diff --git a/data/clustering_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl b/data/clustering_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 850bf00c0cc13c482a2f3badfab0cd94373de508..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
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diff --git a/data/clustering_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl b/data/clustering_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 462c0cc161362cb64806404e10023810555cc095..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
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diff --git a/data/clustering_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl b/data/clustering_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 74e1e883285b2ec2e1d3e31a862e3558621b0e18..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
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diff --git a/data/clustering_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl b/data/clustering_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8e7a03036cc4b021c33aefbc698b053c25b9c8db..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
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diff --git a/data/clustering_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl b/data/clustering_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e734117e161bdc1f3d85259d39422f6c7360bd5f..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
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diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8a8e79102e2d48811674b06fa4e47df7fa9b2767..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
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diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index c49c86054840c1ac296a0ba6ad13813f943e8a64..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
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diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 203b13bb060bc6bcdf7030176b59c40facdf961e..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
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diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e065cc80fd958c330bebeb00d25f2af1e740dd1d..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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deleted file mode 100644
index 7db255d8104d6f56a127265ecaba70af23ba0094..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
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index 508df8ee4a7ec6f9f6493a64b39fa8ccd5f0eb71..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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deleted file mode 100644
index 5759d164880aae1d070b31e0c2878759c4b5ab5e..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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deleted file mode 100644
index cb38b38e85d6a5a78020f06cf5ca3f2a43b28746..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
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diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index cb430c7544f6304b827150555b77bf6afa7caa08..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_individual-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl
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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": ""}
-{"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": ""}
diff --git a/data/clustering_individual-fb63ba98-1c91-4ec0-96cc-8001dbf7c68d.jsonl b/data/clustering_individual-fb63ba98-1c91-4ec0-96cc-8001dbf7c68d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 6b322ea712214e499b49b44e3226548bb4e6814b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_individual-fb63ba98-1c91-4ec0-96cc-8001dbf7c68d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/clustering_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl b/data/clustering_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index ce08f1208ec95b5ad71984029adf1f8e6cd1d93f..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/clustering_single_choice-9927ebef-3345-4b49-8ff5-87e890770fc2.jsonl b/data/clustering_single_choice-9927ebef-3345-4b49-8ff5-87e890770fc2.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 55c7bad0010b6e5725f7fc452781f2c85392fb76..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_single_choice-9927ebef-3345-4b49-8ff5-87e890770fc2.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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": ""}
diff --git a/data/clustering_single_choice-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl b/data/clustering_single_choice-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index c93d545ccbb4c7f47607ed21699209bed9fa5e3b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/clustering_single_choice-df3c662b-7d5b-43a4-a868-1314da6c5b9d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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": ""}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index ea5fd9afa37985ad1d08e78a2ac66aa6394e69da..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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\"."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 19a85f1b88616df4771b21d6ffda1601ad0eccf5..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 1dd996d298dbacd4b9e60fd052179e31fbec001f..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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:"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index cb78403de1878f3bc56e75d1e4637266fcbc24d8..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
-{"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.\""]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-3c024354-1f91-4cbd-9efb-98a422340116.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-3c024354-1f91-4cbd-9efb-98a422340116.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index aca277039896b76c10a0ee7c19de7a10187e44da..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-3c024354-1f91-4cbd-9efb-98a422340116.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 6ff781c69ec3262f4b7d400dbd57820c042185c7..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index a824febe3fc1a02d353ec5b285db558296fb4afe..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 11c15aa6a6f6101c7c53052ed5fc86569fe5568d..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index dceac99310fccabd0d9e8e296f767c36f75e21b0..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-635bd7fb-fc6f-41c5-88d8-b40c736ed682.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-635bd7fb-fc6f-41c5-88d8-b40c736ed682.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 57099611cb4a3b3750704283ce8549b62b381505..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-635bd7fb-fc6f-41c5-88d8-b40c736ed682.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-81e097d6-3874-42a8-8b62-4607bc9a913a.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-81e097d6-3874-42a8-8b62-4607bc9a913a.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 04053bd5557b2c88f23a9d2df1f1d61d181a87d5..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-81e097d6-3874-42a8-8b62-4607bc9a913a.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-89a737a2-614f-471a-a683-afe1c34f2a21.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-89a737a2-614f-471a-a683-afe1c34f2a21.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index d87ae69a27a541a10b9bf09ccd42b90e6aba2d49..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-89a737a2-614f-471a-a683-afe1c34f2a21.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-a8a00b73-9704-41ce-89a1-66763bfb6ee2.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-a8a00b73-9704-41ce-89a1-66763bfb6ee2.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index fd4f374530c808d949254f80723cf3b76eeed420..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 7649c9703b545495680ecd8ccf97aa742f3a4123..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11 +0,0 @@
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index b8b0143393b5ef9b9117371e6e9207ec3fdbdbc9..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8de6b83453c2e3adcb295124380551e8734467bb..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index b6f38490b2dcd83aeef448bc23fa207ee213b83f..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_battle-f1980055-2f53-4936-815c-00e216a90a0f.jsonl b/data/retrieval_battle-f1980055-2f53-4936-815c-00e216a90a0f.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 3f969fcea2a3643d9742ece0b0d9974dc21934c4..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_battle-f1980055-2f53-4936-815c-00e216a90a0f.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-04b41a16-8446-4c25-b993-5f682d3e6561.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-04b41a16-8446-4c25-b993-5f682d3e6561.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 9f1fcd6b50e782be3d7f8d3f6c61e0186b3c11fd..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-04b41a16-8446-4c25-b993-5f682d3e6561.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-07382a20-4ab0-48ff-b6a9-d0e108ae5043.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-07382a20-4ab0-48ff-b6a9-d0e108ae5043.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index a9630b8074ce1fa90941e9b3eb02d75b903d47ce..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-07382a20-4ab0-48ff-b6a9-d0e108ae5043.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-073afe0e-f34e-497a-b29b-b191cd43aabe.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-073afe0e-f34e-497a-b29b-b191cd43aabe.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index f500f887f441544e6240fa438e0ef6d6ad6eb5d4..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-073afe0e-f34e-497a-b29b-b191cd43aabe.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 267efc97b98552090c6831dfd1066b11498104a1..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,30 +0,0 @@
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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\"."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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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-{"tstamp": 1721254001.9431, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721253949.6154, "finish": 1721254001.9431, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b6baeb45c43c49fd8d74610db35fbb9b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who was the spanish civil war fought between", "output": [["who was the spanish civil war fought between", "Title: Spanish Civil War\n\nPassage: The Spanish Civil War () was a military conflict fought from 1936 to 1939 between the Republicans and the Nationalists. Republicans were loyal to the left-leaning Popular Front government of the Second Spanish Republic, and consisted of various socialist, communist, separatist, anarchist, and republican parties, some of which had opposed the government in the pre-war period. The opposing Nationalists were an alliance of Falangists, monarchists, conservatives, and traditionalists led by a military junta among whom General Francisco Franco quickly achieved a preponderant role. Due to the international political climate at the time, the war had many facets and was variously viewed as class struggle, a religious struggle, a struggle between dictatorship and republican democracy, between revolution and counterrevolution, and between fascism and communism. According to Claude Bowers, U.S. ambassador to Spain during the war, it was the \"dress rehearsal\" for World War II. The Nationalists won the war, which ended in early 1939, and ruled Spain until Franco's death in November 1975.\nThe war began after the partial failure of the coup d'\u00e9tat of July 1936 against the Republican government by a group of generals of the Spanish Republican Armed Forces, with General Emilio Mola as the primary planner and leader and General Jos\u00e9 Sanjurjo as a figurehead. The government at the time was a coalition of Republicans, supported in the Cortes by communist and socialist parties, under the leadership of centre-left president Manuel Aza\u00f1a. The Nationalist faction was supported by several conservative groups, including CEDA, monarchists, including both the opposing Alfonsists and the religious conservative Carlists, and the Falange Espa\u00f1ola de las JONS, a fascist political party. After the deaths of Sanjurjo, Emilio Mola, and Manuel Goded Llopis, Franco emerged as the remaining leader of the Nationalist side.\nThe coup was supported by military units in Morocco, Pamplona, Burgos, Zaragoza, Valladolid, C\u00e1diz, C\u00f3rdoba, M\u00e1laga, and Seville. However, rebelling units in almost all important cities\u2014such as Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Bilbao, Murcia, and Almer\u00eda\u2014did not gain control. Those cities remained in the hands of the government, leaving Spain militarily and politically divided. The Nationalists and the Republican government fought for control of the country. The Nationalist forces received munitions, soldiers, and air support from Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and Portugal, while the Republican side received support from the Soviet Union and Mexico. Other countries, such as the United Kingdom, France, and the United States, continued to recognise the Republican government but followed an official policy of non-intervention. Despite this policy, tens of thousands of citizens from non-interventionist countries directly participated in the conflict. They fought mostly in the pro-Republican International Brigades, which also included several thousand exiles from pro-Nationalist regimes."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254001.9431, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721253949.6154, "finish": 1721254001.9431, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0a31d83f0ba04241895b15baf06d4ef2", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who was the spanish civil war fought between", "output": [["who was the spanish civil war fought between", "Title: Spanish Civil War\n\nPassage: The Spanish Civil War () was a military conflict fought from 1936 to 1939 between the Republicans and the Nationalists. Republicans were loyal to the left-leaning Popular Front government of the Second Spanish Republic, and consisted of various socialist, communist, separatist, anarchist, and republican parties, some of which had opposed the government in the pre-war period. The opposing Nationalists were an alliance of Falangists, monarchists, conservatives, and traditionalists led by a military junta among whom General Francisco Franco quickly achieved a preponderant role. Due to the international political climate at the time, the war had many facets and was variously viewed as class struggle, a religious struggle, a struggle between dictatorship and republican democracy, between revolution and counterrevolution, and between fascism and communism. According to Claude Bowers, U.S. ambassador to Spain during the war, it was the \"dress rehearsal\" for World War II. The Nationalists won the war, which ended in early 1939, and ruled Spain until Franco's death in November 1975.\nThe war began after the partial failure of the coup d'\u00e9tat of July 1936 against the Republican government by a group of generals of the Spanish Republican Armed Forces, with General Emilio Mola as the primary planner and leader and General Jos\u00e9 Sanjurjo as a figurehead. The government at the time was a coalition of Republicans, supported in the Cortes by communist and socialist parties, under the leadership of centre-left president Manuel Aza\u00f1a. The Nationalist faction was supported by several conservative groups, including CEDA, monarchists, including both the opposing Alfonsists and the religious conservative Carlists, and the Falange Espa\u00f1ola de las JONS, a fascist political party. After the deaths of Sanjurjo, Emilio Mola, and Manuel Goded Llopis, Franco emerged as the remaining leader of the Nationalist side.\nThe coup was supported by military units in Morocco, Pamplona, Burgos, Zaragoza, Valladolid, C\u00e1diz, C\u00f3rdoba, M\u00e1laga, and Seville. However, rebelling units in almost all important cities\u2014such as Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Bilbao, Murcia, and Almer\u00eda\u2014did not gain control. Those cities remained in the hands of the government, leaving Spain militarily and politically divided. The Nationalists and the Republican government fought for control of the country. The Nationalist forces received munitions, soldiers, and air support from Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and Portugal, while the Republican side received support from the Soviet Union and Mexico. Other countries, such as the United Kingdom, France, and the United States, continued to recognise the Republican government but followed an official policy of non-intervention. Despite this policy, tens of thousands of citizens from non-interventionist countries directly participated in the conflict. They fought mostly in the pro-Republican International Brigades, which also included several thousand exiles from pro-Nationalist regimes."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254158.0222, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254099.8369, "finish": 1721254158.0222, "ip": "", "conv_id": "55e351cdf26b46dea81ca28c1e0b0ffe", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "when was the last time tug-of-war was an official olympic sport", "output": [["when was the last time tug-of-war was an official olympic sport", "Title: Tug of war at the 1904 Summer Olympics\n\nPassage: Background\nTug of war was first held during the 1900 Olympics, when it was won by a mixed team from Scandinavia, featuring three Danish and three Swedish athletes. For the 1904 games in St. Louis, six teams entered. Four of the teams were representing the host nation, the United States, while there were also teams from Greece and South Africa. For the United States, the Milwaukee Athletic Club entered a team, the Southwest Turnverein of St. Louis entered two teams, and the New York Athletic Club were the final entrant. A team from the Pan-Hellenic Athletic Club represented Greece, while South Africa was represented by the Boer Team. The contests were held on turf ground with no shoes on, over a period of five minutes. If within that five minutes, a team succeeded in pulling the other team across a line from their starting position, they were deemed to win. Otherwise, the team that had pulled their opponents closest to the line after five minutes would be the winner. Three local judges were selected to officiate in the competition; Clark Hetherington of the University of Missouri, and John Meyers and Myles McDonough, both of St. Louis.\nResults\nAugust 30 was the first day of the tug-of-war competition, with the two quarterfinal matches and the first semi-final match (between the two teams who had byes in the quarterfinals) being held. The rest of the competition was conducted on 1 September.\nQuarterfinals\nLosers were eliminated.\nSemifinals\nThe losers were sent to the repechage to face each other: the winner would face the loser of the final for second place.\nFinal\nThe winner received the gold medal, while the loser had to face the winner of the repechage in the silver medal match.\nSilver medal semifinal\nThe winner of this match faced the loser of the final for the silver medal.\nSilver and bronze medal matches\nThe New York team failed to appear for either the silver medal match or the bronze medal match: both matches were scratched, with the silver medal being awarded to the Saint Louis No. 1 team and the bronze medal being awarded to the Saint Louis No. 2 team.\nFinal standings\nParticipating nations\n6 teams of 5, for a total of 30 athletes, competed. The host team had four teams, and two other nations each sent one.\nRosters\nMilwaukee Athletic Club\nPatrick Flanagan Sidney Johnson Oscar Olson Conrad Magnusson Henry Seiling\nSouthwest Turnverein of St. Louis No. 1\nMax Braun August Rodenberg Charles Rose William Seiling Orrin Upshaw\nSouthwest Turnverein of St. Louis No. 2\nOscar Friede Charles Haberkorn Harry Jacobs Frank Kugler (GER) Charles Thias\nNew York Athletic Club\nCharles Chadwick Charles Dieges Lawrence Feuerbach Sam Jones Jim Mitchel\nBoer Team\nPieter Hillense Pieter Lombard Johannes Schutte Paulus Visser Christopher Walker\nPan-Hellenic Athletic Club\nDimitrios Dimitrakopoulos Nikolaos Georgantas Anastasios Georgopoulos Periklis Kakousis Vasilios Metalos\nMedal table"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254158.0222, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254099.8369, "finish": 1721254158.0222, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a341a062966489081f563c584b3bb5a", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when was the last time tug-of-war was an official olympic sport", "output": [["when was the last time tug-of-war was an official olympic sport", "Title: Edgar Aabye\n\nPassage: Edgar Lindenau Aabye (14 September 1865 \u2013 30 April 1941) was a Danish athlete and journalist who earned a gold medal in the tug of war at the age of 34\t in the 1900 Summer Olympics in Paris, France, after joining the team as a last-minute substitute.\nAabye was an accomplished athlete who had previously won a Danish championship in swimming (1896) and been a competitor in rowing and cycling. Aabye joined the team which then competed in the only tug-of-war contest, defeating the French team for the gold medal. Initially, Aabye was not a member of the tug-of-war team but was working at the Paris Olympics as a journalist for the Politiken newspaper. When a member of the combined Dano-Swedish tug of war team was injured, the team asked Aabye to fill in as a last-minute substitute.\nHe was the nation's first sports journalist as he worked for the broadsheet Politiken from 1892 until 1935. He had previously studied theology and taught history and geography at a middle school."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254198.2724, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254172.0998, "finish": 1721254198.2724, "ip": "", "conv_id": "94fdf8c6fa744b55a41808054e10552c", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "which is one effect of the team halo effect", "output": [["which is one effect of the team halo effect", "Title: Team\n\nPassage: The other line of inquiry focused on measuring the \u2018effectiveness\u2019 of teams. Writers such as Deihl and Stroebe (1987), Gersik (1988), Evenden and Anderson (1992), Furnham et al. (1993), Cohen and Ledford (1994) and Katzenbach (1998) were concerned with high performing teams and the objective measurement of their effectiveness. McFadzean (2002) believed that the appearance of a number of models of team effectiveness was indicative of a variety of variables such as personality, group size, work norms, status relationships, group structure etc. that can impact on team \u2018effectiveness\u2019 and its measurement.\nDavid Cooperrider suggests that the larger the group, the better. This is because a larger group is able to address concerns of the whole system. So while a large team may be ineffective at performing a given task, Cooperider says that the relevance of that task should be considered, because determining whether the team is effective first requires identifying what needs to be accomplished.\nRegarding composition, all teams will have an element of homogeneity and heterogeneity. The more homogeneous the group, the more cohesive it will be. The more heterogeneous the group, the greater the differences in perspective and increased potential for creativity, but also the greater potential for conflict.\nTeam members normally have different roles, like team leader and agents. Large teams can divide into subteams according to need.\nMany teams go through a life-cycle of stages, identified by Bruce Tuckman as: forming, storming, norming, performing and adjourning.\nTeam cognition\nTeam cognition has been defined as an \"emergent state that refers to the manner in which knowledge important to team functioning is organized, represented, and distributed within team.\" This emergent state can manifest in two ways. Compositional emergence occurs when individual level cognition is similar in form and function to its manifestation at team-level. Compilational emergence, on the other hand, represents a greater degree of synergy among team members and represents a new-team level construct. As such, higher degrees of compilational emergence are more closely related to team process and performance than is compositional emergence.\nResearch into team cognition has focused on how teams develop mental models and transactive memory systems. Mental models refer to the degree in which team members have similar cognitive understanding of the situation and performance goals which include shared representations of the task. Transactive memory systems relate to how knowledge is distributed among team members and retrieved in a coordinated fashion, the way that team member rely on knowledge that is possessed by other members and how knowledge sets are differentiated within a team. The emergence of team cognition is thought to impact team effectiveness because it can positively affect a team's behavioural process, motivational states, and performance.\nTeam cognition consists of two broad types of content. Task related models are related to knowledge of the major duties and resources possessed by the team. Team-related models refer to interactions and interdependence among the team members.\nTeam effectiveness"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254198.2724, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254172.0998, "finish": 1721254198.2724, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0e846b3f7cfd489ca5088115aa8de579", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "which is one effect of the team halo effect", "output": [["which is one effect of the team halo effect", "Title: Ringelmann effect\n\nPassage: Increase involvement: Another option to reduce social loafing is to simply increase how involved group members are with the task or goal at hand. This can be achieved by turning the task into a friendly competition between group members, or attach rewards or punishment to the task, contingent on the performance of the group as a whole (Forsyth, 2006). In a similar vein, loafing can also be prevented by convincing individual group members that the goal at hand is important, but that their colleagues are unmotivated to reach this goal, in a process called social compensation (Forsyth, 2006).\nLoss of coordination\nWhen individuals come together in groups to perform a task, their performance depends on their individual resources (e.g., talents, skills, effort) and the various interpersonal processes at work within the group. Even if group members possess the abilities and expertise required to complete an assigned task, they may fail to coordinate their efforts in a productive way. For example, hockey fans may feel that a particular team has the best chances of winning simply because the team is composed of all-star players. However, in reality, if the members of the team are not able to effectively synchronize their actions during game play, the team\u2019s overall performance will likely suffer. According to Steiner (1972), coordination problems between group members are a function of the demands of the tasks to be performed. If a task is unitary (i.e., cannot be broken into subtasks for individual members), requires output maximization to be successful (i.e., a high rate of production quantity), and requires interdependence among members to yield a group product, the potential performance of a group relies on members\u2019 abilities to coordinate with one another.\nEmpirical support\nSubsequent research has aided the further development of the Ringelmann effect theory. Most notably, Ingham, Levinger, Graves, and Peckham (1974) discovered that group members continue to exhibit reductions in rope-pulling force even after being placed in pseudo-groups (i.e., groups composed of confederates and one, true participant). In their study, Ingham et al. (1974) directed confederates to pretend to pull on a rope by faking exertion, suggesting to the real participant that all members were working together. What proves of interest here is that because there was virtually no coordination between the participant and the confederates (they were not physically taking part in the actions), poor communication cannot account for the decrease in effort. Therefore, Ingham et al. (1974) support the assertion that motivational losses largely determine an individual\u2019s decline in performance when acting as a member of a group.\nIn addition, research has shown that participants who have previous experience in a team sport may not show the Ringelmann effect."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254217.0115, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254216.5084, "finish": 1721254217.0115, "ip": "", "conv_id": "46bcdffaa9c14b75a3766d093df3b1a8", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "who took over the dutch colony in north america", "output": [["who took over the dutch colony in north america", "Title: History of the Netherlands\n\nPassage: The colony was a private business venture to exploit the fur trade in beaver pelts. New Netherland was slowly settled during its first decades, partially as a result of policy mismanagement by the Dutch West India Company (WIC), and conflicts with Native Americans. During the 1650s, the colony experienced dramatic growth and became a major port for trade in the Atlantic World, tolerating a highly diverse ethnic mix. The surrender of Fort Amsterdam to the British control in 1664 was formalized in 1667, contributing to the Second Anglo\u2013Dutch War. In 1673 the Dutch re-took the area, but later relinquished it under the 5 April 1674 Treaty of Westminster ending the Third Anglo-Dutch War.\nDescendants of the original settlers played a prominent role in the history of the United States, as typified by the Roosevelt and Vanderbilt families. The Hudson Valley still boasts a Dutch heritage. The concepts of civil liberties and pluralism introduced in the province became mainstays of American political and social life.\nSlave trade\nAlthough slavery was illegal inside the Netherlands it flourished in the Dutch Empire, and helped support the economy. In 1619 The Netherlands took the lead in building large-scale slave trading between Africa and Virginia, by 1650 becoming the pre-eminent slave trading country in Europe. It was overtaken by Britain around 1700. Historians agree that in all the Dutch shipped about 550,000 African slaves across the Atlantic, about 75,000 of whom died on board before reaching their destinations. From 1596 to 1829, the Dutch traders sold 250,000 slaves in the Dutch Guianas, 142,000 in the Dutch Caribbean islands, and 28,000 in Dutch Brazil. In addition, tens of thousands of slaves, mostly from India and some from Africa, were carried to the Dutch East Indies and slaves from the East Indies to Africa and the West Indies.\nThe Dutch in Asia: The Dutch East India Company\nThe Dutch East India Company (also called the VOC) emerged in 1602, when the government gave it a monopoly to trade with Asia, mainly to Mughal India. It had many world firsts\u2014the first multinational corporation, the first company to issue stock, and the first megacorporation, possessing quasi-governmental powers, including the ability to wage war, negotiate treaties, coin money, and establish colonial settlements."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254217.0115, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254216.5084, "finish": 1721254217.0115, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c9e72cde94a2407fa53fec79578d1ebf", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who took over the dutch colony in north america", "output": [["who took over the dutch colony in north america", "Title: New Amsterdam\n\nPassage: In 1661, the Communipaw ferry was founded and began a long history of trans-Hudson ferry and ultimately rail and road transportation.\nIn 1664, Jan van Bonnel built a Saw mill on East 74th Street and the East River, where a long stream that began in the north of today's Central Park, which became known as the Saw Kill or Saw Kill Creek, emptied into the river. Later owners of the property George Elphinstone and Abraham Shotwell replaced the sawmill with a leather mill in 1677. The Saw Kill was later redirected into a culvert, arched over, and its trickling little stream was called Arch Brook.\nEnglish capture\nOn August 27, 1664, while England and the Dutch Republic were at peace, four English frigates sailed into New Amsterdam's harbor and demanded New Netherland's surrender, effecting the bloodless capture of New Amsterdam. On September 6, the local Dutch deciding not to offer resistance, Stuyvesant's lawyer Johannes de Decker and five other delegates signed the official Articles of Surrender of New Netherland. This was swiftly followed by the Second Anglo-Dutch War, between England and the Dutch Republic. In June 1665, New Amsterdam was reincorporated under English law as New York City, named after the Duke of York (later King James II). He was the brother of King Charles II, who had been granted the lands.\nIn 1667, the Treaty of Breda ended the conflict in favor of the Dutch. The Dutch did not press their claims on New Netherland but did demand control over the valuable sugar plantations and factories captured by them that year on the coast of Surinam, giving them full control over the coast of what is now Guyana and Suriname.\nOn 9 August 1673 (N.S.; 30 July 1673 (O.S.)), during the Third Anglo-Dutch War, the Dutch quickly but briefly retook the colony of New Netherland, which the English called \"New York\", with a combined fleet of a squadron of ships from Amsterdam and a squadron of ships from Zeeland. The commanders were Jacob Benckes (Koudum, 1637\u20131677) and Cornelis Evertsen de Jongste (Vlissingen, 1642\u20131706) under instruction of the States General of the Dutch Republic. Anthony Colve was installed as the first Dutch governor of the province. Previously there had only been West India Company Directors and a Director-General.\nAmidst the recapture, New York City would be again renamed, this time to New Orange. However, after the signing of the Treaty of Westminster in February 1674, both the Dutch territories were relinquished to the English. With the effective transfer of control on 10 November 1674 (N.S.), the names New Netherland and New Orange reverted to the English versions of \"New York\" and \"New York City\", respectively. Suriname became an official Dutch possession in return.\nCartography"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254257.8577, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254221.3953, "finish": 1721254257.8577, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d6f0aed001c646e49534ceb5122afaf1", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what is the meaning of the name gomez", "output": [["what is the meaning of the name gomez", "Title: Mariano Gomez\n\nPassage: Mariano Gomez or Mariano G\u00f3mez may refer to:\nMariano Gomez (priest) (1799-1872), Filipino Catholic priest\nMariano G\u00f3mez (footballer) (born 1999), Spanish footballer"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254257.8577, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254221.3953, "finish": 1721254257.8577, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0e27e98a5748495a8b6c4a014d39e2b6", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "what is the meaning of the name gomez", "output": [["what is the meaning of the name gomez", "Title: G\u00f3mez Ortega\n\nPassage: G\u00f3mez Ortega is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:\nCasimiro G\u00f3mez Ortega (1741\u20131818), Spanish physician and botanist\nJos\u00e9 G\u00f3mez Ortega (1895\u20131920), Spanish bullfighter\nRafael G\u00f3mez Ortega (1882\u20131960), Spanish bullfighter, brother of Jos\u00e9"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254303.0274, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254264.7154, "finish": 1721254303.0274, "ip": "", "conv_id": "80ae215b89aa4fb1bf6ef5b56646f30f", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "explain what happens to the extra quarter of a day each calendar year", "output": [["explain what happens to the extra quarter of a day each calendar year", "Title: Leap year\n\nPassage: A leap year (also known as an intercalary year or bissextile year) is a calendar year that contains an additional day (or, in the case of a lunisolar calendar, a month) compared to a common year. The 366th day (or 13th month) is added to keep the calendar year synchronised with the astronomical year or seasonal year. Since astronomical events and seasons do not repeat in a whole number of days, calendars having a constant number of days each year will unavoidably drift over time with respect to the event that the year is supposed to track, such as seasons. By inserting (\"intercalating\") an additional day\u2014a leap day\u2014or month\u2014a leap month\u2014into some years, the drift between a civilization's dating system and the physical properties of the Solar System can be corrected."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721254303.0274, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721254264.7154, "finish": 1721254303.0274, "ip": "", "conv_id": "64b6ee2d5f9a4a74ac54cb3c49fc30cf", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "explain what happens to the extra quarter of a day each calendar year", "output": [["explain what happens to the extra quarter of a day each calendar year", "Title: 4\u20134\u20135 calendar\n\nPassage: The 4\u20134\u20135 calendar is a method of managing accounting periods, and is a common calendar structure for some industries such as retail and manufacturing. It divides a year into four quarters of 13 weeks, each grouped into two 4-week \"months\" and one 5-week \"month\". The longer \"month\" may be set as the first (5\u20134\u20134), second (4\u20135\u20134), or third (4\u20134\u20135) unit.\nIts major advantage over a regular calendar is that each period is the same length and ends on the same day of the week, which is useful for planning manufacturing or work shifts.\nA disadvantage is that comparisons or trend analysis by \"month\" are flawed, as one month is 25% longer than the other two (whereas comparisons between weeks or to the same \"month\" in the previous year are still useful).\nAnother disadvantage is that the 4\u20134\u20135 calendar has only 364 days (7 days x 52 weeks), meaning a 53rd week must be added every five or six years: this can make year-on-year comparison difficult.\n52\u201353-week fiscal year"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273726.3948, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273705.643, "finish": 1721273726.3948, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7249d5f6ce244604989eb047e097d3ad", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where do the maple leafs play hockey in toronto", "output": [["where do the maple leafs play hockey in toronto", "Title: List of Toronto Maple Leafs general managers\n\nPassage: The Toronto Maple Leafs are a professional ice hockey team based in Toronto, Ontario. They are members of the Atlantic Division in the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL) and are known as one of the Original Six teams of the league. Founded in 1917, the club had no nickname in their first season, and were known as the Toronto Arenas for their second season. From the 1919\u201320 season they were known as the Toronto St. Patricks, until in February 1927 when the club was purchased by Conn Smythe. Smythe changed the name of the club to the Maple Leafs and they have been known by that name ever since. The franchise has had eighteen general managers since their inception.\nKey\nGeneral managers"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273726.3948, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273705.643, "finish": 1721273726.3948, "ip": "", "conv_id": "09749638af8f42c4a1eb4199e14a3257", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "where do the maple leafs play hockey in toronto", "output": [["where do the maple leafs play hockey in toronto", "Title: Sports in Toronto\n\nPassage: Ice hockey\nThe city is known for the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League, a team with passionate support in the city, and the most financially successful sports franchise in the country. The team built Maple Leaf Gardens, a sporting venue which served as the home arena for the Maple Leafs, and was also used for cultural and other events. Since 1999, they have played in the Scotiabank Arena (initially referred to as the Air Canada Centre). The team's roots stretch back to the Toronto Blueshirts of the National Hockey Association, the predecessor to the NHL. The NHA was founded in 1909 without any teams from Toronto. In 1911, the Arena Gardens was being built and Ambrose O'Brien, who had operated four NHA franchises but decided to get out of the business, sold two of his franchises to Toronto-based groups. The Toronto Hockey Club purchased one, which would become known as the Blueshirts, and a second was sold to a group affiliated with the Tecumseh Lacrosse Club for $500 cash and promissory notes for $2,000 which would be called the Toronto Tecumsehs. They were scheduled to begin play in the 1911\u201312 season, but construction delays led to the two Toronto teams being dropped from the schedule and they instead began play in 1912\u201313.\nAfter a year of play, the Tecumsehs were sold and renamed the Toronto Ontarios. The following year the team was purchased by Eddie Livingstone, who renamed them the Toronto Shamrocks in January 1915. Later that year, Livingstone purchased the Blueshirts giving him ownership of two NHA teams, but after the Pacific Coast Hockey Association raids left him with only enough players for one team, he transferred Shamrocks players to the Blueshirts and only the Blueshirts competed in the 1915\u201316 NHA season. When Livingstone failed to sell the Shamrocks, the NHA seized the franchise, which was left dormant for the year before being reactivated in 1916\u201317, awarding it to a Canadian military team, the Toronto 228th Battalion. When the regiment was ordered overseas in February 1917, the team was forced to withdraw. That left the NHA with an odd number of teams, and as a result, the team owners, who wanted Livingstone out of the league, decided to suspend operations of the Blueshirts for the remainder of the season. Following the end of the season, Toronto was reinstated, with the condition that the club was to be sold within 60 days. However, Livingstone obtained a court order to prevent the sale."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273782.986, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273763.877, "finish": 1721273782.986, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6512b2770367418ea93bb09e849acd99", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where is the battle of britain flight based", "output": [["where is the battle of britain flight based", "Title: Battle of Britain Memorial Flight\n\nPassage: Spitfires\nIndividual aircraft have historic heritages; the oldest of the Spitfires, P7350 (G-AWIJ), is a Mk.IIa, which originally flew in the Battle of Britain in 1940, with No. 266 (Rhodesia) Squadron RAF and 603 (City of Edinburgh) Squadron AAF. It was also used by No. 64 Squadron RAF and No. 616 Squadron RAF. In 2019 she was repainted in the No. 54 Squadron code 'KL-B', which represents the aircraft flown by Al Deere from 10 July 1940 until 31 August 1940.\nThe Mk Vb Spitfire, AB910, built in 1941 escorted convoys in the Battle of the Atlantic. She then flew escort patrols during bombing raids on the German battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, then (as part of No. 133 (Eagle) Squadron), she fought in the Dieppe Raid. Capping this long career, as part of No. 402 Squadron RCAF, she flew cover patrols over the Normandy beaches on D-Day and in the subsequent weeks \u2013 as did another of the flight's Spitfires, with No. 443 Squadron RCAF. As of August 2018, AB910 was adorned with the D-Day colour scheme of Flight Lieutenant Tony Cooper's 64 Squadron Mk Vb 'SH-F' (BM327) \"PeterJohn1\" (named after his new-born son).\nThe Mk LFIXe Spitfire, MK356, was built in March 1944 and fitted with a Merlin 66 engine with a two-speed, two-stage supercharger optimised for low altitudes. Allocated to the Royal Canadian Air Force (RCAF) No. 144 Wing, based in various locations around southern England, she took part in the Rodeo fighter sweep over occupied France in the weeks leading up to D-Day. After the war she served as a gate guardian at Hawkinge and Locking, and was recovered and refurbished in 1992 for the BBMF. From 2017 she was displayed in a desert paint scheme used by No. 92 (East India) Squadron in Tunisia in 1943. The aircraft crashed in 2024, killing the pilot.\nThere are also two PRXIX Spitfires, both built in 1945 with Griffon 66 engines. PM631 was too late to see operational services in the Second World War and carried out civilian duties with the Temperature and Humidity Monitoring Flight (THUM) at RAF Woodvale until 11 July 1957, when she became part of the Historic Aircraft Flight; she is the longest-serving aircraft in the BBMF and is currently painted in her original PR Blue markings last worn in 1957.\nPS915 was operated by No. 541 Squadron RAF and performed various reconnaissance duties at RAF Wunstorf in Germany. She returned to the UK in 1954 and was retired to gate guarding duties. In 1987 she was modified with a Griffon 58 engine and refurbished to flying condition by British Aerospace. She currently carries the markings of PS888 of 81 Squadron based at Seletar, Singapore, during the Malayan Emergency which conducted the last operational RAF Spitfire sortie on 1 April 1954, photographing communist guerrilla hideouts over an area of jungle in Johore. The ground crew painted the inscription \"The Last!\" on PS915's left engine cowling."