UK-aired Channel Five versions of seasons 7\u201316 of Law & Order feature the song \"I'm Not Driving Anymore\" by Rob Dougan in the opening credits, while seasons 17\u201320 used the US theme.\nCasting and characters\nPilot\nFor the 1988 pilot, George Dzundza and Chris Noth were cast as the original detectives, Sergeant Max Greevey and Detective Mike Logan. The producers felt that Dzundza would be a perfect senior police officer as he was someone the producers felt they could see themselves riding along with in a police cruiser. Noth and Michael Madsen were candidates for the role of Logan. Madsen initially was considered the perfect choice for the role, but, in a final reading, it was felt that Madsen's acting mannerisms were repetitive, and Noth received the role instead. Rounding out the police cast, Dann Florek was cast as Captain Donald Cragen.\nOn the prosecutor's side, Michael Moriarty was Dick Wolf's choice to play Executive Assistant District Attorney Benjamin \"Ben\" Stone. The network, however, preferred James Naughton, but, in the end, Wolf's choice would prevail, and Moriarty received the role. As his A.D.A., Richard Brooks and Eriq La Salle were being considered for the role of Paul Robinette. The network favored La Salle but, once again, the producers' choice prevailed, and Brooks received the role. As their boss, Roy Thinnes was cast as District Attorney Alfred Wentworth.\nSeasons 1\u20133\nNearly two years passed between the pilot and production of the series. The producers held options on Dzundza, Noth, Moriarty and Brooks. Each was paid holding money for the additional year and brought back. Florek also returned. Thinnes, however, was starring in Dark Shadows and declined to return. In his place, the producers tapped Steven Hill to portray District Attorney Adam Schiff, a character loosely based on real-life New York County District Attorney Robert Morgenthau. Hill brought prestige and experience to the show, and as such, the producers allowed Hill to give insight on the direction he thought the character should go."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660048.6248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660028.507, "finish": 1720660048.6248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3e4938e24c146a392e442f292783832", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where will you see polaris in north pole", "output": [["where will you see polaris in north pole", "Title: The Next Great Exoplanet Hunt\n\nPassage: What strange new worlds will our next-generation telescopes find?\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660048.6248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660028.507, "finish": 1720660048.6248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3a6d276d02942ae9a82cf192d69887a", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where will you see polaris in north pole", "output": [["where will you see polaris in north pole", "Title: A Polar large polaron in WO3\n\nPassage: This version withdrawn by arXiv administrators because the author did not\nhave the right to agree to our license at the time of submission\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660087.4846, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660068.1272, "finish": 1720660087.4846, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bcf749b2254246c3b434396de6279f94", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "how has australia been influenced by other cultures", "output": [["how has australia been influenced by other cultures", "Title: Disproving Hibi's Conjecture with CoCoA or Projective Curves with bad\n Hilbert Functions\n\nPassage: In this paper we show how to combine different techniques from Commutative\nAlgebra and a systematic use of a Computer Algebra System (in our case mainly\nCoCoA) in order to explicitly construct Cohen-Macaulay domains, which are\nstandard $k$-algebras and whose Hilbert function is ``bad\". In particular we\ndisprove a well-known conjecture by Hibi.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660087.4846, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660068.1272, "finish": 1720660087.4846, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8c5e947b3edc47b9b7207b7e4947c242", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "how has australia been influenced by other cultures", "output": [["how has australia been influenced by other cultures", "Title: \"Bridging the Gap\" through Australian Cultural Astronomy\n\nPassage: For more than 50,000 years, Indigenous Australians have incorporated\ncelestial events into their oral traditions and used the motions of celestial\nbodies for navigation, time-keeping, food economics, and social structure. In\nthis paper, we explore the ways in which Aboriginal people made careful\nobservations of the sky, measurements of celestial bodies, and incorporated\nastronomical events into complex oral traditions by searching for written\nrecords of time-keeping using celestial bodies, the use of rising and setting\nstars as indicators of special events, recorded observations of variable stars,\nthe solar cycle, and lunar phases (including ocean tides and eclipses) in oral\ntradition, as well as astronomical measurements of the equinox, solstice, and\ncardinal points.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660162.962, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660149.7326, "finish": 1720660162.962, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3cad313ccf1f4cd98722542489e50aed", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who is dylan's father in bates motel", "output": [["who is dylan's father in bates motel", "Title: Soliton ratchets induced by ac forces with harmonic mixing\n\nPassage: The ratchet dynamics of a kink (topological soliton) of a dissipative\nsine-Gordon equation in the presence of ac forces with harmonic mixing (at\nleast bi-harmonic) of zero mean is studied. The dependence of the kink mean\nvelocity on system parameters is investigated numerically and the results are\ncompared with a perturbation analysis based on a point particle representation\nof the soliton. We find that first order perturbative calculations lead to\nincomplete descriptions, due to the important role played by the soliton-phonon\ninteraction in establishing the phenomenon. The role played by the temporal\nsymmetry of the system in establishing soliton ratchets is also emphasized. In\nparticular, we show the existence of an asymmetric internal mode on the kink\nprofile which couples to the kink translational mode through the damping in the\nsystem. Effective soliton transport is achieved when the internal mode and the\nexternal force get phase locked. We find that for kinks driven by bi-harmonic\ndrivers consisting of the superposition of a fundamental driver with its first\nodd harmonic, the transport arises only due to this {\\it internal mode}\nmechanism, while for bi-harmonic drivers with even harmonic superposition, also\na point-particle contribution to the drift velocity is present. The phenomenon\nis robust enough to survive the presence of thermal noise in the system and can\nlead to several interesting physical applications.