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data/clustering_individual-b9229914-47bc-4da8-a21b-89329fff8207.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1722305517.51, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722305517.3223, "finish": 1722305517.51, "ip": "", "conv_id": "94a661611dd14690a1f8ff341c608d33", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": ["rock", "jazz", "classical", "flute", "guitar", "saxophone", "violin", "trumpet", "drums", "Cassiopeia", "Scorpius", "Leo", "Impressionism", "Cubism", "Baroque"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722305536.8568, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722305536.7681, "finish": 1722305536.8568, "ip": "", "conv_id": "247891ecc3be49079754b6814bbcf217", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": ["O", "B", "beer", "wine"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722305536.8568, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722305536.7681, "finish": 1722305536.8568, "ip": "", "conv_id": "13fc23841333430eb8fee00d5a620cc5", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": ["O", "B", "beer", "wine"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722305517.51, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722305517.3223, "finish": 1722305517.51, "ip": "", "conv_id": "94a661611dd14690a1f8ff341c608d33", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": ["rock", "jazz", "classical", "flute", "guitar", "saxophone", "violin", "trumpet", "drums", "Cassiopeia", "Scorpius", "Leo", "Impressionism", "Cubism", "Baroque"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722305536.8568, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722305536.7681, "finish": 1722305536.8568, "ip": "", "conv_id": "247891ecc3be49079754b6814bbcf217", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": ["O", "B", "beer", "wine"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722305536.8568, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722305536.7681, "finish": 1722305536.8568, "ip": "", "conv_id": "13fc23841333430eb8fee00d5a620cc5", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": ["O", "B", "beer", "wine"], "ncluster": 2, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309485.5996, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309485.4988, "finish": 1722309485.5996, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8359dda2c804fb18c356875be073109", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": ["rooibos", "pu-erh", "black", "chamomile", "oolong", "green", "willow", "maple", "birch", "oak", "conscientiousness", "openness", "neuroticism"], "ncluster": 3, "output": "", "ndim": "3D (press for 2D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309485.5996, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309485.4988, "finish": 1722309485.5996, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3be1622cdbfc466e89a86f79a6119eb3", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": ["rooibos", "pu-erh", "black", "chamomile", "oolong", "green", "willow", "maple", "birch", "oak", "conscientiousness", "openness", "neuroticism"], "ncluster": 3, "output": "", "ndim": "3D (press for 2D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309488.9581, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309488.869, "finish": 1722309488.9581, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8359dda2c804fb18c356875be073109", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": ["rooibos", "pu-erh", "black", "chamomile", "oolong", "green", "willow", "maple", "birch", "oak", "conscientiousness", "openness", "neuroticism"], "ncluster": 3, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309488.9581, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309488.869, "finish": 1722309488.9581, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3be1622cdbfc466e89a86f79a6119eb3", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": ["rooibos", "pu-erh", "black", "chamomile", "oolong", "green", "willow", "maple", "birch", "oak", "conscientiousness", "openness", "neuroticism"], "ncluster": 3, "output": "", "ndim": "2D (press for 3D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309491.4668, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309491.3788, "finish": 1722309491.4668, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8359dda2c804fb18c356875be073109", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": ["rooibos", "pu-erh", "black", "chamomile", "oolong", "green", "willow", "maple", "birch", "oak", "conscientiousness", "openness", "neuroticism"], "ncluster": 3, "output": "", "ndim": "3D (press for 2D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309491.4668, "task_type": "clustering", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309491.3788, "finish": 1722309491.4668, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3be1622cdbfc466e89a86f79a6119eb3", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": ["rooibos", "pu-erh", "black", "chamomile", "oolong", "green", "willow", "maple", "birch", "oak", "conscientiousness", "openness", "neuroticism"], "ncluster": 3, "output": "", "ndim": "3D (press for 2D)", "dim_method": "PCA", "clustering_method": "KMeans"}