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273782.986, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273763.877, "finish": 1721273782.986, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2330815ce75d44f9b123f2b39fd2c434", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where is the battle of britain flight based", "output": [["where is the battle of britain flight based", "Title: Battle of Britain Memorial Flight\n\nPassage: The Battle of Britain Memorial Flight (BBMF) is a Royal Air Force flight which provides an aerial display group usually comprising an Avro Lancaster heavy bomber and two fighters, a Supermarine Spitfire and a Hawker Hurricane. The aircraft are regularly seen at events commemorating the Second World War and upon British State occasions, notably Trooping the Colour, celebrating Queen Elizabeth II's 80th birthday in 2006, and the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton in 2011, and at air displays throughout the United Kingdom and Europe.\nThe flight is administratively part of No. 1 Group (Air Combat) RAF, operating out of RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire, England.\nAircraft history\nAlthough usually seen flying in a formation of three, the Lancaster flanked by a fighter on each wing, the BBMF comprises a total of 12 aircraft:\n1 Avro Lancaster\n6 Supermarine Spitfires\n2 Hawker Hurricanes\n1 Douglas Dakota\n2 de Havilland Canada DHC-1 Chipmunks"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273791.2693, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273791.0946, "finish": 1721273791.2693, "ip": "", "conv_id": "153e1e06ccf54beea60a800eb9b25eec", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "do you have to have a gun permit to shoot at a range", "output": [["do you have to have a gun permit to shoot at a range", "Title: Overview of gun laws by nation\n\nPassage: Poland\nGun ownership in Poland is regulated by the Weapons and Munitions Act of 1999 as further amended. A permit is required to own or possess firearms. Permits are granted for specific purposes, such as self-defense, sport, hunting, collecting etc. and are except the ones for self-defense, which are . Institutional permits allow for firearm ownership by private security companies, shooting ranges, sport clubs etc.\nPermits are issued to permanent residents over 21, not addicted to alcohol or other substances, having no criminal record, being in good physical and mental health, who passed an exam before sporting association, hunting association or the Police. Permits specify the purposes, categories and quantities of allowed guns; categories depend on permit purpose while quantities are assigned at the discretion of the Police, based on documentation provided. Quantities can be increased when one uses up all available slots.\nCarrying loaded guns is allowed on all types of permits except permits for collecting and memorial purposes. Hunters can carry loaded only on hunting grounds. Guns shall be carried concealed in a holster close to the body. Carrying in public transport is limited only to self-defense permit holders. It is prohibited to carry while intoxicated, and when attending public gatherings or mass events.\nEveryone, including foreigners, is allowed to use legal guns at registered shooting ranges, regardless of actual gun's ownership, e.g. rented from the range or shared by a legal owner present. Discharging a firearm for training or leisure out of a registered shooting range (even on a large private property) is prohibited.\nFull-auto or select-fire firearms are permitted only on institutional and training permits. Since 2020 the Police can issue permits for firearms with suppressors for hunting, but only to be used for sanitary shootings, see main article for details. Armor-piercing, incendiary, tracer and other special ammunition is banned. Only valid permit holders are allowed to buy or possess live ammunition, and only of the types exactly matching the guns they legally own. The quantity of matching ammunition in possession is not limited. Hunters, collectors and sport shooters are allowed to manufacture (reload) ammunition, but strictly for their own use. There are further limits regarding allowed types and calibers depending on the purpose of the permit \u2013 see main article for details. There are no limits of magazine capacity, except when hunting."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273791.2693, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273791.0946, "finish": 1721273791.2693, "ip": "", "conv_id": "acf45d822578466bb7f3012aeaa742b7", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "do you have to have a gun permit to shoot at a range", "output": [["do you have to have a gun permit to shoot at a range", "Title: Overview of gun laws by nation\n\nPassage: A hunting license permits the over-the-counter-purchase and ownership of an unlimited number of shotguns of up to 12 gauge and two-round capacity. From there, the police has to be notified of new weapon purchases through an online form. Bolt-action rifles can also be bought over-the-counter, although they require a rifle license which is obtained through the police. The allowed calibers range from the smallest possible, up to .50 BMG, with .50 BMG not included. Semi-automatic rifles are allowed if the rifle is limited to two rounds (hunting in Denmark), or without limitation on capacity (hunting outside of Denmark). Currently, only larger calibers (.308, 6.555, .300wm etc.) are issued as semi-auto rifles for hunting abroad. .223/5.5645 and similar caliber rifles are generally not approved. The hunter must pass a shotgun or rifle shooting test before being allowed to hunt.\nFor sport-shooting purposes, shotguns can also be used, as can bolt-action rifles of almost any caliber (.50 BMG as one of the exceptions). Sporting rifles are often chambered in .22 LR and 6.555\u00a0mm.\nSemi-automatic rifles are not allowed for sports shooting.\nHandguns: After two years of active membership in a shooting club, one can apply for a handgun permit which is then subject to background checks and approval by the police, and one has to be 21 years old.\nApproved calibers: All calibers under 9mm (919, .38 special, .357 magnum, .32 ACP, etc.), plus a limited number of larger calibers; .40 S&W, .45 ACP, .44 special. The maximum number of handguns are six in .22 caliber. When applying for a third gun, a special permit from the department of justice is required. Large caliber guns, i.e. bigger than .22 caliber, are restricted to a maximum of two in the same caliber. Therefore, one can only own two handguns in 9\u00a0mm at any given time. However, it is legal to own an additional two handguns in 9\u00a0mm, if these are revolvers. For all handguns, the overall length must be at least , regardless of caliber, measured without orthopedic grips or removal parts.\nA weapon permit for sporting purposes (both long and short firearms) has to be renewed every five years. Rifle permits for hunting rifles have to be renewed every 10 years. Shotguns are not held on individual permits; holders are allowed to own these as long as they have a valid hunting license \u2013 and they can keep it for up to 10 years after the hunting license expires \u2013 albeit they are not allowed to keep ammunition without a valid license.\nCarrying a firearm in public is strictly prohibited, however, a notion of proportional self-defense exists. This means that if someone is attacked with a firearm, they are legally allowed to defend themselves proportionally \u2013 e.g. with a firearm of their own."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273808.1339, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273807.8622, "finish": 1721273808.1339, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6119c6bf67ca4b708f68aeb296784530", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who plays the dad in drake and josh", "output": [["who plays the dad in drake and josh", "Title: List of Drake & Josh characters\n\nPassage: Josh Nichols\nJosh Nichols (Josh Peck) is Drake and Megan's stepbrother, Walter's biological son and Audrey's stepson. Unlike Drake, Josh is knowledgeable, diligent, caring, responsible, a good hard-working student and socially awkward. In the pilot episode, he had a job for the school newspaper in which he wrote advice for students under the name Miss Nancy. He begins working for Helen at the fictional Premiere movie theater in the second season. Unlike Drake, Josh often tries his best in challenging situations, takes things seriously, feels resourceful if he makes mistakes, and uses his common sense, often repeating things for emphasis when anxious. Despite his logical mind and hard-working nature, Josh is prone to bad luck in the first seasons, especially with girls. However, later in the series he begins to date Mindy Crenshaw, his academic rival. His hobbies include cooking and performing magic tricks. Later in the series, Josh becomes popular and has better luck as he loses weight. He is obsessed with Oprah Winfrey and accidentally runs her over with his car in \"Josh Runs into Oprah,\" leading her to get a brief restraining order against him. Peck described his character as having a Jackie Gleason quality, and said, \"Not only can Josh do the physical comedy and the pratfalls, but he can also sell a sophisticated joke and a touching moment.\" His character is similar to that of Joey Gladstone and Danny Tanner from Full House for his maturity and responsibility.\nAudrey Parker-Nichols\nAudrey Parker-Nichols (Nancy Sullivan) is Drake and Megan's biological mother, Josh's stepmother and Walter's wife. Her first name is never mentioned in the series, although a deleted scene from the series finale would have revealed Audrey. The scene would also specify her profession as a caterer.\nShe often tells the boys to be more mature. She upsets her husband, Walter, because of her preference for Bruce Winchill, his rival weatherman. Because Walter lacks respect from Megan and Drake, she usually has to punish them, although these punishments are usually unfair because most of the boys' wrongdoings are Megan's fault. As stepmother and stepson, Audrey and Josh have a very close relationship and he affectionately calls her \"Mom\" or \"Mama.\" She is a nurturing and supportive mother. However, she is a bit gullible when it comes to her daughter Megan, especially when it is Megan's word against Drake and Josh.\nWalter Nichols"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273808.1339, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273807.8622, "finish": 1721273808.1339, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ca89d1398a774cdcbe3fa82daff67040", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who plays the dad in drake and josh", "output": [["who plays the dad in drake and josh", "Title: List of Drake & Josh characters\n\nPassage: Josh Nichols\nJosh Nichols (Josh Peck) is Drake and Megan's stepbrother, Walter's biological son and Audrey's stepson. Unlike Drake, Josh is knowledgeable, diligent, caring, responsible, a good hard-working student and socially awkward. In the pilot episode, he had a job for the school newspaper in which he wrote advice for students under the name Miss Nancy. He begins working for Helen at the fictional Premiere movie theater in the second season. Unlike Drake, Josh often tries his best in challenging situations, takes things seriously, feels resourceful if he makes mistakes, and uses his common sense, often repeating things for emphasis when anxious. Despite his logical mind and hard-working nature, Josh is prone to bad luck in the first seasons, especially with girls. However, later in the series he begins to date Mindy Crenshaw, his academic rival. His hobbies include cooking and performing magic tricks. Later in the series, Josh becomes popular and has better luck as he loses weight. He is obsessed with Oprah Winfrey and accidentally runs her over with his car in \"Josh Runs into Oprah,\" leading her to get a brief restraining order against him. Peck described his character as having a Jackie Gleason quality, and said, \"Not only can Josh do the physical comedy and the pratfalls, but he can also sell a sophisticated joke and a touching moment.\" His character is similar to that of Joey Gladstone and Danny Tanner from Full House for his maturity and responsibility.\nAudrey Parker-Nichols\nAudrey Parker-Nichols (Nancy Sullivan) is Drake and Megan's biological mother, Josh's stepmother and Walter's wife. Her first name is never mentioned in the series, although a deleted scene from the series finale would have revealed Audrey. The scene would also specify her profession as a caterer.\nShe often tells the boys to be more mature. She upsets her husband, Walter, because of her preference for Bruce Winchill, his rival weatherman. Because Walter lacks respect from Megan and Drake, she usually has to punish them, although these punishments are usually unfair because most of the boys' wrongdoings are Megan's fault. As stepmother and stepson, Audrey and Josh have a very close relationship and he affectionately calls her \"Mom\" or \"Mama.\" She is a nurturing and supportive mother. However, she is a bit gullible when it comes to her daughter Megan, especially when it is Megan's word against Drake and Josh.\nWalter Nichols"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273817.607, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273817.0695, "finish": 1721273817.607, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2cb816546db34b0d803d94229424a491", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where in the bible are the 12 disciples", "output": [["where in the bible are the 12 disciples", "Title: Seventy disciples\n\nPassage: The seventy disciples (Greek: \u1f11\u03b2\u03b4\u03bf\u03bc\u03ae\u03ba\u03bf\u03bd\u03c4\u03b1 \u03bc\u03b1\u03b8\u03b7\u03c4\u03ad\u03c2, hebdomikonta mathetes), known in the Eastern Christian traditions as the seventy apostles (Greek: \u1f11\u03b2\u03b4\u03bf\u03bc\u03ae\u03ba\u03bf\u03bd\u03c4\u03b1 \u03b1\u03c0\u03cc\u03c3\u03c4\u03bf\u03bb\u03bf\u03b9, hebdomikonta apostoloi), were early emissaries of Jesus mentioned in the Gospel of Luke.\nAccording to the Gospel of Luke, the only gospel in which they appear, Jesus appointed them and sent them out in pairs on a specific mission which is detailed in the text. The number of those disciples varies between either 70 or 72 depending on the account.\nIn Western Christianity, they are usually referred to as disciples, whereas in Eastern Christianity they are usually referred to as apostles. Using the original Greek words, both titles are descriptive, as an apostle is one sent on a mission (the Greek uses the verb form: apesteilen) whereas a disciple is a student, but the two traditions differ on the scope of the words apostle and disciple.\nThe passage from Luke 10 reads (in Douay\u2013Rheims Bible):\nAnalysis\nThis is the only mention of the group in the Bible. The number is seventy in some manuscripts of the Alexandrian (such as Codex Sinaiticus) and Caesarean text traditions but seventy-two in most other Alexandrian and Western texts. Samuel Dickey Gordon notes that they were sent out as thirty-five deputations of two each.\nThe number may derive from the seventy nations of Genesis 10 or the many other occurrences of the number seventy in the Bible, or the seventy-two translators of the Septuagint from the Letter of Aristeas. In translating the Vulgate, Jerome selected the reading of seventy-two.\nThe Gospel of Luke is not alone among the synoptic gospels in containing multiple episodes in which Jesus sends out his followers on missions. The first occasion () is closely based on the \"limited commission\" mission in , which, however, recounts the sending out of the twelve apostles, rather than seventy, though with similar details. The parallels (also , , and ) suggest a common origin in the hypothesized Q document. Luke also mentions the Great Commission to \"all nations\" () but in less detail than Matthew's account, and mentions the Dispersion of the Apostles."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273817.607, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273817.0695, "finish": 1721273817.607, "ip": "", "conv_id": "33a179c6bccd42c79a9bcb96d9d07809", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "where in the bible are the 12 disciples", "output": [["where in the bible are the 12 disciples", "Title: Seventy disciples\n\nPassage: The seventy disciples (Greek: \u1f11\u03b2\u03b4\u03bf\u03bc\u03ae\u03ba\u03bf\u03bd\u03c4\u03b1 \u03bc\u03b1\u03b8\u03b7\u03c4\u03ad\u03c2, hebdomikonta mathetes), known in the Eastern Christian traditions as the seventy apostles (Greek: \u1f11\u03b2\u03b4\u03bf\u03bc\u03ae\u03ba\u03bf\u03bd\u03c4\u03b1 \u03b1\u03c0\u03cc\u03c3\u03c4\u03bf\u03bb\u03bf\u03b9, hebdomikonta apostoloi), were early emissaries of Jesus mentioned in the Gospel of Luke.\nAccording to the Gospel of Luke, the only gospel in which they appear, Jesus appointed them and sent them out in pairs on a specific mission which is detailed in the text. The number of those disciples varies between either 70 or 72 depending on the account.\nIn Western Christianity, they are usually referred to as disciples, whereas in Eastern Christianity they are usually referred to as apostles. Using the original Greek words, both titles are descriptive, as an apostle is one sent on a mission (the Greek uses the verb form: apesteilen) whereas a disciple is a student, but the two traditions differ on the scope of the words apostle and disciple.\nThe passage from Luke 10 reads (in Douay\u2013Rheims Bible):\nAnalysis\nThis is the only mention of the group in the Bible. The number is seventy in some manuscripts of the Alexandrian (such as Codex Sinaiticus) and Caesarean text traditions but seventy-two in most other Alexandrian and Western texts. Samuel Dickey Gordon notes that they were sent out as thirty-five deputations of two each.\nThe number may derive from the seventy nations of Genesis 10 or the many other occurrences of the number seventy in the Bible, or the seventy-two translators of the Septuagint from the Letter of Aristeas. In translating the Vulgate, Jerome selected the reading of seventy-two.\nThe Gospel of Luke is not alone among the synoptic gospels in containing multiple episodes in which Jesus sends out his followers on missions. The first occasion () is closely based on the \"limited commission\" mission in , which, however, recounts the sending out of the twelve apostles, rather than seventy, though with similar details. The parallels (also , , and ) suggest a common origin in the hypothesized Q document. Luke also mentions the Great Commission to \"all nations\" () but in less detail than Matthew's account, and mentions the Dispersion of the Apostles."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273841.959, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273826.8358, "finish": 1721273841.959, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d5fb722fe1354338a00dded6d6250e8c", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who plays lindsay denton in line of duty", "output": [["who plays lindsay denton in line of duty", "Title: Allison McKenzie\n\nPassage: Beowulf (TV series) \u2013 ITV 1 \u2013 (2016) \u2013 Directed by Colin Teague, Role - Arla\nDoctors \u2013 (BBC 1) \u2013 Small Deaths \u2013 Directed by Adrian Bean \u2013 (June 2014), Role - DS Katherine Palmer\nLine of Duty (series 2) \u2013 (BBC 2) \u2013 (2014) \u2013 Directed by Douglas MacKinnon & Daniel Nettheim, Role - DS Jayne Akers\nM.I. High \u2013 1 episode (2014) \u2013 BBC 1 \u2013 Created by Keith Brumpton, Role - Vivian Glitch\nBob Servant Independent \u2013 (2013) \u2013 BBC 4, Role - Sally Donaldson\nDoctors \u2013 (2011) \u2013 BBC 1 \u2013 Just Like A Woman, Role - Katrina Bryne/Steve\nSadie J \u2013 Tidylicious \u2013 (2011) \u2013 BBC 1, Role - Lorna\nRiver City \u2013 BBC One Scotland \u2013 (2002 - 2007), Role - Joanne Rossi, (Former Series Regular)\nRebus \u2013 (2004) \u2013 STV \u2013 Dead Souls, Role - Helen\nAttachments \u2013 (2003) \u2013 BBC 2 \u2013 Gym Virgin, Role - Alison\nIt's Just a Habit \u2013 BBC, Role - Susan\nTaggart \u2013 STV \u2013 (2000) \u2013 Football Crazy, Role - Candice Marie\nFilm credits\nFamily Portrait (Short Film) \u2013 (2016) \u2013 Director Kelly Holmes \u2013 Writer Nils Gustenhofen, Role - Margaret\nSwung (2014) Writer Ewan Morrison \u2013 Director Colin Kennedy \u2013 Produced by Sigma, Role - Marcia\nThe Virtual Network (Short film) \u2013 (2012) \u2013 Directed by Bryan Larkin \u2013 Dabhand Films, Role - Litza\nAirborne \u2013 Directed by Dominic Burns, Role - Agent Millward\nParkarma (Short film) \u2013 (2011) \u2013 Directed by Bryan Larkin \u2013 Dabhand Films, Role - Allison\nCasting (Short film) \u2013 (2007) \u2013 SMG \u2013 Directed by Roderick Smith, Role - Emelia\nThe Aficionado \u2013 (2005) \u2013 Antonine Production \u2013 Directed by Alan de Pallett, Role - Mandy\nLoved, Alone (Short film) \u2013 (2003) \u2013 Dark Cloud Productions \u2013 Directed by Indra Bhose, Role-Brooke\n16 Years of Alcohol \u2013 (2003) \u2013 16 Years Limited \u2013 directed by Richard Jobson, Role - Beth\nClub le Monde \u2013 (2002) \u2013 OutLaw Films \u2013 directed by Simon Rumley, Role - Ali\nTheatre credits\nThe Butterfly Lion written by Michael Morpurgo in a new adaptation by Anna Ledwich - Directed by Dale Rooks - Minerva Theatre, Chichester at Chichester Festival Theatre - (October/November 2019), Role - Isobel/Nanny\nWilderness written by Kellie Smith - Hampstead Theatre at Hampstead Downstairs - (March/April 2019), Role - Stephanie\nThe Seven Acts of Mercy written by Anders Lustgarten \u2013 Royal Shakespeare Company \u2013 24 November 2016 \u2013 10 February 2017 \u2013 Directed by Erica Whyman \u2013 Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, Role - Lavinia\nThe Rover (play) written by Aphra Behn \u2013 Royal Shakespeare Company \u2013 (8 September 2016 \u2013 11 February 2017) \u2013 Directed by Loveday Ingram \u2013 Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, Role - Moretta\nTwo Noble Kinsmen written by William Shakespeare & John Fletcher \u2013 Royal Shakespeare Company \u2013 (17 August 2016 \u2013 7 February 2017) \u2013 Directed by Blanche McIntyre \u2013 Swan Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, Role - Hippolyta"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273841.959, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273826.8358, "finish": 1721273841.959, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3a827f3fac034a5cb21adb07e3c54179", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who plays lindsay denton in line of duty", "output": [["who plays lindsay denton in line of duty", "Title: Duty Free (TV series)\n\nPassage: Duty Free is a British sitcom written by Eric Chappell and Jean Warr that aired on ITV from 1984 to 1986. It was made by Yorkshire Television.\nCast\nKeith Barron as David Pearce\nGwen Taylor as Amy Pearce\nJoanna Van Gyseghem as Linda Cochran\nNeil Stacy as Robert Cochran"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273873.8837, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273849.1227, "finish": 1721273873.8837, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e7abc782a7d5450ca21d28870817d7b8", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "when was how deep is your love released", "output": [["when was how deep is your love released", "Title: Dru Hill\n\nPassage: Enter the Dru (1998), Island Def Jam merger, Woody's departure and Sisq\u00f3's solo success\nDru Hill's third top 20 pop hit came in the form of 1998's \"How Deep Is Your Love\" (Pop #3), which was included on the soundtrack to the Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker film Rush Hour. The single \"This Is What We Do\", featuring a guest rap from Method Man, set the tone for the group's second album, Enter the Dru. The album featured several other mid-tempo tracks in the vein of \"How Deep Is Your Love\", as well as the R&B top 5 single \"These are the Times\" (Pop #21), co-written and co-produced by Babyface, and featuring guitar work from Atlanta-based session guitarist and former Earth Wind & Fire member Dick Smith. The album was released on October 27, 1998. It peaked at number two on the Billboard 200 and eventually sold two million copies by May 1999.\nAfter PolyGram (parent company of Island) was acquired by Seagram on December 10, 1998, thus PolyGram's music division was merged with MCA Records to become what is known today as Universal Music Group. Then, on New Year's Eve, Island Records' operations as a label was combined with sister labels Mercury Records and Def Jam Recordings to become The Island Def Jam Music Group. As a result, Island Black Music was folded, soon after Island and Mercury's R&B and hip hop rosters were transferred to Def Jam and thus, Dru Hill was moved to its R&B division of Def Soul, having found a new label home. However, after a shooting incident at a concert in Paris that almost costed two lives of its entourage, member Woody Rock decided to part ways with the group. Later that year, Dru Hill released a remix of \"You Are Everything\", featuring rapper Ja Rule, and recorded a version of \"Enchantment Passing Through\" for the soundtrack to the Broadway musical Aida, which was also featured on Sisq\u00f3's solo debut album Unleash the Dragon, which was later released in November 1999. The album had a minor hit with his first single, \"Got to Get It\" featuring Make It Hot. His second single, \"Thong Song\", became a major hit during the spring of 2000, and his third, \"Incomplete\", became a number-one hit during the summer.\nThe group made the final appearance of that year on the title track to the western comedy film Wild Wild West, starring the track's leading performer, Will Smith.\nDru World Order (2002) and Def Soul issues"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721273873.8837, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721273849.1227, "finish": 1721273873.8837, "ip": "", "conv_id": "30996414c5e34bb4a916c71f8335bb16", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "when was how deep is your love released", "output": [["when was how deep is your love released", "Title: Deep Love\n\nPassage: Deep Love is a Japanese cell phone novel series written by Yoshi, and is officially the first in its literary genre. The series includes four novels which were later published by Stars Publishing from December 2002 and July 2003. The series launched with Deep Love: Ayu no Monogatari, followed by Deep Love: Host, Deep Love: Reina no Unmei, and Deep Love: Pao no Monogatari.\nAfter 2.6 million book copies were sold in Japan, the Deep Love novels were adapted into five manga series: three illustrated by Y\u016b Yoshii, and one each drawn by Tetsu and Akiyo Kurosawa. Deep Love has also had two live-action series air on TV Tokyo: Ayu no Monogatari (2004) and Host (2005). A live-action film was released in theaters in 2004. Literary critic Minako Sait\u014d panned the novels, suggesting that if it had been entered into a new writer competition in a literary magazine, it would have been rejected in the first round. She goes on to say that there might not even be any need to review such a work.\nSynopsis\nAyu no Monogatari\nThis series follows Ayu, a high school girl who moonlights as a prostitute. She views the world as filthy, hypocritical, and hedonistic, and believes that money is the most important thing in the world. She lives with her boyfriend Kenji, a gigolo with a drug problem, and spends her school days with her friend Reina, her only friend.\nAyu's outlook on life changes after she meets an old woman, even going so far as to adopt Pao, an abused stray dog. However Ayu ends up betraying the old woman by stealing money that was intended to be used on an operation for her \"son\" Yoshiyuki. Ayu steals the funds to help her boyfriend, who ends up dying before he could repay the cash.\nAyu tries to repay the money by honest means, but is forced to return to prostitution. In the meantime Ayu's friend Reina has started prostituting herself. She's bullied by several of her classmates, who trick her into going to a karaoke bar with them \u2013 only for them to abuse her and carve \"whore\" onto her leg before leaving Reina to be raped by several boys.\nAyu eventually graduates from school and develops a friendship with Yoshiyuki after the death of the old woman. She eventually manages to raise 2 million yen, the amount the old lady stated was needed for the operation, and gives it to Yoshiyuki's father \u2013 only to discover that the operation costs 10 million. Unbeknownst to Ayu, Yoshiyuki's father ends up spending it on frivolities and fun rather than on his son."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721297580.4875, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721297580.0899, "finish": 1721297580.4875, "ip": "", "conv_id": "986f89fb56734fd0b76db89bb13e4680", "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"}
-{"tstamp": 1721297580.4875, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721297580.0899, "finish": 1721297580.4875, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a5d2ff02b722493ea8ba3ef23b7afdf2", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: 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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721312643.9258, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721312641.1257, "finish": 1721312643.9258, "ip": "", "conv_id": "03c9e332f23248e1b112bd9b15573b02", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "who won the battle of trafalgar", "output": [["who won the battle of trafalgar", "Title: Order of battle at the Battle of Trafalgar\n\nPassage: British fleet\nThe table below shows the British vessels as they were deployed just prior to engagement. HMS Africa, somewhat detached to the north due to a combination of weather and a missed signal during the night, was supposed to have been fourth from last, in the lee column. The rest of the ships-of-the-line were divided into two columns, with the weather column forming the northern flank and the lee column the southern flank. The enemy line had been sailing north to south in front of the wind. Just as the battle was beginning they turned individually anticlockwise, wore ship, and came into the wind, hoping to bear down on Nelson. The order of British ships in the table is the one of that moment. Prior to closing with the enemy, they were in a single line, and after engagement, the ships manoeuvred to assume the best firing positions. The British fleet of the battle consisted of 33 warships, 27 of which were ships of the line. During the battle the frigates (which had been the force observing Cadiz) and smaller vessels acted in support to the fleet, relaying messages and towing ships but did not engage. When Collingwood took command after Nelson's death he transferred to Euralyus as his own flagship, the Royal Sovereign, was badly damaged.\nFranco-Spanish fleet\nJust before the engagement the French and Spanish ships of the line had been sailing north to south. After wearing, the order of sailing was reversed, so that the former head was now the rear. During the battle itself the entire line broke into small units and individual ships. The combined fleet consisted of 40 vessels with 18 French ships of the line and 15 Spanish ships of the line.\nLosses\nBelow is a graph of the percentage of casualties plotted for each ship along the three battle columns. The graph is a construct only. The losses were incurred throughout the entire battle and after, most while the ships were not actually in that order. The order in the graph is shown as a convenience.\nThree columns and a separate ship are shown on the horizontal axis, which represents units of conventional distance between ship positions. All units are assumed to be the same. There are three origin points, one for the beginning of each column and the Africa, which was not in the three.\nThe vertical axis shows percentage of casualties per ship. For example, casualties for the Victory are plotted at 20%. A casualty is someone who was known to have been wounded, someone who was known to have been killed, or someone missing in action and presumed drowned. The percentage is the ratio of casualties to ship's complement multiplied by 100. Casualties continued over the next few weeks as enemy crews rebelled, retook their ships, and were subdued. The graph covers only the main battle on the first day."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721312643.9258, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721312641.1257, "finish": 1721312643.9258, "ip": "", "conv_id": "823650ec28ec49a29295162dc95474f4", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who won the battle of trafalgar", "output": [["who won the battle of trafalgar", "Title: Order of battle at the Battle of Trafalgar\n\nPassage: A square rigged ship cannot sail within 6 points (67.5 degrees) either side of the wind. If the wind is coming from the north, the closest it could sail would be ENE or WNW. In order to travel in that direction, it must \"fall off,\" or move to an angle with the wind on one side or the other, a \"tack.\" A ship tacks back and forth against the wind, or \"beats,\" each tack earning it some \"headway\". However, because of the huge distance a square-rigger had to travel before it could fill its sails again, tacking would only be done in a dire emergency; where speed of manoeuvre outweighed the enormous risk of being caught in irons. By far the most common way of working to windward was wearing round (gybing).\nIn addition, sailing with the wind directly aft (\"abaft\") or directly on either side (\"abeam\") was difficult and inefficient. Sails with the wind in those directions do not fill. The wind must be allowed only from the quarters. At those angles the sails fill and there is a component of force in the desired direction. If the wind is directly abeam, the ship must fall off or close up. The ship may sail on either side of a wind directly astern. A manoeuvre similar to coming about is used to move the wind from one side to another: wearing. The helm is put over, the sails go limp, they are adjusted to fill on the other side. The ship does not have to rotate as far, so the manoeuvre is less disruptive.\nWind is everything to a sailing vessel. It cannot move anywhere without it (is \"becalmed\"). If the wind is too great the sails may have to be shortened to present less area, a procedure call \"reefing.\" In a storm the ship must sail close to the wind or have it close astern. As the waves are generally coming in with the wind, a ship sailing close into the wind generally cuts them perpendicularly and only pitches; i.e., drops into the troughs and rises on the crests. A ship with the storm wind abeam is struck longitudinally and rolls treacherously, running a risk of capsizing. To avoid that risk the captain must run before the wind. All directions are evaluated with regard to the wind. The side of a ship toward the wind is called the \"weather\" or \"upwind\" side; away, the \"lee\" or \"downwind\" side (refer to Windward and leeward)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721316446.8691, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721316444.6514, "finish": 1721316446.8691, "ip": "", "conv_id": "29f2d44151fa431980c5d271f95f0887", "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"}
-{"tstamp": 1721316446.8691, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721316444.6514, "finish": 1721316446.8691, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a49464f738284874b4e9bb6a1f6ef070", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "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"}
-{"tstamp": 1721316538.8874, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721316536.7198, "finish": 1721316538.8874, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c07e5e0e547549f482eac7dcd83de09c", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "how long has tom brady been the patriots quarterback", "output": [["how long has tom brady been the patriots quarterback", "Title: Jim Brady (quarterback)\n\nPassage: James Murphy Brady (August 11, 1907 \u2013 January 12, 1984), a grandson of Idaho governor James H. Brady, was an American football player and broadcasting entrepreneur.\nAfter graduating from Pocatello High School in Idaho, Brady tried out for the football team at Notre Dame, but was told by coach Knute Rockne that he was far too small. But over time his persistence paid off, and in 1927 he was named the starting quarterback. Brady was the quarterback for the legendary \"Win one for the Gipper\" game against Army on November 10, 1928\u2014dramatized in the film Knute Rockne, All American.\nReturning to Idaho Falls in 1933, he joined the family business at The Post Register newspaper. After serving in the United States Army in World War II, Brady founded the radio station KIFI in Idaho Falls in 1947, and eventually the television station KIFI-TV. He served as president of Upper Valley Cable from 1969 until his death in 1984."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721316538.8874, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721316536.7198, "finish": 1721316538.8874, "ip": "", "conv_id": "774598f2faf349c1849a6ae4d8e23bb8", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "how long has tom brady been the patriots quarterback", "output": [["how long has tom brady been the patriots quarterback", "Title: New England Patriots\n\nPassage: Founded in 1959 as the Boston Patriots, the team was a charter member of the American Football League (AFL) before joining the NFL in 1970 through the AFL\u2013NFL merger. The Patriots played their home games at various stadiums throughout Boston, including Fenway Park from 1963 to 1969 until the franchise moved to Foxborough in 1971. As part of the move, the team changed its name to the New England Patriots. Home games were played at Foxboro Stadium until 2002 when the stadium was demolished alongside the opening of Gillette Stadium. The team began utilizing Gillette Stadium for home games the same year.\nThe Patriots hold the records for most Super Bowl wins (6, tied with the Pittsburgh Steelers), appearances (11), and losses (5, tied with the Denver Broncos). Generally unsuccessful prior to the 21st century, the franchise enjoyed a period of dominance under head coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady from 2001 to 2019. The Brady\u2013Belichick era, regarded as one of the greatest sports dynasties, would see the Patriots claim nearly every major Super Bowl record. Other NFL records held by the franchise include the most playoff wins (37), the most wins in a 10-year period (126 from 2003 to 2012), the longest winning streak of regular season and playoff games (21 from October 2003 to October 2004), the most consecutive winning seasons (19 from 2001 to 2019), the most consecutive conference championship appearances (8 from 2011 to 2018), the most consecutive division titles (11 from 2009 to 2019), the only undefeated 16-game regular season (2007), and the highest postseason winning percentage (.638).\nFranchise history\nBrief summary\nOn November 16, 1959, Boston business executive Billy Sullivan was awarded the eighth and final franchise of the developing American Football League (AFL). The following winter, locals were allowed to submit ideas for the Boston football team's official name. The most popular choice \u2013 and the one that Sullivan selected \u2013 was the \"Boston Patriots\", with \"Patriots\" referring to the colonists of the Thirteen Colonies who rebelled against British control during the American Revolution and in July 1776 declared the United States of America an independent nation, which heavily involved the then-colony of Massachusetts. Immediately thereafter, artist Phil Bissell of The Boston Globe developed the \"Pat Patriot\" logo.\nThe Patriots never had a regular home stadium in the AFL. Nickerson Field, Harvard Stadium, Fenway Park (shared with baseball's Boston Red Sox), and Alumni Stadium all served as home fields during their time in the American Football League. The 1963 season saw the franchise's first playoff win over Buffalo to clinch the division. They subsequently lost the AFL championship game to the San Diego Chargers 51\u201310. They did not appear again in an AFL or NFL post-season game for another 13 years."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721316658.4494, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721316658.2234, "finish": 1721316658.4494, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6fa4174e2a314d99b688c32e2d6076a3", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "when was lucknam park hotel & spa built", "output": [["when was lucknam park hotel & spa built", "Title: Bridlington Spa\n\nPassage: Herbert Beerbohm Tree, the actor and famous impresario.\nIn 1914 the council took a lease on the Spa and in 1919 they purchased it. In 1925 the council replaced the last of the 1890s Spa with new Spa Royal Hall. It opened in 1926 and was built at a cost of \u00a350,000 it was a flagship art deco building.\nOn the night of 29 January 1932 it burnt down though fortunately the theatre was not badly damaged and able to reopen at Easter. In a remarkable feat of design and construction the new Royal Hall was designed by the borough architect Peter Newton and built in 52 days to re-open on 29 July 1932.\nBefore 1939 the Spa provided plays and variety in the theatre and dancing in the Royal Hall. Herman Darewski was the well-known and very successful musical director at the Spa from 1924 to 1939. After the Second World War the traditional holiday trade and entertainments continued but as the 1960s dawned, the motorcar, increased wealth and the package tour brought about changes. The British seaside resort was changing again, the Spa moved away from weekly shows, and the theatre and dances in the hall, to a new broader entertainment base. The Royal hall has been a feature of the British Rock circuit now for over 30 years with many famous artists playing it. The world darts championship used this venue before its refurbishment and the World Finals of the 2008 Winmau World Masters returned to The Spa. Conference and association use of the facilities has increased to balance the decline in traditional entertainments.\nOasis on 15 July 2009 sold out the Bridlington Spa within two minutes of the tickets coming on sale, Oasis played at the theatre on 20 August 2009 as a warm up before headlining the V Festival later in the week.\nFacilities\nThe facilities of the Spa at Bridlington include the Royal Hall, with a maximum standing capacity 3,800, the Spa Theatre which seats 675, the Harbour Suite with views over the bay and the Gallery Suite which is used as an art gallery featuring differing local artists' work each week. Other facilities include the Promenade Bar and Bay View Lounge; both featuring panoramic sea views and a Board Room allowing seating around a large table for 22 people. The main entrance on South Marine Drive leads to the Box Office and the Spa Caf\u00e9 Bar. This Caf\u00e9 bar is another space within the refurbished building with a huge window over Bridlington's South Bay and is a vantage point whatever the weather. A range of pianists play over lunchtimes during the week.\nSpa Theatre\nThis is an Edwardian auditorium with a traditional theatre layout of stalls and circle seating provides an environment for music, dance and drama. The Spa Theatre is equipped with sound and lighting systems and has the ability to fly scenery."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721316658.4494, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721316658.2234, "finish": 1721316658.4494, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5d2b69d4119749c797d059e632813750", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "when was lucknam park hotel & spa built", "output": [["when was lucknam park hotel & spa built", "Title: Park Lane Mews Hotel\n\nPassage: The Park Lane Mews Hotel (formerly the Hilton London Mews Hotel) is a luxury 4-star boutique hotel in London's Mayfair district.\nHistory of the Hotel\nThe building, which dates back to 1618, was originally the site of a shepherd's cottage \u2013 known as Mayfair's oldest house. During the Blitz, in the winter of 1940, the cottage was destroyed when a bomb struck a building opposite.\nA plaque above the hotel reads:\n\"On this site, until destroyed by bombing during the winter of 1940, stood an archway and Mayfair's oldest house. \u2018The Cottage 1618 A.D.' from where a shepherd tended his flock whilst Tyburn idled nearby.\u201d\nThe hotel building has been updated a number of times over the years.\nAbout the Hotel Building\nThe Park Lane Mews Hotel, a 4-star London hotel, is a small hotel in the townhouse style.\nThe hotel is owned by Genting Group, who also own the largest number of casinos in the UK, including 4 casinos in London: Crockfords, Palm Beach, Maxims and Colony Club.\nThe hotel has seven floors: five floors of bedrooms and suites; the ground floor which hosts the lounge bar, restaurant and reception area; and a basement with offices and conference rooms."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322715.2322, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322715.0034, "finish": 1721322715.2322, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c96ef4ce519a45e8af8b6d110f229999", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "when was the last god of war made", "output": [["when was the last god of war made", "Title: God of War (franchise)\n\nPassage: God of War is an action-adventure game franchise created by David Jaffe and developed by Sony's Santa Monica Studio. It began in 2005 on the PlayStation 2 (PS2) video game console and has become a flagship series for PlayStation, consisting of nine installments across multiple platforms. Based on ancient mythologies, the series' plot follows Kratos, a Spartan warrior who becomes the God of War and comes into conflict with various mythological pantheons. The earlier games in the series are based on Greek mythology and see Kratos follow a path of vengeance against the Olympian gods; the later games are based on Norse mythology and see Kratos go on a path of redemption while also introducing his son Atreus as a secondary protagonist."