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660204.7509, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660204.6634, "finish": 1720660204.7509, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b917a615efb04a2ca1c912a7b37d0f87", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Bitcoin", "output": [["Bitcoin", "Title: Plasmon recombination in narrowgap HgTe quantum wells\n\nPassage: The dispersion laws of two-dimensional plasmons in narrow-gap HgTe/CdHgTe\nquantum wells are calculated taking into account the spatial dispersion of the\nelectron susceptibility. At the energy scale of the band gap the dependence of\nplasmon frequencies on the wave vector is shown to be close to linear that\nchanges significantly the critical concentration of noneqilibrium electron-hole\ngas corresponding to \"switching-on\" the carrier recombination with plasmon\nemission. The recombination rates with the plasmon emission have been\ncalculated.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660230.0681, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660229.9589, "finish": 1720660230.0681, "ip": "", "conv_id": "98cb55ab062140849b66c5206255154c", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when to use an air gap for dishwasher", "output": [["when to use an air gap for dishwasher", "Title: Air gap\n\nPassage: Air gap may refer to:\nScience and technology\nAir gap (plumbing), the vertical space between the water outlet and the flood level of a fixture\nAir gap (networking), physical isolation from external computer networks\nIBM airgap, a technique invented by IBM for fabricating vacuum pockets in integrated circuits\nAir gap (magnetic), a gap in the magnetic material\nAir gap, used in inductors and transformers\nAir gap in an electric machine, a space between the rotor and the stator in the machine\nAir gap, the space between magnetic pole pieces in which a voice coil operates\nAir gaps, the use of air-filled or vacuum pockets as a replacement for low-\u03ba dielectrics in integrated circuits\nOther uses\nMid-Atlantic gap, a geographic area not covered by allied air support during the World War II Battle of the Atlantic"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660237.5958, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660237.4738, "finish": 1720660237.5958, "ip": "", "conv_id": "98672ae367f34600a51ded472bbe0e3c", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when did aint get added to the dictionary", "output": [["when did aint get added to the dictionary", "Title: \u00c1ine (given name)\n\nPassage: \u00c1ine () is an Irish language feminine given name. It means \"radiance\" and was the name of the Irish Celtic goddess of wealth and summer: \u00c1ine.\nNotable people\n\u00c1ine Brady (born 1954), Irish Fianna F\u00e1il politician and teacher\n\u00c1ine Rose Daly, British actor and singer\n\u00c1ine Lawlor (born 1965), Irish radio broadcaster\n\u00c1ine Minogue (born 1977), Irish harpist\n\u00c1ine Murphy, Northern Irish politician\n\u00c1ine N\u00ed Chonaill (born 1952), Irish activist\nAine Ni Mhuiri, Irish actress\n\u00c1ine O'Gorman (born 1989), Irish footballer\n\u00c1ine Phillips, Irish performance artist\n\u00c1ine N\u00ed Murchadha, Princess of Leinster, fl. 1169\n\u00c1ine N\u00ed Duinn Sleibhe, Queen of Airg\u00edalla, died 1171\n\u00c1ine N\u00ed Donnchada, Queen of Breifne, died 1386\n\u00c1ine N\u00ed Eochagain, Queen of Fermanagh, died 1466"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660241.5548, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660241.4395, "finish": 1720660241.5548, "ip": "", "conv_id": "61a035c138df45f7a83a3d7fee7d70cb", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "how many municipal corporation are there in pune", "output": [["how many municipal corporation are there in pune", "Title: Pune Municipal Corporation\n\nPassage: In July 2017, eleven villages surrounding the city were merged in PMC bringing an additional area of 80.7 sq. km. and a population of 278,000 under the civic body's jurisdiction. PMC now governs a total area of 331.26 sq. km. The merged villages include: Uruli Devachi, Phursungi, Bavdhan Budruk, Lohegaon (remaining), Hadapsar (Sadesatra Nali), Mundhwa (Keshavnagar area), Shivane (remaining), Dhayari (remaining), Undri, Ambegaon Khurda and Ambegaon Budruk. This merger was preceded by the merger of 23 villages in 1997.\nOn 23 December 2020, the state government issued a draft notification for the merger of 23 adjoining villages within PMC limits, namely Mhalunge, Sus, Bavdhan Budruk, Kirkatwadi, Pisoli, Kondhwe-Dhawade, Kopre, Nanded, Khadakwasla, Manjari Budruk, Narhe, Holkarwadi, Autade-Handewadi, Wadachiwadi, Shewalewadi, Nandoshi, Sanasnagar, Mangdewadi, Bhilarewadi, Gujar Nimbalkarwadi, Jambhulwadi, Kolewadi and Wagholi. The total area of the PMC would be around 485 sq km, making it the municipal corporation with the largest area in the state.\nTo serve citizens better, PMC has taken initiative for e-Governance. Presently a few big corporations like Persistent Systems are lending help for developing the E-governance system, as a part of their social service initiative. A public-private partnership is perceived to bring tremendous changes in the future.\nAdministration\nThe major responsibility of PMC is to look after the civic and infrastructural needs of the citizens. The administration consists of two major branches: the executive branch headed by the Municipal Commissioner and the deliberative branch headed by the Mayor.\nExecutive Branch\nThe executive branch is headed by the Municipal Commissioner appointed by the State government from the Indian Administrative Service for a term not exceeding three years according to Section 36 of the Maharashtra Municipal Corporation Act, 1949. Additional Municipal Commissioner(s) assist the Municipal Commissioner in the administration of the departments deputed to them. As of April 2018, there are three Additional Commissioners supervising the general, special and estate administration of the city. Each of these categories consist of several departments. The Municipal Commissioner also serves on the boards of directors of the two public transport companies, PMPML and MahaMetro.\nAdministrative Zones\nFor the convenience of administration, the city is divided into five zones each headed by a Deputy Municipal Commissioner. Each zone consists of three ward offices (Marathi: \u0915\u094d\u0937\u0947\u0924\u094d\u0930\u093f\u092f \u0915\u093e\u0930\u094d\u092f\u093e\u0932\u092f, IAST: K\u1e63hetriya K\u0101ry\u0101lay) overseen by an Assistant Municipal Commissioner. A ward office typically has jurisdiction over more than one election ward. Ward offices not only coordinate major civic projects in their respective areas but also deal with minor works such as maintenance and repair. Residents can avail municipal services at their local ward office eliminating the need to visit the PMC headquarters.