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data/retrieval_battle-b9229914-47bc-4da8-a21b-89329fff8207.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1722305246.8396, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6cf9d4db20f8436c8c7f2ccaca29d2fa", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "0_output": [["what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "Askubuntu Stackexchange\n\nQ: How to enable user sharing per instructions? I have this entry in .xsession-errors log\n\"Nautilus-Share-Message: Called \"net usershare info\" but it failed: 'net usershare' returned \nerror 255: net usershare: cannot open usershare directory /var/lib/samba/usershares. \nError No such file or directory\nPlease ask your system administrator to enable user sharing.\n\nThis is in relation to my applets having to be reloaded after every boot. Just wondering how I would enable user sharing, and how it affects my applets ??\n\nA: I don't think this effects your applets at all, that's probably a different bug. You could just make the directory with sudo:\nsudo mkdir -p /var/lib/samba/usershares\n\nBut I don't really know what it will do.\n"]], "0_corpus": "stackexchange", "1_conv_id": "38308d8cc72f4a24b8ddc6bafec79a96", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "1_output": [["what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "Math Stackexchange\n\nQ: Limit and limit points What is the basic difference between limit and limit points, and if a sequence has one unique limit how it can have a lot of limit points \n\nA: A limit point is a generalization of a limit (each limit is a limit point but not vice versa). You can see this in the definition:\nLimit: $a$ is a limit of $(a_n)$, iff in each neighborhood of $a$ are almost all elements of $(a_n)$.\nLimit point: $a$ is a limit of $(a_n)$, iff in each neighborhood of $a$ are infinite elements of $(a_n)$.\nI highlighted the difference between both definitions.\nBecause only infinite elements need to be in any neighborhood of $a$. There can be infinite elements outside this neighborhood which can clustered to another limit point. This is the reason why there might be many limit points for a sequence. If $a$ is a limit only finite elements can be outside any given neighborhood which is not enough to go to another limit.\n"]], "1_corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722306411.5045, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "5993407c26d04c54981a49217a38518d", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "0_output": [["when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "Scotland national football team\n\nScotland lost just two of their first 43 international matches. It was not until a 2β0 home defeat by Ireland in 1903 that Scotland lost a match to a team other than England. This run of success meant that Scotland would have regularly topped the Elo ratings, which were calculated in 1998, between 1876 and 1904. Scotland won the British Home Championship outright on 24 occasions, and shared the title 17 times with at least one other team. A noteworthy victory for Scotland before the Second World War was the 5β1 victory over England in 1928, which led to that Scotland side being known as the \"Wembley Wizards\". Scotland played their first match outside the British Isles in 1929, beating Norway 7β3 in Bergen. Scotland continued to contest regular friendly matches against European opposition and enjoyed wins against Germany and France before losing to the Austrian \"Wunderteam\" and Italy in 1931.\nScotland, like the other Home Nations, did not enter the three FIFA World Cups held during the 1930s. This was because the four associations had been excluded from FIFA due to a disagreement regarding the status of amateur players. The four associations, including Scotland, returned to the FIFA fold after the Second World War. A match between a United Kingdom team and a \"Rest of the World\" team was played at Hampden Park in 1947 to celebrate this reconciliation.\n1950s: Entering the World Cup"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "940948f56e9c4f5297cb17f69935bd8b", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "1_output": [["when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "Scotland at the FIFA World Cup\n\nThe World Cup consists of two parts, the qualification phase and the final phase (officially called the World Cup Finals). The qualification phase, which currently take place over the three years preceding the Finals, is used to determine which teams qualify for the Finals. The current format of the Finals involves 32 teams competing at venues within the host nation (or nations) over a period of about a month. The World Cup Finals is the most widely viewed sporting event in the world, with an estimated 715.1 million people watching the 2006 tournament final.\nHistory\n1930s\nScotland did not compete in the first three World Cup competitions, in 1930, 1934 and 1938. Because of a dispute with FIFA over \"broken-time\" payments to players, the SFA, with the football associations of England, Ireland and Wales, withdrew from FIFA in 1928, and did not rejoin as a permanent member until 1946.