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322715.2322, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322715.0034, "finish": 1721322715.2322, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d49deaa4b43418aabc3a4d5e877ed92", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when was the last god of war made", "output": [["when was the last god of war made", "Title: Fetial\n\nPassage: When Rome asked for reparations for an offense or damage, the fetials were sent as ambassadors to the foreign country concerned.\nIf the requests borne by the pater patratus were not met, he went back to Rome after invoking Jupiter, Juno (or Janus), and Quirinus, along with the heavenly gods, the terrestrial gods, and the gods of the netherworld as witnesses of the violation of the ius and after declaring war within 30 or 33\u00a0days. When this period of time had expired he went back to the border and opened the hostilities with a magic gesture: while affirming once again the good right of Rome he threw a spear with steel point or a javelin of corniolum hardened with fire into the enemy's territory.\nThe fetials were a common institution of the Latins and of other Italic people.\nAccording to G. Dum\u00e9zil, the initial contract concluded with the gods and extended through the sacra and the signa is sufficient to justify the acts of official religious authorities (such as pontiffs and augurs) within the Roman ager. Actions beyond this boundary require an additional religious foundation, based not only on ius but also, on a deeper level, the fas on which ius is based. This is the task of the fetials who achieve their aim through the *feti-, word that as Vedic dh\u0101tu means founding. They rely on a set of ceremonies that bestow a religious value on the political or military decisions of the magistrates, ensuring that under any circumstance Rome has the gods on her side. Besides offering their advice on international issues to the senate or the consuls, the sodalitas dispatches two envoys (the pater patratus and the verbenarius, the last one having only the task of carrying the sagmina taken from the Capitol Hill) to ask for the reparations, to declare war in a form that is pious and just, and lastly to conclude the peace. The god under whose protection they act and whom the pater patratus invokes is Iupiter Lapis in the rite of the conclusion of a treaty and in general when there an agreement is reached. If a declaration of war ensues the fetial calls as witnesses Jupiter, Juno (or Janus, correction accepted by most editors), Quirinus, the heavenly, earthly and nether gods of the violation of the ius and declares war within thirty-three days.\nPolitical implications of the ius fetiale\nThe author of Cicero's apocryphal speech of Furius Filus and the Christian apologists blamed the Romans for craftily using the ius fetiale in order to ensure divine support for Rome in international disputes. They allege that Romans were not moved by a desire for justice in their use of the ius fetiale, but rather bent its rules and made a disproportionately excessive use of its technicalities to acquire an undue advantage over other peoples with the ultimate goal of stealing their lands and riches."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322733.2673, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322732.8673, "finish": 1721322733.2673, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c13af6fb6a2c427697b4b9d294c341a2", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when was the first mad max movie release", "output": [["when was the first mad max movie release", "Title: Mad Max (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: Mad Max is an Australian media franchise.\nMad Max may also refer to:\nFilms\nMad Max (film), released in 1979\nMad Max 2, released in 1981\nMad Max Beyond Thunderdome, released in 1985\nMad Max: Fury Road, released in 2015\nFuriosa: A Mad Max Saga, released in 2024\nRelated topics\nMad Max (soundtrack), the soundtrack for the first film\nMad Max (1990 video game), NES game based on Mad Max 2\nMad Max (2015 video game), based on the franchise\nMad Max series legacy and influence in popular culture\nMax Rockatansky, the main protagonist of the film series\nPeople\nJochen Hippel (born 1971), German musician\nVernon Maxwell (born 1965), former NBA player\nMax Papis (born 1969), Italian race car driver\nMax Biaggi (born 1971), Italian motorcycle racer\nAravinda de Silva (born 1965), Sri Lankan former cricketer\nMax Scherzer, American baseball pitcher\nMaxwell R. Thurman (1931\u20131995), American general\nMaxime Bernier, nicknamed Mad Max, a Canadian politician\nMax Tegmark, nicknamed Mad Max, a physicist\nMax Verstappen (born 1997), Dutch race car driver\nMaksim Gelman (born 1987), Spree killer\nOther uses\nMad Max (band), a German hard rock band"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322733.2673, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322732.8673, "finish": 1721322733.2673, "ip": "", "conv_id": "75d6ce2d7d944041863d74b6e6e6fc1c", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "when was the first mad max movie release", "output": [["when was the first mad max movie release", "Title: Mad Max (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: Mad Max is an Australian media franchise.\nMad Max may also refer to:\nFilms\nMad Max (film), released in 1979\nMad Max 2, released in 1981\nMad Max Beyond Thunderdome, released in 1985\nMad Max: Fury Road, released in 2015\nFuriosa: A Mad Max Saga, released in 2024\nRelated topics\nMad Max (soundtrack), the soundtrack for the first film\nMad Max (1990 video game), NES game based on Mad Max 2\nMad Max (2015 video game), based on the franchise\nMad Max series legacy and influence in popular culture\nMax Rockatansky, the main protagonist of the film series\nPeople\nJochen Hippel (born 1971), German musician\nVernon Maxwell (born 1965), former NBA player\nMax Papis (born 1969), Italian race car driver\nMax Biaggi (born 1971), Italian motorcycle racer\nAravinda de Silva (born 1965), Sri Lankan former cricketer\nMax Scherzer, American baseball pitcher\nMaxwell R. Thurman (1931\u20131995), American general\nMaxime Bernier, nicknamed Mad Max, a Canadian politician\nMax Tegmark, nicknamed Mad Max, a physicist\nMax Verstappen (born 1997), Dutch race car driver\nMaksim Gelman (born 1987), Spree killer\nOther uses\nMad Max (band), a German hard rock band"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322748.3465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322745.993, "finish": 1721322748.3465, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6b001af17085489b9add3f80c8ad0281", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "the house of rules committee is an important part of the legislative process because it", "output": [["the house of rules committee is an important part of the legislative process because it", "Title: Procedures of the United States House of Representatives\n\nPassage: with instructions to take some action and then report back the bill forthwith, which will result in the Committee chairman immediately re-reporting to the House the bill according to the instructions in the motion to recommit;\nwithout instructions, which leaves the bill in committee for reconsideration.\nCommittees\nIt is in Committee(s) that bills get the most scrutiny and attention and that most of the work on a bill is done. Committees play an important role in the legislative process by providing members the opportunity to study, debate and amend the bill and the public with the opportunity to make comments on the bill. There are three types of House Committees, these are:\n1) standing committees elected by members of the House,\n2) select committees appointed by the Speaker of the House, and\n3) joint committees whose members are chosen according to the statute or resolution that created that committee.\nAs the House Rules limit the amount of floor debate on any given bill the committees play an important function in determining the final content and format of the bill.\nAfter the committee conducts any necessary research, and has debated and voted on any amendments that were offered in committee they may take one of three actions. These are reporting a measure to the full House with or without amendments, report the measure to the full House with a negative recommendation or fail to report the measure. The House may under certain rules remove the bill or measure from committee (see discharge petition) if the committee fails to report the measure to the House Rules Committee or to the full House and a negative report to the full House does not terminate the bill. The phrase that a \"bill has been killed in committee\" is not completely accurate as the full House always has options under the rules to remove the bill from Committee and to take action.\nStanding committees"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322748.3465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322745.993, "finish": 1721322748.3465, "ip": "", "conv_id": "53b6cb06938445c68222aaf154e5e9e5", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "the house of rules committee is an important part of the legislative process because it", "output": [["the house of rules committee is an important part of the legislative process because it", "Title: Markup (legislation)\n\nPassage: Markup (or mark-up) is the process by which a U.S. congressional committee or state legislative session debates, amends, and rewrites proposed legislation.\nIn the House of Representatives\nThe process of marking up bills and resolutions in committees of the House of Representatives generally resembles, but does not perfectly replicate, the process of amending measures on the House floor."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322773.0037, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322772.8536, "finish": 1721322773.0037, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d64057fa53d14b8e92c40499f750e14f", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who wrote the song going to kansas city", "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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721322773.0037, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721322772.8536, "finish": 1721322773.0037, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae1597019687489589d057401735f610", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who wrote the song going to kansas city", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 9ae1d22b922844910757d7d5958b3367e041f29f..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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)"]]}
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-19ed4e99-7ff1-4c13-bfa1-e9421c113b3d.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-19ed4e99-7ff1-4c13-bfa1-e9421c113b3d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 144f4c44ebe28b33bef9e6907f5c2e755d04e2dd..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-19ed4e99-7ff1-4c13-bfa1-e9421c113b3d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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\"."]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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: "]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 2500a2e5a151e02e705d95bbc99d072ba9a596cb..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-2e986748-8e6b-4919-8def-1c065564db6d.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-2e986748-8e6b-4919-8def-1c065564db6d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 81be8b470edb29d462edaa9327bfcd6b8cf9fb6a..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-2e986748-8e6b-4919-8def-1c065564db6d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-32e25ae8-534b-45f9-9e5f-f3042b6bd8e4.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-32e25ae8-534b-45f9-9e5f-f3042b6bd8e4.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 19e00747c147c06a407b02bd99b7b975f40d799e..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-32e25ae8-534b-45f9-9e5f-f3042b6bd8e4.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
-{"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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-331c8ee0-a597-4ee9-8458-221abc34109d.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-331c8ee0-a597-4ee9-8458-221abc34109d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 83f9e11e1f7af64533abfae0b4af7b8989f652f0..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-331c8ee0-a597-4ee9-8458-221abc34109d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
-{"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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index f2ae81d8cac988b5643c87e6fac0be85020a1b98..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-33f55c11-6036-407b-a481-834fd19e80f9.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
-{"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."]]}
-{"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:"]]}
-{"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: "]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
-{"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"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-34e63447-6c9e-44bd-b363-42ad6ef08bc0.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-34e63447-6c9e-44bd-b363-42ad6ef08bc0.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 6bf9d4e6ccfa6bf547860eba09583c7db9d1d500..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-34e63447-6c9e-44bd-b363-42ad6ef08bc0.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720825282.8737, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825220.0756, "finish": 1720825282.8737, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eff27849dbd74976ab202cf8b2ab0ac3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825282.8737, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825220.0756, "finish": 1720825282.8737, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b3872a560ccc47288e068ad8f960ccae", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-3998fce9-10e5-4cda-a209-c69466b80a7d.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-3998fce9-10e5-4cda-a209-c69466b80a7d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 91ee3895395035d4eefc0ffdcade57d8d8de1585..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-3998fce9-10e5-4cda-a209-c69466b80a7d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722097869.3122, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722097786.5333, "finish": 1722097869.3122, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3c761a92628f476b921243494d10b092", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "gwgw", "output": [["gwgw", "Title: Calculation of prompt diphoton production cross sections at Tevatron and LHC energies\n\nAbstract: A fully differential calculation in perturbative quantum chromodynamics is presented for the production of massive photon pairs at hadron colliders. All next-to-leading order perturbative contributions from quark-antiquark, gluon-(anti)quark, and gluon-gluon subprocesses are included, as well as all-orders resummation of initial-state gluon radiation valid at next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy. The region of phase space is specified in which the calculation is most reliable. Good agreement is demonstrated with data from the Fermilab Tevatron, and predictions are made for more detailed tests with CDF and DO data. Predictions are shown for distributions of diphoton pairs produced at the energy of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Distributions of the diphoton pairs from the decay of a Higgs boson are contrasted with those produced from QCD processes at the LHC, showing that enhanced sensitivity to the signal can be obtained with judicious selection of events."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098052.5954, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722097882.9305, "finish": 1722098052.5954, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fb594a0d4b6e4912b872f40e39a37de2", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "gwgwgw", "output": [["gwgwgw", "List of Desert Island Discs episodes\n\nThe BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs invites castaways to choose eight pieces of music, a book (in addition to the Bible \u2013 or a religious text appropriate to that person's beliefs \u2013 and the Complete Works of Shakespeare) and a luxury item that they would take to an imaginary desert island, where they will be marooned indefinitely. The rules state that the chosen luxury item must not be anything animate or indeed anything that enables the castaway to escape from the island, for instance a radio set, sailing yacht or aeroplane. The choices of book and luxury can sometimes give insight into the guest's life, and the choices of guests are listed here."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098071.2547, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098063.1141, "finish": 1722098071.2547, "ip": "", "conv_id": "38f221dcf8384f46bae839917b1d7069", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "gewg", "output": [["gewg", "Apple Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why doesn't Microsoft Office/2008(& later) support RTL languages? I have Microsoft Office/2008 on my MacBook Pro. Office doesn't support RTL languages like Farsi and Arabic, and I know that Office/2010 (for Windows) also has the same problem.\nDo you think the lack of support is because of business competition, or some other reason?\n\nA: \u201cWhy\u201d is a question for Microsoft, but I'm guessing it boils down to a simple lack of resources on the part of the Mac Business Unit. They have to prioritize certain features, and RTL support is not a priority for them.\nTo address the underlying need, you have several options:\nOpenOffice and NeoOffice support RTL text in Microsoft Office documents.\nMellel has a reputation as the best RTL/multilingual word processor (it certainly has a nice feature set for it, like a direction breaking space so you can mix RTL/LTR in a paragraph), but I don\u2019t know how good its Microsoft Office document interoperability is.\nThis would also be a use case where it might make sense to run Office 2010 inside a Windows virtual machine.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098084.8117, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098079.1189, "finish": 1722098084.8117, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ee7034003ce14ceab806295edcc10e53", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Artificial intelligence\n\nIn the late teens and early 2020s, AGI companies began to deliver programs that created enormous interest. In 2015, AlphaGo, developed by DeepMind, beat the world champion Go player. The program was taught only the rules of the game and developed strategy by itself. GPT-3 is a large language model that was released in 2020 by OpenAI and is capable of generating high-quality human-like text. These programs, and others, inspired an aggressive AI boom, where large companies began investing billions in AI research. According to AI Impacts, about $50 billion annually was invested in \"AI\" around 2022 in the U.S. alone and about 20% of the new U.S. Computer Science PhD graduates have specialized in \"AI\".\nAbout 800,000 \"AI\"-related U.S. job openings existed in 2022.\nPhilosophy\nDefining artificial intelligence\nAlan Turing wrote in 1950 \"I propose to consider the question 'can machines think'?\" He advised changing the question from whether a machine \"thinks\", to \"whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\". He devised the Turing test, which measures the ability of a machine to simulate human conversation. Since we can only observe the behavior of the machine, it does not matter if it is \"actually\" thinking or literally has a \"mind\". Turing notes that we can not determine these things about other people but \"it is usual to have a polite convention that everyone thinks.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index ff1c60060699d43073f69fea34d00187a1d34e4b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,141 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720905285.9406, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905232.9322, "finish": 1720905285.9406, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e3cbb1da405d498db5cf1ab80ff11403", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905285.9406, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905232.9322, "finish": 1720905285.9406, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4342dfa715fe4ab3a3101e0cb23bc27d", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905390.0871, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905355.6428, "finish": 1720905390.0871, "ip": "", "conv_id": "23d9e43896504a12a47d77470889d3e0", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905390.0871, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905355.6428, "finish": 1720905390.0871, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6d0429e10cda45b79db855cef5e0bc22", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "output": [["where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "Title: UW Health University Hospital\n\nPassage: UW Health University Hospital (UW Health, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics or UWHC) is a 614-bed academic regional referral center with 127 outpatient clinics, located on the western edge of the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison's campus in Madison, Wisconsin. It is an American College of Surgeons designated Level I adult and pediatric trauma center, one of only two in Wisconsin.\nUW Health describes itself as \"the integrated health system of the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison.\" It is the primary teaching affiliate of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health (whose main building, the Health Sciences Learning Center, is connected to UW Health University Hospital). It is also the primary teaching affiliate of the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison's School of Nursing and School of Pharmacy, and is a teaching affiliate of Edgewood College's Henry Predolin School of Nursing."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905477.6457, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905461.9795, "finish": 1720905477.6457, "ip": "", "conv_id": "30b69481f9c3449eb35f5a819f21d287", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905477.6457, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905461.9795, "finish": 1720905477.6457, "ip": "", "conv_id": "92833b95bb0b4777b9768474b8cde2e5", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: Bubba Smith\n\nPassage: Charles Aaron \"Bubba\" Smith (February 28, 1945 \u2013 August 3, 2011) was an American professional football defensive end and actor. Smith played in the National Football League (NFL) for the Baltimore Colts, Oakland Raiders, and Houston Oilers.\nSmith played college football for Michigan State University, where he twice earned All-American honors on the Spartans football team. Smith had a major role in a 10\u201310 tie against Notre Dame in 1966 that was billed as \"The Game of the Century\". He is one of only six players to have his jersey number retired by the program. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988.\nThe first overall pick of the 1967 NFL/AFL draft, Smith played nine years in the NFL for the Colts, Raiders, and Oilers from 1967 to 1976. He was the Colts' starting left defensive end for five seasons, playing in Super Bowls III and V. He was named to two Pro Bowls and was a first-team All-Pro in 1971. He had tremendous quickness despite being and , a combination which usually earned him a double-team.\nDuring his acting career, Smith specialized in comedic roles in film, television, and television advertising. For about a decade following his retirement from football, he appeared in various commercials for Miller Lite, alongside Chicago Bears linebacker Dick Butkus. His best-known role was as Moses Hightower in the first six Police Academy movies.\nSmith was posthumously diagnosed with chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a neurological condition generally related to head trauma. He is one of at least 345 NFL players to be diagnosed after death with this disease.\nEarly life"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905584.2087, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905583.9248, "finish": 1720905584.2087, "ip": "", "conv_id": "886169a731404b9f93f477298654e318", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: Bubba Smith\n\nPassage: Smith was traded from the Colts to the Oakland Raiders for Raymond Chester on July 16, 1973. He finished his career with the Houston Oilers. Smith was selected All-Pro one year, All-Conference two years, and went to two Pro Bowls. His legacy is the inspiration behind the documentary, Through the Banks of the Red Cedar, written and directed by MSU teammate Gene Washington's daughter, Maya.\nActing career\nAfter retiring from professional football, Smith began acting in small movie and television roles in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He is perhaps best known for his role as Moses Hightower in the Police Academy movie series, a role he reprised in all but one of the Police Academy sequels. He also played as the chauffeur for Ned Beatty's character, Clyde Torkle, in the movie Stroker Ace starring Burt Reynolds.\nSmith starred in the short-lived television series Blue Thunder, partnering with Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive star Dick Butkus, with whom he frequently costarred in advertisements for Miller Lite beer. Among other television series Smith appeared in were Good Times, Half Nelson, The Odd Couple, Wonder Woman, Taxi, Hart to Hart, MacGyver, Married... with Children and Family Matters.\nSmith was the longtime spokesman of Baltimore-area law firm Cohen, Snyder, Eisenberg & Katzenberg.\nPersonal life\nIn 1983, Smith published the autobiography entitled Kill, Bubba, Kill, in which he stated he felt it was possible Super Bowl III had been rigged to enable the Jets to win in order to ensure the AFL\u2013NFL merger proceeded smoothly.\nSmith was found dead in his Los Angeles home by his caretaker on August 3, 2011. He died from acute drug intoxication and heart disease. Phentermine, a weight-loss drug, was found in his system. His heart weighed more than twice that of an average similar male. He was 66 years old.\nCTE diagnosis\nOn May 24, 2016, it was announced that Smith had the brain disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative illness affecting unknown numbers of former athletes in contact sports. The findings were confirmed by researchers affiliated with the Department of Veterans Affairs, Boston University and the Concussion Legacy Foundation, and released with the permission of the executor of Smith's estate.\nSmith is the 90th former NFL player found to have had CTE by the researchers at the Boston University brain bank; they have examined 94 former pro players. According to the Concussion Legacy Foundation, on a scale of 1 to 4 used by the neuropathologist who examined Smith's brain, Smith had Stage 3 CTE, with symptoms including cognitive impairment and problems with judgment and planning.\nFilmography"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905584.2087, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905583.9248, "finish": 1720905584.2087, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c2f895255e064d099325de6a947556e3", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: Bubba Smith\n\nPassage: Charles Aaron \"Bubba\" Smith (February 28, 1945 \u2013 August 3, 2011) was an American professional football defensive end and actor. Smith played in the National Football League (NFL) for the Baltimore Colts, Oakland Raiders, and Houston Oilers.\nSmith played college football for Michigan State University, where he twice earned All-American honors on the Spartans football team. Smith had a major role in a 10\u201310 tie against Notre Dame in 1966 that was billed as \"The Game of the Century\". He is one of only six players to have his jersey number retired by the program. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988.\nThe first overall pick of the 1967 NFL/AFL draft, Smith played nine years in the NFL for the Colts, Raiders, and Oilers from 1967 to 1976. He was the Colts' starting left defensive end for five seasons, playing in Super Bowls III and V. He was named to two Pro Bowls and was a first-team All-Pro in 1971. He had tremendous quickness despite being and , a combination which usually earned him a double-team.\nDuring his acting career, Smith specialized in comedic roles in film, television, and television advertising. For about a decade following his retirement from football, he appeared in various commercials for Miller Lite, alongside Chicago Bears linebacker Dick Butkus. His best-known role was as Moses Hightower in the first six Police Academy movies.\nSmith was posthumously diagnosed with chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a neurological condition generally related to head trauma. He is one of at least 345 NFL players to be diagnosed after death with this disease.\nEarly life"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905594.1846, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905593.9227, "finish": 1720905594.1846, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f76116c04e014a3a91c8345c1ade7e18", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who was elected president of the united states in 1928", "output": [["who was elected president of the united states in 1928", "Title: 1928 United States presidential election in California\n\nPassage: The 1928 United States presidential election in California took place on November 6, 1928, as part of the 1928 United States presidential election. State voters chose 13 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.\nCalifornia voted for the Republican nominee, former Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover, in a landslide over the Democratic nominee, New York Governor Al Smith. This was also the first election in California where the winning candidate received over 1 million votes. This also remains the last time that a Republican got more than 60% of the vote in California.\nThis was the last time until 1952 that a Republican presidential nominee carried California.\nResults\nResults by county"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905594.1846, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905593.9227, "finish": 1720905594.1846, "ip": "", "conv_id": "76046266044745a3b94aca9ee4a9ea69", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who was elected president of the united states in 1928", "output": [["who was elected president of the united states in 1928", "Title: Presidency of Herbert Hoover\n\nPassage: Election of 1928\nAfter President Calvin Coolidge announced in August 1927 that he would not seek a second full term of office in the 1928 presidential election, Hoover emerged as the front-runner for the Republican presidential nomination. While Hoover gained the support of important party constituencies and won several primaries, some party leaders opposed his candidacy. Coolidge viewed Hoover's candidacy with ill-concealed disgust, remarking that \"for six years that man has given me unsolicited advice\u2014all of it bad.\" Hoover's opponents were unable to unite around an alternative candidate, and Hoover won the presidential nomination on the first ballot of the 1928 Republican National Convention. The delegates considered re-nominating Vice President Charles Dawes to be Hoover's running mate, but Coolidge, who hated Dawes, remarked that this would be \"a personal affront\" to him. The convention instead selected Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas, who had Native American ancestry.\nDelegates to the 1928 Democratic National Convention nominated New York Governor Alfred E. Smith, who was described by Smith ally Franklin D. Roosevelt as \"the Happy Warrior of the political battlefield.\" Hoover campaigned for efficiency and the Republican record of prosperity. Smith ran on his record of efficiency earned over four terms as governor. Both candidates were pro-business, and each promised to improve conditions for farmers, reform immigration laws, and maintain America's isolationist foreign policy. They differed on the Volstead Act which outlawed the sale of liquor and beer. Smith was a \"wet\" who called for its repeal, whereas Hoover gave limited support for Prohibition, calling it an \"experiment noble in purpose.\" While Smith won extra support among Catholics in the big cities, he was the target of intense anti-Catholic rhetoric from the Ku Klux Klan, as well as numerous Protestant preachers in rural areas across the South and West.\nIn the November election, Republicans won an overwhelming victory. Though Smith carried every large urban area in the country, Hoover received 58 percent of the popular vote and a massive 444 to 87 Electoral College majority. Hoover won 40 states, including Smith's home state; he also succeeded in cracking the \"Solid South\", winning in five traditionally Democratic states. Historians agree that Hoover's national reputation and the booming economy, combined with deep splits in the Democratic Party over religion and prohibition, were the decisive factors in the 1928 election.\nTransition\nBefore President-elect Hoover would take office, there was a nearly four-month transition period."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905614.2669, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905613.9603, "finish": 1720905614.2669, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8bf591f72030425cbd9505025229be23", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "difference between half rate and full rate in gsm", "output": [["difference between half rate and full rate in gsm", "Title: Half Rate\n\nPassage: Half Rate (HR or GSM-HR or GSM 06.20) is a speech coding system for GSM, developed in the early 1990s.\nSince the codec, operating at 5.6\u00a0kbit/s, requires half the bandwidth of the Full Rate codec, network capacity for voice traffic is doubled, at the expense of audio quality. The sampling rate is 8\u00a0kHz with resolution 13 bit, frame length 160 samples (20 ms) and subframe length 40 samples (5 ms).\nGSM Half Rate is specified in ETSI EN 300 969 (GSM 06.20), and uses a form of the VSELP algorithm. Previous specification was in ETSI ETS 300 581\u20132, which first edition was published in December 1995.\nFor some Nokia phones one can configure the use of this codec:\nTo activate HR codec use enter the following code: *4720#\nTo deactivate HR codec use enter the following code: #4720#"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905614.2669, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905613.9603, "finish": 1720905614.2669, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9043250aee0942448950eabe8ce1720c", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "difference between half rate and full rate in gsm", "output": [["difference between half rate and full rate in gsm", "Title: Half Rate\n\nPassage: Half Rate (HR or GSM-HR or GSM 06.20) is a speech coding system for GSM, developed in the early 1990s.\nSince the codec, operating at 5.6\u00a0kbit/s, requires half the bandwidth of the Full Rate codec, network capacity for voice traffic is doubled, at the expense of audio quality. The sampling rate is 8\u00a0kHz with resolution 13 bit, frame length 160 samples (20 ms) and subframe length 40 samples (5 ms).\nGSM Half Rate is specified in ETSI EN 300 969 (GSM 06.20), and uses a form of the VSELP algorithm. Previous specification was in ETSI ETS 300 581\u20132, which first edition was published in December 1995.\nFor some Nokia phones one can configure the use of this codec:\nTo activate HR codec use enter the following code: *4720#\nTo deactivate HR codec use enter the following code: #4720#"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905633.0831, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905632.8021, "finish": 1720905633.0831, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0bb9851382be484fabf2d6e5c249a157", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when does panic at the disco album come out", "output": [["when does panic at the disco album come out", "Title: Panic! at the Disco discography\n\nPassage: Panic! at the Disco was an American rock band that originated in Las Vegas, Nevada. Their 2005 debut album, A Fever You Can't Sweat Out, reached number 13 on the US Billboard 200, and has sold more than 2.2 million copies in the US (pure) and has been certified 4x platinum by RIAAsince its September 2005 release, spearheaded by the eight platinum top-10 hit single, \"I Write Sins Not Tragedies\". The band's second album, Pretty. Odd., was released on March 21, 2008, entering the US chart at, and peaking at, number 2 and is certified platinum by RIAA. Their third effort, Vices & Virtues, was released on March 18, 2011, and peaked at number 7 in the US and is certified gold by RIAA, spawned iconic comeback smash hit \"The Ballad of Mona Lisa\". Their fourth album, 2013's Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!, entered and peaked at number 2 on the US chart, and contained hits such as \"Miss Jackson\", \"This Is Gospel\", and \" Girls / Girls Boys\". The band's fifth studio album, Death of a Bachelor, was released in January 2016 and became their first number-one album in the US. It has been certified 2x platinum in 2019. It is currently the most streamed album. Their sixth album, Pray for the Wicked, was released on June 22, 2018, and debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200. It has been certified 2x platinum by RIAA. It later became band's most successful era in terms of achievement and tour gross. Their seventh and final album, Viva Las Vengeance, released in August 2022 and became band's most critically acclaimed album to date.\nAlbums\nStudio albums\nLive albums\nCompilation albums\nExtended plays\nSingles\nPromotional singles\nOther charted and certified songs\nOther releases\nGuest appearances\nUnreleased songs\nMusic videos\nGuest appearances"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905633.0831, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905632.8021, "finish": 1720905633.0831, "ip": "", "conv_id": "78a7dd5e4ace4f1b8ea222f1c9853f93", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when does panic at the disco album come out", "output": [["when does panic at the disco album come out", "Title: Panic! at the Disco discography\n\nPassage: Panic! at the Disco was an American rock band that originated in Las Vegas, Nevada. Their 2005 debut album, A Fever You Can't Sweat Out, reached number 13 on the US Billboard 200, and has sold more than 2.2 million copies in the US (pure) and has been certified 4x platinum by RIAAsince its September 2005 release, spearheaded by the eight platinum top-10 hit single, \"I Write Sins Not Tragedies\". The band's second album, Pretty. Odd., was released on March 21, 2008, entering the US chart at, and peaking at, number 2 and is certified platinum by RIAA. Their third effort, Vices & Virtues, was released on March 18, 2011, and peaked at number 7 in the US and is certified gold by RIAA, spawned iconic comeback smash hit \"The Ballad of Mona Lisa\". Their fourth album, 2013's Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die!, entered and peaked at number 2 on the US chart, and contained hits such as \"Miss Jackson\", \"This Is Gospel\", and \" Girls / Girls Boys\". The band's fifth studio album, Death of a Bachelor, was released in January 2016 and became their first number-one album in the US. It has been certified 2x platinum in 2019. It is currently the most streamed album. Their sixth album, Pray for the Wicked, was released on June 22, 2018, and debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200. It has been certified 2x platinum by RIAA. It later became band's most successful era in terms of achievement and tour gross. Their seventh and final album, Viva Las Vengeance, released in August 2022 and became band's most critically acclaimed album to date.\nAlbums\nStudio albums\nLive albums\nCompilation albums\nExtended plays\nSingles\nPromotional singles\nOther charted and certified songs\nOther releases\nGuest appearances\nUnreleased songs\nMusic videos\nGuest appearances"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905642.8724, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905642.5834, "finish": 1720905642.8724, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3c892506ee7f4ce4a43a77c511d3e76d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who was Darth Plagueis?", "output": [["Who was Darth Plagueis?", "Title: Sith\n\nPassage: Darth Vader\nDarth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a human-cyborg Dark Lord of the Sith and the third and final apprentice of Darth Sidious, who first appeared in the Star Wars original trilogy, and later in the prequel trilogy. As the Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker, he fought alongside his master Obi-Wan Kenobi during the galaxy-wide Clone Wars, but was slowly seduced to the dark side by Darth Sidious, then Sheev Palpatine, a well respected senator. After helping Sidious kill Jedi Master Mace Windu, he swore allegiance to the Sith and was given the name Darth Vader before setting out to destroy all Jedi left on Coruscant. After being sent by Sidious to assassinate the Separatist council members on Mustafar, Vader was badly injured in a duel with Kenobi, resulting in the loss of his remaining organic arm, both legs, and severe burn injuries. He was saved by Sidious, and encased in a black suit of armor with extensive cybernetics which kept him alive. As the Galactic Empire was established and continued to grow, Vader became the Emperor's immensely feared second-in-command and was given the task of finding surviving Jedi and the Rebel Alliance's base. After the destruction of the first Death Star, Vader was charged with tracking down the Rebel Alliance and destroying their headquarters. However, the actions of his son, Luke Skywalker, eventually turned Vader against his master, resulting in both Sidious' and Vader's deaths, as well as the fulfilment of the Chosen One prophecy.\nDarth Plagueis\nDarth Plagueis was a Muun Dark Lord of the Sith and Darth Sidious' master, first referenced in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. In the film, Sidious (as Palpatine) uses Plagueis' story to seduce Anakin Skywalker to the dark side, claiming that Plagueis' abilities in the Force grew to such an extent that he could create life by influencing microscopic Force-sensitive entities called \"midi-chlorians,\" and even save people from dying. According to the Rule of Two, Plagueis was eventually killed by Sidious in his sleep, who subsequently became the new Sith Master and would later take on an apprentice of his own.\nPlagueis is the main character of the Legends novel, Star Wars: Darth Plagueis, which explains much of his backstory, including his training under Darth Tenebrous, mentorship of Palpatine, and early plans to undermine the Galactic Republic and drive the Jedi Order into ruins. The novel also reveals that Plagueis' public identity was Hego Damsk II, a member of the Intergalactic Banking Clan.\nDarth Bane"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905642.8724, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905642.5834, "finish": 1720905642.8724, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3db560ce63ac4bd3bf9b8a155721bfb0", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Who was Darth Plagueis?", "output": [["Who was Darth Plagueis?", "Title: Sith\n\nPassage: Darth Vader\nDarth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a human-cyborg Dark Lord of the Sith and the third and final apprentice of Darth Sidious, who first appeared in the Star Wars original trilogy, and later in the prequel trilogy. As the Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker, he fought alongside his master Obi-Wan Kenobi during the galaxy-wide Clone Wars, but was slowly seduced to the dark side by Darth Sidious, then Sheev Palpatine, a well respected senator. After helping Sidious kill Jedi Master Mace Windu, he swore allegiance to the Sith and was given the name Darth Vader before setting out to destroy all Jedi left on Coruscant. After being sent by Sidious to assassinate the Separatist council members on Mustafar, Vader was badly injured in a duel with Kenobi, resulting in the loss of his remaining organic arm, both legs, and severe burn injuries. He was saved by Sidious, and encased in a black suit of armor with extensive cybernetics which kept him alive. As the Galactic Empire was established and continued to grow, Vader became the Emperor's immensely feared second-in-command and was given the task of finding surviving Jedi and the Rebel Alliance's base. After the destruction of the first Death Star, Vader was charged with tracking down the Rebel Alliance and destroying their headquarters. However, the actions of his son, Luke Skywalker, eventually turned Vader against his master, resulting in both Sidious' and Vader's deaths, as well as the fulfilment of the Chosen One prophecy.\nDarth Plagueis\nDarth Plagueis was a Muun Dark Lord of the Sith and Darth Sidious' master, first referenced in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. In the film, Sidious (as Palpatine) uses Plagueis' story to seduce Anakin Skywalker to the dark side, claiming that Plagueis' abilities in the Force grew to such an extent that he could create life by influencing microscopic Force-sensitive entities called \"midi-chlorians,\" and even save people from dying. According to the Rule of Two, Plagueis was eventually killed by Sidious in his sleep, who subsequently became the new Sith Master and would later take on an apprentice of his own.