\nDeliberative Branch"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660279.051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660278.9455, "finish": 1720660279.051, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a6268b0bb644d1f987a5d8658b42edf", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what are the types of information system application", "output": [["what are the types of information system application", "Title: Leptogenesis from the Asymmetric Texture\n\nPassage: We investigate non-resonant thermal leptogenesis in the context of the $SU(5)\n\\times \\mathcal{T}_{13}$ \"asymmetric texture\", where both Dirac and Majorana\n${CP}$ violation arise from a single phase in the tribimaximal seesaw mixing\nmatrix. We show that the baryon asymmetry of the universe can be explained in\nthis model only when flavor effects are considered for right-handed neutrino\nmasses of $\\mathcal{O}(10^9 - 10^{12})$ $\\text{GeV}$. The sign of the baryon\nasymmetry also determines the sign of the previously predicted Dirac\n$\\require{cancel}\\cancel{CP}$ phase $|\\delta_{CP}| = 1.32\\pi$, consistent with\nthe latest global fit $\\delta_{CP}^{PDG} = 1.37 \\pm 0.17\\pi$.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660581.8876, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660570.3344, "finish": 1720660581.8876, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c9b93ce991eb40fc9242abd99d7db301", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "indian cricketer who has the highest test batting average in cricket", "output": [["indian cricketer who has the highest test batting average in cricket", "Title: Similarities among top one day batters: physics-based quantification\n\nPassage: Assessment of the performance of a player in any sport is very much needed to\ndetermine the ranking of players and make a solid team with the best players.\nBesides these, fans, journalists, sports persons, and sports councils often\nanalyse the performances of current and retired players to identify the best\nplayers of all time. Here, we study the performance of all-time top batters in\none-day cricket using physics-based statistical methods. The batters are\nselected in this study who possess either higher total runs or a high number of\ncenturies. It is found that the total runs increases linearly with the innings\nnumber at the later stage of the batter carrier, and the runs rate estimated\nfrom the linear regression analysis also increases linearly with the average\nruns. The probability of non-scoring innings is found to be a negligibly small\nnumber (i.e., $\\leq 0.1$ ) for each batter. Furthermore, based on innings-wise\nruns, we have computed the six-dimensional probability distribution vector for\neach player. Two components of the probability distribution vector vary\nlinearly with average runs. The component representing the probability of\nscoring runs less than 50 linearly decreases with the average runs. In\ncontrast, the probability of scoring runs greater than or equal to 100 and less\nthan 150 linearly increases with the average runs. We have also estimated the\nentropy to assess the diversity of a player. Interestingly, the entropy varies\nlinearly with the average runs, giving rise to two clusters corresponding to\nthe old and recent players. Furthermore, the angle between two probability\nvectors is calculated for each pair of players to measure the similarities\namong the players. It is found that some of the players are almost identical to\neach other.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720660581.8876, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720660570.3344, "finish": 1720660581.8876, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b7453da82bfb4a7a8616babca36705e8", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "indian cricketer who has the highest test batting average in cricket", "output": [["indian cricketer who has the highest test batting average in cricket", "Title: Importance of Compton scattering to radiation spectra of isolated\n neutron stars\n\nPassage: Model atmospheres of isolated neutron stars with low magnetic field are\ncalculated with Compton scattering taking into account. Models with effective\ntemperatures 1, 3 and 5 MK, with two values of surface gravity log(g)g = 13.9\nand 14.3), and different chemical compositions are calculated. Radiation\nspectra computed with Compton scattering are softer than the computed with\nThomson scattering at high energies (E > 5 keV) for hot (T_eff > 1 MK)\natmospheres with hydrogen-helium composition. Compton scattering is more\nsignificant to hydrogen models with low surface gravity. The emergent spectra\nof the hottest (T_eff > 3 MK) model atmospheres can be described by diluted\nblackbody spectra with hardness factors ~ 1.6 - 1.9. Compton scattering is less\nimportant for models with solar abundance of heavy elements.\n"]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl
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data/retrieval_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720652505.8616, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720652490.6481, "finish": 1720652505.8616, "ip": "", "conv_id": "40719bad0725424ca9ba0866beed199b", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "$\\frac{1}{2}$", "output": [["$\\frac{1}{2}$", "Title: 1/2 & 1/2\n\nPassage: \"1/2 & 1/2\" is a single by Gang Starr (feat. M.O.P.), taken from the soundtrack album Blade: Music from and Inspired by the Motion Picture, although it was not featured in the film itself. The song was later included on Gang Starr's album Full Clip: A Decade of Gang Starr. The track features samples from Jimmy Webb's \"Gymnast's Ballet (Fingerpainting)\", Mobb Deep's \"Survival of the Fittest\", M.O.P.'s \"New Jack City\", and Brother Arthur's \"What You Gonna Do\".\nThe B-side to the single was \"Gangsta Bounce\" by Wolfpak.\nTrack listing\nUS CD\n\"1/2 & 1/2\" (Clean Radio) - Gang Starr\n\"1/2 & 1/2\" (Street) - Gang Starr\n\"1/2 & 1/2\" (Instrumental) - Gang Starr\n\"Gangsta Bounce\" - Wolfpak (5:27)"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720652616.9821, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720652616.867, "finish": 1720652616.9821, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f59510aecd584e22a89762854f21c582", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "```\n10+10\n```", "output": [["```\n10+10\n```", "Title: 10 + 2\n\nPassage: ISF filing is exempted for bulk cargo and a few identified breakbulk cargo. The filing should be done for the rest of the commodities. including containerized cargo.\nThe new rule, published on November 26, 2008, went into effect on January 26, 2009. CBP is taking a phased-in approach in terms of implementation and enforcement. During the first 12 months, importers will be warned of infractions instead of being fined, with the hope that the importers will establish a filing system. All ISF filings are required to be submitted electronically via the Automated Broker Interface (ABI) or the Automated Manifest System (AMS). For shipments on the water on or after June 30, 2016, CBP had ended the phased-in approach and ISF compliance is in full effect. If compliance is not met, liquidated damages penalties up to $5,000 may be issued by the local port for each violation.