\n1950s\nThe readmission of the Scottish Football Association to FIFA in 1946 meant that Scotland were now eligible to enter the 1950 FIFA World Cup. FIFA advised that places would be awarded to the top two teams in the 1949β50 British Home Championship, but the SFA announced that Scotland would attend the finals only if Scotland won the competition. Scotland won their first two matches, but a 1β0 home defeat by England meant that the Scots finished as runners-up. The SFA stood by this proclamation, despite pleas to the contrary by the Scotland players, supported by England captain Billy Wright and the other England players. Sportswriter Brian Glanville later described the SFA as showing \"baffling insularity and pique\" in their refusal to send a team to the World Cup."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307573.5271, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "9deb3465ffd3458081570489c3810813", "0_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "0_prompt": "are opened or are open?", "0_output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "0_corpus": "stackexchange", "1_conv_id": "9913e8b8325c4550a0bfb3f5298189d2", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "are opened or are open?", "1_output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "1_corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722305246.8396, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6cf9d4db20f8436c8c7f2ccaca29d2fa", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "0_output": [["what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "Askubuntu Stackexchange\n\nQ: How to enable user sharing per instructions? I have this entry in .xsession-errors log\n\"Nautilus-Share-Message: Called \"net usershare info\" but it failed: 'net usershare' returned \nerror 255: net usershare: cannot open usershare directory /var/lib/samba/usershares. \nError No such file or directory\nPlease ask your system administrator to enable user sharing.\n\nThis is in relation to my applets having to be reloaded after every boot. Just wondering how I would enable user sharing, and how it affects my applets ??\n\nA: I don't think this effects your applets at all, that's probably a different bug. You could just make the directory with sudo:\nsudo mkdir -p /var/lib/samba/usershares\n\nBut I don't really know what it will do.\n"]], "0_corpus": "stackexchange", "1_conv_id": "38308d8cc72f4a24b8ddc6bafec79a96", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "1_output": [["what is the difference between cluster point and limit point?", "Math Stackexchange\n\nQ: Limit and limit points What is the basic difference between limit and limit points, and if a sequence has one unique limit how it can have a lot of limit points \n\nA: A limit point is a generalization of a limit (each limit is a limit point but not vice versa). You can see this in the definition:\nLimit: $a$ is a limit of $(a_n)$, iff in each neighborhood of $a$ are almost all elements of $(a_n)$.\nLimit point: $a$ is a limit of $(a_n)$, iff in each neighborhood of $a$ are infinite elements of $(a_n)$.\nI highlighted the difference between both definitions.\nBecause only infinite elements need to be in any neighborhood of $a$. There can be infinite elements outside this neighborhood which can clustered to another limit point. This is the reason why there might be many limit points for a sequence. If $a$ is a limit only finite elements can be outside any given neighborhood which is not enough to go to another limit.\n"]], "1_corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722306411.5045, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "5993407c26d04c54981a49217a38518d", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "0_output": [["when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "Scotland national football team\n\nScotland lost just two of their first 43 international matches. It was not until a 2β0 home defeat by Ireland in 1903 that Scotland lost a match to a team other than England. This run of success meant that Scotland would have regularly topped the Elo ratings, which were calculated in 1998, between 1876 and 1904. Scotland won the British Home Championship outright on 24 occasions, and shared the title 17 times with at least one other team. A noteworthy victory for Scotland before the Second World War was the 5β1 victory over England in 1928, which led to that Scotland side being known as the \"Wembley Wizards\". Scotland played their first match outside the British Isles in 1929, beating Norway 7β3 in Bergen. Scotland continued to contest regular friendly matches against European opposition and enjoyed wins against Germany and France before losing to the Austrian \"Wunderteam\" and Italy in 1931.\nScotland, like the other Home Nations, did not enter the three FIFA World Cups held during the 1930s. This was because the four associations had been excluded from FIFA due to a disagreement regarding the status of amateur players. The four associations, including Scotland, returned to the FIFA fold after the Second World War. A match between a United Kingdom team and a \"Rest of the World\" team was played at Hampden Park in 1947 to celebrate this reconciliation.