\nPlagueis is the main character of the Legends novel, Star Wars: Darth Plagueis, which explains much of his backstory, including his training under Darth Tenebrous, mentorship of Palpatine, and early plans to undermine the Galactic Republic and drive the Jedi Order into ruins. The novel also reveals that Plagueis' public identity was Hego Damsk II, a member of the Intergalactic Banking Clan.\nDarth Bane"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905764.208, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905728.2329, "finish": 1720905764.208, "ip": "", "conv_id": "128959b5d7214c199aee3b96d0a46a9a", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: 42\n\nPassage: 42 may refer to:\n42 (number)\nThe years 42 BC and AD 42\nArts, entertainment, and media\n42 (dominoes), a game\n42 (film), a 2013 biopic about American baseball player Jackie Robinson\n42, a 2021 album by Sech\n42, the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything, from Douglas Adams' series The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Named after or in honor of this:\n\"42\" (Doctor Who), a 2007 television episode\n\"42\" (2001), the final episode of the television series Buzz Lightyear of Star Command\n\"42\" (song), a 2008 song by Coldplay\n42, the 2012 debut album of Cthulhu Rise\n42: The Wildly Improbable Ideas of Douglas Adams, 2023 book by Kevin Jon Davies\n42 Entertainment, an alternate reality games company founded in 2003\n\"42\", a song by Mumford & Sons from Delta, 2018\n\"Forty Two\", a song by Karma to Burn from the album Appalachian Incantation, 2010\nOther uses\n42 (school), a French computer programming school\nThe 42 (Kolkata), a residential skyscraper in India\nTower 42 a skyscraper in London, England\n42.zip, a zip bomb\n42, Jackie Robinson\u2019s jersey number, since retired by all of Major League Baseball\n42, the atomic number of Molybdenum\n42 Isis, a main-belt asteroid"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905795.5638, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905795.4463, "finish": 1720905795.5638, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d54529924fd844cb9e43340ac615c7dc", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who has won the 2018 formula one australia grand prix tournament", "output": [["who has won the 2018 formula one australia grand prix tournament", "Title: 2005 Australian Grand Prix\n\nPassage: The 2005 Australian Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit on 6 March 2005. It was the first round of the 2005 Formula One season. The 58-lap race was won by Renault driver Giancarlo Fisichella after he started from pole position. Rubens Barrichello finished second for the Ferrari team and Fisichella's team-mate Fernando Alonso came in third.\nFriday drivers"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720905801.5926, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720905801.4095, "finish": 1720905801.5926, "ip": "", "conv_id": "29ee3dbbe05e4487bf1de58c07911de4", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "the origins of the stations of the cross", "output": [["the origins of the stations of the cross", "Title: Christ Carrying the Cross\n\nPassage: Christ Carrying the Cross on his way to his crucifixion is an episode included in the Gospel of John, and a very common subject in art, especially in the fourteen Stations of the Cross, sets of which are now found in almost all Roman Catholic churches, as well as in many Lutheran churches and Anglican churches. However, the subject occurs in many other contexts, including single works and cycles of the Life of Christ or the Passion of Christ. Alternative names include the Procession to Calvary, Road to Calvary and Way to Calvary, Calvary or Golgotha being the site of the crucifixion outside Jerusalem. The actual route taken is defined by tradition as the Via Dolorosa in Jerusalem, although the specific path of this route has varied over the centuries and continues to be the subject of debate.\nBiblical references"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908606.897, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908549.8177, "finish": 1720908606.897, "ip": "", "conv_id": "393625bb628e4fa4be7317252274a217", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908606.897, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908549.8177, "finish": 1720908606.897, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d4c0bb3426c5438dbee499c45b1d1823", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908798.3011, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908797.9146, "finish": 1720908798.3011, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c0884a4fa4b94bc9bdfa36446261d833", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is Trantor?", "output": [["What is Trantor?", "Title: Transterpreter\n\nPassage: The transterpreter is computer software, an interpreter for the transputer, is a virtual machine for the programming language occam-\u03c0 (occam-pi), and a portable runtime for the KRoC compiler. It is designed for education and research in concurrency and robotics. The transterpreter was developed at the University of Kent.\nThe transterpeter has made it possible to easily run occam-\u03c0 programs on platforms such as the Lego Mindstorms RCX, Arduino, IA-32, SPARC, MIPS, and the Cell BE, on the operating systems Linux, macOS, Microsoft Windows, and MS-DOS."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908798.3011, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908797.9146, "finish": 1720908798.3011, "ip": "", "conv_id": "10ef784ea17c44d694438d88976f4e94", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is Trantor?", "output": [["What is Trantor?", "Title: Ecumenopolis\n\nPassage: Doxiadis also created a scenario based on the traditions and trends of urban development of his time, predicting at first a European eperopolis (\"continent city\") which would be based on the area between London, Paris, Rhine-Ruhr and Amsterdam. In 2008, Time magazine coined Nylonkong to link New York City, London, and Hong Kong as the eperopolis of the Americas, Euro-Africa and Asia-Pacific respectively.\nIn popular culture\nBefore the term had been created, the concept had been previously discussed. The American religious leader Thomas Lake Harris (1823\u20131906) mentioned city-planets in his verses, and science fiction author Isaac Asimov used the city-planet Trantor as the setting of some of his Foundation novels.\nIn science fiction, the ecumenopolis has become a frequent topic and popularized in 1999 by the fictional city planet Coruscant in the Star Wars franchise, which is the capital of the Galactic Republic (later Empire) and home to the Jedi Order. In addition to Coruscant, Star Wars: The Force Awakens features the planet Hosnian Prime, the capital world of the New Republic. Star Wars Legends also features Nar Shaddaa, a moon ecumenopolis known for being almost entirely ruled by crime lords, and Taris, a former ecumenopolis wiped out in the course of a devastating civil war, eventually becoming a vast swampland of ruins.\nIn Dune, the Harkonnens' home world of Giedi Prime is a heavily polluted ecumenopolis infamous for its gladiator arenas.\nThe concept is depicted in the video game Stellaris, where players are given the option of transforming planets into ecumenopolises, which provides a great deal of housing and space for industrial production through the construction of arcologies, at the cost of making the planet's natural resources inaccessible.\nThe video game Star Citizen currently features an ecumenopolis called ArcCorp which is owned by a fictional in-game company of the same name. As of March 2024, its current implementation in the game is a de facto ecumenopolis. However, as development continues, it is expected to feature oceans and small parts of undeveloped land.\nA central setting in the tabletop wargame Warhammer 40,000 is a portrayal of Earth in the far future, where it is known as \"Holy Terra\" and is described as having been transformed into a vast, Gothic-style ecumenopolis sometime during the 30th millennium AD after its establishment as the \"Throneworld\", or capital, of an interstellar superpower known as the Imperium of Man.\nIn Magic: the Gathering, the plane of Ravnica is an ecumenopolis.\nDC Comics continuity features Darkseid's extra-dimensional home planet of Apokolips, often depicted as a hellish world covered entirely in industrial sprawl to feed Darkseid's brutal empire.\nThe manga and film of Blame! by Tsutomu Nihei is set in a far future in which Earth has become the ruins of planet-covering city, which is suggested to be so large that it has consumed most of the Solar System as well, it may also be along the lines of a hollow-world or dyson shell. Some of his other works also take place in this same setting."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908817.2604, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908817.0123, "finish": 1720908817.2604, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fb08839e459c4ad69b0b586d0b3808d0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What did Arcadia do on Trantor?", "output": [["What did Arcadia do on Trantor?", "Title: Arc of Infinity\n\nPassage: Time Lord Councillor Hedin is revealed as the traitor who transmitted the bio-data. Hedin is in awe of his master Omega, first of the Time Lords and pioneer of time travel. Hedin wishes to release Omega from his exile in a universe of antimatter, not realising the great Time Lord has been driven insane by his years of solitary confinement. The Castellan kills Councillor Hedin, but this does not prevent Omega using the Arc of Infinity to seize total control of the Matrix and come to Earth. When he peels his decayed mask away, he reveals the features of the Doctor, whom he now perfectly resembles.\nOmega leaves for Amsterdam with the Doctor and Nyssa in pursuit. Within a short time, the Doctor's prediction of an unstable transfer begins to come true: Omega's flesh decays and it is clear his new body is not permanent. When the Doctor and Nyssa catch up with him, it is a painful task for the Doctor to use the Ergon's antimatter converter on Omega, expelling him back to his own universe of antimatter. The Time Lord High Council on Gallifrey detects the end of the threat. Once Tegan has checked on her cousin's progress in hospital, she decides to rejoin the TARDIS crew.\nProduction\nThe working titles for this story were The Time of Neman and The Time of Omega. For Parts One and Two, the character of Omega was credited as \"The Renegade\" on the end credits. Colin Baker stated on Doctor Who: The Colin Baker Years video that John Nathan-Turner believed his performance was a little arch, and therefore gave him the nickname of Archie.\nSubstantial portions of the story were filmed on location in Amsterdam. This was only the second time the show had filmed outside of Britain. John Nathan-Turner hoped to repeat the success of the first story filmed overseas, City of Death (1979). Amsterdam was chosen both because the BBC had recently developed contacts there and because it was cheap to arrange travel and hotel accommodations. Story writer Johnny Byrne had some trouble at first because the producers wanted a plot that made the Amsterdam setting a key factor in the course of events, rather than him just happening to be there.\nPart One was broadcast on a Monday in contrast to the rest of this season's episodes, which were all transmitted on consecutive Tuesday and Wednesday evenings.\nCast notes\nThe story features a guest appearance by Michael Gough (who had previously played the Celestial Toymaker in the story of the same name). Leonard Sachs previously played Admiral Gaspard de Coligny in The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve (1966). Ian Collier previously played Stuart Hyde in The Time Monster (1972)."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908817.2604, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908817.0123, "finish": 1720908817.2604, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1149d54bcde34da9ab7bd5eb3be47569", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What did Arcadia do on Trantor?", "output": [["What did Arcadia do on Trantor?", "Title: Arcology\n\nPassage: The concept has been popularized by various science fiction writers. Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle provided a detailed description of an arcology in their 1981 novel Oath of Fealty. William Gibson mainstreamed the term in his seminal 1984 cyberpunk novel Neuromancer, where each corporation has its own self-contained city known as an arcology. More recently, authors such as Peter Hamilton in Neutronium Alchemist and Paolo Bacigalupi in The Water Knife explicitly used arcologies as part of their scenarios. They are often portrayed as self-contained or economically self-sufficient.\nDevelopment\nAn arcology is distinguished from a merely large building in that it is designed to lessen the impact of human habitation on any given ecosystem. It could be self-sustainable, employing all or most of its own available resources for a comfortable life: power, climate control, food production, air and water conservation and purification, sewage treatment, etc. An arcology is designed to make it possible to supply those items for a large population. An arcology would supply and maintain its own municipal or urban infrastructures in order to operate and connect with other urban environments apart from its own.\nArcologies were proposed in order to reduce human impact on natural resources. Arcology designs might apply conventional building and civil engineering techniques in very large, but practical projects in order to achieve pedestrian economies of scale that have proven, post-automobile, to be difficult to achieve in other ways.\nFrank Lloyd Wright proposed an early version called Broadacre City although, in contrast to an arcology, his idea is comparatively two-dimensional and depends on a road network. Wright's plan described transportation, agriculture, and commerce systems that would support an economy. Critics said that Wright's solution failed to account for population growth, and assumed a more rigid democracy than the US actually has.\nBuckminster Fuller proposed the Old Man River's City project, a domed city with a capacity of 125,000, as a solution to the housing problems in East St. Louis, Illinois.\nPaolo Soleri proposed later solutions, and coined the term \"arcology\". Soleri describes ways of compacting city structures in three dimensions to combat two-dimensional urban sprawl, to economize on transportation and other energy uses. Like Wright, Soleri proposed changes in transportation, agriculture, and commerce. Soleri explored reductions in resource consumption and duplication, land reclamation; he also proposed to eliminate most private transportation. He advocated for greater \"frugality\" and favored greater use of shared social resources, including public transit (and public libraries).\nSimilar real-world projects\nArcosanti is an experimental \"arcology prototype\", a demonstration project under construction in central Arizona since 1970. Designed by Paolo Soleri, its primary purpose is to demonstrate Soleri's personal designs, his application of principles of arcology to create a pedestrian-friendly urban form.\nMany cities in the world have proposed projects adhering to the design principles of the arcology concept, like Tokyo, and Dongtan near Shanghai. The Dongtan project may have collapsed, and it failed to open for the Shanghai World Expo in 2010."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908881.0328, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908880.7728, "finish": 1720908881.0328, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3777890f9c074ded93775f2e27aa301f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I want to learn about cryonics", "output": [["I want to learn about cryonics", "Title: Cryopreservation\n\nPassage: Cryopreservation or cryoconservation is a process where biological material - cells, tissues, or organs - are frozen to preserve the material for an extended period of time. At low temperatures (typically or using liquid nitrogen) any cell metabolism which might cause damage to the biological material in question is effectively stopped. Cryopreservation is an effective way to transport biological samples over long distances, store samples for prolonged periods of time, and create a bank of samples for users. Molecules, referred to as cryoprotective agents (CPAs), are added to reduce the osmotic shock and physical stresses cells undergo in the freezing process. Some cryoprotective agents used in research are inspired by plants and animals in nature that have unique cold tolerance to survive harsh winters, including: trees, wood frogs, and tardigrades.The first human corpse to be frozen with the hope of future resurrection was James Bedford's, a few hours after his cancer-caused death in 1967.[15] Bedford's is the only cryonics corpse frozen before 1974 still frozen today.\nNatural cryopreservation"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908881.0328, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908880.7728, "finish": 1720908881.0328, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cb7b675eaff84caaae3ce60c2211fe40", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I want to learn about cryonics", "output": [["I want to learn about cryonics", "Title: Cryopreservation\n\nPassage: Cryopreservation or cryoconservation is a process where biological material - cells, tissues, or organs - are frozen to preserve the material for an extended period of time. At low temperatures (typically or using liquid nitrogen) any cell metabolism which might cause damage to the biological material in question is effectively stopped. Cryopreservation is an effective way to transport biological samples over long distances, store samples for prolonged periods of time, and create a bank of samples for users. Molecules, referred to as cryoprotective agents (CPAs), are added to reduce the osmotic shock and physical stresses cells undergo in the freezing process. Some cryoprotective agents used in research are inspired by plants and animals in nature that have unique cold tolerance to survive harsh winters, including: trees, wood frogs, and tardigrades.The first human corpse to be frozen with the hope of future resurrection was James Bedford's, a few hours after his cancer-caused death in 1967.[15] Bedford's is the only cryonics corpse frozen before 1974 still frozen today.\nNatural cryopreservation"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908898.613, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908898.4004, "finish": 1720908898.613, "ip": "", "conv_id": "920bc4663fb84862b5ea87096d063ae5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Can aging be stopped?", "output": [["Can aging be stopped?", "Title: Ending Aging\n\nPassage: Ending Aging: The Rejuvenation Breakthroughs that Could Reverse Human Aging in Our Lifetime is a 2007 book written by biogerontologist Aubrey de Grey, with his research assistant Michael Rae. Ending Aging describes de Grey's proposal for eliminating aging as a cause of debilitation and death in humans, and restoring the body to an indefinitely youthful state, a project that he calls the \"strategies for engineered negligible senescence\" (\"SENS\"). De Grey argues that defeating aging is feasible, possibly within a few decades, and he outlines steps that can be taken to hasten the development of regenerative medicine treatments for each side of aging.\nEditions\nSt. Martin's Press, 1st edition (hardcover, 389 pages), released September 4, 2007:\nSt. Martin's Griffin, 1st reprint edition with new afterword (paperback, 448 pages), released October 14, 2008:\nTranslations\nGerman: Niemals alt!: So l\u00e4sst sich das Altern umkehren. Fortschritte der Verj\u00fcngungsforschung, transcript Verlag, Bielefeld 2010\nSpanish: El Fin del Envejecimiento. Los avances que podr\u00edan revertir el envejecimiento humano durante nuestra vida, Lola Books, Berl\u00edn 2013\nItalian: La fine dell'invecchiamento: Come la scienza potr\u00e0 esaudire il sogno dell'eterna giovinezza, D Editore, Roma 2016\nPortuguese: O fim do envelhecimento: Os avan\u00e7os que poderiam reverter o envelhecimento humano durante nossa vida, NTZ, 2018\nThe book has not been officially translated into Russian, but there is an unofficial non-commercial fan translation named \"\u041e\u0442\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0442\u044c \u0421\u0442\u0430\u0440\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435\", which is distributed on the Internet in PDF format."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908898.613, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908898.4004, "finish": 1720908898.613, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8b49a31c8f6a44d68c7720a8d22dbbdd", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Can aging be stopped?", "output": [["Can aging be stopped?", "Title: Senescence\n\nPassage: Senescence () or biological aging is the gradual deterioration of functional characteristics in living organisms. Whole organism senescence involves an increase in death rates and/or a decrease in fecundity with increasing age, at least in the later part of an organism's life cycle. However, the resulting effects of senescence can be delayed. The 1934 discovery that calorie restriction can extend lifespans by 50% in rats, the existence of species having negligible senescence, and the existence of potentially immortal organisms such as members of the genus Hydra have motivated research into delaying senescence and thus age-related diseases. Rare human mutations can cause accelerated aging diseases.\nEnvironmental factors may affect aging \u2013 for example, overexposure to ultraviolet radiation accelerates skin aging. Different parts of the body may age at different rates and distinctly, including the brain, the cardiovascular system, and muscle. Similarly, functions may distinctly decline with aging, including movement control and memory. Two organisms of the same species can also age at different rates, making biological aging and chronological aging distinct concepts.\nDefinition and characteristics"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908930.0273, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908929.8459, "finish": 1720908930.0273, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d31ccb3cd048462a94393f7e4c04a9ba", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I want to learn about aging and whether it can be cured.", "output": [["I want to learn about aging and whether it can be cured.", "Title: Ageing\n\nPassage: Ageing (or aging in American English) is the process of becoming older. The term refers mainly to humans, many other animals, and fungi, whereas for example, bacteria, perennial plants and some simple animals are potentially biologically immortal. In a broader sense, ageing can refer to single cells within an organism which have ceased dividing, or to the population of a species.\nIn humans, ageing represents the accumulation of changes in a human being over time and can encompass physical, psychological, and social changes. Reaction time, for example, may slow with age, while memories and general knowledge typically increase. Ageing is associated with increased risk of cancer, Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, increased mental health risks, and many more. Of the roughly 150,000 people who die each day across the globe, about two-thirds die from age-related causes. Certain lifestyle choices and socioeconomic conditions been linked to ageing.\nCurrent ageing theories are assigned to the damage concept, whereby the accumulation of damage (such as DNA oxidation) may cause biological systems to fail, or to the programmed ageing concept, whereby the internal processes (epigenetic maintenance such as DNA methylation) inherently may cause ageing. Programmed ageing should not be confused with programmed cell death (apoptosis).\nAgeing versus immortality\nHuman beings and members of other species, especially animals, age and die. Fungi, too, can age. In contrast, many species can be considered potentially immortal: for example, bacteria fission to produce daughter cells, strawberry plants grow runners to produce clones of themselves, and animals in the genus Hydra have a regenerative ability by which they avoid dying of old age.\nEarly life forms on Earth, starting at least 3.7\u00a0billion years ago, were single-celled organisms. Such organisms (Prokaryotes, Protozoans, algae) multiply by fission into daughter cells, thus do not age and are potentially immortal under favourable conditions."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720908930.0273, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720908929.8459, "finish": 1720908930.0273, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e8e414858d14495da4548320b583c556", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I want to learn about aging and whether it can be cured.", "output": [["I want to learn about aging and whether it can be cured.", "Title: Senescence\n\nPassage: Senescence () or biological aging is the gradual deterioration of functional characteristics in living organisms. Whole organism senescence involves an increase in death rates and/or a decrease in fecundity with increasing age, at least in the later part of an organism's life cycle. However, the resulting effects of senescence can be delayed. The 1934 discovery that calorie restriction can extend lifespans by 50% in rats, the existence of species having negligible senescence, and the existence of potentially immortal organisms such as members of the genus Hydra have motivated research into delaying senescence and thus age-related diseases. Rare human mutations can cause accelerated aging diseases.\nEnvironmental factors may affect aging \u2013 for example, overexposure to ultraviolet radiation accelerates skin aging. Different parts of the body may age at different rates and distinctly, including the brain, the cardiovascular system, and muscle. Similarly, functions may distinctly decline with aging, including movement control and memory. Two organisms of the same species can also age at different rates, making biological aging and chronological aging distinct concepts.\nDefinition and characteristics"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909082.5057, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909082.2648, "finish": 1720909082.5057, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cb801fdb22814ba4a16141f4c8042387", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which book served as an inspiration for Star Wars?", "output": [["Which book served as an inspiration for Star Wars?", "Title: The Art of Star Wars\n\nPassage: The Art of Star Wars is a series of books by various editors featuring concept art from the Star Wars motion picture saga. The books mainly feature artwork accompanied by a short explanation of the scene and the artist's ideas, but also script notes, posters and other information. The first books were published by Ballantine Books, a subsidiary of Random House, with later editions appearing under the DelRey and LucasBooks imprints. Later titles were published by Harry N. Abrams.\nThe Art of Star Wars was also the title of an exhibition of Star Wars artwork, props, and costumes mounted by Lucasfilm at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco in 1995. The exhibition was subsequently expanded to various international venues from 2000\u20132001, including the Barbican Art Gallery in London and the Helsinki City Art Museum.\nContent\nCarol Titelman's first volume, originally entitled The Art of Star Wars, was published in 1979 amid a popular trend for behind-the-scenes, \"making-of\" media products (such as The Making of Star Wars documentary). The book presents a range of pre-production concept art, storyboards, and publicity shots alongside Lucas's screenplay. It has been noted as a rich record of the previsualization behind the 1977 movie that gives the reader an insight into the \"possibilities that might have been\" in the final production design, and that challenges the \"authorial singularity and originality\" that normally surrounds the works of a Hollywood auteur. The first volume has been called the definitive work on the development of the cinematographic art of Star Wars, a body of creative works that heavily influenced later films."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909082.5057, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909082.2648, "finish": 1720909082.5057, "ip": "", "conv_id": "023e3bc4d1e046e9b0c3c2975424e64a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which book served as an inspiration for Star Wars?", "output": [["Which book served as an inspiration for Star Wars?", "Title: Splinter of the Mind's Eye\n\nPassage: Splinter of the Mind's Eye is a 1978 science fiction novel by American writer Alan Dean Foster, a sequel to the film Star Wars (1977). Originally published in 1978 by Del Rey, a division of Ballantine Books, the book was written with the intention of being adapted as a low-budget sequel to Star Wars in case the original film was not successful enough to finance a high-budget sequel.\nSplinter of the Mind's Eye was the first Star Wars novel with an original storyline published after the release of the original film, and is thus considered, alongside the Star Wars newspaper comic strip and Marvel's 1977 comic series, to mark the beginning of the Star Wars Expanded Universe.\nThe story focuses on Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia, who are marooned together on the world of Mimban, where they encounter the locals and struggle against the forces of the evil Galactic Empire, including Darth Vader.\nBackground and publication"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909111.9887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909111.7708, "finish": 1720909111.9887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f47b9ee161e848cbbe56dcce61066141", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "\"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\" - Which book is this from?", "output": [["\"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\" - Which book is this from?", "Title: On War\n\nPassage: One of Clausewitz's best-known quotes summarizes that idea: \"War is the continuation of policy with other means.\"\nThat quote in itself allows for the interpretation that the military will take over from politics as soon as war has begun, as, for example, the German General Staff did during World War I. However, Clausewitz had postulated the primacy of politics and in this context elaborated: \"[...], we claim that war is nothing more than a continuation of the political process by applying other means. By applying other means we simultaneously assert that the political process does not end with the conclusion of the war or is being transformed into something entirely different, but that it continues to exist and proceed in its essence, regardless of the means, it might make use of.\"\nAccording to Azar Gat, the \"general message\" of the book was that \"the conduct of war could not be reduced to universal principles [and is] dominated by political decisions and moral forces.\" These basic conclusions are essential to Clausewitz's theory:\nWar must never be seen as having any purpose in itself but should be seen as a political instrument: \"War is not merely a political act, but a real political instrument, a continuation of the political process, an application by other means.\"\nThe military objectives in war that support one's political objectives fall into two broad types: \"war to achieve limited aims\" and war to \"disarm\" the enemy: \"to render [him] politically helpless or militarily impotent.\"\nAll else being equal, the course of war will tend to favor the party with the stronger emotional and political motivations, especially the defender.\nSome of the key ideas (not necessarily original to Clausewitz or even to his mentor, Gerhard von Scharnhorst) discussed in On War include (in no particular order of importance):\nthe dialectical approach to military analysis\nthe methods of \"critical analysis\"\nthe uses and abuses of historical studies\nthe nature of the balance-of-power mechanism\nthe relationship between political objectives and military objectives in war\nthe asymmetrical relationship between attack and defense\nthe nature of \"military genius\"\nthe \"fascinating trinity\" () of war\nphilosophical distinctions between \"absolute or ideal war,\" and \"real war\"\nin \"real war,\" the distinctive poles of a) limited war and b) war to \"render the enemy helpless\"\n\"war\" belongs fundamentally to the social realm, rather than the realms of art or science\n\"strategy\" belongs primarily to the realm of art\n\"tactics\" belongs primarily to the realm of science\nthe essential unpredictability of war\nsimplicity: Everything is very simple in war, but the simplest thing is difficult. These difficulties accumulate. The strength of any strategy lies in its simplicity.\nthe \"fog of war\"\n\"friction\"\nstrategic and operational \"centres of gravity\"\nthe \"culminating point of the offensive\"\nthe \"culminating point of victory\"\nClausewitz used a dialectical method to construct his argument, which led to frequent modern misinterpretation because he explores various often-opposed ideas before he came to conclusions."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909111.9887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909111.7708, "finish": 1720909111.9887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "40ba32a0b00d41e58abc220d00620890", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "\"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\" - Which book is this from?", "output": [["\"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\" - Which book is this from?", "Title: The Unexpurgated Code\n\nPassage: The Unexpurgated Code: A Complete Manual of Survival & Manners is a 1975 non-fiction humorous book by J. P. Donleavy.\nOverview\nThe book is a guide for people who feel that they should belong to the manner born - that is, not having to work and generally living a life of luxury.\nChapters:\nSocial Climbing\nExtinctions and Mortalities\nVilenesses Various\nIn Pursuit of Comfortable Habits\nPerils and Precautions\nAdvice\nThe book consists of hundreds of anecdotes and events one may encounter throughout life, and how to deal with them. Some examples include:\nUpon Embellishing your Background\nAccent Improvement\nUpon the Sudden Reawakening of your Sordid Background\nAss kissing and other types of Flattery\nSuicide\nCannibalism\nUpon Saucy Assemblages\nUpon Marrying a Lady for Her Money\nStripping and Streaking\nWhen the Overwhelming Desire to Goose a Lady Cannot be Suppressed\nUpon Being a Member of the Titled Classes\nBlowing upon Your Soup\nWife Beating\nShabby People\nShabby Shabby People\nShabby Shabby Shabby People\nQuotations\nShaving: \"Hey why are you growing that beard.\"...\"I say, you unpleasantly unfortunate radoteur, I'm not doing a thing. You're shaving every day.\"\nWhen Some Supercilious Cunt Asks Is There Anything Wrong: \"Yes, you evil little man, I'm looking at your tie.\"\nHow to Prevent People from Detesting You: \"Don't try.\"\nThe Psychologist: \"This smug son of a bitch.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909225.4633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909225.2325, "finish": 1720909225.4633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ad5fce3750dc439cbd7dee77007c7d9a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Where is the second foundation located in The Foundation Series?", "output": [["Where is the second foundation located in The Foundation Series?", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909225.4633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909225.2325, "finish": 1720909225.4633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "803e675ce43645b08da05aa224017aeb", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Where is the second foundation located in The Foundation Series?", "output": [["Where is the second foundation located in The Foundation Series?", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909263.3967, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909263.1963, "finish": 1720909263.3967, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6d0bf113f2fd439d82e586d8baafa418", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "A book that talks about the fall of a galactic empire.", "output": [["A book that talks about the fall of a galactic empire.", "Title: Against the Fall of Night\n\nPassage: Around the same time, the galactic empire contacts another race \"far around the curve of the Cosmos\" that has developed its own superintellect, one along purely physical lines. Most of the galaxy leaves on a quest to meet them, powering their great ship using the energy of all the suns, leaving the galaxy permanently dimmed. Only the Seven Suns remain untouched. Those that stayed behind were not adventurous and slowly went extinct over time, Earth only avoiding that fate by luck. Even the Battle of Shalmirane is a myth; Shalmirane was built to destroy the Moon when it threatened to crash into Earth.\nThe book ends with the Tomb of Yarlan Zey being torn down as the links between Lys and Diaspar are opened to all. Alvin sets himself to rebuilding the Earth's oceans and solving the mystery of who the Master was. He intends to send the spaceship off on its own to bring a message to their now distant ancestors, hoping Earth will be worthy of their companionship when they return in the far distant future.\nPolitics\nThe book makes a distinction between the city life of Diaspar, and the life in Lys. Diaspar reflects the values of a city, in which technology cares for mundane tasks (robots, streets, food), so people can pursue pleasures such as music and knowledge. The opposite is true in Lys, which has a rural style where everything comes from nature. When Alvin re-introduced the two, they found that one still needed the other, and that their cultures had become stifled. The Council from Diaspar had become old and weary, and did not want to deal with the exuberance of youth, while Lys, feeling that it was young, did not want the city culture to interfere with its natural way of life. When the two cultures met, they found out that they complemented each other: Diaspar with infinite life and technology, and Lys with quick minds and telepathy.\nReception\nGroff Conklin described the original edition of the novel as \"a light, simple, fast-moving and often richly imaginative fantasy.\" Boucher and McComas praised \"this brief but intense book\" as \"beautiful\", describing it as \"poetry and awe and wonder\" and characterizing Clarke as \"the visionary poet of a future so far distant that its most prosaic science passes our technical understanding.\" P. Schuyler Miller reported that because the narrative \"is so well told, the story becomes convincing, and its magic spreads over the reader as well as the people of the plot.\" In 1969, Alexei Panshin wrote that \"the story is largely undeveloped -- too much is asserted, too little is examined.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909263.3967, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909263.1963, "finish": 1720909263.3967, "ip": "", "conv_id": "647a2d7c799145479a42d2d314105080", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "A book that talks about the fall of a galactic empire.", "output": [["A book that talks about the fall of a galactic empire.", "Title: Thrawn trilogy\n\nPassage: The Last Command (1993)\nIn (1993), set about a month after the previous book, Thrawn uses the Katana fleet, crewed with clones, to mount a successful offensive against the New Republic. Seizing one planet after the other, Thrawn soon immobilizes the galactic capital world, Coruscant. He has placed multiple cloaked asteroids around the planet, and through a ruse, he has led the New Republic leadership to believe that Coruscant is surrounded with them. Learning of the deception, the Republic fleet attacks the Imperial shipyards at Bilbringi to capture a device that can find the cloaked asteroids, but Thrawn's forces intercept and surround them. Meanwhile, Luke and Leia lead a group to destroy the cloning facility on Wayland, killing C'baoth and destroying the cloning cylinders. Just as Thrawn and Pellaeon learn that the Noghri aided in the attack on Wayland, Thrawn's Noghri bodyguard, Rukh, kills the Grand Admiral\u2014whose last words are, \"But\u00a0... it was so artistically done.\" The tide of battle at Bilbringi turns, and with the hope of victory dashed by Thrawn's death, Pellaeon orders the Imperial forces to retreat.\nDevelopment\nThe idea for a post-film trilogy was conceived by Lou Aronica, an editor at Bantam Books who proposed a series as \"ambitious as the films were\". Lucas was initially skeptical of the proposal, but acquiesced; Bantam Spectra then brought Timothy Zahn on board to write the trilogy.\nZahn was given freedom to develop the direction the story should go in, with minimal pushback from Lucasfilm. Before starting work on the books, Zahn was only given two rules: the series had to take place three to five years after Return of the Jedi, and no characters killed in the films could return. Changes requested by Lucasfilm included changing an evil clone of Obi-Wan Kenobi to the new character of Joruus C'baoth and the renaming of Rukh's species from Sith to Noghri. In order to provide him with existing worldbuilding material, Lucasfilm supplied Zahn with supplementary content from the tabletop RPG Star Wars: The Roleplaying Game."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909301.0481, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909300.762, "finish": 1720909301.0481, "ip": "", "conv_id": "98147b42914a457da37b739742b0477b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm looking for a book where a galactic empire is about to collapse and using statistical tools they are able to predict and to some degree plan for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a book where a galactic empire is about to collapse and using statistical tools they are able to predict and to some degree plan for it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909301.0481, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909300.762, "finish": 1720909301.0481, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0efc99b73324478d9608abbf8b436ba5", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I'm looking for a book where a galactic empire is about to collapse and using statistical tools they are able to predict and to some degree plan for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a book where a galactic empire is about to collapse and using statistical tools they are able to predict and to some degree plan for it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909339.7444, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909339.542, "finish": 1720909339.7444, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ba5e597189f646cc8c03d1ce0dbe7877", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and to some degree plans for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and to some degree plans for it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909339.7444, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909339.542, "finish": 1720909339.7444, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eb1094a168da4719a9f1c6aca3b3c14f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and to some degree plans for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and to some degree plans for it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909351.1304, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909350.9595, "finish": 1720909351.1304, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e4c61deb92f649bf96f712ffafc28757", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909351.1304, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909350.9595, "finish": 1720909351.1304, "ip": "", "conv_id": "aec641634e7f44fcbc217e9e82a538ab", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909362.5232, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909362.3399, "finish": 1720909362.5232, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0b33d4ceeb094f9b9a2ae0725fc4859d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with an empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with an empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "Title: The Patterns of Chaos\n\nPassage: The Patterns of Chaos is a 1972 science fiction novel by British writer Colin Kapp. It originally appeared in If magazine, serialized in three parts.\nIt combines grand space operatic themes of battle between space empires and intergalactic alien invasion with philosophical themes of predestination and destiny, and detailed character development of a tight set of central characters.\nEarth's Stellar Commando has placed their secret agent Commander Bron on a planet where they hope he will be able to find out the coordinates of a rival space empire, the Destroyers.\nBron is there to impersonate a famous scientist of interest to the Destroyers, and has been given implants through which a monitoring team can see what he sees, hear what he hears and talk to him, even when separated by interstellar distances. The plot hinges on a fictional science, the study of the entropic \"patterns of Chaos\", which allows predictions of events with an accuracy that was not before possible. Both Earth and the Destroyers\u2014and specifically Bron himself\u2014are discovered to be the target of an extraterrestrial interstellar murder campaign that was hatched 700 million years ago. He succeeds in joining together the Earth and Destroyer fleets and confronts the aliens, to discover that his destiny is inextricably entangled with theirs."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909362.5232, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909362.3399, "finish": 1720909362.5232, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5cd8713abe0a41ef9e520da13c6be235", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with an empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with an empire that is about to collapse but using statistical tools someone predicts and plan for it.", "Title: Futures studies\n\nPassage: 1.