\nThe ISF needs to be submitted at the lowest bill of lading level (i.e., house bill or regular bill) that is transmitted into the Automated Manifest System (AMS). The bill of lading number is the only common \u201clink\u201d between the ISF and the customs manifest data. The following 10 data elements are required from the importer:\nManufacturer (or supplier) name and address\nSeller (or owner) name and address\nBuyer (or owner) name and address\nShip-to name and address\nContainer stuffing location\nConsolidator (stuffer) name and address\nImporter of record number/foreign trade zone applicant identification number\nConsignee number(s)\nCountry of origin\nCommodity Harmonized Tariff Schedule number to six digits\nFrom the carrier, 2 data elements are required:\nVessel stow plan\nContainer status messages\nThe above information is required for the Department of Homeland Security to \"push out\" U.S. borders.\nAutomation\nAn automated 10+2 solution takes electronic data, sent from supply chain partners, and maps it to the requested data elements required by CBP. The filing of this information is known by CBP as the Importer Security Filing. With an automated solution, importers utilize the software to:\nLoad data from electronic files or allow for manual entry of data\nNotify users automatically when work needs to be completed for filing purposes\nConnect to CBP, allowing the importer to file the ISF\nValidate classification data for all filings before transmitting to CBP\nDesignate fields to automatically populate with consistent data across all filings for a company\nTrack the events of a shipment and coinciding ISF data elements triggered by those events\nThe importer is ultimately responsible for filing the required data elements or trusting a third party, such as a broker or a Freight forwarder, to submit the appropriate product information, or using an automation system provided by companies which offer ERP system to help manage electronic filing requirements of customs of other countries, such as Integration Point, SAP, Amber Road, to submit the appropriate product information."]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-19ed4e99-7ff1-4c13-bfa1-e9421c113b3d.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720586458.5306, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586377.6731, "finish": 1720586458.5306, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1a0271e0178b4505b38fe0dc4b504617", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: MLP SE\n\nPassage: MLP SE (formerly MLP AG, founded as Marschollek, Lautenschl\u00e4ger und Partner GbR) is a German corporation providing financial services, especially personal financial planning advisory. It is based in Wiesloch, Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg and was founded on 1 January 1971 in Heidelberg by Eicke Marschollek and Manfred Lautenschl\u00e4ger."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586458.5306, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586377.6731, "finish": 1720586458.5306, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d9d510a3f78542d8a25c8dbaf4313978", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586481.0955, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586480.4739, "finish": 1720586481.0955, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3e2ec56e5044dcd9604f3fe8ffaefa0", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: \u96c5\u6a02\n\nPassage: The Chinese characters \u96c5\u6a02 may refer to:\nYayue, the ancient court ritual music of China\nGagaku, the ancient court ritual music of Japan, of Chinese and Korean origin\nAak, the ancient court ritual music of Korea, of Chinese origin\nNh\u00e3 nh\u1ea1c, the ancient court ritual music of Vietnam, of Chinese origin"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586481.0955, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586480.4739, "finish": 1720586481.0955, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e4c12ac9337945f8bcdc5b32e133c893", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: \u6b63\u6708\n\nPassage: \u6b63\u6708 may refer to:\nChinese New Year\nJapanese New Year\nKorean New Year"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586493.9321, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586493.7451, "finish": 1720586493.9321, "ip": "", "conv_id": "520c558d2aa74ed1a25f02ee12f46cdc", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "output": [["I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "Title: Minority interest\n\nPassage: In accounting, minority interest (or non-controlling interest) is the portion of a subsidiary corporation's stock that is not owned by the parent corporation. The magnitude of the minority interest in the subsidiary company is generally less than 50% of outstanding shares, or the corporation would generally cease to be a subsidiary of the parent.\nIt is, however, possible (such as through special voting rights) for a controlling interest requiring consolidation to be achieved without exceeding 50% ownership, depending on the accounting standards being employed. Minority interest belongs to other investors and is reported on the consolidated balance sheet of the owning company to reflect the claim on assets belonging to other, non-controlling shareholders. Also, minority interest is reported on the consolidated income statement as a share of profit belonging to minority shareholders.\nThe reporting of 'minority interest' is a consequence of the requirement by accounting standards to 'fully' consolidate partly owned subsidiaries. Full consolidation, as opposed to partial consolidation, results in financial statements that are constructed as if the parent corporation fully owns these partly owned subsidiaries; except for two line items that reflect partial ownership of subsidiaries: net income to common shareholders and common equity. The two minority interest line items are the net difference between what would have been the common equity and net income to common, if all subsidiaries were fully owned, and the actual ownership of the group. All the other line items in the financial statements assume a fictitious 100% ownership.\nSome investors have expressed concern that the minority interest line items cause significant uncertainty for the assessment of value, leverage and liquidity. A key concern of investors is that they cannot be sure what part of the reported cash position is owned by a 100% subsidiary and what part is owned by a 51% subsidiary.\nMinority interest is an integral part of the enterprise value of a company. The converse concept is an associate company.