\n1950s: Entering the World Cup"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "940948f56e9c4f5297cb17f69935bd8b", "1_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "1_prompt": "when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "1_output": [["when did scotland last qualify for world cup", "Scotland at the FIFA World Cup\n\nThe World Cup consists of two parts, the qualification phase and the final phase (officially called the World Cup Finals). The qualification phase, which currently take place over the three years preceding the Finals, is used to determine which teams qualify for the Finals. The current format of the Finals involves 32 teams competing at venues within the host nation (or nations) over a period of about a month. The World Cup Finals is the most widely viewed sporting event in the world, with an estimated 715.1 million people watching the 2006 tournament final.\nHistory\n1930s\nScotland did not compete in the first three World Cup competitions, in 1930, 1934 and 1938. Because of a dispute with FIFA over \"broken-time\" payments to players, the SFA, with the football associations of England, Ireland and Wales, withdrew from FIFA in 1928, and did not rejoin as a permanent member until 1946.\n1950s\nThe readmission of the Scottish Football Association to FIFA in 1946 meant that Scotland were now eligible to enter the 1950 FIFA World Cup. FIFA advised that places would be awarded to the top two teams in the 1949β50 British Home Championship, but the SFA announced that Scotland would attend the finals only if Scotland won the competition. Scotland won their first two matches, but a 1β0 home defeat by England meant that the Scots finished as runners-up. The SFA stood by this proclamation, despite pleas to the contrary by the Scotland players, supported by England captain Billy Wright and the other England players. Sportswriter Brian Glanville later described the SFA as showing \"baffling insularity and pique\" in their refusal to send a team to the World Cup."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307573.5271, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "9deb3465ffd3458081570489c3810813", "0_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "0_prompt": "are opened or are open?", "0_output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "0_corpus": "stackexchange", "1_conv_id": "9913e8b8325c4550a0bfb3f5298189d2", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "are opened or are open?", "1_output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "1_corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309466.1126, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "bc8a08f1718846e58aa907a16ce9620b", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "0_output": [["where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "German Americans\n\nA particularly attractive destination was Milwaukee, which came to be known as \"the German Athens\". Radical Germans trained in politics in the old country dominated the city's Socialists. Skilled workers dominated many crafts, while entrepreneurs created the brewing industry; the most famous brands included Pabst, Schlitz, Miller, and Blatz.\nWhereas half of German immigrants settled in cities, the other half established farms in the Midwest. From Ohio to the Plains states, a heavy presence persists in rural areas into the 21st century.\nDeep South\nFew German immigrants settled in the Deep South, apart from New Orleans, the German Coast, and Texas.\nTexas\nTexas attracted many Germans who entered through Galveston and Indianola, both those who came to farm, and later immigrants who more rapidly took industrial jobs in cities such as Houston. As in Milwaukee, Germans in Houston built the brewing industry. By the 1920s, the first generation of college-educated German Americans were moving into the chemical and oil industries.\nTexas had about 20,000 German Americans in the 1850s. They did not form a uniform bloc, but were highly diverse and drew from geographic areas and all sectors of European society, except that very few aristocrats or upper middle class businessmen arrived. In this regard, Texas Germania was a microcosm of the Germania nationwide."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "b7cfab5df92f40cb97e749a1057688d3", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_prompt": "where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "1_output": [["where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "Immigration to Germany\n\nImmigration to Germany, both in the country's modern borders and the many political entities that preceded it, has occurred throughout the country's history. Today, Germany is one of the most popular destinations for immigrants in the world, with well over 1 million people moving there each year since 2013. As of 2019, around 13.7 million people living in Germany, or about 17% of the population, are first-generation immigrants."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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data/retrieval_individual-b9229914-47bc-4da8-a21b-89329fff8207.jsonl