\tCollapse Scenarios seek to answer: What happens if the STEEP baselines fall into ruin and no longer exist? How will that impact STEEP categories?\n2.\tTransformation Scenarios: explore futures with the baseline of society transiting to a \"new\" state. How are the STEEP categories effected if society has a whole new structure?\n3.\tNew Equilibrium: examines an entire change to the structure of the domain. What happens if the baseline changes to a \"new\" baseline within the same structure of society?\nHistory\nOrigins\nJohan Galtung and Sohail Inayatullah argue that the search for grand patterns goes all the way back to Sima Qian (145\u201390 BC) and Ibn Khaldun (1332\u20131406). Early western examples include Sir Thomas More's Utopia (1516) in which a future society has overcome poverty and misery.\nAdvances in mathematics in the 17th century prompted attempts to calculate statistical and probabilistic concepts. Objectivity became linked to knowledge that could be expressed in numerical data. In 18th century Britain, investors established mathematical formulas to assess the future value of an asset. In 1758 the French economist Fran\u00e7ois Quesnay proceeded to establish a quantitative model of the entire economy, known as the Tableau Economique, so that future production could be planned. Meanwhile, Anne Robert Jacques Turgot first articulated the law of diminishing returns. In 1793 the Chinese bureaucrat Hong Liangji forecasted future population growth.\nThe industrial revolution was on the verge of spreading across the European continent, when in 1798 Thomas Malthus published An essay on the principle of Population as it affects the Future Improvement of Society. Malthus questioned optimistic utopias and theories of progress. Malthus' fear about the survival of the human race is regarded as an early European dystopia. Starting in the 1830s, Auguste Comte developed theories of social evolution and claimed that metapatterns could be discerned in social change. In the 1870s Herbert Spencer blended Compte's theories with Charles Darwin's biological evolution theory. Social Darwinism became popular in Europe and the USA. By the late 19th century, the belief in human progress and the triumph of scientific invention prevailed and science fiction became a popular future narrative. In 1888 William Morris published News from Nowhere, in which he theorized about how working time could be reduced.\nEarly 20th century\nThe British H. G. Wells established the genre of \"true science fiction\" at the turn of the century. Well's works were supposedly based on sound scientific knowledge. Wells became a forerunner of social and technological forecasting. A series of techno-optimistic newspaper articles and books were published between 1890 and 1914 in the US and Europe. After World War I the Italian Futurism movement led by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti glorified modernity. Soviet futurists, such as Vladimir Mayakovsky, David Burliuk, and Vasily Kamensky struggled against official communist cultural policy throughout the 20th century. In Japan, futurists gained traction after World War I by denouncing the Meiji era and glorifying speed and technological progress."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909378.2336, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909378.0685, "finish": 1720909378.2336, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d58f73539b2d4c2f841d45a404a2d765", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to fall but via statistical tools someone predicts it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to fall but via statistical tools someone predicts it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Hari Seldon is a fictional character in the Foundation series of novels by Isaac Asimov. In his capacity as mathematics professor at Streeling University on the planet Trantor, Seldon develops psychohistory, an algorithmic science that allows him to predict the future in probabilistic terms. On the basis of his psychohistory he is able to predict the eventual fall of the Galactic Empire and to develop a means to shorten the millennia of chaos to follow.\nIn the first five books of the Foundation series, Hari Seldon made only one in-the-flesh appearance, in the first part of the first book (Foundation), although he did appear at other times in pre-recorded messages to reveal a \"Seldon Crisis\". After writing five books in chronological order, Asimov retroactively added two books to expand on the genesis of psychohistory. The two prequels\u2014Prelude to Foundation and Forward the Foundation\u2014describe Seldon's life in considerable detail. He is also the central character of the Second Foundation Trilogy written after Asimov's death (Foundation's Fear by Gregory Benford, Foundation and Chaos by Greg Bear, and Foundation's Triumph by David Brin), which are set after Asimov's two prequels.\nSeldon is voiced by William Eedle in several episodes of the 1973 BBC Radio 4 adaptation The Foundation Trilogy, and portrayed by Jared Harris in the 2021 Apple TV+ television series adaptation Foundation.\nAppearances\nHari Seldon is first mentioned in the short story \"Foundation\", published in Astounding Science Fiction in May 1942, as the creator of psychohistory, and appears as a prerecorded hologram near the end. The story was renamed \"The Encylopedists\" and collected with four others as Foundation in 1951. \"The Psychohistorians\" depicts Seldon put on trial by the Commission of Public Safety for his dire predictions about the eventual fall of the Galactic Empire, after which he is exiled to the distant planet Terminus. Seldon's prerecorded messages continue to appear in Foundation and Empire (1952) and Second Foundation (1953), as well as the later sequels, Foundation's Edge (1982) and Foundation and Earth (1986). He is featured as the main character in Asimov's two prequels, Prelude to Foundation (1988) and Forward the Foundation (1993).\nDescribing \"The Psychohistorians\" as \"28 pages of nonstop world-building\", Josh Wimmer and Alasdair Wilkins of Gizmodo wrote that in the story, \"Hari Seldon isn't so much a character as he is the living embodiment of psychohistory, an ethereal presence who's about as relatable as Gandalf. It wouldn't be until Prelude to Foundation ... that Seldon would become an actual character.\"\nStoryline\nFictional biography\nGalactic Empire First Minister and psychohistorian Hari Seldon was born in the 10th month of the 11,988th\u00a0year of the Galactic Era (GE) (-79\u00a0Foundation Era (FE)) and died 12,069\u00a0GE (1\u00a0FE).\nHe was born on the planet Helicon in the Arcturus sector where his father worked as a tobacco grower in a hydroponics plant. He shows incredible mathematical abilities at a very early age."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909378.2336, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909378.0685, "finish": 1720909378.2336, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5a44c27269a44c7f9d12196b43f1de58", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to fall but via statistical tools someone predicts it.", "output": [["I'm looking for a story with a galactic empire that is about to fall but via statistical tools someone predicts it.", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909466.1937, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909465.9694, "finish": 1720909466.1937, "ip": "", "conv_id": "553ba9c537e54bc383839ca0000ce1a1", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which book suggests that 42 may the be the meaning of life?", "output": [["Which book suggests that 42 may the be the meaning of life?", "Title: Meaning of life\n\nPassage: Monty Python's The Meaning of Life includes a character played by Michael Palin being handed an envelope containing \"the meaning of life\", which she opens and reads out to the audience: \"Well, it's nothing very special. Uh, try to be nice to people, avoid eating fat, read a good book every now and then, get some walking in, and try to live together in peace and harmony with people of all creeds and nations.\"\nIn Douglas Adams' book The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything is given the numeric solution \"42\", after seven and a half million years of calculation by a giant supercomputer called Deep Thought. When this answer is met with confusion and anger from its constructors, Deep Thought explains that \"I think the problem such as it was, was too broadly based. You never actually stated what the question was.\" Deep Thought then constructs another computer\u2014the Earth\u2014to calculate what the Ultimate Question actually is. Later Ford and Arthur manage to extract the question as the Earth computer would have rendered it. That question turns out to be \"what do you get if you multiply six by nine\", and it is realised that the program was ruined by the unexpected arrival of the Golgafrinchans on Earth, and so the actual Ultimate Question of Life, The Universe, And Everything remains unknown.\nIn Person of Interest season 5 episode 13, an artificial intelligence referred to as The Machine tells Harold Finch that the secret of life is \"Everyone dies alone. But if you mean something to someone, if you help someone, or love someone. If even a single person remembers you then maybe you never really die at all.\" This phrase is then repeated at the very end of the show to add emphasis to the finale.\nRelated concepts\nExistential crisis\nExistential crises are crises of meaning. They are triggered by the impression that life lacks meaning. This impression can lead to an inner conflict because there is a strong desire to find some form of meaning in life. In the existentialist literature, the discrepancy between the individual's desire for meaning and the world's apparent lack thereof is termed the absurd. It may be summarized by the question \"How does a being who needs meaning find meaning in a universe that has no meaning?\". While this conflict may affect different people at least to some extent, it reaches a more severe level in the case of existential crises. This level leads to various negative experiences, such as stress, anxiety, despair, and depression. In the more serious cases, these symptoms disturb the individual's normal functioning in everyday life. A positive side effect of these negative experiences is that they push the affected individual to address the underlying issue. This opens the opportunity of developing as a person and improving one's way of life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909466.1937, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909465.9694, "finish": 1720909466.1937, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c8aa631aa3af47fda5c9c09729510522", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which book suggests that 42 may the be the meaning of life?", "output": [["Which book suggests that 42 may the be 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909529.4599, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909529.2833, "finish": 1720909529.4599, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e35d1b5bcb9d444cb70852449a6b036f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who is the author of the book that suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "output": [["Who is the author of the book that suggests 42 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909529.4599, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909529.2833, "finish": 1720909529.4599, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a9488a91122b459bbfaf3fe03f9348f2", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who is the author of the book that suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "output": [["Who is the author of the book that suggests 42 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909537.7179, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909537.5504, "finish": 1720909537.7179, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9857c591263c4109a787d653a47c6869", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who authored the book that suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "output": [["Who authored the book that suggests 42 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909537.7179, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909537.5504, "finish": 1720909537.7179, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b06a0e23b6be43b7bcb3f8bca8f984c4", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who authored the book that suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "output": [["Who authored the book that suggests 42 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909548.2374, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909548.0638, "finish": 1720909548.2374, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d9af9c2f60204031a263b49a50046d52", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which book suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "output": [["Which book suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "Title: Meaning of life\n\nPassage: Monty Python's The Meaning of Life includes a character played by Michael Palin being handed an envelope containing \"the meaning of life\", which she opens and reads out to the audience: \"Well, it's nothing very special. Uh, try to be nice to people, avoid eating fat, read a good book every now and then, get some walking in, and try to live together in peace and harmony with people of all creeds and nations.\"\nIn Douglas Adams' book The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, the Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything is given the numeric solution \"42\", after seven and a half million years of calculation by a giant supercomputer called Deep Thought. When this answer is met with confusion and anger from its constructors, Deep Thought explains that \"I think the problem such as it was, was too broadly based. You never actually stated what the question was.\" Deep Thought then constructs another computer\u2014the Earth\u2014to calculate what the Ultimate Question actually is. Later Ford and Arthur manage to extract the question as the Earth computer would have rendered it. That question turns out to be \"what do you get if you multiply six by nine\", and it is realised that the program was ruined by the unexpected arrival of the Golgafrinchans on Earth, and so the actual Ultimate Question of Life, The Universe, And Everything remains unknown.\nIn Person of Interest season 5 episode 13, an artificial intelligence referred to as The Machine tells Harold Finch that the secret of life is \"Everyone dies alone. But if you mean something to someone, if you help someone, or love someone. If even a single person remembers you then maybe you never really die at all.\" This phrase is then repeated at the very end of the show to add emphasis to the finale.\nRelated concepts\nExistential crisis\nExistential crises are crises of meaning. They are triggered by the impression that life lacks meaning. This impression can lead to an inner conflict because there is a strong desire to find some form of meaning in life. In the existentialist literature, the discrepancy between the individual's desire for meaning and the world's apparent lack thereof is termed the absurd. It may be summarized by the question \"How does a being who needs meaning find meaning in a universe that has no meaning?\". While this conflict may affect different people at least to some extent, it reaches a more severe level in the case of existential crises. This level leads to various negative experiences, such as stress, anxiety, despair, and depression. In the more serious cases, these symptoms disturb the individual's normal functioning in everyday life. A positive side effect of these negative experiences is that they push the affected individual to address the underlying issue. This opens the opportunity of developing as a person and improving one's way of life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909548.2374, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909548.0638, "finish": 1720909548.2374, "ip": "", "conv_id": "98ee009d0db345f0b4a3c01e2902145a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which book suggests 42 as the meaning of life?", "output": [["Which book suggests 42 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909630.2841, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909630.046, "finish": 1720909630.2841, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9c40b4a3ceae4a75a539d0e2f35e5d80", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "\u201cViolence is the last refuge of the incompetent.\u201d", "output": [["\u201cViolence is the last refuge of the incompetent.\u201d", "Title: The Last Article\n\nPassage: The Nazis, however, led by Field Marshal Walther Model, are completely unmoved by Gandhi's strategy. They view themselves as a master race and have no moral qualms about killing those who resist non-violently (or even those who do not resist at all, if they are of a certain race). In the end the movement collapses as it proves unable to deal with the savagery of Nazism.\nThemes\nGandhi assumes a moral equivalence between the Nazi and British imperialists, naively dismissing reports otherwise; the story makes clear that this is a lethal mistake stemming from Gandhi's reluctance to entertain the idea that his moral and ethical assumptions are not shared in common among all human groups. Loyalty is explored as a powerful but amoral force. Gandhi is loyal to his concepts of passive resistance, however poorly they fit the situation or inevitably they lead to violence; the Indians are loyal to Gandhi, and some die for it; Model is loyal to his rank and volk; the British are loyal to their ideas of decency and mercy and defend them to the last, through the medium of war.\nThe story illustrates the weakness inherent in Gandhi'sand later Martin Luther King Jr.'snonviolence movement, the success of which depends on a reasoned appeal to the enemy's conscience\u2014that is, on the ability to arouse shame and remorse in the oppressor, who eventually relents. This was a plausible strategy against British imperialism or American institutional racism, as the notion of oppression clashes unpleasantly with the values espoused by these nations. Historically, ideals of freedom, justice, and equality for all citizens are at the root of the British and American political system and, perhaps more important, the religion and national self-image of the people. The story explores the strategic difference between opposing a tolerant competitor, such as the British, and opposing a remorselessly violent foe, suggesting that violent resistance to malign forces like Nazism, such as the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, is more likely to succeed than a pacifistic approach. Violence does not guarantee success, however; the Warsaw uprising is indicated as a failure.\nField Marshal Model compares the Nazi empire with the Roman Empire facing the early Christians, pointing out that Rome's collapse came as a result of its tolerance of a force that sought to undermine it. The story does not characterize Model as a bloodthirsty savage; rather, he is a merely a professional doing his job. Turtledove provides an appearance by Jurgen Stroop, the SS officer responsible for the Warsaw Ghetto massacre, to contrast Stroop's mindless savagery and Model's workmanlike, impassive decimation of the Indian resistance."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909630.2841, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909630.046, "finish": 1720909630.2841, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bbe8bc27d98046f39e010ffbdd070d1c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "\u201cViolence is the last refuge of the incompetent.\u201d", "output": [["\u201cViolence is the last refuge of the incompetent.\u201d", "Title: Incompetence (novel)\n\nPassage: The novel tells the story of a detective working for an unnamed secret agency, with a variety of identities within various law enforcement agencies (two examples being Europol and the Police Corruption Investigation Department). His real name remains a mystery, but he commonly uses the pseudonym Harry Salt. The story starts with the apparent death of his former mentor (Klingferm) in an apparent elevator accident. He suspects foul play, and his investigations lead him around various states of Europe. In the course of these investigations, he seems to be tracked by an unknown stalker. On the way, he is hindered by the fact that practically everyone he meets has a serious character flaw and/or mental deficiency. Another ongoing problem is his inability to acquire or hang onto a decent pair of shoes, primarily as all shoes in the \"United States of Europe\" are made of vegetable matter. A number of new mental disorders have apparently been classified in the book's universe, such as Sexually Inappropriate Response and Non-Specific Stupidity.\nExamples of incompetence in the world around the agent are:\nRecords that are incomplete, contradict other documents, or are simply false (such as death certificates issued for living people).\nPolice who obliterate all evidence by walking casually through a crime scene.\nInaccurate local guides and transport.\nPeople who cannot work the basic equipment they are paid to use.\nThe plot appears to be based on the film The Third Man. The film is mentioned in the drunken conversation between Salt and Klingferm near the start of the book.\nCharacters\nHarry Salt/Harry Tequila/Harry Pepper/Cardew Vascular: The main protagonist. Years of dealing with stupidity have left him somewhat cynical. One of the few characters who is not incompetent or mentally retarded, he has learnt to exploit society's incompetence to aid his investigations. He seems to be one of very few people who can do anything well, although he remarks that most people who do get nowhere, which may be one of the reasons he has learned to hate his job to the point where he resigns at the end of the book. Harry's real name is not given, although his mentor Klingferm refers to him as Harry Salt. His pseudonyms are compromised throughout the novel.\nDick Klingferm: Harry's former mentor and fellow agent. During the story, he is presumed dead when an elevator supposedly kills him along with several other people. Harry tracks down his killer, only to find out it to be Klingferm himself. He explains he is a deep undercover American agent out to destroy any possibilities of the United States of Europe expanding to include Russia. Harry electrocutes Klingferm, then shoots him in the head, blowing out a large piece of his brain."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909658.0678, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909657.844, "finish": 1720909658.0678, "ip": "", "conv_id": "582af63c881049bdb73d046ecd79ff21", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "Title: Turing test\n\nPassage: Alan Turing and the Imitation Game\nResearchers in the United Kingdom had been exploring \"machine intelligence\" for up to ten years prior to the founding of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) research in 1956. It was a common topic among the members of the Ratio Club, an informal group of British cybernetics and electronics researchers that included Alan Turing.\nTuring, in particular, had been running the notion of machine intelligence since at least 1941 and one of the earliest-known mentions of \"computer intelligence\" was made by him in 1947. In Turing's report, \"Intelligent Machinery,\" he investigated \"the question of whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\" and, as part of that investigation, proposed what may be considered the forerunner to his later tests:\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\"\nTo demonstrate this approach Turing proposes a test inspired by a party game, known as the \"imitation game\", in which a man and a woman go into separate rooms and guests try to tell them apart by writing a series of questions and reading the typewritten answers sent back. In this game, both the man and the woman aim to convince the guests that they are the other. (Huma Shah argues that this two-human version of the game was presented by Turing only to introduce the reader to the machine-human question-answer test.) Turing described his new version of the game as follows:"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909658.0678, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909657.844, "finish": 1720909658.0678, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dcdc7c31de864a62b429b8bcd358d4fa", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "Title: Alan Turing\n\nPassage: Alan Mathison Turing (; 23 June 1912\u00a0\u2013 7 June 1954) was an English mathematician, computer scientist, logician, cryptanalyst, philosopher and theoretical biologist. Turing was highly influential in the development of theoretical computer science, providing a formalisation of the concepts of algorithm and computation with the Turing machine, which can be considered a model of a general-purpose computer. He is widely considered to be the father of theoretical computer science.\nBorn in London, Turing was raised in southern England. He graduated in maths from King's College, Cambridge, and in 1938, earned a maths PhD from Princeton University. During the Second World War, Turing worked for the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, Britain's codebreaking centre that produced Ultra intelligence. He led Hut 8, the section responsible for German naval cryptanalysis. He devised techniques for speeding the breaking of German ciphers, including improvements to the pre-war Polish bomba method, an electromechanical machine that could find settings for the Enigma machine. Turing played a crucial role in cracking intercepted messages that enabled the Allies to defeat the Axis powers in many crucial engagements, including the Battle of the Atlantic."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909702.5808, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909702.3773, "finish": 1720909702.5808, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8656ba86f89b465091e35b681ea285cb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who proposed a way to test if machines can think?", "output": [["Who proposed a way to test if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909702.5808, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909702.3773, "finish": 1720909702.5808, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4f51a73706d6484a90a322ec54ba986c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who proposed a way to test if machines can think?", "output": [["Who proposed a way to test if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909713.9705, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909713.8053, "finish": 1720909713.9705, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e833577d44bf4415a3c5dc29a7ff7c3f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How to test if machines can think?", "output": [["How to test if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909713.9705, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909713.8053, "finish": 1720909713.9705, "ip": "", "conv_id": "19c8bee0b0e44f00aa651c0dbc77303a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "How to test if machines can think?", "output": [["How to test if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909723.8655, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909723.6807, "finish": 1720909723.8655, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9af7faac81904baba506929e64b0b665", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who proposed a test if machines can think?", "output": [["Who proposed a test if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909723.8655, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909723.6807, "finish": 1720909723.8655, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b4b1b9f5f69540c7af509faca102c066", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who proposed a test if machines can think?", "output": [["Who proposed a test if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909891.3983, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909891.1591, "finish": 1720909891.3983, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cd755027b6194d8b8364d69ece9526ca", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How to prevent aging?", "output": [["How to prevent aging?", "Title: Ending Aging\n\nPassage: Ending Aging: The Rejuvenation Breakthroughs that Could Reverse Human Aging in Our Lifetime is a 2007 book written by biogerontologist Aubrey de Grey, with his research assistant Michael Rae. Ending Aging describes de Grey's proposal for eliminating aging as a cause of debilitation and death in humans, and restoring the body to an indefinitely youthful state, a project that he calls the \"strategies for engineered negligible senescence\" (\"SENS\"). De Grey argues that defeating aging is feasible, possibly within a few decades, and he outlines steps that can be taken to hasten the development of regenerative medicine treatments for each side of aging.\nEditions\nSt. Martin's Press, 1st edition (hardcover, 389 pages), released September 4, 2007:\nSt. Martin's Griffin, 1st reprint edition with new afterword (paperback, 448 pages), released October 14, 2008:\nTranslations\nGerman: Niemals alt!: So l\u00e4sst sich das Altern umkehren. Fortschritte der Verj\u00fcngungsforschung, transcript Verlag, Bielefeld 2010\nSpanish: El Fin del Envejecimiento. Los avances que podr\u00edan revertir el envejecimiento humano durante nuestra vida, Lola Books, Berl\u00edn 2013\nItalian: La fine dell'invecchiamento: Come la scienza potr\u00e0 esaudire il sogno dell'eterna giovinezza, D Editore, Roma 2016\nPortuguese: O fim do envelhecimento: Os avan\u00e7os que poderiam reverter o envelhecimento humano durante nossa vida, NTZ, 2018\nThe book has not been officially translated into Russian, but there is an unofficial non-commercial fan translation named \"\u041e\u0442\u043c\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0442\u044c \u0421\u0442\u0430\u0440\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0435\", which is distributed on the Internet in PDF format."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720909891.3983, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720909891.1591, "finish": 1720909891.3983, "ip": "", "conv_id": "350da4c781f24f5ab0e28edbf1a4a9a2", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "How to prevent aging?", "output": [["How to prevent aging?", "Title: Life extension\n\nPassage: Hormone treatment\nThe anti-aging industry offers several hormone therapies. Some of these have been criticized for possible dangers and a lack of proven effect. For example, the American Medical Association has been critical of some anti-aging hormone therapies.\nWhile growth hormone (GH) decreases with age, the evidence for use of growth hormone as an anti-aging therapy is mixed and based mostly on animal studies. There are mixed reports that GH or IGF-1 modulates the aging process in humans and about whether the direction of its effect is positive or negative.\nKlotho and exerkines like irisin are being investigated for potential pro-longevity therapies.\nLifestyle factors\nLoneliness/isolation, social life and support, exercise/physical activity (partly via neurobiological effects and increased NAD+ levels), psychological characteristics/personality (possibly highly indirectly), sleep duration, circadian rhythms (patterns of sleep, drug-administration and feeding), type of leisure activities, not smoking, altruistic emotions and behaviors, subjective well-being, mood and stress (including via heat shock protein) are investigated as potential (modulatable) factors of life extension.\nHealthy lifestyle practices and healthy diet have been suggested as \"first-line function-preserving strategies, with pharmacological agents, including existing and new pharmaceuticals and novel 'nutraceutical' compounds, serving as potential complementary approaches\".\nSocietal strategies\nCollectively, addressing common causes of death could extend lifespans of populations and humanity overall. For instance, a 2020 study indicates that the global mean loss of life expectancy (LLE) from air pollution in 2015 was 2.9 years, substantially more than, for example, 0.3\u2009years from all forms of direct violence, albeit a significant fraction of the LLE (a measure similar to years of potential life lost) is considered to be unavoidable.\nRegular screening and doctor visits has been suggested as a lifestyle-societal intervention. (See also: medical test and biomarker)\nHealth policy and changes to standard healthcare could support the adoption of the field's conclusions \u2013 a review suggests that the longevity diet would be a \"valuable complement to standard healthcare and that, taken as a preventative measure, it could aid in avoiding morbidity, sustaining health into advanced age\" as a form of preventive healthcare.\nIt has been suggested that in terms of healthy diets, Mediterranean-style diets could be promoted by countries for ensuring healthy-by-default choices (\"to ensure the healthiest choice is the easiest choice\") and with highly effective measures including dietary education, food checklists and recipes that are \"simple, palatable, and affordable\".\nA review suggests that \"targeting the aging process per se may be a far more effective approach to prevent or delay aging-associated pathologies than treatments specifically targeted to particular clinical conditions\".\nLow ambient temperature\nLow ambient temperature as a physical factor affecting free radical levels was identified as a treatment producing exceptional lifespan increase in Drosophila melanogaster and other living beings.\nHistory"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911791.8806, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911791.5541, "finish": 1720911791.8806, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e0a63bc7f8b24cf7ab276ac9e0eb94cb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How does the Infinite Improbability Drive work in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "output": [["How does the Infinite Improbability Drive work in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "Title: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Tertiary to Hexagonal Phases\n\nPassage: Henry Blofeld: Himself\nFred Trueman: Himself\nAnnouncer: John Marsh\nSlartibartfast shows Ford and Arthur an Informational Illusion about the Krikkit Wars and the Wikkit Gate, and that the game of cricket on Earth is a \"racial memory\" of the Wars. Investigating further, they discover that the Krikkitmen, a previously peaceful people, built their first spaceship in a year, after a spaceship landed on their planet. The planet and its sun had been previously obscured in a dust cloud that left the Krikkitmen unaware of the existence or even possibility of existence of stars. It is considered remarkable that they constructed a working ship in just a year. After they saw the rest of the universe existed, they decided to annihilate it.\nMeanwhile, on the Heart of Gold, Zaphod Beeblebrox hears the noise of thousands of people saying \"Wop\". He intercepts them on the bridge, where he is told they want the \"Golden Bail\", the ship's Infinite Improbability Drive. They take it, shoot him, and leave.\nBack on Slartibartfast's ship, Ford and Arthur watch the Krikkit War Crimes Trial, presided over by Judiciary Pag. Pag's sentence is that Krikkit will be locked in an envelope of \"Slo-Time\", until the universe has ended, when it will be released, thus saving the universe from attack from Krikkit, and allowing Krikkit to exist in isolation after the end of the universe. However, a Krikkit ship escaped.\nSlartibartfast notes that parts of the key to the Wikkit Gate, sealing the envelope of Slo-Time, have been re-appearing. After a failed attempt to recover the Wooden Pillar (the Ashes), Slartibartfast plans to go to a party, to locate the Silver Bail. Ford disagrees with this objective but agrees with the concept of going to a party. They teleport from the ship.\nArthur does not materialise with Ford and Slartibartfast, but elsewhere, in a gloomy room, with signs such as \"DO NOT BE ALARMED. BE VERY VERY FRIGHTENED, ARTHUR DENT\". The episode ends on a cliff-hanger, with the previously unintroduced character of Agrajag saying \"Bet you weren't expecting to see me again.\"\nThe episode includes several Guide interludes, notably the story of Lallafa the poet, and a description of Brockian Ultra-Cricket.\nFit the Sixteenth\nBroadcast on BBC Radio 4, 12 October 2004\nCast:\nThe Book: William Franklyn\nArthur Dent: Simon Jones\nFord Prefect: Geoffrey McGivern\nSlartibartfast: Richard Griffiths\nTrillian: Susan Sheridan\nThor: Dominic Hawksley\nAgrajag: Douglas Adams\nAward winner: Bob Golding\nWoman with the Sydney Opera House Head: Joanna Lumley\nParty Doorman: Paul Wickens\nAnnouncer: John Marsh\nThe episode begins with Arthur, who has been \"diverted\" by Agrajag, who claims that Arthur has killed previous incarnations of him hundreds of times. He also claims to have been the bowl of petunias that materialised into existence in Fit the Third. Eventually it transpires one of the deaths was at Stavromula Beta, where someone tried to assassinate Arthur, and he ducked, hitting Agrajag. Arthur however has never been there. Agrajag cries \"I've brought you here too zarking soon\", but decides to attempt to kill Arthur anyway."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911791.8806, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911791.5541, "finish": 1720911791.8806, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6a20a6182ffc4a8f8820cca5e7648e87", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "How does the Infinite Improbability Drive work in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "output": [["How does the Infinite Improbability Drive work in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "Title: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Primary and Secondary Phases\n\nPassage: The Lintillas finally join Arthur, and Poodoo seizes his opportunity to introduce the Allitnils to them. They are immediately overwhelmingly attracted to each other, but are warned off from kissing each other until married. The priest is then called upon to perform three weddings. As the weddings conclude and the men kiss their brides, two of the three pairs disappear in \"a puff of unsmoke\" as Arthur discovers that the marriage certificates are actually cloning machine company \"Agreements to Cease to Be\" and cries out, stopping the final couple from kissing.\nAt this point, we go back to Ford and Zaphod entering the very late space ship, just as the passengers are being woken from suspended animation for coffee and biscuits. Ford and Zaphod flee the scene, eventually arriving on the flight deck, where they are continually ordered by the autopilot to return to their seats. The autopilot argues with them over the statistical likelihood of another civilisation delivering the lemon soaked paper napkins required by the spaceship before it can depart, and Ford and Zaphod flee again, this time to the First Class compartment. Here, a man introduces himself to Zaphod as Zarniwoop, whom Zaphod had been seeking since Fit the Seventh.\nThe action returns to Arthur, the remaining Lintilla, and Marvin. We learn that Arthur had killed the last Allitnil, the anti-clone, and Marvin tied up Poodoo and Varntvar, leaving them forced to listen to a cassette tape of Marvin's autobiography. As they finally exit the Dolmansaxlil building, they set out for the same spaceport that Ford and Zaphod are in, but then discover that the suspended cup is heading towards the surface, with the Heart of Gold still inside.\nMeanwhile, Zarniwoop has offered Ford and Zaphod some drinks, and attempts to explain the whole situation to them. Zarniwoop starts by explaining that they had been in an artificially created universe within his office, then explains that he and Zaphod had co-conspired to discover who was really ruling the galaxy, as it was obvious it was not the President. Zaphod succeeds in his task, bringing the Heart of Gold - its improbability drive being necessary to reach the realm of the real ruler of the galaxy - to Zarniwoop's hiding place. Zarniwoop begins \"dismantling\" the artificial universe, and causes the cup to head to the surface outside."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911817.5048, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911817.2582, "finish": 1720911817.5048, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3e6493bdee944b29b33305834754702", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What are the Vogons known for in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "output": [["What are the Vogons known for in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "Title: Vogon\n\nPassage: The Vogons are a fictional alien race from the planet Vogsphere in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\u2014initially a BBC Radio series by Douglas Adams\u2014who are responsible for the destruction of the Earth, in order to facilitate an intergalactic highway construction project for a hyperspace express route. Vogons are slug-like but vaguely humanoid, are bulkier than humans, and have green skin. Vogons are described as \"one of the most unpleasant races in the galaxy\u2014not actually evil, but bad-tempered, bureaucratic, officious and callous\", and having \"as much sex appeal as a road accident\" as well as being the authors of \"the third worst poetry in the universe\". They are employed as the galactic government's bureaucrats. According to Marvin the Paranoid Android, they are also the worst marksmen in the galaxy. They follow orders as they were told to and will not allow exceptions.\nDescription\nAppearance and personality\nGuide Description:\nVogons are roughly human-sized, although much bulkier, with green or grey skin. Their noses are above their eyebrows, which are either ginger (in the television series) or white (in the film). The film's commentary states that the idea behind the high flat noses was that they evolved both the noses and the severe bureaucracy from being repeatedly whacked by the paddle creatures under the sand on Vogsphere whenever they had an independent thought (in the film, the Vogon bureaucracy is centred on Vogsphere). In the radio series it is said that \"Their highly domed nose rises above their small piggy forehead\".\nGarth Jennings based the visual portrayal of the Vogons in the 2005 film on the work of cartoonist James Gillray (1757\u20131815). \"His creations were so grotesque...when we looked at them, we realised they were the Vogons\".\nOrigins"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911817.5048, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911817.2582, "finish": 1720911817.5048, "ip": "", "conv_id": "277a9d6696d740e2995826aeec2da93e", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What are the Vogons known for in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "output": [["What are the Vogons known for in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'?", "Title: Vogon\n\nPassage: The Vogons are a fictional alien race from the planet Vogsphere in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\u2014initially a BBC Radio series by Douglas Adams\u2014who are responsible for the destruction of the Earth, in order to facilitate an intergalactic highway construction project for a hyperspace express route. Vogons are slug-like but vaguely humanoid, are bulkier than humans, and have green skin. Vogons are described as \"one of the most unpleasant races in the galaxy\u2014not actually evil, but bad-tempered, bureaucratic, officious and callous\", and having \"as much sex appeal as a road accident\" as well as being the authors of \"the third worst poetry in the universe\". They are employed as the galactic government's bureaucrats. According to Marvin the Paranoid Android, they are also the worst marksmen in the galaxy. They follow orders as they were told to and will not allow exceptions.\nDescription\nAppearance and personality\nGuide Description:\nVogons are roughly human-sized, although much bulkier, with green or grey skin. Their noses are above their eyebrows, which are either ginger (in the television series) or white (in the film). The film's commentary states that the idea behind the high flat noses was that they evolved both the noses and the severe bureaucracy from being repeatedly whacked by the paddle creatures under the sand on Vogsphere whenever they had an independent thought (in the film, the Vogon bureaucracy is centred on Vogsphere). In the radio series it is said that \"Their highly domed nose rises above their small piggy forehead\".\nGarth Jennings based the visual portrayal of the Vogons in the 2005 film on the work of cartoonist James Gillray (1757\u20131815). \"His creations were so grotesque...when we looked at them, we realised they were the Vogons\".\nOrigins"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911856.2402, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911856.0434, "finish": 1720911856.2402, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dc41744b76e546b2a5ec1b4f10dc89cb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the concept of 'Don't Panic' as it is used in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'.", "output": [["What is the concept of 'Don't Panic' as it is used in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'.", "Title: Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: Don't Panic\nIn the series, Don't Panic is a phrase on the cover of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The novel explains that this was partly because the device \"looked insanely complicated\" to operate, and partly to keep intergalactic travellers from panicking. \"It is said that despite its many glaring (and occasionally fatal) inaccuracies, the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy itself has outsold the Encyclopedia Galactica because it is slightly cheaper, and because it has the words 'DON'T PANIC' in large, friendly letters on the cover.