\nAccounting treatment\nUnder the International Financial Reporting Standards, the non-controlling interest is reported in accordance with IFRS 5 and is shown at the very bottom of the Equity section on the consolidated balance sheet and subsequently on the statement of changes in equity. Under US GAAP minority interest can be reported either in the liabilities section, the equity section or, preceding changes to acceptable accounting standards, the mezzanine section of the balance sheet. The mezzanine section is located between liabilities and equity. FASB FAS 160 and FAS 141r significantly alter the way a parent company accounts for non-controlling interest (NCI) in a subsidiary. It is no longer acceptable to report minority interest in the mezzanine section of the balance sheet.\nPublic sector usage\nFrom 2013 onwards, the UK Government stated that it would become a minority equity co-investor in future Private Finance Initiative projects, which thereafter were referred to as \"PF2 projects\"."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586493.9321, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586493.7451, "finish": 1720586493.9321, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e2226a1aade3489d92ba2c1209b491d8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "output": [["I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "Title: Moro people\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586505.2984, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586505.0694, "finish": 1720586505.2984, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7e1514cf0d9048ed9b9212bbd6daad48", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "output": [["I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "Title: Moro people\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586520.6228, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586520.4505, "finish": 1720586520.6228, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7c22599a9ff24a20aca5b1a5a3625bff", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720586526.4161, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720586526.2593, "finish": 1720586526.4161, "ip": "", "conv_id": "034f71d8b3ff4550a48fecb1d293704c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720651779.0755, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651760.0498, "finish": 1720651779.0755, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4be6bb6a69e744cba4c5a18797706308", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: MLP SE\n\nPassage: MLP SE (formerly MLP AG, founded as Marschollek, Lautenschl\u00e4ger und Partner GbR) is a German corporation providing financial services, especially personal financial planning advisory. It is based in Wiesloch, Baden-W\u00fcrttemberg and was founded on 1 January 1971 in Heidelberg by Eicke Marschollek and Manfred Lautenschl\u00e4ger."]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-2e986748-8e6b-4919-8def-1c065564db6d.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720596632.5316, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596605.9063, "finish": 1720596632.5316, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1a5c761ffa384884b340072744f56f62", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where is virginia beach located on a map", "output": [["where is virginia beach located on a map", "Title: Silver Beach, Virginia\n\nPassage: Silver Beach is an unincorporated community in Northampton County, Virginia, United States."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720596687.2133, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596649.8907, "finish": 1720596687.2133, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8abb7108b18241818743a4609b7b5dac", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where is virginia beach located on a map", "output": [["where is virginia beach located on a map", "Title: Virginia Beach Town Center\n\nPassage: Virginia Beach Town Center is a group of offices, hotels, stores, and restaurants located in the central business district of Virginia Beach, Virginia.\nLocation"]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-32e25ae8-534b-45f9-9e5f-f3042b6bd8e4.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1721768959.5076, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721768937.3179, "finish": 1721768959.5076, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b90b628176c6421aa6929da4f6c80677", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Title: Observance of Christmas by country\n\nPassage: Examples of candies and treats associated with Christmas are marzipan, toffee, kn\u00e4ck (quite similar to butterscotch), nuts and fruits: figs, chocolate, dates and oranges decorated with cloves.\nTelevision also plays a big role, many families watch the Disney Christmas special (From All of Us to All of You), Karl Bertil Jonssons julafton (animated short), or a re-run of the Svensson, Svensson episode \"\" ('Merry Christmas') on the TV channel SVT1.\nAfter the on December 24, the presents are distributed, either by or a family member, and usually from a sack or from under the Christmas tree where they have been lying all day or for several days.\nMany Swedes still adhere to the tradition that each present should have a rhyme written on the wrapping paper, to hint at the contents without revealing them.\nIn older days a yule goat was an alternative to ; nowadays it is used as an ornament, ranging from sizes of to huge constructions like the giant straw Christmas G\u00e4vle goat, famous for frequently being vandalised or burnt down. If one has two families to celebrate Christmas with, it is common that one of the families move their celebrations to Christmas Day or the day before Christmas Eve (commonly referred to as little Christmas Eve)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769070.6824, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769070.5659, "finish": 1721769070.6824, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63006f0eedfb43ec891a6d8d5b6504a8", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Pete Campbell\n\nPassage: Peter Dyckman Campbell (born February 28, 1934) is a fictional character on AMC's television series Mad Men. He is portrayed by Vincent Kartheiser.\nKartheiser has won the Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series twice along with the cast of Mad Men.\nBiography\nPete Campbell was born to an upper-crust White Anglo-Saxon Protestant Manhattan family in 1934. His mother, Dorothy \"Dot\" Campbell (n\u00e9e Dyckman) (Channing Chase), descended from an old Dutch family that had arrived in New Amsterdam and at one point \"owned pretty much everything north of 125th Street\".\nPete has a strained relationship with his parents, who are emotionally distant and disapprove of their son's decision to go into advertising. In Season 2, after his father dies on American Airlines Flight 1 over Jamaica Bay, Pete is unable to cry.\nUpon their father's death, Pete's older brother, Bud (Rich Hutchman), examines their father's finances to determine their inheritance from the family trust. Bud discovers their father, through years of a lavish lifestyle, depleted the money put into the trust. Bud tells Pete this news, and both seem unsurprised. Following this revelation, Pete states that he, in fact, hated his father. Later in Season 2, Pete reveals that he also hates his mother."