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{"tstamp": 1722307143.5212, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722307143.3926, "finish": 1722307143.5212, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef28c889daf44e7587446e62092e3d2a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is attention all I need?", "output": [["Is attention all I need?", "Title: Attention Is All You Need\n\nAbstract: The dominant sequence transduction models are based on complex recurrent or convolutional neural networks in an encoder-decoder configuration. The best performing models also connect the encoder and decoder through an attention mechanism. We propose a new simple network architecture, the Transformer, based solely on attention mechanisms, dispensing with recurrence and convolutions entirely. Experiments on two machine translation tasks show these models to be superior in quality while being more parallelizable and requiring significantly less time to train. Our model achieves 28.4 BLEU on the WMT 2014 English-to-German translation task, improving over the existing best results, including ensembles by over 2 BLEU. On the WMT 2014 English-to-French translation task, our model establishes a new single-model state-of-the-art BLEU score of 41.8 after training for 3.5 days on eight GPUs, a small fraction of the training costs of the best models from the literature. We show that the Transformer generalizes well to other tasks by applying it successfully to English constituency parsing both with large and limited training data."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307566.3844, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722307566.1887, "finish": 1722307566.3844, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9deb3465ffd3458081570489c3810813", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "are opened or are open?", "output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307566.3844, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722307566.1887, "finish": 1722307566.3844, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9913e8b8325c4550a0bfb3f5298189d2", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "are opened or are open?", "output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307143.5212, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722307143.3926, "finish": 1722307143.5212, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef28c889daf44e7587446e62092e3d2a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is attention all I need?", "output": [["Is attention all I need?", "Title: Attention Is All You Need\n\nAbstract: The dominant sequence transduction models are based on complex recurrent or convolutional neural networks in an encoder-decoder configuration. The best performing models also connect the encoder and decoder through an attention mechanism. We propose a new simple network architecture, the Transformer, based solely on attention mechanisms, dispensing with recurrence and convolutions entirely. Experiments on two machine translation tasks show these models to be superior in quality while being more parallelizable and requiring significantly less time to train. Our model achieves 28.4 BLEU on the WMT 2014 English-to-German translation task, improving over the existing best results, including ensembles by over 2 BLEU. On the WMT 2014 English-to-French translation task, our model establishes a new single-model state-of-the-art BLEU score of 41.8 after training for 3.5 days on eight GPUs, a small fraction of the training costs of the best models from the literature. We show that the Transformer generalizes well to other tasks by applying it successfully to English constituency parsing both with large and limited training data."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307566.3844, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722307566.1887, "finish": 1722307566.3844, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9deb3465ffd3458081570489c3810813", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "are opened or are open?", "output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722307566.3844, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722307566.1887, "finish": 1722307566.3844, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9913e8b8325c4550a0bfb3f5298189d2", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "are opened or are open?", "output": [["are opened or are open?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are they the same in meaning, the open door and the opened door? What is the difference between \"the open door\" and \"the opened door\"? Are they the same in meaning? Please explain it. Thanks a lot.\n\nA: Open is an adjective. \nOpened is a past participle used as a modifier. \nThe difference in meaning is that open is in contrast to not open. The door could have been open for ten years or a century. It could always be open. \nOpened expands to The \"having been opened\" door...\nThis refers to the action of the door having been opened. The door used to be shut, now it is open. It has been opened. It has not always been open. It could have been opened ten years ago or two seconds ago, but at some point it was closed. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309436.1545, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309435.9519, "finish": 1722309436.1545, "ip": "", "conv_id": "38a0e89319e9427ea9e2b12967ebecca", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "are brake pads supposed to be loose?", "output": [["are brake pads supposed to be loose?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: In Scala, how do I mixin java interfaces into Scala code For example suppose I have\ninterface ICar {...}\nclass Car implements ICar {...}\n\nIn Scala I wish to do\nnew MyScalaClass with ICar\n\nBut use the java implementation of ICar i.e. Car. What is the syntax for doing this?\n\nA: You can use object aggregation, but encapsulating the aggregation in a trait. Suppose you have the following Java code:\ninterface ICar {\n public void brake();\n}\npublic class Car implements ICar {\n public void brake() { System.out.println(\"BRAKE !!!\"); }\n}\n\nThen you can define the following Scala trait:\ntrait HasCar { self: ICar =>\n private val car = new Car\n def brake() = car.brake()\n}\n\nAnd finally you can mix everything you need into your class:\n val c = new MyScalaClass extends ICar with HasCar\n c.brake // prints \"BRAKE !!!\"\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309436.1545, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309435.9519, "finish": 1722309436.1545, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9af9eff85d5f4a178cd5808f666b4e57", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "are brake pads supposed to be loose?", "output": [["are brake pads supposed to be loose?", "Gaming Stackexchange\n\nQ: Brake pedal trouble with Xbox 360 Racing Wheel I have bought a used Microsoft Xbox Racing Wheel and have recently started playing. I have noticed that every time I let go of the gas pedal completely, the braking lights turn on. And when the car eventually stops, it starts backing up in reverse at full speed.\nHas anyone else experienced this? It happens on any game. I also switched pedal sets as I have 2 sets. \n\nA: I had this problem with mine, and it turned out that I needed to change out my batteries. There is a compartment on the steering wheel portion of the setup that opens up when you push a grey button, and that's where the batteries go. I want to say that it's all the way over on the right side of the assembly, but I am not 100% sure, as I do not have it in front of me. It's pretty easy to find, once you know it's up there, though. If you can, use the kind of batteries meant for digital cameras, etc; the wheel draws a bit more juice than a normal XB360 controller.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309446.5042, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309446.2777, "finish": 1722309446.5042, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bc8a08f1718846e58aa907a16ce9620b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "output": [["where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "German Americans\n\nA particularly attractive destination was Milwaukee, which came to be known as \"the German Athens\". Radical Germans trained in politics in the old country dominated the city's Socialists. Skilled workers dominated many crafts, while entrepreneurs created the brewing industry; the most famous brands included Pabst, Schlitz, Miller, and Blatz.\nWhereas half of German immigrants settled in cities, the other half established farms in the Midwest. From Ohio to the Plains states, a heavy presence persists in rural areas into the 21st century.\nDeep South\nFew German immigrants settled in the Deep South, apart from New Orleans, the German Coast, and Texas.\nTexas\nTexas attracted many Germans who entered through Galveston and Indianola, both those who came to farm, and later immigrants who more rapidly took industrial jobs in cities such as Houston. As in Milwaukee, Germans in Houston built the brewing industry. By the 1920s, the first generation of college-educated German Americans were moving into the chemical and oil industries.\nTexas had about 20,000 German Americans in the 1850s. They did not form a uniform bloc, but were highly diverse and drew from geographic areas and all sectors of European society, except that very few aristocrats or upper middle class businessmen arrived. In this regard, Texas Germania was a microcosm of the Germania nationwide."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722309446.5042, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722309446.2777, "finish": 1722309446.5042, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b7cfab5df92f40cb97e749a1057688d3", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "output": [["where did german immigrants settled in the 1800s", "Immigration to Germany\n\nImmigration to Germany, both in the country's modern borders and the many political entities that preceded it, has occurred throughout the country's history. Today, Germany is one of the most popular destinations for immigrants in the world, with well over 1 million people moving there each year since 2013. As of 2019, around 13.7 million people living in Germany, or about 17% of the population, are first-generation immigrants."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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