\"\nArthur C. Clarke said Douglas Adams' use of \"don't panic\" was perhaps the best advice that could be given to humanity.\nBritish rock band Coldplay's debut album Parachutes contains a song called \"Don't Panic\" in reference to the series.\nOn 6 February 2018 SpaceX launched the Falcon Heavy rocket, carrying Elon Musk's Tesla Roadster which had \"DON'T PANIC!\" written on the screen on the dashboard as a reference to the series.\nKnowing where one's towel is\nWithin the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy universe, towels are regarded as indispensable equipment for experienced travellers, since they can be put to a wide variety of uses. Consequently, a person who can quickly adapt to virtually any new situation is said to know where their towel is. The logic behind this statement is presented in chapter 3 of the first novel in the series thus:\nAdams got the idea for this phrase when he went travelling and found that his beach towel kept disappearing. In the 1985 book The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy -The Radio Scripts, his friends describe how he would always \"mislay\" his towel. On Towel Day, fans commemorate Adams by carrying towels with them.\nMostly Harmless\nThe only entry about Earth in the Guide used to be \"Harmless\", but Ford Prefect managed to change it a little before getting stuck on Earth. \"Mostly Harmless\" provoked a very upset reaction from Arthur when heard. Those two words are not what Ford submitted as a result of his researchmerely all that was left after his editors were done with it. The term is the title of the fifth book in the Hitchhiker \"trilogy\". Its popularity is such that it has become the definition of Earth in many standard works of sci-fi reference, like The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Additionally, \"Harmless\" and \"Mostly Harmless\" both feature as ranks in the computer game Elite and its sequels. Also, in World of Warcraft, there is a rifle that fires (mostly) harmless pellets. In the MMORPG RuneScape, there is an island called Mos Le Harmless (Mostly Harmless). Low-scoring players in the multiplayer version of the game Perfect Dark and GoldenEye 007 are awarded with the designation \"mostly harmless\". In the 2008 edition of the board game Cosmic Encounter, the human race is given the attribute \"Mostly Harmless\". In the game Kerbal Space Program, there is an atomic rocket motor with the description \"mostly harmless\". Another reference is in the book title Mostly Harmless Econometrics.\nNot entirely unlike"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911856.2402, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911856.0434, "finish": 1720911856.2402, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e0a5f819a8d4d8e9eec6d63393735b7", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the concept of 'Don't Panic' as it is used in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'.", "output": [["What is the concept of 'Don't Panic' as it is used in 'Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy'.", "Title: Phrases from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: Don't Panic\nIn the series, Don't Panic is a phrase on the cover of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. The novel explains that this was partly because the device \"looked insanely complicated\" to operate, and partly to keep intergalactic travellers from panicking. \"It is said that despite its many glaring (and occasionally fatal) inaccuracies, the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy itself has outsold the Encyclopedia Galactica because it is slightly cheaper, and because it has the words 'DON'T PANIC' in large, friendly letters on the cover.\"\nArthur C. Clarke said Douglas Adams' use of \"don't panic\" was perhaps the best advice that could be given to humanity.\nBritish rock band Coldplay's debut album Parachutes contains a song called \"Don't Panic\" in reference to the series.\nOn 6 February 2018 SpaceX launched the Falcon Heavy rocket, carrying Elon Musk's Tesla Roadster which had \"DON'T PANIC!\" written on the screen on the dashboard as a reference to the series.\nKnowing where one's towel is\nWithin the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy universe, towels are regarded as indispensable equipment for experienced travellers, since they can be put to a wide variety of uses. Consequently, a person who can quickly adapt to virtually any new situation is said to know where their towel is. The logic behind this statement is presented in chapter 3 of the first novel in the series thus:\nAdams got the idea for this phrase when he went travelling and found that his beach towel kept disappearing. In the 1985 book The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy -The Radio Scripts, his friends describe how he would always \"mislay\" his towel. On Towel Day, fans commemorate Adams by carrying towels with them.\nMostly Harmless\nThe only entry about Earth in the Guide used to be \"Harmless\", but Ford Prefect managed to change it a little before getting stuck on Earth. \"Mostly Harmless\" provoked a very upset reaction from Arthur when heard. Those two words are not what Ford submitted as a result of his researchmerely all that was left after his editors were done with it. The term is the title of the fifth book in the Hitchhiker \"trilogy\". Its popularity is such that it has become the definition of Earth in many standard works of sci-fi reference, like The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Additionally, \"Harmless\" and \"Mostly Harmless\" both feature as ranks in the computer game Elite and its sequels. Also, in World of Warcraft, there is a rifle that fires (mostly) harmless pellets. In the MMORPG RuneScape, there is an island called Mos Le Harmless (Mostly Harmless). Low-scoring players in the multiplayer version of the game Perfect Dark and GoldenEye 007 are awarded with the designation \"mostly harmless\". In the 2008 edition of the board game Cosmic Encounter, the human race is given the attribute \"Mostly Harmless\". In the game Kerbal Space Program, there is an atomic rocket motor with the description \"mostly harmless\". Another reference is in the book title Mostly Harmless Econometrics.\nNot entirely unlike"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911877.5446, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911877.3289, "finish": 1720911877.5446, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9e5101e60d184d4f9e03f856861bd8d4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the significance of the number 42 in popular culture?", "output": [["What is the significance of the number 42 in popular culture?", "Title: 42 (number)\n\nPassage: \"42\" is a song written and produced by hip-hop and record production trio 3Racha, which consists of members Bang Chan, Han Jisung, and Seo Changbin of popular k-pop group Stray Kids. A lyric in this song states, \"Why do we live? What's the purpose? Is it 42? Stop speaking nonsense,\" which directly references The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxys definition of 42.\n\"\"42\"\" is a song from the 2018 album SR3MM by American rap duo Rae Sremmurd.\n\"42\" is a song from the 2019 album Don\u2032t Panic by the progressive rock band IZZ. The album is a partial concept album based on The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.\n\"42\" is a song by The Disco Biscuits.\nTelevision and film\nThe Kumars at No. 42 is a British comedy television series.\n\"42\" is an episode of Doctor Who, set in real time lasting approximately 42\u00a0minutes.\nOn the game show Jeopardy!, \"Watson\" the IBM supercomputer has 42 \"threads\" in its avatar.\n42 is a film on the life of American baseball player Jackie Robinson.\nCaptain Harlock is sometimes seen wearing clothing with the number 42 on it.\nIn the Stargate Atlantis season 4 episode \"Quarantine\", Colonel Sheppard states that Dr. McKay's password ends in 42 because \"It's the ultimate answer to the great question of life, the universe and everything.\"\nIn Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, the Festival of the Ancestors on Planet Pasaana is held every 42 years. The film itself was released in 2019, 42 years after the 1977 original Star Wars film. By a \"whole string of pretty meaningless coincidences\", 2019 is the same year that 42 was found to be the largest possible natural number less than 100 to be expressed as a sum of three cubes.\nIn the TV show Lost, 42 is one of the numbers used throughout the show for some of its mysteries.\nThere is a Belgian TV drama called Unit 42 about a special police unit that uses high-tech tools to go after criminals. One of the characters in the pilot episode explains that the unit was named based on the Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy.\nVideo games\n42 Entertainment is the company responsible for several alternate reality games, including I Love Bees, Year Zero, and Why So Serious.\nTokyo 42 is a video game released in 2017.\nSquadron 42 is a video game set in the Star Citizen Universe with an unspecified release date.\nSports\nThe jersey number of Jackie Robinson, which is the only number retired by all Major League Baseball teams. Although the number was retired in 1997, Mariano Rivera of the New York Yankees, the last professional baseball player to wear number 42, continued to wear it until he retired at the end of the 2013 season. As of the 2014 season, no player ever again wore the number 42 in Major League Baseball except on Jackie Robinson Day (April 15), when all uniformed personnel (players, managers, coaches, and umpires) wear the number."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911877.5446, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911877.3289, "finish": 1720911877.5446, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ccca84c81a74961869e6172c76502f9", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the significance of the number 42 in popular culture?", "output": [["What is the significance of the number 42 in popular culture?", "Title: 42 (number)\n\nPassage: \"42\" is a song written and produced by hip-hop and record production trio 3Racha, which consists of members Bang Chan, Han Jisung, and Seo Changbin of popular k-pop group Stray Kids. A lyric in this song states, \"Why do we live? What's the purpose? Is it 42? Stop speaking nonsense,\" which directly references The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxys definition of 42.\n\"\"42\"\" is a song from the 2018 album SR3MM by American rap duo Rae Sremmurd.\n\"42\" is a song from the 2019 album Don\u2032t Panic by the progressive rock band IZZ. The album is a partial concept album based on The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.\n\"42\" is a song by The Disco Biscuits.\nTelevision and film\nThe Kumars at No. 42 is a British comedy television series.\n\"42\" is an episode of Doctor Who, set in real time lasting approximately 42\u00a0minutes.\nOn the game show Jeopardy!, \"Watson\" the IBM supercomputer has 42 \"threads\" in its avatar.\n42 is a film on the life of American baseball player Jackie Robinson.\nCaptain Harlock is sometimes seen wearing clothing with the number 42 on it.\nIn the Stargate Atlantis season 4 episode \"Quarantine\", Colonel Sheppard states that Dr. McKay's password ends in 42 because \"It's the ultimate answer to the great question of life, the universe and everything.\"\nIn Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, the Festival of the Ancestors on Planet Pasaana is held every 42 years. The film itself was released in 2019, 42 years after the 1977 original Star Wars film. By a \"whole string of pretty meaningless coincidences\", 2019 is the same year that 42 was found to be the largest possible natural number less than 100 to be expressed as a sum of three cubes.\nIn the TV show Lost, 42 is one of the numbers used throughout the show for some of its mysteries.\nThere is a Belgian TV drama called Unit 42 about a special police unit that uses high-tech tools to go after criminals. One of the characters in the pilot episode explains that the unit was named based on the Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy.\nVideo games\n42 Entertainment is the company responsible for several alternate reality games, including I Love Bees, Year Zero, and Why So Serious.\nTokyo 42 is a video game released in 2017.\nSquadron 42 is a video game set in the Star Citizen Universe with an unspecified release date.\nSports\nThe jersey number of Jackie Robinson, which is the only number retired by all Major League Baseball teams. Although the number was retired in 1997, Mariano Rivera of the New York Yankees, the last professional baseball player to wear number 42, continued to wear it until he retired at the end of the 2013 season. As of the 2014 season, no player ever again wore the number 42 in Major League Baseball except on Jackie Robinson Day (April 15), when all uniformed personnel (players, managers, coaches, and umpires) wear the number."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911940.0532, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911939.83, "finish": 1720911940.0532, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a2c19122f516477bb6587c443cb3d8c9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything.", "output": [["What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything.", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911940.0532, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911939.83, "finish": 1720911940.0532, "ip": "", "conv_id": "153e31d3d4184dc8b2264dd3dd3b0ea4", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything.", "output": [["What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything.", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911976.038, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911975.836, "finish": 1720911976.038, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b640b44b1c5b447fb8c8beeb490e1964", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything?", "output": [["What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720911976.038, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720911975.836, "finish": 1720911976.038, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1361fd0ce64f43719c37a5a6591ee8c0", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything?", "output": [["What is the ultimate answer to life, the universe, and everything?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912008.0379, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912007.852, "finish": 1720912008.0379, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1b66ea5ab6cb47cf9c70114dd5064aa9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912008.0379, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912007.852, "finish": 1720912008.0379, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6707ffcf54c2489bba75af66fe5cfb64", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912088.7097, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912088.4471, "finish": 1720912088.7097, "ip": "", "conv_id": "166d4ed05249416d98ef4c0cf901c1c4", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912088.7097, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912088.4471, "finish": 1720912088.7097, "ip": "", "conv_id": "aebcb01070d340929ae5b67c8198be49", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912097.5465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912097.3664, "finish": 1720912097.5465, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d431b558e3e045ecb835251ade2e277c", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912097.5465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912097.3664, "finish": 1720912097.5465, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cf63b18ef49740b1a933b9e6f3d146c5", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912127.8991, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912110.8352, "finish": 1720912127.8991, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d6af4ab295e24e27aeb726ee28fd8853", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912127.8991, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912110.8352, "finish": 1720912127.8991, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63d5adebc3de461bb4c212b407621727", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912140.2041, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912139.8626, "finish": 1720912140.2041, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4221d598be5143d1926078429ed358eb", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912140.2041, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912139.8626, "finish": 1720912140.2041, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a7728eb6e0164784b66268591a87fdaf", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912191.9949, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912174.1691, "finish": 1720912191.9949, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7b471a767dba42f8a853e1a28eb24d39", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912191.9949, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912174.1691, "finish": 1720912191.9949, "ip": "", "conv_id": "afe23a1077e843c7bfcd1e8871e15f71", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "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: Douglas Adams's Guide to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: Douglas Adams's Guide to The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a BBC Radio production sold as an audio book on two cassette tapes (later, two CDs). The programme was partially broadcast by BBC Radio 4 as a 40-minute feature titled The Guide to 20 Years' Hitch-Hiking on 5 March 1998, marking the 20th anniversary of the first radio programme in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.\nTape one\nThe first tape runs 55 minutes and is narrated by Peter Jones, who narrated the original radio series. It features comments by many of the people involved, telling how the series was created and how it developed. The participants are Douglas Adams, Simon Brett (producer of the first programme), Simon Jones (Arthur Dent), Geoffrey McGivern (Ford Prefect), Paddy Kingsland (sound effects and audio mixing), Stephen Moore (Marvin), Geoffrey Perkins (producer of the first two radio series, except for the first programme) and Nick Webb (Pan Books).\nThese people tell their first-hand account of how it all started, and how surprised they all were at the huge success they had created. They also tell the exciting story of how the last programme in the second series was so plagued by deadline problems that it almost didn't get broadcast, and the mind-boggling conditions they worked under to complete the job in time.\nThese comments are intermixed with some clips from the radio programmes, including some highlights such as the destruction of the earth and Marvin telling everyone how depressed he is.\nThe programme was written by Debbie Barham.\nTape two\nThe second tape runs 50 minutes and consists of Douglas Adams being interviewed by Iain Johnstone. Many topics are touched upon, often with surprising connections between them.\nSome of the topics discussed by Douglas Adams are: University of Cambridge and Footlights, Monty Python, Graham Chapman, Star Wars, Tolstoy's Resurrection, Last Chance to See, the Nordic god Thor, is Arthur Dent really Douglas Adams, Simon Jones, light switches, Richard Dawkins, atheism, Procol Harum, Doom Watch, X-Files, Sherlock Holmes, Arthur C. Clarke, The Digital Village, John Cleese's influence in selecting \"42\", the Hubble Constant, and his daughter Polly.\nAvailability\nThe product is no longer available at BBC Shop, but can usually be found on Internet auction sites and used book sites and Internet book stores that sell used books via \"partners\".\nIt is available as a bonus on the CD boxset of the first two series: Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy: Collector's Edition ."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912203.7862, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912203.5181, "finish": 1720912203.7862, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e1518c00ff2b4c7298a4c4335d84e06b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912203.7862, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912203.5181, "finish": 1720912203.7862, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ab88b43ea171403aa2219f6bdb7b2785", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912215.6767, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912215.4453, "finish": 1720912215.6767, "ip": "", "conv_id": "736465a7bcca4b6b823676b4ab584210", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912215.6767, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912215.4453, "finish": 1720912215.6767, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9af3613942c94f0f989568a5c08bd9d8", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912248.8696, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912248.6885, "finish": 1720912248.8696, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ca3a16142f4e4473bdd6067e16a203d0", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912248.8696, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912248.6885, "finish": 1720912248.8696, "ip": "", "conv_id": "441e8c7aa89242bc8405aa94729e05c1", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912256.7558, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912256.559, "finish": 1720912256.7558, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b1360cf659f249f8a92c539f296d2f76", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912256.7558, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912256.559, "finish": 1720912256.7558, "ip": "", "conv_id": "08d88f7f7220434988353dc60a7dae92", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912271.0456, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912268.9353, "finish": 1720912271.0456, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5ff2aad4bd9641a0a006950487cf790e", "model_name": "BM25", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912271.0456, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912268.9353, "finish": 1720912271.0456, "ip": "", "conv_id": "18b05d9921154208a5b1081e1f50731f", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912282.7594, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912282.6114, "finish": 1720912282.7594, "ip": "", "conv_id": "def4c7fdac0c47f4ab02ff7ffb49c60d", "model_name": "BM25", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912282.7594, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912282.6114, "finish": 1720912282.7594, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f41841886281437d80925fd975053edd", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912317.8478, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912294.1853, "finish": 1720912317.8478, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3f867e56dded436d861ac61223ff6cea", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "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: The Guide\n\nPassage: Plot summary\nThe protagonist, Raju, who is nicknamed \"Railway Raju\", is characterized as being a corrupt and popular tour guide. In the story, he falls in love with a beautiful woman named Rosie, who is married to an archaeologist named Marco, while the couple is visiting Malgudi as tourists. Marco disapproves of Rosie's passion for dancing but Raju encourages Rosie to pursue her dreams and become a dancer. With this interaction, they begin to spend time with each other and become very close.\nUpon learning about their relationship, Marco leaves Rosie in Malgudi and returns to Madras alone. Rosie seeks refuge at Raju's home, and they start living together. However, Raju's mother does not approve of their relationship and leaves them.\nRaju becomes Rosie's stage manager, and with his marketing tactics, Rosie gains recognition as a dancer. With his success, Raju becomes overly confident and begins to assert more control over Rosie's life for financial gain. He becomes involved in a forgery case related to Rosie's signature. Raju is sentenced to two years in prison, despite Rosie's defence.\nAfter completing his sentence, Raju passes through a village called Mangal, where he is mistaken for a sadhu (a spiritual guide). To avoid returning to Malgudi in disgrace, he decides to stay in an abandoned temple near Mangal. There, he takes on the role of a sadhu, delivering sermons and solving the villagers' daily problems and disputes.\nDuring a famine in the village, some of the villagers request help from Raju, believing that rain will come and end the famine if he fasts. Raju decides to confess his entire past to Velan, who had initially discovered him in the temple and had unwavering faith in him like the rest of the villagers. However, Velan remains unchanged by the confession, and Raju resolves to continue with the fast.\nAs news of Raju's fast spreads through the media, a large crowd gathers to witness the spectacle, much to Raju's annoyance. On the morning of the eleventh day of his fast, he goes to the riverside as part of his daily ritual. He senses rain falling in the distant hills and collapses into the water. Whether it actually rained or if Raju died remains unknown and open to the reader's interpretation.\nAdaptations\nThe film Guide was released in 1965, based on the novel. It was directed by Vijay Anand. It starred Dev Anand as Raju, Waheeda Rehman as Rosie, and Leela Chitnis in the lead roles. The film's score was composed by S. D. Burman. The movie's ending differs from that of the novel, in which the fate of some characters remain unanswered.\nA 120-minute U.S. version was written by Pearl S. Buck, and directed and produced by Tad Danielewski. The film was screened at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, 42 years after its release.\nThe novel was also adapted into a play in 1968. The play was profiled in the William Goldman book The Season: A Candid Look at Broadway."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912317.8478, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912294.1853, "finish": 1720912317.8478, "ip": "", "conv_id": "274b261b27bf4f7cb812464c43c39740", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "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: Douglas Adams's Guide to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy\n\nPassage: Douglas Adams's Guide to The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a BBC Radio production sold as an audio book on two cassette tapes (later, two CDs). The programme was partially broadcast by BBC Radio 4 as a 40-minute feature titled The Guide to 20 Years' Hitch-Hiking on 5 March 1998, marking the 20th anniversary of the first radio programme in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series.\nTape one\nThe first tape runs 55 minutes and is narrated by Peter Jones, who narrated the original radio series. It features comments by many of the people involved, telling how the series was created and how it developed. The participants are Douglas Adams, Simon Brett (producer of the first programme), Simon Jones (Arthur Dent), Geoffrey McGivern (Ford Prefect), Paddy Kingsland (sound effects and audio mixing), Stephen Moore (Marvin), Geoffrey Perkins (producer of the first two radio series, except for the first programme) and Nick Webb (Pan Books).\nThese people tell their first-hand account of how it all started, and how surprised they all were at the huge success they had created. They also tell the exciting story of how the last programme in the second series was so plagued by deadline problems that it almost didn't get broadcast, and the mind-boggling conditions they worked under to complete the job in time.\nThese comments are intermixed with some clips from the radio programmes, including some highlights such as the destruction of the earth and Marvin telling everyone how depressed he is.\nThe programme was written by Debbie Barham.\nTape two\nThe second tape runs 50 minutes and consists of Douglas Adams being interviewed by Iain Johnstone. Many topics are touched upon, often with surprising connections between them.\nSome of the topics discussed by Douglas Adams are: University of Cambridge and Footlights, Monty Python, Graham Chapman, Star Wars, Tolstoy's Resurrection, Last Chance to See, the Nordic god Thor, is Arthur Dent really Douglas Adams, Simon Jones, light switches, Richard Dawkins, atheism, Procol Harum, Doom Watch, X-Files, Sherlock Holmes, Arthur C. Clarke, The Digital Village, John Cleese's influence in selecting \"42\", the Hubble Constant, and his daughter Polly.\nAvailability\nThe product is no longer available at BBC Shop, but can usually be found on Internet auction sites and used book sites and Internet book stores that sell used books via \"partners\".\nIt is available as a bonus on the CD boxset of the first two series: Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy: Collector's Edition ."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912378.6059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912378.459, "finish": 1720912378.6059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "caf954ffb1ed4c4ca8e0030cda2304fc", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question if machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912378.6059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912378.459, "finish": 1720912378.6059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3bdd7fa8b22c4dd6b112ef3cd1ccb6fe", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question if machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question if 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912402.4673, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912402.0895, "finish": 1720912402.4673, "ip": "", "conv_id": "197d9b67b1cc45629ec42fc74e2642f4", "model_name": "BM25", "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: Turing test\n\nPassage: Alan Turing and the Imitation Game\nResearchers in the United Kingdom had been exploring \"machine intelligence\" for up to ten years prior to the founding of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) research in 1956. It was a common topic among the members of the Ratio Club, an informal group of British cybernetics and electronics researchers that included Alan Turing.\nTuring, in particular, had been running the notion of machine intelligence since at least 1941 and one of the earliest-known mentions of \"computer intelligence\" was made by him in 1947. In Turing's report, \"Intelligent Machinery,\" he investigated \"the question of whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\" and, as part of that investigation, proposed what may be considered the forerunner to his later tests:\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\"\nTo demonstrate this approach Turing proposes a test inspired by a party game, known as the \"imitation game\", in which a man and a woman go into separate rooms and guests try to tell them apart by writing a series of questions and reading the typewritten answers sent back. In this game, both the man and the woman aim to convince the guests that they are the other. (Huma Shah argues that this two-human version of the game was presented by Turing only to introduce the reader to the machine-human question-answer test.) Turing described his new version of the game as follows:"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912402.4673, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912402.0895, "finish": 1720912402.4673, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a8eaf34baf714e44a46b224f4fed0cf3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912460.0248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912459.8301, "finish": 1720912460.0248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e39aa34fb5f342e8ae22c32d1efa4988", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912460.0248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912459.8301, "finish": 1720912460.0248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d6704285c84d446a948736be6e9183ad", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912468.2233, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912467.8959, "finish": 1720912468.2233, "ip": "", "conv_id": "57b3d9a74c0640efbf81f6c030f48352", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912468.2233, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912467.8959, "finish": 1720912468.2233, "ip": "", "conv_id": "55a3618f797d4a349c5bbf6b53cbfb4f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912493.6358, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912493.3907, "finish": 1720912493.6358, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d83714eec6ab45b888a3feaa5494fd5e", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Is it possible to prevent death by freezing people?", "output": [["Is it possible to prevent death by freezing people?", "Title: Cryopreservation\n\nPassage: Cryopreservation or cryoconservation is a process where biological material - cells, tissues, or organs - are frozen to preserve the material for an extended period of time. At low temperatures (typically or using liquid nitrogen) any cell metabolism which might cause damage to the biological material in question is effectively stopped. Cryopreservation is an effective way to transport biological samples over long distances, store samples for prolonged periods of time, and create a bank of samples for users. Molecules, referred to as cryoprotective agents (CPAs), are added to reduce the osmotic shock and physical stresses cells undergo in the freezing process. Some cryoprotective agents used in research are inspired by plants and animals in nature that have unique cold tolerance to survive harsh winters, including: trees, wood frogs, and tardigrades.The first human corpse to be frozen with the hope of future resurrection was James Bedford's, a few hours after his cancer-caused death in 1967.[15] Bedford's is the only cryonics corpse frozen before 1974 still frozen today.\nNatural cryopreservation"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912493.6358, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912493.3907, "finish": 1720912493.6358, "ip": "", "conv_id": "50d1920545b34502bcc8edda420bd802", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is it possible to prevent death by freezing people?", "output": [["Is it possible to prevent death by freezing people?", "Title: Cryopreservation\n\nPassage: Cryopreservation or cryoconservation is a process where biological material - cells, tissues, or organs - are frozen to preserve the material for an extended period of time. At low temperatures (typically or using liquid nitrogen) any cell metabolism which might cause damage to the biological material in question is effectively stopped. Cryopreservation is an effective way to transport biological samples over long distances, store samples for prolonged periods of time, and create a bank of samples for users. Molecules, referred to as cryoprotective agents (CPAs), are added to reduce the osmotic shock and physical stresses cells undergo in the freezing process. Some cryoprotective agents used in research are inspired by plants and animals in nature that have unique cold tolerance to survive harsh winters, including: trees, wood frogs, and tardigrades.The first human corpse to be frozen with the hope of future resurrection was James Bedford's, a few hours after his cancer-caused death in 1967.[15] Bedford's is the only cryonics corpse frozen before 1974 still frozen today.\nNatural cryopreservation"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912601.051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912600.7823, "finish": 1720912601.051, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4807f00012284f50b7329f23968593b7", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Niklas Muennighoff", "output": [["Niklas Muennighoff", "Title: Niklas Moisander\n\nPassage: Niklas Kristian Moisander (born 29 September 1985) is a Finnish professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for Swedish club Malm\u00f6 FF. Moisander was born in Turku, where he played for the local TPS youth team before moving to AFC Ajax. Following a one-season stay at Sampdoria, he spent five years at Bundesliga club Werder Bremen. He is the twin brother of goalkeeper Henrik Moisander, and is a former captain of the Finland national team."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912601.051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912600.7823, "finish": 1720912601.051, "ip": "", "conv_id": "324d57e25bbb4e5689c64fb3c72774b8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Niklas Muennighoff", "output": [["Niklas Muennighoff", "Title: Enik\n\nPassage: Enik (*1980) is a songwriter, singer, and musician from Munich, Germany.\nHe released his first EP \"Without a bark\" in 2003 (Wonder Records) and was the songwriter and singer for four songs on Funkst\u00f6rung's album Disconnected (2004), most notably the title track.\nIn 2006, his album \"The Seasons in Between\" was released on Labels Germany (a sublabel of EMI). Enik combined different styles of music and the German internet magazine laut.de compared him to Tom Waits, Giant Sand, Peter Gabriel and David Bowie. Another review can be found in the German music magazine Intro.\nAlso in 2006, Enik released his EP \"Antenna\" and in 2007 his album \"Chainsaw Buddha\". Both are just available as download, as on iTunes.\nIn 2007, Enik did songwriting and singing for the vocal tracks on Chris Gall Trio album \"climbing up\" and toured with them throughout Europe. He cowrote and sang on the second Chris Gall Trio record \"hello stranger\" in 2010.\nEnik also wrote songs for Thomas D released in 2010. His latest release titled \"I Sold My Moon Boots to a Girl From Greece\" was released in 2011. Having just finished the soundtrack for the film feature \"Guantanamo\", Enik is now recording the next album.\nSeveral of Enik's songs can be seen on video at www.youtube.com/enikenik"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912617.3326, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912617.1209, "finish": 1720912617.3326, "ip": "", "conv_id": "07ee01bc80924f829b2a079a1723c298", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: Language model\n\nPassage: Language models are useful for a variety of tasks, including speech recognition (helping prevent predictions of low-probability (e.g. nonsense) sequences), machine translation, natural language generation (generating more human-like text), optical character recognition, handwriting recognition, grammar induction, and information retrieval.\nLarge language models, currently their most advanced form, are a combination of larger datasets (frequently using words scraped from the public internet), feedforward neural networks, and transformers. They have superseded recurrent neural network-based models, which had previously superseded the pure statistical models, such as word n-gram language model.\nPure statistical models\nModels based on word n-grams\nExponential\nMaximum entropy language models encode the relationship between a word and the n-gram history using feature functions. The equation is\nwhere is the partition function, is the parameter vector, and is the feature function. In the simplest case, the feature function is just an indicator of the presence of a certain n-gram. It is helpful to use a prior on or some form of regularization.\nThe log-bilinear model is another example of an exponential language model.\nSkip-gram model\nNeural models\nRecurrent neural network\nContinuous representations or embeddings of words are produced in recurrent neural network-based language models (known also as continuous space language models). Such continuous space embeddings help to alleviate the curse of dimensionality, which is the consequence of the number of possible sequences of words increasing exponentially with the size of the vocabulary, furtherly causing a data sparsity problem. Neural networks avoid this problem by representing words as non-linear combinations of weights in a neural net.\nLarge language models\nAlthough sometimes matching human performance, it is not clear whether they are plausible cognitive models. At least for recurrent neural networks, it has been shown that they sometimes learn patterns that humans do not, but fail to learn patterns that humans typically do.\nEvaluation and benchmarks\nEvaluation of the quality of language models is mostly done by comparison to human created sample benchmarks created from typical language-oriented tasks. Other, less established, quality tests examine the intrinsic character of a language model or compare two such models. Since language models are typically intended to be dynamic and to learn from data they see, some proposed models investigate the rate of learning, e.g., through inspection of learning curves.\nVarious data sets have been developed for use in evaluating language processing systems. These include:\nCorpus of Linguistic Acceptability\nGLUE benchmark\nMicrosoft Research Paraphrase Corpus\nMulti-Genre Natural Language Inference\nQuestion Natural Language Inference\nQuora Question Pairs\nRecognizing Textual Entailment\nSemantic Textual Similarity Benchmark\nSQuAD question answering Test\nStanford Sentiment Treebank\nWinograd NLI\nBoolQ, PIQA, SIQA, HellaSwag, WinoGrande, ARC, OpenBookQA, NaturalQuestions, TriviaQA, RACE, MMLU (Massive Multitask Language Understanding), BIG-bench hard, GSM8k, RealToxicityPrompts, WinoGender, CrowS-Pairs. (LLaMa Benchmark)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912617.3326, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912617.1209, "finish": 1720912617.3326, "ip": "", "conv_id": "93d5b1c1b4154cf48b4b44c30d3eb339", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Language model\n\nPassage: Language models are useful for a variety of tasks, including speech recognition (helping prevent predictions of low-probability (e.g. nonsense) sequences), machine translation, natural language generation (generating more human-like text), optical character recognition, handwriting recognition, grammar induction, and information retrieval.\nLarge language models, currently their most advanced form, are a combination of larger datasets (frequently using words scraped from the public internet), feedforward neural networks, and transformers. They have superseded recurrent neural network-based models, which had previously superseded the pure statistical models, such as word n-gram language model.\nPure statistical models\nModels based on word n-grams\nExponential\nMaximum entropy language models encode the relationship between a word and the n-gram history using feature functions. The equation is\nwhere is the partition function, is the parameter vector, and is the feature function. In the simplest case, the feature function is just an indicator of the presence of a certain n-gram. It is helpful to use a prior on or some form of regularization.\nThe log-bilinear model is another example of an exponential language model.\nSkip-gram model\nNeural models\nRecurrent neural network\nContinuous representations or embeddings of words are produced in recurrent neural network-based language models (known also as continuous space language models). Such continuous space embeddings help to alleviate the curse of dimensionality, which is the consequence of the number of possible sequences of words increasing exponentially with the size of the vocabulary, furtherly causing a data sparsity problem. Neural networks avoid this problem by representing words as non-linear combinations of weights in a neural net.\nLarge language models\nAlthough sometimes matching human performance, it is not clear whether they are plausible cognitive models. At least for recurrent neural networks, it has been shown that they sometimes learn patterns that humans do not, but fail to learn patterns that humans typically do.\nEvaluation and benchmarks\nEvaluation of the quality of language models is mostly done by comparison to human created sample benchmarks created from typical language-oriented tasks. Other, less established, quality tests examine the intrinsic character of a language model or compare two such models. Since language models are typically intended to be dynamic and to learn from data they see, some proposed models investigate the rate of learning, e.g., through inspection of learning curves.\nVarious data sets have been developed for use in evaluating language processing systems. These include:\nCorpus of Linguistic Acceptability\nGLUE benchmark\nMicrosoft Research Paraphrase Corpus\nMulti-Genre Natural Language Inference\nQuestion Natural Language Inference\nQuora Question Pairs\nRecognizing Textual Entailment\nSemantic Textual Similarity Benchmark\nSQuAD question answering Test\nStanford Sentiment Treebank\nWinograd NLI\nBoolQ, PIQA, SIQA, HellaSwag, WinoGrande, ARC, OpenBookQA, NaturalQuestions, TriviaQA, RACE, MMLU (Massive Multitask Language Understanding), BIG-bench hard, GSM8k, RealToxicityPrompts, WinoGender, CrowS-Pairs. (LLaMa Benchmark)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912663.3508, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912663.1079, "finish": 1720912663.3508, "ip": "", "conv_id": "32fc4279456b46278d9b1b38c9e3e9f2", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What was the name of darth vader star destroyer?", "output": [["What was the name of darth vader star destroyer?", "Title: Tantive IV\n\nPassage: The ship first appeared in 1977 with the release of \"Star Wars: A New Hope.\" It had a major role as the personal ship of Princess Leia, a key member of the Rebel Alliance, carrying the plans of the enemy superweapon \"Death Star.