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769114.2504, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769114.137, "finish": 1721769114.2504, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6019d10708dd4890bcaed9eb41bdc994", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "output": [["Who wrote about a guide that's more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Title: AAA (video game industry)\n\nPassage: In the video game industry, AAA (Triple-A) is an informal classification used to classify video games produced or distributed by a mid-sized or major publisher, which typically have higher development and marketing budgets than other tiers of games. In the mid-2010s, the term \"AAA+\" was used to describe AAA type games that generated additional revenue over time, in a similar fashion to massively multiplayer online games, by using games-as-a-service methods such as season passes and expansion packs. The similar construction \"III\" (Triple-I) has also been used to describe high-production-value games in the indie game industry.\nHistory\nThe term \"AAA\" began to be used in the late 1990s by game retailers attempting to gauge interest in upcoming titles, and first appeared in print in a press release from Infogrames in June 2000. The term was likely borrowed from the credit industry's bond ratings, where \"AAA\" bonds represent the safest investment opportunity and are the most likely to meet their financial goals."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1721769134.3899, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721769134.2755, "finish": 1721769134.3899, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9f5ccbb70b104104b47d7db2756b0a56", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: 1968 in the Vietnam War\n\nPassage: Operation Toan Thang I was a US and ARVN operation conducted between 8 April 1968 and 31 May 1968. Toan Thang, or \"Complete Victory\", was part of a reaction to the Tet Offensive designed to put pressure on the PAVN/VC. The PAVN/VC lost 7,645 killed and 1,708 captured for the loss of 762 ARVN and 564 U.S. killed.\n8 April to 11 November\nOperation Burlington Trail was a security operation conducted by the U.S. 198th Infantry Brigade in Qu\u1ea3ng Nam Province. The operation resulted in 1,931 VC and 129 U.S. killed.\n10 April\nA 250-man PAVN force attempted to block Route 19 west of Landing Zone Schueller. A reaction force from the 1st Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment at Schueller was called forward and quickly overwhelmed the PAVN ambushers some of whom retreated to a nearby hill where they were assaulted by the 1st Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment. The engagement resulted in 1 U.S. and 40 PAVN killed.\nThe Anderson Platoon won the 1967 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film by Pierre Schoendoerffer followed a platoon of the 1st Cavalry Division in September and October 1966.\n10-4 April\nOperation Jasper Square was a 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines operation on Go Noi Island, Qu\u1ea3ng Nam Province. The operation resulted in 54 PAVN/VC and six Marines killed.\n13 April\nIn an unnamed operation east of Hu\u1ebf, the 1st Battalion, 27th Marines killed 60 PAVN/VC for the loss of 24 Marines."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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data/retrieval_individual-331c8ee0-a597-4ee9-8458-221abc34109d.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720595556.2916, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595539.8856, "finish": 1720595556.2916, "ip": "", "conv_id": "34c303a723b44343a379cc1be412168e", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720595584.9121, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595568.6702, "finish": 1720595584.9121, "ip": "", "conv_id": "65bee0cc73614209be8eb3803de140e1", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720595617.5807, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595592.8555, "finish": 1720595617.5807, "ip": "", "conv_id": "17dd9c20fc0442aa9d48c3b07e566241", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Mountain View, Stokes County, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Mountain View is an unincorporated community in Stokes County, North Carolina, United States, approximately three miles northeast of King."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720595672.9201, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595647.747, "finish": 1720595672.9201, "ip": "", "conv_id": "045b1c29d61640e294926aace603dfca", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: National Register of Historic Places listings in Wake County, North Carolina\n\nPassage: This list includes properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Wake County, North Carolina. Click the \"Map of all coordinates\" link to the right to view an online map of all properties and districts with latitude and longitude coordinates in the table below.\nCurrent listings"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720595730.8621, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595715.1616, "finish": 1720595730.8621, "ip": "", "conv_id": "86be4d4bc3254650aafc779ea54b2744", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720595838.7224, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595798.8277, "finish": 1720595838.7224, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ccd213b5f3d746e7b8759dbdc58eeb2a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720595882.7586, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595848.9573, "finish": 1720595882.7586, "ip": "", "conv_id": "659d5ce314bf4c7aa5fc0aa6c0a2fd8f", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: A new town hall facility opened in downtown Wake Forest in September 2010, and was LEED Platinum certified in November 2011. All town departments are housed in the facility, except police (which has its own building nearby) and public works.\nEducation\nPrimary and secondary education\nThe town is served by twelve public schools which are administered by the Wake County Public School System and Granville County Public School System. Public schools include:\nHeritage Elementary School\nJones Dairy Elementary School\nMount Energy Elementary\nWake Forest Elementary School\nRichland Creek Elementary School\nG C Hawley Middle\nHeritage Middle School\nGranville Early College High\nWake Forest Middle School\nHeritage High School\nWake Forest High School\nCharter schools include Franklin Academy (K-12),Wake Forest Charter Academy (K-8), Endeavor Charter School (K-8), and Envision Science Academy (K-8). Private schools include Thales Academy, All Saints Academy, and St. Catherine of Siena Catholic School, serving grades K-8. Wake Forest is also home to two Montessori schools, Wake Forest Montessori and Children's House of Wake Forest.\nHigher learning\nWake Technical Community College is an area two-year college with a north campus on Louisburg Road in Raleigh. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary is a seminary of the Southern Baptist Convention. It began offering classes in 1950 on the original campus of Wake Forest University and is commonly known by its acronym, SEBTS.\nTransportation\nPassenger\nAir: Wake Forest is served by Raleigh-Durham International Airport, which is located southwest of the town in northwestern Wake County.\nInterstate Highway: Wake Forest can be accessed by I-85 and I-40. The town is located to the east of I-85 and north of I-40.\nWake Forest is not currently served directly by passenger trains. Amtrak serves nearby Raleigh. NCDOT expects to extend the Piedmont service from Raleigh to a new Wake Forest train station by 2030 as part of an initiative to build high-speed rail between Raleigh and Richmond, Virginia.\nLocal bus: The Triangle Transit Authority operates buses that serve the region and connect to municipal bus systems in Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill.\nRoads\nWake Forest is located off US 1 (also known as Capital Boulevard in northern Wake County), a major north\u2013south U.S. Highway that serves the East Coast of the United States.\nOther highways that run through the area include NC 96 and NC 98.\nMedia\nOn air\nWCPE-FM, located in Wake Forest, is a classical music station that provides its programming over the air, via the Internet, and via C-band and Ku-band satellite.\nNewspaper\nThe town's independently owned community newspaper, The Wake Weekly, has an average circulation of more than 8,400 copies per week.\nOnline\nWake Forest News is a humor publication with the motto, \"Half our news is fit to print\".\nWake Forest Today is the town's first digital daily news portal. It is an online news source that covers local news and events regarding Wake Forest and the surrounding area.\nNotable people"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720596020.1096, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595996.6557, "finish": 1720596020.1096, "ip": "", "conv_id": "34eea5a8bf664554be5843da9b4b5c70", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720596062.895, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596046.9349, "finish": 1720596062.895, "ip": "", "conv_id": "44fe743a7cd04cd2866b02ed14d0a81c", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720596089.8721, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596073.2044, "finish": 1720596089.8721, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7e5a171241b34bf4b7038f9bd0616538", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where is wake forest located in north carolina", "output": [["where is wake forest located in north carolina", "Title: Wake Forest, North Carolina\n\nPassage: Wake Forest is a town in Franklin and Wake counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina; located almost entirely in Wake County, it lies just north of the state capital, Raleigh. At the 2020 census, the population was 47,601, up from 30,117 in 2010. It is part of the Raleigh metropolitan area. Wake Forest was the original home of Wake Forest University for 122 years before it moved to Winston-Salem in 1956.\nHistory\nIn 1832, Dr. Calvin Jones, originally from New England, bought of forested land in Wake County, North Carolina. He built his plantation here. The sparsely populated area became known as the Forest of Wake, or Wake Forest. Jones sold his farm to the North Carolina Baptist Convention for $2,000, who opened the Wake Forest Manual Labor Institute, later Wake Forest College, on the site. The Raleigh & Gaston Railroad, completed in 1840, established a depot in nearby Forestville that stimulated the school and surrounding village. College leaders convinced the railroad to move the depot even closer to the college in 1874, leading to more economic development. This community was incorporated as the \"Town of Wake Forest College\" in 1880. In 1909, the word \"College\" was removed from the name of the town. The college moved to the much larger city of Winston-Salem in 1956. Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary began offering classes on the original campus of Wake Forest University in 1950, and occupied the entire campus when the university completed its move.\nIn 2007, the town was listed by Forbes magazine as the 20th fastest growing suburb in America, with a 73.2 percent increase in population between 2000 and 2006.\nGeography\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of , of which is land and (0.80%) is water."]]}
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data/retrieval_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1720838982.9, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720838929.9903, "finish": 1720838982.9, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a09a103d86a54991b31c024748db1cc5", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "what is the genus of a bald eagle", "output": [["what is the genus of a bald eagle", "Title: Sea eagle\n\nPassage: A sea eagle or fish eagle (also called erne or ern, mostly in reference to the white-tailed eagle) is any of the birds of prey in the subfamily Haliaeetinae of the bird of prey family Accipitridae. Ten extant species exist, currently described with this label.\nThe subfamily has a significant reach, with a scholarly article in 2005 reporting that they were \"found in riverine and coastal habitat[s] throughout the world\". However, Haliaeetinae inhabited areas have experienced particular threats given the context of human impacts on the environment.\nTaxonomy and evolution\nThe genus Haliaeetus was introduced in 1809 by French naturalist Marie Jules C\u00e9sar Savigny in his chapter on birds in the Description de l'\u00c9gypte. The two fish eagles in the genus Ichthyophaga were found to lie within Haliaeetus in a genetic study in 2005. They were then moved accordingly. They are very similar to the tropical Haliaeetus species. A prehistoric (i.e. extinct before 1500) form from Maui in the Hawaiian Islands may represent a species or subspecies in this genus.\nThe relationships to other genera in the family are less clear; they have long been considered closer to the genus Milvus (kites) than to the true eagles in the genus Aquila on the basis of their morphology and display behaviour; more recent genetic evidence agrees with this, but points to their being related to the genus Buteo (buzzards/hawks), as well, a relationship not previously thought close.\nA 2005 molecular study found that the genus is paraphyletic and subsumes Ichthyophaga, the species diverging into a temperate and tropical group.\nEvolution\nHaliaeetus is possibly one of the oldest genera of living birds. A distal left tarsometatarsus (DPC 1652) recovered from early Oligocene deposits of Fayyum, Egypt (Jebel Qatrani Formation, about 33 million years ago (Mya)) is similar in general pattern and some details to that of a modern sea eagle. The genus was present in the middle Miocene (12-16 Mya) with certainty."]