\" After it is captured by the Galactic Empire, the ship is towed to an Imperial scrap yard for scuttling. Later, the Blockade Runner is rescued and returned to General Organa. Its last appearance was in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, where it is destroyed by Emperor Palpatine's lightning attack.\nOrigin and design\nThe ship's design stems from initial concepts for the Millennium Falcon. When Space: 1999 featured a ship called an Eagle Transporter with an appearance similar to the Industrial Light & Magic's Falcon design, the model makers redesigned the Falcon and adapted the initial design for the Tantive IV. The revised model was scaled down, with replacements for outsized components and a different cockpit. This also explains the 194-centimeter model's intricacy, which would have been necessary for depicting the prominent Falcon. Although not visible in the first Star Wars film, modelmakers hung a miniature Playboy centerfold on the cockpit's starboard bulkhead. The Tantive IV was the last model completed for the film. A smaller 16-inch model was also made for the shot of the craft receding into the distance. A separate model was needed for this because of the limited length of the Dykstraflex track used. That model has lights for the eleven engines to give the illusion of exhausts. The miniature model was in the collection of Grant McCune until he died in 2010 and it was then sold at auction in 2015 for a record sum of $450,000.\nThe model was altered slightly for Return of the Jedi, with the addition of windows along the ship's spine and larger weapons. These modifications were removed in the 1990s. The Republic cruiser in Star Wars: Episode I \u2013 The Phantom Menace was designed to be reminiscent of the Tantive IVs shape.\nDepiction\nThe Tantive IV first appears in the opening of Star Wars as it is captured by the Imperial I-class Star Destroyer Devastator over Tatooine. The ship was carrying Princess Leia and the plans for the Empire's Death Star battle station. Leia had taken the ship to Tatooine to recruit the Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi to join the rebellion. Unable to find Kenobi herself, Leia gives the plans and a message to R2-D2, who escapes with C-3PO in an escape pod and lands on Tatooine. According to the Star Wars Encyclopedia, the ship was subsequently destroyed by Darth Vader. Since the Disney purchase of Lucasfilm, this plotline is part of the non-canon Legends timeline."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912663.3508, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912663.1079, "finish": 1720912663.3508, "ip": "", "conv_id": "33776c529c5147508cb52bd85133846f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What was the name of darth vader star destroyer?", "output": [["What was the name of darth vader star destroyer?", "Title: Sith\n\nPassage: Darth Vader\nDarth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a human-cyborg Dark Lord of the Sith and the third and final apprentice of Darth Sidious, who first appeared in the Star Wars original trilogy, and later in the prequel trilogy. As the Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker, he fought alongside his master Obi-Wan Kenobi during the galaxy-wide Clone Wars, but was slowly seduced to the dark side by Darth Sidious, then Sheev Palpatine, a well respected senator. After helping Sidious kill Jedi Master Mace Windu, he swore allegiance to the Sith and was given the name Darth Vader before setting out to destroy all Jedi left on Coruscant. After being sent by Sidious to assassinate the Separatist council members on Mustafar, Vader was badly injured in a duel with Kenobi, resulting in the loss of his remaining organic arm, both legs, and severe burn injuries. He was saved by Sidious, and encased in a black suit of armor with extensive cybernetics which kept him alive. As the Galactic Empire was established and continued to grow, Vader became the Emperor's immensely feared second-in-command and was given the task of finding surviving Jedi and the Rebel Alliance's base. After the destruction of the first Death Star, Vader was charged with tracking down the Rebel Alliance and destroying their headquarters. However, the actions of his son, Luke Skywalker, eventually turned Vader against his master, resulting in both Sidious' and Vader's deaths, as well as the fulfilment of the Chosen One prophecy.\nDarth Plagueis\nDarth Plagueis was a Muun Dark Lord of the Sith and Darth Sidious' master, first referenced in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. In the film, Sidious (as Palpatine) uses Plagueis' story to seduce Anakin Skywalker to the dark side, claiming that Plagueis' abilities in the Force grew to such an extent that he could create life by influencing microscopic Force-sensitive entities called \"midi-chlorians,\" and even save people from dying. According to the Rule of Two, Plagueis was eventually killed by Sidious in his sleep, who subsequently became the new Sith Master and would later take on an apprentice of his own.\nPlagueis is the main character of the Legends novel, Star Wars: Darth Plagueis, which explains much of his backstory, including his training under Darth Tenebrous, mentorship of Palpatine, and early plans to undermine the Galactic Republic and drive the Jedi Order into ruins. The novel also reveals that Plagueis' public identity was Hego Damsk II, a member of the Intergalactic Banking Clan.\nDarth Bane"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912681.5392, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912681.3387, "finish": 1720912681.5392, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1f4e4f8609de4e17942cc34327f052ba", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What was the name of Darth Vader's star destroyer?", "output": [["What was the name of Darth Vader's star destroyer?", "Title: Tantive IV\n\nPassage: The ship first appeared in 1977 with the release of \"Star Wars: A New Hope.\" It had a major role as the personal ship of Princess Leia, a key member of the Rebel Alliance, carrying the plans of the enemy superweapon \"Death Star.\" After it is captured by the Galactic Empire, the ship is towed to an Imperial scrap yard for scuttling. Later, the Blockade Runner is rescued and returned to General Organa. Its last appearance was in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, where it is destroyed by Emperor Palpatine's lightning attack.\nOrigin and design\nThe ship's design stems from initial concepts for the Millennium Falcon. When Space: 1999 featured a ship called an Eagle Transporter with an appearance similar to the Industrial Light & Magic's Falcon design, the model makers redesigned the Falcon and adapted the initial design for the Tantive IV. The revised model was scaled down, with replacements for outsized components and a different cockpit. This also explains the 194-centimeter model's intricacy, which would have been necessary for depicting the prominent Falcon. Although not visible in the first Star Wars film, modelmakers hung a miniature Playboy centerfold on the cockpit's starboard bulkhead. The Tantive IV was the last model completed for the film. A smaller 16-inch model was also made for the shot of the craft receding into the distance. A separate model was needed for this because of the limited length of the Dykstraflex track used. That model has lights for the eleven engines to give the illusion of exhausts. The miniature model was in the collection of Grant McCune until he died in 2010 and it was then sold at auction in 2015 for a record sum of $450,000.\nThe model was altered slightly for Return of the Jedi, with the addition of windows along the ship's spine and larger weapons. These modifications were removed in the 1990s. The Republic cruiser in Star Wars: Episode I \u2013 The Phantom Menace was designed to be reminiscent of the Tantive IVs shape.\nDepiction\nThe Tantive IV first appears in the opening of Star Wars as it is captured by the Imperial I-class Star Destroyer Devastator over Tatooine. The ship was carrying Princess Leia and the plans for the Empire's Death Star battle station. Leia had taken the ship to Tatooine to recruit the Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi to join the rebellion. Unable to find Kenobi herself, Leia gives the plans and a message to R2-D2, who escapes with C-3PO in an escape pod and lands on Tatooine. According to the Star Wars Encyclopedia, the ship was subsequently destroyed by Darth Vader. Since the Disney purchase of Lucasfilm, this plotline is part of the non-canon Legends timeline."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912681.5392, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912681.3387, "finish": 1720912681.5392, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9751b344287e470bb7d7b6d845f3e34f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What was the name of Darth Vader's star destroyer?", "output": [["What was the name of Darth Vader's star destroyer?", "Title: Sith\n\nPassage: Darth Vader\nDarth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a human-cyborg Dark Lord of the Sith and the third and final apprentice of Darth Sidious, who first appeared in the Star Wars original trilogy, and later in the prequel trilogy. As the Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker, he fought alongside his master Obi-Wan Kenobi during the galaxy-wide Clone Wars, but was slowly seduced to the dark side by Darth Sidious, then Sheev Palpatine, a well respected senator. After helping Sidious kill Jedi Master Mace Windu, he swore allegiance to the Sith and was given the name Darth Vader before setting out to destroy all Jedi left on Coruscant. After being sent by Sidious to assassinate the Separatist council members on Mustafar, Vader was badly injured in a duel with Kenobi, resulting in the loss of his remaining organic arm, both legs, and severe burn injuries. He was saved by Sidious, and encased in a black suit of armor with extensive cybernetics which kept him alive. As the Galactic Empire was established and continued to grow, Vader became the Emperor's immensely feared second-in-command and was given the task of finding surviving Jedi and the Rebel Alliance's base. After the destruction of the first Death Star, Vader was charged with tracking down the Rebel Alliance and destroying their headquarters. However, the actions of his son, Luke Skywalker, eventually turned Vader against his master, resulting in both Sidious' and Vader's deaths, as well as the fulfilment of the Chosen One prophecy.\nDarth Plagueis\nDarth Plagueis was a Muun Dark Lord of the Sith and Darth Sidious' master, first referenced in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. In the film, Sidious (as Palpatine) uses Plagueis' story to seduce Anakin Skywalker to the dark side, claiming that Plagueis' abilities in the Force grew to such an extent that he could create life by influencing microscopic Force-sensitive entities called \"midi-chlorians,\" and even save people from dying. According to the Rule of Two, Plagueis was eventually killed by Sidious in his sleep, who subsequently became the new Sith Master and would later take on an apprentice of his own.\nPlagueis is the main character of the Legends novel, Star Wars: Darth Plagueis, which explains much of his backstory, including his training under Darth Tenebrous, mentorship of Palpatine, and early plans to undermine the Galactic Republic and drive the Jedi Order into ruins. The novel also reveals that Plagueis' public identity was Hego Damsk II, a member of the Intergalactic Banking Clan.\nDarth Bane"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912728.6135, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912728.3735, "finish": 1720912728.6135, "ip": "", "conv_id": "01f2f7f2cbc846979f317b7cb35920db", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which planet may host life?", "output": [["Which planet may host life?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: K2-18b is an exoplanet 124 light-years away, orbiting in the habitable zone of the K2-18, a red dwarf. This planet is significant for water vapor found in its atmosphere; this was announced on September 17, 2019.\nIn September 2020, astronomers identified 24 superhabitable planet (planets better than Earth) contenders, from among more than 4000 confirmed exoplanets at present, based on astrophysical parameters, as well as the natural history of known life forms on the Earth.\nHabitability outside the HZ\nLiquid-water environments have been found to exist in the absence of atmospheric pressure and at temperatures outside the HZ temperature range. For example, Saturn's moons Titan and Enceladus and Jupiter's moons Europa and Ganymede, all of which are outside the habitable zone, may hold large volumes of liquid water in subsurface oceans.\nOutside the HZ, tidal heating and radioactive decay are two possible heat sources that could contribute to the existence of liquid water. Abbot and Switzer (2011) put forward the possibility that subsurface water could exist on rogue planets as a result of radioactive decay-based heating and insulation by a thick surface layer of ice.\nWith some theorising that life on Earth may have actually originated in stable, subsurface habitats, it has been suggested that it may be common for wet subsurface extraterrestrial habitats such as these to 'teem with life'. On Earth itself, living organisms may be found more than below the surface.\nAnother possibility is that outside the HZ organisms may use alternative biochemistries that do not require water at all. Astrobiologist Christopher McKay, has suggested that methane () may be a solvent conducive to the development of \"cryolife\", with the Sun's \"methane habitable zone\" being centered on from the star. This distance is coincident with the location of Titan, whose lakes and rain of methane make it an ideal location to find McKay's proposed cryolife. In addition, testing of a number of organisms has found some are capable of surviving in extra-HZ conditions.\nSignificance for complex and intelligent life\nThe Rare Earth hypothesis argues that complex and intelligent life is uncommon and that the HZ is one of many critical factors. According to Ward & Brownlee (2004) and others, not only is a HZ orbit and surface water a primary requirement to sustain life but a requirement to support the secondary conditions required for multicellular life to emerge and evolve. The secondary habitability factors are both geological (the role of surface water in sustaining necessary plate tectonics) and biochemical (the role of radiant energy in supporting photosynthesis for necessary atmospheric oxygenation). But others, such as Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen in their 2002 book Evolving the Alien argue that complex intelligent life may arise outside the HZ. Intelligent life outside the HZ may have evolved in subsurface environments, from alternative biochemistries or even from nuclear reactions."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912728.6135, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912728.3735, "finish": 1720912728.6135, "ip": "", "conv_id": "767f9a485a5144c9aed61a5f6a5e5778", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planet may host life?", "output": [["Which planet may host life?", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912750.1737, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912749.967, "finish": 1720912750.1737, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df32c1616da84ff0ac83e29aa965524d", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which planet in the solar system is most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planet in the solar system is most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: An update to habitable zone concept came in 2000 when astronomers Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee introduced the idea of the \"galactic habitable zone\", which they later developed with Guillermo Gonzalez. The galactic habitable zone, defined as the region where life is most likely to emerge in a galaxy, encompasses those regions close enough to a galactic center that stars there are enriched with heavier elements, but not so close that star systems, planetary orbits, and the emergence of life would be frequently disrupted by the intense radiation and enormous gravitational forces commonly found at galactic centers.\nSubsequently, some astrobiologists propose that the concept be extended to other solvents, including dihydrogen, sulfuric acid, dinitrogen, formamide, and methane, among others, which would support hypothetical life forms that use an alternative biochemistry. In 2013, further developments in habitable zone concepts were made with the proposal of a circum planetary habitable zone, also known as the \"habitable edge\", to encompass the region around a planet where the orbits of natural satellites would not be disrupted, and at the same time tidal heating from the planet would not cause liquid water to boil away.\nIt has been noted that the current term of 'circumstellar habitable zone' poses confusion as the name suggests that planets within this region will possess a habitable environment. However, surface conditions are dependent on a host of different individual properties of that planet. This misunderstanding is reflected in excited reports of 'habitable planets'. Since it is completely unknown whether conditions on these distant HZ worlds could host life, different terminology is needed.\nDetermination\nWhether a body is in the circumstellar habitable zone of its host star is dependent on the radius of the planet's orbit (for natural satellites, the host planet's orbit), the mass of the body itself, and the radiative flux of the host star. Given the large spread in the masses of planets within a circumstellar habitable zone, coupled with the discovery of super-Earth planets which can sustain thicker atmospheres and stronger magnetic fields than Earth, circumstellar habitable zones are now split into two separate regions\u2014a \"conservative habitable zone\" in which lower-mass planets like Earth can remain habitable, complemented by a larger \"extended habitable zone\" in which a planet like Venus, with stronger greenhouse effects, can have the right temperature for liquid water to exist at the surface.\nSolar System estimates\nEstimates for the habitable zone within the Solar System range from 0.38 to 10.0 astronomical units, though arriving at these estimates has been challenging for a variety of reasons. Numerous planetary mass objects orbit within, or close to, this range and as such receive sufficient sunlight to raise temperatures above the freezing point of water. However, their atmospheric conditions vary substantially."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912750.1737, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912749.967, "finish": 1720912750.1737, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9d4c510608da47779df582713693c26c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planet in the solar system is most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planet in the solar system is most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912802.7128, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912802.5095, "finish": 1720912802.7128, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8567fd8c2f1a4a72858a24532be5c917", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912802.7128, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912802.5095, "finish": 1720912802.7128, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ce7f1c4a916c48d1bceca9d5005fffb4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912810.7427, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912810.5699, "finish": 1720912810.7427, "ip": "", "conv_id": "61a2196a4bcf49eb927be2cb4e0ff0b6", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which objects in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which objects in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: An update to habitable zone concept came in 2000 when astronomers Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee introduced the idea of the \"galactic habitable zone\", which they later developed with Guillermo Gonzalez. The galactic habitable zone, defined as the region where life is most likely to emerge in a galaxy, encompasses those regions close enough to a galactic center that stars there are enriched with heavier elements, but not so close that star systems, planetary orbits, and the emergence of life would be frequently disrupted by the intense radiation and enormous gravitational forces commonly found at galactic centers.\nSubsequently, some astrobiologists propose that the concept be extended to other solvents, including dihydrogen, sulfuric acid, dinitrogen, formamide, and methane, among others, which would support hypothetical life forms that use an alternative biochemistry. In 2013, further developments in habitable zone concepts were made with the proposal of a circum planetary habitable zone, also known as the \"habitable edge\", to encompass the region around a planet where the orbits of natural satellites would not be disrupted, and at the same time tidal heating from the planet would not cause liquid water to boil away.\nIt has been noted that the current term of 'circumstellar habitable zone' poses confusion as the name suggests that planets within this region will possess a habitable environment. However, surface conditions are dependent on a host of different individual properties of that planet. This misunderstanding is reflected in excited reports of 'habitable planets'. Since it is completely unknown whether conditions on these distant HZ worlds could host life, different terminology is needed.\nDetermination\nWhether a body is in the circumstellar habitable zone of its host star is dependent on the radius of the planet's orbit (for natural satellites, the host planet's orbit), the mass of the body itself, and the radiative flux of the host star. Given the large spread in the masses of planets within a circumstellar habitable zone, coupled with the discovery of super-Earth planets which can sustain thicker atmospheres and stronger magnetic fields than Earth, circumstellar habitable zones are now split into two separate regions\u2014a \"conservative habitable zone\" in which lower-mass planets like Earth can remain habitable, complemented by a larger \"extended habitable zone\" in which a planet like Venus, with stronger greenhouse effects, can have the right temperature for liquid water to exist at the surface.\nSolar System estimates\nEstimates for the habitable zone within the Solar System range from 0.38 to 10.0 astronomical units, though arriving at these estimates has been challenging for a variety of reasons. Numerous planetary mass objects orbit within, or close to, this range and as such receive sufficient sunlight to raise temperatures above the freezing point of water. However, their atmospheric conditions vary substantially."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912810.7427, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912810.5699, "finish": 1720912810.7427, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f439011d2afe43bca31350150c927133", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which objects in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which objects in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Title: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912919.592, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912919.2997, "finish": 1720912919.592, "ip": "", "conv_id": "60b7773c4e91468fb501686cc5ee0af9", "model_name": "BM25", "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: Solar analog\n\nPassage: Some other stars are sometimes mentioned as solar-twin candidates such as: Beta Canum Venaticorum; however it has too low metallicities (\u22120.21) for solar twin. 16 Cygni B is sometimes noted as twin, but is part of a triple star system and is very old for a solar twin at 6.8 Ga. Two solar sibling candidates (similar age, metallicity (\u22120.113), and kinematics) are Gaia DR2 1927143514955658880 and 1966383465746413568.\nBy potential habitability\nAnother way of defining solar twin is as a \"habstar\"\u2014a star with qualities believed to be particularly hospitable to a life-hosting planet. Qualities considered include variability, mass, age, metallicity, and close companions.\nAt least 0.5\u20131 billion years old\nOn the main sequence\nNon-variable\nCapable of harboring terrestrial planets\nSupport a dynamically stable habitable zone\n0\u20131 non-wide stellar companion stars.\nThe requirement that the star remain on the main sequence for at least 0.5\u20131\u00a0Ga sets an upper limit of approximately 2.2\u20133.4 solar masses, corresponding to a hottest spectral type of A0-B7V. Such stars can be 100x as bright as the Sun. Tardigrade-like life (due to the UV flux) could potentially survive on planets orbiting stars as hot as B1V, with a mass of 10 M\u2609, and a temperature of 25,000 K, a main-sequence lifetime of about 20 million years.\nNon-variability is ideally defined as variability of less than 1%, but 3% is the practical limit due to limits in available data. Variation in irradiance in a star's habitable zone due to a companion star with an eccentric orbit is also a concern.\nTerrestrial planets in multiple star systems, those containing three or more stars, are not likely to have stable orbits in the long term. Stable orbits in binary systems take one of two forms: S-Type (satellite or circumstellar) orbits around one of the stars, and P-Type (planetary or circumbinary) orbits around the entire binary pair. Eccentric Jupiters may also disrupt the orbits of planets in habitable zones.\nMetallicity of at least 40% solar ([Fe/H] = \u22120.4) is required for the formation of an Earth-like terrestrial planet. High metallicity strongly correlates to the formation of hot Jupiters, but these are not absolute bars to life, as some gas giants end up orbiting within the habitable zone themselves, and could potentially host Earth-like moons.\nOne example of such a star is , a G5V, at temperature of 5533\u00a0K, but is much younger than the Sun, at 1.9 billion years old.\nAnother such example would be HIP 11915, which has a planetary system containing a Jupiter-like planet orbiting at a similar distance that the planet Jupiter does in the Solar System. To strengthen the similarities, the star is class G5V, has a temperature of 5750\u00a0K, has a Sun-like mass and radius, and is only 500 million years younger than the Sun. As such, the habitable zone would extend in the same area as the zone in the Solar System, around 1 AU. This would allow an Earth-like planet to exist around 1 AU."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720912919.592, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720912919.2997, "finish": 1720912919.592, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b42f2e37b79c46ea98c6a939a8f08cc5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720913285.4729, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720913285.2635, "finish": 1720913285.4729, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d854d8a7afac4b658499c8c30c2d4e3f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720913285.4729, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720913285.2635, "finish": 1720913285.4729, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2d4015290ce84e85a1fb09990fe36f13", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720933795.2316, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720933795.0204, "finish": 1720933795.2316, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c902d910646d4a3c93d9548a08ec8a15", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "what is the legal age for marriage in australia", "output": [["what is the legal age for marriage in australia", "Title: LGBT rights in Queensland\n\nPassage: The resulting Criminal Law (Historical Homosexual Convictions Expungement) Bill 2017 was introduced to the Queensland Parliament on 11 May 2017. The law allows a person convicted of, or charged with, an eligible offence to apply to the Director-General of the Department of Justice and Attorney-General for the conviction or charge to be purged. In order to be eligible for expungement, the individual must have been charged with an offence involving participants aged at least 18 years. Given the age of consent was lowered from 18 to 16 in 2016, this means that individuals charged with an offence when they were 16 or 17 between 1991 and 2016 are ineligible to apply for expungement. In a departure from the QLRC's recommendations, the legislation also allows those charged with \"public morality offences\" to apply for those to also be expunged.\nThe introduction of the expungement scheme proposal was accompanied by an official apology from Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk on behalf of the Queensland Parliament to people charged under historical anti-homosexuality laws. The apology motion passed without objection, though LNP Opposition Leader Tim Nicholls did not speak to the motion. The bill was referred to the Legal Affairs and Community Safety Committee, which tabled its report to parliament on 14 July 2017. The committee recommended that the bill be passed, though LNP members objected to the inclusion of \"public morality\" offences in the legislation. The bill passed the Parliament on 10 October 2017. Amendments moved by the Attorney-General allowing offences in certain circumstances to be expunged if they occurred in a public place were passed. The bill received royal assent on 23 October 2017. The Act and related regulation went into effect from 30 June 2018.\nRecognition of same-sex relationships\nCohabiting same-sex couples have been recognised as \"de facto\" partners under Queensland law since 2002 and under Commonwealth law since 2008. Civil partnerships were first introduced by the Labor Party under Anna Bligh in 2012, to allow couples to register their relationship with the option of an official ceremony. They were temporarily downgraded to \"registered partnerships\" under the short-lived government of Campbell Newman and his Liberal National Party, before being reinstated by the returned Labor administration of Annastacia Palaszczuk in 2016.\nSame-sex marriage\nSame-sex marriage became legal in Queensland, and in the rest of Australia, in December 2017, after the Federal Parliament passed a law legalising same-sex marriage. The first same-sex couple to marry in the state were Craig Burns and Luke Sullivan just after midnight on 9 January 2018.\nSince September 1, 2021 Queensland has formally included the \"X\" non-binary option for marriage certificates, forms and documents - alongside male and female.\nDe facto recognition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720933795.2316, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720933795.0204, "finish": 1720933795.2316, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a40dc7573f1a4e6bbb5c9d673be948c2", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "what is the legal age for marriage in australia", "output": [["what is the legal age for marriage in australia", "Title: Marriage in the United States\n\nPassage: Marriage in the United States is a legal, social, and religious institution. The marriage age is set by each state and territory, either by statute or the common law applies. An individual may marry without parental consent or other authorization on reaching 18 years of age in all states except in Nebraska (where the general marriage age is 19) and Mississippi (where the general marriage age is 21.) In Puerto Rico the general marriage age is also 21. In all these jurisdictions, these are also the ages of majority. In Alabama, however, the age of majority is 19, while the general marriage age is 18. Most states also set a lower age at which underage persons are able to marry with parental or judicial consent. Marriages where one partner is less than 18 years of age are commonly referred to as child or underage marriages.\nMarriage laws have changed considerably over time, including the removal of bans on interracial marriage and same-sex marriage. In 2009, there were 2,077,000 marriages, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. The median age for the first marriage has increased in recent years. The median age in the early 1970s was 23 for men and 21 for women; and it rose to 28 for men and 26 for women by 2009 and by 2017, it was 29.5 for men and 27.4 for women.\nMarriages vary considerably in terms of religion, socioeconomic status, age, commitment, and so forth. Reasons for marrying may include a desire to have children, love, or economic security. Marriage has been in some instances used for the sole purpose of gaining a green card and/or facilitating full citizenship; the Immigration Marriage Fraud Amendments of 1986 are among laws that can be used to set aside such marriages, and a marriage visa can be obtained in advance of entry of the non-national where there is a long-term, committed relationship demonstrable. In 2003, 184,741 immigrants were admitted as spouses of US citizens."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720933827.3544, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720933827.1829, "finish": 1720933827.3544, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9fa9c2bbac9b4d22b9cb117aafe48484", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who is usually appointed as the chief justice of india", "output": [["who is usually appointed as the chief justice of india", "Title: President of India\n\nPassage: As per Article 142, it is the duty of the president to enforce the decrees of the supreme court.\nJudicial powers\nThe primary duty of the president is to preserve, protect and defend the constitution and the law of India per Article 60. The president appoints the Chief Justice of India and other judges on the advice of the chief justice. The President may dismiss a judge with a two-thirds vote of the two Houses of the parliament.\nThe Indian government's chief legal adviser, Attorney-General for India, is appointed by the president of India under Article 76(1) and holds office during the pleasure of the president. If the president considers a question of law or a matter of public importance has arisen, they can also ask for the advisory opinion of the supreme court per Article 143. Per Article 88, the president can ask the attorney general to attend the parliamentary proceedings and report to him any unlawful functioning if any.\nAppointment powers\nThe president appoints as prime minister, the person most likely to command the support of the majority in the Lok Sabha (usually the leader of the majority party or coalition). The president then appoints the other members of the Council of Ministers, distributing portfolios to them on the advice of the prime minister. The Council of Ministers remains in power at the 'pleasure' of the president.\nThe president appoints 12 members of the Rajya Sabha from amongst persons who have special knowledge or practical experience in respect of such matters as literature, science, art and social service. The president may nominate not more than two members of Anglo Indian community as Lok Sabha members per Article 331, which was removed in 2019.\nGovernors of states are also appointed by the president who shall work at the pleasure of the president. Per Article 156, the president is empowered to dismiss a governor who has violated the constitution in their acts.\nThe president is responsible for making a wide variety of appointments. These include:\nThe Chief Justice of India and other judges of the Supreme Court of India and state/union territory high courts.\nThe Chief Minister of the National Capital Territory of Delhi (Article 239 AA 5 of the constitution).\nThe Comptroller and Auditor General Of India.\nThe Chief Election Commissioner and other Election Commissioners.\nThe chairman and other members of the Union Public Service Commission.\nThe Attorney General Of India.\nAmbassadors and High Commissioners to other countries (only through the list of names given by the prime minister)."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720933827.3544, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720933827.1829, "finish": 1720933827.3544, "ip": "", "conv_id": "181a7b31ba7a4c7da77b21023b5349c6", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "who is usually appointed as the chief justice of india", "output": [["who is usually appointed as the chief justice of india", "Title: Chief Justice of Malaysia\n\nPassage: The chief justice of Malaysia (Malay: Ketua Hakim Negara Malaysia), also known as the chief justice of the Federal Court, is the office and title of the head of the Malaysian judiciary system. The title has been in use since 1994, and prior to this it was known as the lord president of the Federal Court. The chief justice is the head of the Federal Court, the apex court of Malaysia. It is the highest position in Malaysian judicial system followed by the president of the Court of Appeal of Malaysia, chief judge of Malaya, and the chief judge of Sabah and Sarawak.\nThe current chief justice is Tengku Maimun Tuan Mat, since 2 May 2019.\nConstitutional basis\nThe office of Chief Justice of the Federal Court is established under Article 122 of the Constitution of Malaysia, which establishes the then-Supreme Court (now Federal Court) as consisting of a lord president (now chief justice), the chief judges of the High Courts and at least four other judges and such additional judges as may be appointed pursuant to Clause (1A).\nRole\nThe chief justice is first among equals among the judges of the Federal Court, and the position differs little from that of the other judges. All judges, including the chief justice, are appointed by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong (King of Malaysia), on the advice of the prime minister of Malaysia. Under Article 125 of the Malaysian Constitution, they can be removed only by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, on a recommendation from a tribunal consisting of at least five judges who are current or former Federal Court judges. Reasons for removal include the chief justice:\nnot following the Judges\u2019 Code of Ethics; or\nbeing physically or mentally unable to carry out his or her duties.\nThe prime minister will then provide the Yang di-Pertuan Agong the reason(s) why the chief justice should be removed. The Yang di-Pertuan Agong will then proceed to set up the tribunal to make a decision.\nChief justices of Malaysia"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-3c024354-1f91-4cbd-9efb-98a422340116.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-3c024354-1f91-4cbd-9efb-98a422340116.jsonl
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@@ -1,74 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720829235.9576, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829190.6939, "finish": 1720829235.9576, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8a0a87ed1d1d421a9558780a259ee83c", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829235.9576, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829190.6939, "finish": 1720829235.9576, "ip": "", "conv_id": "205a3083409f4fa88d94728efe46137a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829271.9842, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829271.735, "finish": 1720829271.9842, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a361b41752e04bd59cfb62c411661906", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the planet Trantor about?", "output": [["What is the planet Trantor about?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829271.9842, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829271.735, "finish": 1720829271.9842, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0285b3e4c9f84cbc866e4f8d100a008a", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "What is the planet Trantor about?", "output": [["What is the planet Trantor about?", "Title: Traya\n\nPassage: For Traya see:\nDarth Traya\nMisti Traya"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829286.4157, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829286.18, "finish": 1720829286.4157, "ip": "", "conv_id": "66605d79cdf84a718b3c03839ab42921", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the planet Trantor about and what does it have to do with Hari Seldon?", "output": [["What is the planet Trantor about and what does it have to do with Hari Seldon?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829286.4157, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829286.18, "finish": 1720829286.4157, "ip": "", "conv_id": "538f0e04fbc4434db90434ffbd10a53c", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "What is the planet Trantor about and what does it have to do with Hari Seldon?", "output": [["What is the planet Trantor about and what does it have to do with Hari Seldon?", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829294.8719, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829294.6633, "finish": 1720829294.8719, "ip": "", "conv_id": "55d79881c2844f2c8e84d0230fc845a2", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Hari Seldon, Trantor, Mule", "output": [["Hari Seldon, Trantor, Mule", "Title: Arbiter (Halo)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829294.8719, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829294.6633, "finish": 1720829294.8719, "ip": "", "conv_id": "95fb0f6e07884f0aa19ddc97e3fb81ef", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Hari Seldon, Trantor, Mule", "output": [["Hari Seldon, Trantor, Mule", "Title: Kabir Suman\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829421.5527, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829325.3168, "finish": 1720829421.5527, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6177414870cd470bbc243adb06c71fc4", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829421.5527, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829325.3168, "finish": 1720829421.5527, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fc01e83915a24b8f9f75daa8bf07498d", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829450.3225, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829439.1514, "finish": 1720829450.3225, "ip": "", "conv_id": "92c23ad59434418a9b69a9a2241da4e5", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829450.3225, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829439.1514, "finish": 1720829450.3225, "ip": "", "conv_id": "557355a32b0a4e718ca9e18763e01bc2", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829486.1458, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829485.9164, "finish": 1720829486.1458, "ip": "", "conv_id": "206b54ac7942426889f381883d540071", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who famously said \"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\"?", "output": [["Who famously said \"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\"?", "Title: Political views of Osama bin Laden\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829486.1458, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829485.9164, "finish": 1720829486.1458, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dd11ee92228547148e240a7c2b138328", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Who famously said \"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\"?", "output": [["Who famously said \"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent\"?", "Title: Si vis pacem, para bellum\n\nPassage: () is a Latin adage translated as \"If you want peace, prepare for war.\" The phrase is adapted from a statement found in Roman author Publius Flavius Vegetius Renatus's tract D\u0113 R\u0113 M\u012blit\u0101r\u012b (fourth or fifth century AD), in which the actual phrasing is Igitur qu\u012b d\u0113s\u012bderat p\u0101cem, pr\u00e6paret bellum (\"Therefore let him who desires peace prepare for war\"). The idea which it conveys also appears in earlier works such as Plato's Nomoi (Laws). The phrase presents the insight that the conditions of peace are often preserved by a readiness to make war to defend said peace when the need arises.\nDerived uses"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829520.4193, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829520.1796, "finish": 1720829520.4193, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3b2a2bca7b4c45e6ae48eee31ea28190", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "The planet of which book inspired Coruscant?", "output": [["The planet of which book inspired Coruscant?", "Title: City of Golden Shadow\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829520.4193, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829520.1796, "finish": 1720829520.4193, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9491dbd187c7434090c3e201c2a5a309", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "The planet of which book inspired Coruscant?", "output": [["The planet of which book inspired Coruscant?", "Title: List of Star Wars planets and moons\n\nPassage: \"Who can name one of the five major trade routes in the galaxy? The Hydian Way [runs] from the Outer Rim to as far away as the Core Worlds. However, there are several other regions within our galaxy. They are the Mid Rim, the Expansion Region, the Inner Rim, the Colonies, the Core, and the Deep Core.\"\nStar Wars canon planets and moons\nThe following list names prominent planets and moons from the Star Wars films or other canon media.\nStar Wars Legends planets and moons\nThese are planets with multiple appearances in the Star Wars Expanded Universe, now rebranded as Star Wars Legends. The accompanying works were declared non-canon by Lucasfilm in April 2014, following its acquisition by The Walt Disney Company in October 2012.\nSimilarities to real-world planets\nThe discovery of exoplanets in the real-world universe gained pace in the early 21st century. In 2015, the US space agency NASA published an article which stated that many of the newly discovered astronomical bodies possessed scientifically confirmed properties that are similar to planets in the fictional Star Wars universe.