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720838982.9, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720838929.9903, "finish": 1720838982.9, "ip": "", "conv_id": "79e922a3362640ec834ff22166b02b1e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the genus of a bald eagle", "output": [["what is the genus of a bald eagle", "Title: Haliaeetus\n\nPassage: Haliaeetus is a genus of four species of eagles, closely related to the sea eagles in the genus Ichthyophaga.\nThis genus includes the following four species:"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720839037.3783, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720839037.1546, "finish": 1720839037.3783, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eb766f05f8ed440ab0eab4147f8d8c73", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'd like to learn about aging and if it can be cured.", "output": [["I'd like to learn about aging and if it can be cured.", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720839047.6, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720839047.2771, "finish": 1720839047.6, "ip": "", "conv_id": "05394bda0ea74d2b8bff7f965c4ddb6a", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "I'd like to learn about aging and if it can be cured.", "output": [["I'd like to learn about aging and if it can be cured.", "Title: Misinformation\n\nPassage: One-on-one correction\nWithin the context of personal interactions, some strategies for debunking have the potential to be effective. Simply delivering facts is frequently ineffective because misinformation belief is often not the result of a deficit of accurate information, although individuals may be more likely to change their beliefs in response to information shared by someone with whom they have close social ties, like a friend or family member. More effective strategies focus on instilling doubt and encouraging people to examine the roots of their beliefs. In these situations, tone can also play a role: expressing empathy and understanding can keep communication channels open. It is important to remember that beliefs are driven not just by facts but by emotion, worldview, intuition, social pressure, and many other factors.\nSocial correction\nFact-checking and debunking can be done in one-on-one interactions, but when this occurs on social media it is likely that other people may encounter and read the interaction, potentially learning new information from it or examining their own beliefs. This type of correction has been termed social correction. Researchers have identified three ways to increase the efficacy of these social corrections for observers. First, corrections should include a link to a credible source of relevant information, like an expert organization. Second, the correct information should be repeated, for example at the beginning and end of the comment or response. Third, an alternative explanation should be offered. An effective social correction in response to a statement that chili peppers can cure COVID-19 might look something like: \u201cHot peppers in your food, though very tasty, cannot prevent or cure COVID-19. The best way to protect yourself against the new coronavirus is to keep at least 1 meter away from others and to wash your hands frequently and thoroughly. Adding peppers to your soup won\u2019t prevent or cure COVID-19. Learn more from the WHO.\" Interestingly, while the tone of the correction may impact how the target of the correction receives the message and can increase engagement with a message, it is less likely to affect how others seeing the correction perceive its accuracy.\nIt is important to note that, while social correction has the potential to reach a wider audience with correct information, it can also potentially amplify an original post containing misinformation.\nPrebunking\nUnfortunately, misinformation typically spreads more readily than fact-checking. Further, even if misinformation is corrected, that does not mean it is forgotten or does not influence people's thoughts. Another approach, called prebunking, aims to \"inoculate\" against misinformation by showing people examples of misinformation and how it works before they encounter it. While prebunking can involve fact-based correction, it focuses more on identifying common logical fallacies and tactics used to spread misinformation as well as common misinformation sources. Research about the efficacy of prebunking has shown promising results.\nOther interventions"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720839091.2475, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720839060.87, "finish": 1720839091.2475, "ip": "", "conv_id": "14f906b2544043d5b0c9e6179b56b57e", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "grey's anatomy the episode with the bomb", "output": [["grey's anatomy the episode with the bomb", "Title: An unexpected new explanation of seasonality in suicide attempts: Grey's\n Anatomy broadcasting\n\nPassage: Seasonality is one of the oldest and most elucidation-resistant issues in\nsuicide epidemiological research. Despite winter depression (also known as\nSeasonal Affective Disorder, SAD) is known and treated since many years,\nworldwide cross-sectional data from 28 countries show a lower frequency of\nsuicide attempts around the equinoxes and a higher frequency in spring (both in\nNorthern and Southern Hemisphere). This peak is not compatible with the SAD\nexplanation. However, in recent years epidemiological research has yielded new\nresults, which provide new perspectives on the matter. In fact, the discovery\nof a new pathology called Post-Series Depression (PSD) could provide an\nexplanation of the suicide attempts pattern. The aim of this study is to\nanalyse weekly data in order to compare them with the TV series broadcasting.\nSince medical observations in our sample are distributed over many years, in\norder to compare them as best as we can with the television programming, Grey's\nAnatomy series was chosen. This medical drama has been in the top 10 of most\nviewed TV series since 12 years and it is broadcast all over the world, so that\nit can be considered a universal and homogeneous phenomenon. A full season of\nthe series is split into two separate units with a hiatus around the end of the\ncalendar year, and it runs from September through May. Data analysis was made\nin order to prove the correlation between PSD and the increase of suicide\nattempts. Surprisingly, the data analysis shows that the increase of rate of\nsuicide attempts does not coincide with the breaks in Grey's Anatomy\nscheduling, but with the series broadcasting. This therefore suggests that it\nis the series itself to increase the viewer's depression.\n"]]}
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{"tstamp": 1720839091.2475, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720839060.87, "finish": 1720839091.2475, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8e6f031c46be4a67a46f84e7c4dbac7c", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "grey's anatomy the episode with the bomb", "output": [["grey's anatomy the episode with the bomb", "Title: Love kills Penna ageing model\n\nPassage: No abstract needed since short\n"]]}
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