\nKepler-452b, a rocky super-Earth-type planet, is said to be similar to the Star Wars planet Coruscant. Likewise, the planets Kepler-16b and Kepler-453b, planets discovered orbitting binary stars probably resemble the desert world Tatooine. The hot, molten worlds of Kepler-10b and Kepler-78b are comparable to the volcanic planet Mustafar. OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb, a cold, remote exoplanet, is like the ice planet Hoth. Kepler-22b, thought by scientists to be an ocean planet, is compared to the planet Kamino. According to NASA, there are also similarities to Alderaan and Endor in the real-world universe.\nSolar System\nTwo non-canonical works also feature the real-life Solar System's planets. Monsters and Aliens from George Lucas (1993) contains a feature, presented as a clip from a gossip column, in which a pair of Duros are abducted by humans and taken to \"Urthha\" (Earth), where they create havoc by misunderstanding terrestrial objects and food. In issue #19 of the comic series Star Wars Tales (2004), the story \"Into the Great Unknown\" finds Han Solo and Chewbacca in the Millennium Falcon, fleeing the Imperial Navy. They jump to hyperspace without doing calculations and find themselves in the middle of our Solar System, overpassing Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars while decelerating and landing in Northern America. Han is killed by Native Americans, and a mourning Chewbacca leaves the Falcon to live in the trees, where the natives believe him to be a sasquatch. In an epilogue set 126 years later, archaeologist Dr. Jones and his sidekick Short Round, searching for the sasquatch, find the Falcon and Han's remains."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829554.7966, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829554.6019, "finish": 1720829554.7966, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0ed253e4192e4f7b95660f3c3e558cce", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Why was Coruscant sometimes named Jhantor?", "output": [["Why was Coruscant sometimes named Jhantor?", "Title: City of Golden Shadow\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829554.7966, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829554.6019, "finish": 1720829554.7966, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a0814cffde4842f3922318be506cab76", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Why was Coruscant sometimes named Jhantor?", "output": [["Why was Coruscant sometimes named Jhantor?", "Title: Traya\n\nPassage: For Traya see:\nDarth Traya\nMisti Traya"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829573.2021, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829573.0359, "finish": 1720829573.2021, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6f718eb466974693b1278f2b3d852c9d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Why was the Star Wars planet \"Coruscant\" sometimes named \"Jhantor\"?", "output": [["Why was the Star Wars planet \"Coruscant\" sometimes named \"Jhantor\"?", "Title: Traya\n\nPassage: For Traya see:\nDarth Traya\nMisti Traya"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829573.2021, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829573.0359, "finish": 1720829573.2021, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e367923ecb794e94827c016cc09b0348", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Why was the Star Wars planet \"Coruscant\" sometimes named \"Jhantor\"?", "output": [["Why was the Star Wars planet \"Coruscant\" sometimes named \"Jhantor\"?", "Title: Traya\n\nPassage: For Traya see:\nDarth Traya\nMisti Traya"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829620.6097, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829606.3924, "finish": 1720829620.6097, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bf3a2bfc895e4a279dbab61a35f112c7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the relationship between Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series and George Lucas' Star Wars?", "output": [["What is the relationship between Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series and George Lucas' Star Wars?", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829620.6097, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829606.3924, "finish": 1720829620.6097, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f350d7a4dbe04402abbf2024fc6a5014", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the relationship between Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series and George Lucas' Star Wars?", "output": [["What is the relationship between Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series and George Lucas' Star Wars?", "Title: Comparison of Star Trek and Star Wars\n\nPassage: Both franchises promote philosophical and political messages.\nThe primary philosophies of Star Trek convey the morals of exploration and interference and how to properly confront and ethically resolve numerous new situations. Creator Gene Roddenberry was inspired by morality tales such as Gulliver's Travels with the basic dramatic format inspired by the science fiction film Forbidden Planet.\nThe primary philosophical messages of Star Wars are the ethics of good against evil and how to distinguish them from one another. Star Wars preaches against totalitarian systems and favors societies that offer equality. In an interview on the Star Wars 20th Anniversary UK Program which aired in 1997, referring to the mythology of the original Star Wars trilogy, Patrick Stewart stated, \"A belief in one's own powers, especially one's own powers to do good because the underlying morality of Star Wars is a very, very positive one.\"\nActors from both franchises have appeared on common television series such as The Outer Limits and Sea Quest.\nBoth franchises also draw from history and ancient mythology, including Greco-Roman mythology. For example, many planets and alien species in Star Trek are named after ancient Roman deities. Several episodes from various Star Trek television series, such as \"Who Mourns for Adonais,\" are directly based on ancient Greek-Roman themes and settings. The series also makes references to Ancient Babylon and its mythic folklore. The Klingons and their warrior culture is a representation of the 12th-century Mongols and 11th-century Vikings.\nSimilarly, many of Star Wars plots and character developments are based on ancient history, including classical Greece and Rome, such as the fall of the Republic in Star Wars followed by the rise of the Galactic Empire, which parallels the civil war and subsequent fall of the ancient Roman Republic followed by the rise of the Roman Empire.\nA 1983 documentary on the making of Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi was hosted by Leonard Nimoy, who mentioned creator George Lucas's original plan to do two other trilogies preceding and proceeding the original trilogy.\nAbrams era\nJ. J. Abrams has been heavily involved in both franchises, as director and producer of Star Trek (2009) and Star Trek Into Darkness (2013) and producer of Star Trek Beyond (2016), and director and producer of Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker (2019). Star Trek (2009) and Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) are each the first entries in expected trilogies. These films received favorable critical and commercial responses and revived interest in both franchises. In addition to Abrams, actors such as Simon Pegg starred in both series. The newer films of the two franchises filmed major scenes in the United Arab Emirates. The desert scenes on the planet Jakku in Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) were filmed in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi, while scenes for cities in the film Star Trek Beyond (2016) were filmed in the Emirate of Dubai."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829698.5672, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829698.3336, "finish": 1720829698.5672, "ip": "", "conv_id": "59ee89d7ae15466b996254b61826fe2e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which exoplanet is most likely to be inhabited?", "output": [["Which exoplanet is most likely to be inhabited?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829698.5672, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829698.3336, "finish": 1720829698.5672, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8a02e1fd7f64f5f824e61345e8a2907", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which exoplanet is most likely to be inhabited?", "output": [["Which exoplanet is most likely to be inhabited?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: Planetary mass natural satellites have the potential to be habitable as well. However, these bodies need to fulfill additional parameters, in particular being located within the circumplanetary habitable zones of their host planets. More specifically, moons need to be far enough from their host giant planets that they are not transformed by tidal heating into volcanic worlds like Io, but must remain within the Hill radius of the planet so that they are not pulled out of the orbit of their host planet. Red dwarfs that have masses less than 20% of that of the Sun cannot have habitable moons around giant planets, as the small size of the circumstellar habitable zone would put a habitable moon so close to the star that it would be stripped from its host planet. In such a system, a moon close enough to its host planet to maintain its orbit would have tidal heating so intense as to eliminate any prospects of habitability.\nA planetary object that orbits a star with high orbital eccentricity may spend only some of its year in the HZ and experience a large variation in temperature and atmospheric pressure. This would result in dramatic seasonal phase shifts where liquid water may exist only intermittently. It is possible that subsurface habitats could be insulated from such changes and that extremophiles on or near the surface might survive through adaptions such as hibernation (cryptobiosis) and/or hyperthermostability. Tardigrades, for example, can survive in a dehydrated state temperature between and . Life on a planetary object orbiting outside HZ might hibernate on the cold side as the planet approaches the apastron where the planet is coolest and become active on approach to the periastron when the planet is sufficiently warm.\nExtrasolar discoveries\nA 2015 review concluded that the exoplanets Kepler-62f, Kepler-186f and Kepler-442b were likely the best candidates for being potentially habitable. These are at a distance of 990, 490 and 1,120 light-years away, respectively. Of these, Kepler-186f is closest in size to Earth with 1.2 times Earth's radius, and it is located towards the outer edge of the habitable zone around its red dwarf star. Among nearest terrestrial exoplanet candidates, Tau Ceti e is 11.9 light-years away. It is in the inner edge of its planetary system's habitable zone, giving it an estimated average surface temperature of .\nStudies that have attempted to estimate the number of terrestrial planets within the circumstellar habitable zone tend to reflect the availability of scientific data. A 2013 study by Ravi Kumar Kopparapu put \u03b7e, the fraction of stars with planets in the HZ, at 0.48, meaning that there may be roughly 95\u2013180\u00a0billion habitable planets in the Milky Way. However, this is merely a statistical prediction; only a small fraction of these possible planets have yet been discovered."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829715.8953, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829715.6629, "finish": 1720829715.8953, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ee21c1f3ecd74db387135daf9e169edd", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is Drake's Equation?", "output": [["What is Drake's Equation?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829715.8953, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829715.6629, "finish": 1720829715.8953, "ip": "", "conv_id": "66a2a12c637848d982148793ab225de6", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is Drake's Equation?", "output": [["What is Drake's Equation?", "Title: Fermi paradox\n\nPassage: Where is the number of technologically advanced civilizations in the Milky Way galaxy, and is asserted to be the product of\n, the rate of formation of stars in the galaxy;\n, the fraction of those stars with planetary systems;\n, the number of planets, per solar system, with an environment suitable for organic life;\n, the fraction of those suitable planets whereon organic life appears;\n, the fraction of life-bearing planets whereon intelligent life appears;\n, the fraction of civilizations that reach the technological level whereby detectable signals may be dispatched; and\n, the length of time that those civilizations dispatch their signals.\nThe fundamental problem is that the last four terms (, , , and ) are entirely unknown, rendering statistical estimates impossible.\nThe Drake equation has been used by both optimists and pessimists, with wildly differing results. The first scientific meeting on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), which had 10 attendees including Frank Drake and Carl Sagan, speculated that the number of civilizations was roughly between 1,000 and 100,000,000 civilizations in the Milky Way galaxy. Conversely, Frank Tipler and John D. Barrow used pessimistic numbers and speculated that the average number of civilizations in a galaxy is much less than one. Almost all arguments involving the Drake equation suffer from the overconfidence effect, a common error of probabilistic reasoning about low-probability events, by guessing specific numbers for likelihoods of events whose mechanism is not yet understood, such as the likelihood of abiogenesis on an Earth-like planet, with current likelihood estimates varying over many hundreds of orders of magnitude. An analysis that takes into account some of the uncertainty associated with this lack of understanding has been carried out by Anders Sandberg, Eric Drexler and Toby Ord, and suggests \"a substantial ex ante probability of there being no other intelligent life in our observable universe\".\nGreat Filter\nThe Great Filter, a concept introduced by Robin Hanson in 1996, represents whatever natural phenomena that would make it unlikely for life to evolve from inanimate matter to an advanced civilization. The most commonly agreed-upon low probability event is abiogenesis: a gradual process of increasing complexity of the first self-replicating molecules by a randomly occurring chemical process. Other proposed great filters are the emergence of eukaryotic cells or of meiosis or some of the steps involved in the evolution of a brain capable of complex logical deductions.\nAstrobiologists Dirk Schulze-Makuch and William Bains, reviewing the history of life on Earth, including convergent evolution, concluded that transitions such as oxygenic photosynthesis, the eukaryotic cell, multicellularity, and tool-using intelligence are likely to occur on any Earth-like planet given enough time. They argue that the Great Filter may be abiogenesis, the rise of technological human-level intelligence, or an inability to settle other worlds because of self-destruction or a lack of resources.\nEmpirical evidence"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829724.3158, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829724.1242, "finish": 1720829724.3158, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c8aeb1fc70554ebc9671df2bedc7d7e7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the Fermi paradox?", "output": [["What's the Fermi paradox?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829724.3158, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829724.1242, "finish": 1720829724.3158, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bbdd1c2e488a43c09781007b5068309a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's the Fermi paradox?", "output": [["What's the Fermi paradox?", "Title: Fermi paradox\n\nPassage: The Fermi paradox is the discrepancy between the lack of conclusive evidence of advanced extraterrestrial life and the apparently high likelihood of its existence. As a 2015 article put it, \"If life is so easy, someone from somewhere must have come calling by now.\"\nItalian-American physicist Enrico Fermi's name is associated with the paradox because of a casual conversation in the summer of 1950 with fellow physicists Edward Teller, Herbert York, and Emil Konopinski. While walking to lunch, the men discussed recent UFO reports and the possibility of faster-than-light travel. The conversation moved on to other topics, until during lunch Fermi blurted out, \"But where is everybody?\" (although the exact quote is uncertain).\nThere have been many attempts to resolve the Fermi paradox, such as suggesting that intelligent extraterrestrial beings are extremely rare, that the lifetime of such civilizations is short, or that they exist but (for various reasons) humans see no evidence.\nChain of reasoning\nThe following are some of the facts and hypotheses that together serve to highlight the apparent contradiction:\nThere are billions of stars in the Milky Way similar to the Sun.\nWith high probability, some of these stars have Earth-like planets in a circumstellar habitable zone.\nMany of these stars, and hence their planets, are much older than the Sun. If Earth-like planets are typical, some may have developed intelligent life long ago.\nSome of these civilizations may have developed interstellar travel, a step humans are investigating now.\nEven at the slow pace of currently envisioned interstellar travel, the Milky Way galaxy could be completely traversed in a few million years.\nSince many of the Sun-like stars are billions of years older than the Sun, the Earth should have already been visited by extraterrestrial civilizations, or at least their probes.\nHowever, there is no convincing evidence that this has happened.\nHistory\nFermi was not the first to ask the question. An earlier implicit mention was by Konstantin Tsiolkovsky in an unpublished manuscript from 1933. He noted \"people deny the presence of intelligent beings on the planets of the universe\" because \"(i) if such beings exist they would have visited Earth, and (ii) if such civilizations existed then they would have given us some sign of their existence.\" This was not a paradox for others, who took this to imply the absence of extraterrestrial life. But it was one for him, since he believed in extraterrestrial life and the possibility of space travel. Therefore, he proposed what is now known as the zoo hypothesis and speculated that mankind is not yet ready for higher beings to contact us. In turn, Tsiolkovsky himself was not the first to discover the paradox, as shown by his reference to other people's reasons for not accepting the premise that extraterrestrial civilizations exist."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829746.8939, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829746.5067, "finish": 1720829746.8939, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b1b6fdbb5e874b3da750db03477d3fff", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "HD 100546 b", "output": [["HD 100546 b", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829746.8939, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829746.5067, "finish": 1720829746.8939, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c217cb88070f4f8c92b8f611bec94d61", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "HD 100546 b", "output": [["HD 100546 b", "Title: HD 100546\n\nPassage: Planetary system\nThe HD 100546 system as a whole has one confirmed protoplanet candidate and there is evidence for 1\u20132 others, thus it is considered an important evolutionary precursor to intermediate-mass stars with multiple super-jovian planets at moderate/wide separations like HR 8799. While other hypothetical planets have been claimed to exist around the star, none of the discoveries have been confirmed.\nPlanet b\nIn 2013, researchers reported that they had found what seems to be a planet in the process of being formed, embedded in the star's large disc of gas and dust. If confirmed, it would represent the first opportunity to study the early stages of planet formation observationally. The flux from HD\u00a0100546\u00a0b and its circumplanetary disk (CPD) are superimposed, leaving its properties such the radius and temperature thus very uncertain.\nVarious estimates for the mass of HD 100546 b has been varying between 1 and 25 . Although standard hot-start models imply a mass of approximately , other models and HD 100546 b's H-band photometry implies masses below for a 1-million-years-old newly born planet or if made visible by its CPD, while older ages suggest higher masses.\nMore recently in 2019 an upper limit for the planetary mass was given to be as low as based on the relation between the planet, CPD, and circumstellar disk (CSD) masses derived from numerical simulation. The CPD has been assumed to be optically thin with derived upper mass and radius limits of times as massive as Earth () and (AU), while the mass of CSD was given to be . While gas-starved models are also still compatible, this would suggest that HD 100546 b is inconsistent with several planet accretion models.\nFitting a single temperature blackbody to the observed fluxes of the point source component gives a very large radius of times that of Jupiter () and an effective temperature of for the emitting area surrounding the embedded protoplanet respectively. This large radius refers to the diffuse dust and gas envelope or debris disk surrounding the planet, not the planet itself; these estimates are mistakenly used as a single planetary radius and effective temperature for HD 100546 b by the NASA Exoplanet Archive. A best-fit luminosity was also found by the same study to be times as luminous as the Sun ().\nDespite the uncertainty of the planet's properties, a 2017 study calculated HD 100546 b as a very highly reddened substellar object with a good-fit effective temperature of and a planetary mass and radius of and , making it still one of the largest exoplanets discovered by size. However, it has been predicted by planetary evolutionary theory that gas giants including hot Jupiters typically cannot exceed and that more massive gas giants would have lower radius at the time of their formation. This mass would put the planet beyond the border between a large planet and a brown dwarf.\nPlanet c"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829776.4364, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829776.2064, "finish": 1720829776.4364, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e43b0d4d80484771b271fca99528f703", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Kepler-452b", "output": [["Kepler-452b", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829776.4364, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829776.2064, "finish": 1720829776.4364, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae6757d21a9f4a36a195a145846162ae", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Kepler-452b", "output": [["Kepler-452b", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: With a radius estimated at 1.1 Earth, Kepler-186f, discovery announced in April 2014, is the closest yet size to Earth of an exoplanet confirmed by the transit method though its mass remains unknown and its parent star is not a Solar analog.\nKapteyn b, discovered in June 2014 is a possible rocky world of about 4.8 Earth masses and about 1.5 Earth radii were found orbiting the habitable zone of the red subdwarf Kapteyn's Star, 12.8 light-years away.\nOn 6 January 2015, NASA announced the 1000th confirmed exoplanet discovered by the Kepler Space Telescope. Three of the newly confirmed exoplanets were found to orbit within habitable zones of their related stars: two of the three, Kepler-438b and Kepler-442b, are near-Earth-size and likely rocky; the third, Kepler-440b, is a super-Earth. However, Kepler-438b is found to be a subject of powerful flares, so it is now considered uninhabitable. 16 January, K2-3d a planet of 1.5 Earth radii was found orbiting within the habitable zone of K2-3, receiving 1.4 times the intensity of visible light as Earth.\nKepler-452b, announced on 23 July 2015 is 50% bigger than Earth, likely rocky and takes approximately 385 Earth days to orbit the habitable zone of its G-class (solar analog) star Kepler-452.\nThe discovery of a system of three tidally-locked planets orbiting the habitable zone of an ultracool dwarf star, TRAPPIST-1, was announced in May 2016. The discovery is considered significant because it dramatically increases the possibility of smaller, cooler, more numerous and closer stars possessing habitable planets.\nTwo potentially habitable planets, discovered by the K2 mission in July 2016 orbiting around the M dwarf K2-72 around 227 light years from the Sun: K2-72c and K2-72e are both of similar size to Earth and receive similar amounts of stellar radiation.\nAnnounced on the 20 April 2017, LHS 1140b is a super-dense super-Earth 39 light years away, 6.6 times Earth's mass and 1.4 times radius, its star 15% the mass of the Sun but with much less observable stellar flare activity than most M dwarfs. The planet is one of few observable by both transit and radial velocity that's mass is confirmed with an atmosphere may be studied.\nDiscovered by radial velocity in June 2017, with approximately three times the mass of Earth, Luyten b orbits within the habitable zone of Luyten's Star just 12.2 light-years away.\nAt 11 light-years away, the second closest planet, Ross 128 b, was announced in November 2017 following a decade's radial velocity study of relatively \"quiet\" red dwarf star Ross 128. At 1.35 times Earth's mass, is it roughly Earth-sized and likely rocky in composition.\nDiscovered in March 2018, K2-155d is about 1.64 times the radius of Earth, is likely rocky and orbits in the habitable zone of its red dwarf star 203 light years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829782.5669, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829782.3704, "finish": 1720829782.5669, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3b2bde9d00234317b45f0e2615ff6f60", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Kepler-452b", "output": [["Kepler-452b", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829782.5669, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829782.3704, "finish": 1720829782.5669, "ip": "", "conv_id": "be7946056e9146dc8651332c59d52c89", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Kepler-452b", "output": [["Kepler-452b", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: With a radius estimated at 1.1 Earth, Kepler-186f, discovery announced in April 2014, is the closest yet size to Earth of an exoplanet confirmed by the transit method though its mass remains unknown and its parent star is not a Solar analog.\nKapteyn b, discovered in June 2014 is a possible rocky world of about 4.8 Earth masses and about 1.5 Earth radii were found orbiting the habitable zone of the red subdwarf Kapteyn's Star, 12.8 light-years away.\nOn 6 January 2015, NASA announced the 1000th confirmed exoplanet discovered by the Kepler Space Telescope. Three of the newly confirmed exoplanets were found to orbit within habitable zones of their related stars: two of the three, Kepler-438b and Kepler-442b, are near-Earth-size and likely rocky; the third, Kepler-440b, is a super-Earth. However, Kepler-438b is found to be a subject of powerful flares, so it is now considered uninhabitable. 16 January, K2-3d a planet of 1.5 Earth radii was found orbiting within the habitable zone of K2-3, receiving 1.4 times the intensity of visible light as Earth.\nKepler-452b, announced on 23 July 2015 is 50% bigger than Earth, likely rocky and takes approximately 385 Earth days to orbit the habitable zone of its G-class (solar analog) star Kepler-452.\nThe discovery of a system of three tidally-locked planets orbiting the habitable zone of an ultracool dwarf star, TRAPPIST-1, was announced in May 2016. The discovery is considered significant because it dramatically increases the possibility of smaller, cooler, more numerous and closer stars possessing habitable planets.\nTwo potentially habitable planets, discovered by the K2 mission in July 2016 orbiting around the M dwarf K2-72 around 227 light years from the Sun: K2-72c and K2-72e are both of similar size to Earth and receive similar amounts of stellar radiation.\nAnnounced on the 20 April 2017, LHS 1140b is a super-dense super-Earth 39 light years away, 6.6 times Earth's mass and 1.4 times radius, its star 15% the mass of the Sun but with much less observable stellar flare activity than most M dwarfs. The planet is one of few observable by both transit and radial velocity that's mass is confirmed with an atmosphere may be studied.\nDiscovered by radial velocity in June 2017, with approximately three times the mass of Earth, Luyten b orbits within the habitable zone of Luyten's Star just 12.2 light-years away.\nAt 11 light-years away, the second closest planet, Ross 128 b, was announced in November 2017 following a decade's radial velocity study of relatively \"quiet\" red dwarf star Ross 128. At 1.35 times Earth's mass, is it roughly Earth-sized and likely rocky in composition.\nDiscovered in March 2018, K2-155d is about 1.64 times the radius of Earth, is likely rocky and orbits in the habitable zone of its red dwarf star 203 light years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829798.9712, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829798.7497, "finish": 1720829798.9712, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4d0899783336491ab1334da0c7f0f91c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "super-Earth exoplanet habitable zone", "output": [["super-Earth exoplanet habitable zone", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829798.9712, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829798.7497, "finish": 1720829798.9712, "ip": "", "conv_id": "36295a8d13294f3f8f44063e5e61f14b", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "super-Earth exoplanet habitable zone", "output": [["super-Earth exoplanet habitable zone", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: On 25 June 2013, three \"super Earth\" planets have been found orbiting a nearby star at a distance where life in theory could exist, according to a record-breaking tally announced on Tuesday by the European Southern Observatory. They are part of a cluster of as many as seven planets that circle Gliese 667C, one of three stars located a relatively close 22 light years from Earth in the constellation of Scorpio, it said. The planets orbit Gliese 667C in the so-called Goldilocks Zone \u2014 a distance from the star at which the temperature is just right for water to exist in liquid form rather than being stripped away by stellar radiation or locked permanently in ice.\n2014\nIn May 2014, previously discovered Kepler-10c was determined to have the mass comparable to Neptune (17 Earth masses). With the radius of 2.35 , it is currently the largest known planet likely to have a predominantly rocky composition. At 17 Earth masses, it is well above the 10 Earth mass upper limit that is commonly used for the term 'super-Earth' so the term mega-Earth has been proposed. However, in July 2017, more careful analysis of HARPS-N and HIRES data showed that Kepler-10c was much less massive than originally thought, instead around 7.37 (6.18 to 8.69) with a mean density of 3.14 g/cm3. Instead of a primarily rocky composition, the more accurately determined mass of Kepler-10c suggests a world made almost entirely of volatiles, mainly water.\n2015\nOn 6 January 2015, NASA announced the 1000th confirmed exoplanet discovered by the Kepler space telescope. Three of the newly confirmed exoplanets were found to orbit within habitable zones of their related stars: two of the three, Kepler-438b and Kepler-442b, are near-Earth-size and likely rocky; the third, Kepler-440b, is a super-Earth.\nOn 30 July 2015, Astronomy & Astrophysics said they found a planetary system with three super-Earths orbiting a bright, dwarf star. The four-planet system, dubbed HD 219134, had been found 21 light years from Earth in the M-shaped northern hemisphere of constellation Cassiopeia, but it is not in the habitable zone of its star. The planet with the shortest orbit is HD 219134 b, and is Earth's closest known rocky, and transiting, exoplanet.\n2016\nIn February 2016, it was announced that NASA Hubble Space Telescope had detected hydrogen and helium (and suggestions of hydrogen cyanide), but no water vapor, in the atmosphere of 55 Cancri e, the first time the atmosphere of a super-Earth exoplanet was analyzed successfully.\nIn August 2016, astronomers announced the detection of Proxima b, an Earth-sized exoplanet that is in the habitable zone of the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, the closest star to the Sun. Due to its closeness to Earth, Proxima b may be a flyby destination for a fleet of interstellar StarChip spacecraft currently being developed by the Breakthrough Starshot project.\n2018"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829822.6231, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829822.4382, "finish": 1720829822.6231, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8984c7c8150b4b70a563b739b80cca69", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and how does it relate to the habitable zone?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and how does it relate to the habitable zone?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829822.6231, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829822.4382, "finish": 1720829822.6231, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cda47d394a5748318710b00d96c0b541", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and how does it relate to the habitable zone?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and how does it relate to the habitable zone?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: This definition was made by the Kepler space telescope personnel.\nSome authors further suggest that the term Super-Earth might be limited to rocky planets without a significant atmosphere, or planets that have not just atmospheres but also solid surfaces or oceans with a sharp boundary between liquid and atmosphere, which the four giant planets in the Solar System do not have.\nPlanets above 10 Earth masses are termed massive solid planets, mega-Earths, or gas giant planets, depending on whether they are mostly rock and ice or mostly gas.\nHistory and discoveries\nFirst\nThe first super-Earths were discovered by Aleksander Wolszczan and Dale Frail around the pulsar PSR B1257+12 in 1992. The two outer planets (Poltergeist and Phobetor) of the system have masses approximately four times Earth\u2014too small to be gas giants.\nThe first super-Earth around a main-sequence star was discovered by a team under Eugenio Rivera in 2005. It orbits Gliese 876 and received the designation Gliese 876 d (two Jupiter-sized gas giants had previously been discovered in that system). It has an estimated mass of 7.5 Earth masses and a very short orbital period of about 2 days. Due to the proximity of Gliese 876 d to its host star (a red dwarf), it may have a surface temperature of 430\u2013650 kelvin and be too hot to support liquid water.\nFirst in habitable zone\nIn April 2007, a team headed by St\u00e9phane Udry based in Switzerland announced the discovery of two new super-Earths within the Gliese 581 planetary system, both on the edge of the habitable zone around the star where liquid water may be possible on the surface. With Gliese 581c having a mass of at least 5 Earth masses and a distance from Gliese 581 of 0.073 astronomical units (6.8 million mi, 11 million km), it is on the \"warm\" edge of the habitable zone around Gliese 581 with an estimated mean temperature (without considering effects from an atmosphere) of \u22123 degrees Celsius with an albedo comparable to Venus and 40 degrees Celsius with an albedo comparable to Earth. Subsequent research suggested Gliese 581c had likely suffered a runaway greenhouse effect like Venus.\nOthers by year\n2006\nTwo further super-Earths were discovered in 2006: OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb with a mass of 5.5 Earth masses, which was found by gravitational microlensing, and HD 69830 b with a mass of 10 Earth masses.\n2008\nThe smallest super-Earth found as of 2008 was MOA-2007-BLG-192Lb. The planet was announced by astrophysicist David P. Bennett for the international MOA collaboration on June\u00a02, 2008. This planet has approximately 3.3 Earth masses and orbits a brown dwarf. It was detected by gravitational microlensing.\nIn June 2008, European researchers announced the discovery of three super-Earths around the star HD 40307, a star that is only slightly less massive than the Sun. Planets have at least the following minimum masses: 4.2, 6.7, and 9.4 times Earth's. The planets were detected by the radial velocity method by the HARPS (High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher) in Chile."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829859.3439, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829859.1536, "finish": 1720829859.3439, "ip": "", "conv_id": "84cb246635564aeb9cf82aeb39e8fab4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to whether the planet is habitable?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to whether the planet is habitable?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829859.3439, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829859.1536, "finish": 1720829859.3439, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d8180018e85e467194eb8740d627dd33", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to whether the planet is habitable?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to whether the planet is habitable?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829873.509, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829873.3364, "finish": 1720829873.509, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bdd538a1079041608c50f69e99dae36d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to habitability?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to habitability?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829873.509, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829873.3364, "finish": 1720829873.509, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b4ff95912fd84dfe953bbbfd6b9c40c0", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to habitability?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to habitability?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829889.5418, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829889.3314, "finish": 1720829889.5418, "ip": "", "conv_id": "afa12841621e412695715cbfad17cc49", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829889.5418, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829889.3314, "finish": 1720829889.5418, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c19b2532c54413ba0d9bf4faaa46179", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it relate to if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829899.2153, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829899.0019, "finish": 1720829899.2153, "ip": "", "conv_id": "af25980067a4497399cc1836b352abf8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829899.2153, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829899.0019, "finish": 1720829899.2153, "ip": "", "conv_id": "315f50c88ab74efa865bd58cd10b4857", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829905.3139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829905.1146, "finish": 1720829905.3139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "da8ad614f44549f692704329fda0fda7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829905.3139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829905.1146, "finish": 1720829905.3139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d85e8d9035a4cf8ab368426365bc468", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a super-Earth exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829912.8125, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829912.6239, "finish": 1720829912.8125, "ip": "", "conv_id": "62ea0e05266b41638c029e5da1a13747", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's an exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's an exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829912.8125, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829912.6239, "finish": 1720829912.8125, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a505958eebd4474c95f4c5b882255a4f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's an exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's an exoplanet and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Planet\n\nPassage: IAU working definition of exoplanets\nThe 2006 IAU definition presents some challenges for exoplanets because the language is specific to the Solar System and the criteria of roundness and orbital zone clearance are not presently observable for exoplanets. In 2018, this definition was reassessed and updated as knowledge of exoplanets increased. The current official working definition of an exoplanet is as follows:\nThe IAU noted that this definition could be expected to evolve as knowledge improves. A 2022 review article discussing the history and rationale of this definition suggested that the words \"in young star clusters\" should be deleted in clause 3, as such objects have now been found elsewhere, and that the term \"sub-brown dwarfs\" should be replaced by the more current \"free-floating planetary mass objects\". The term \"planetary mass object\" has also been used to refer to ambiguous situations concerning exoplanets, such as objects with mass typical for a planet that are free-floating or orbit a brown dwarf instead of a star. Free-floating objects of planetary mass have sometimes been called planets anyway, specifically rogue planets.\nThe limit of 13 Jupiter masses is not universally accepted. Objects below this mass limit can sometimes burn deuterium, and the amount of deuterium that is burned depends on an object's composition. Furthermore, deuterium is quite scarce, so the stage of deuterium burning does not actually last very long; unlike hydrogen burning in a star, deuterium burning does not significantly affect the future evolution of an object. The relationship between mass and radius (or density) show no special feature at this limit, according to which brown dwarfs have the same physics and internal structure as lighter Jovian planets, and would more naturally be considered planets.\nThus, many catalogues of exoplanets include objects heavier than 13 Jupiter masses, sometimes going up to 60 Jupiter masses. (The limit for hydrogen burning and becoming a red dwarf star is about 80 Jupiter masses.) The situation of main-sequence stars has been used to argue for such an inclusive definition of \"planet\" as well, as they also differ greatly along the two orders of magnitude that they cover, in their structure, atmospheres, temperature, spectral features, and probably formation mechanisms; yet they are all considered as one class, being all hydrostatic-equilibrium objects undergoing nuclear burning.\nMythology and naming\nThe naming of planets differs between planets of the Solar System and exoplanets (planets of other planetary systems). exoplanets are commonly named after their parent star and their order of discovery within its planetary system, such as Proxima Centauri b."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829931.5443, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829931.3491, "finish": 1720829931.5443, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a872c6c587a64275be3831e66b67a441", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a Super-Earth and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a Super-Earth and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829931.5443, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829931.3491, "finish": 1720829931.5443, "ip": "", "conv_id": "11b9f3751295408bb9c43609d48f222f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a Super-Earth and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a Super-Earth and does it have something to do with if the planet can be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829938.0953, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829937.9143, "finish": 1720829938.0953, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4f472a9d5d694e678c336483d60c9612", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a Super-Earth?", "output": [["What's a Super-Earth?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829938.0953, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829937.9143, "finish": 1720829938.0953, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ea85808cafb4262b2ead7e330c66199", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a Super-Earth?", "output": [["What's a Super-Earth?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829947.8087, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829947.6258, "finish": 1720829947.8087, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e20e6828b6c94c98b220fbcd933053e6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's a Super-Earth and can it be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a Super-Earth and can it be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829947.8087, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829947.6258, "finish": 1720829947.8087, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a7f65291b7f848d8ae948f60f7cef55b", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's a Super-Earth and can it be inhabited?", "output": [["What's a Super-Earth and can it be inhabited?", "Title: Super-Earth\n\nPassage: A Super-Earth is a type of exoplanet with a mass higher than Earth's, but substantially below those of the Solar System's ice giants, Uranus and Neptune, which are 14.5 and 17 times Earth's, respectively. The term \"super-Earth\" refers only to the mass of the planet, and so does not imply anything about the surface conditions or habitability. The alternative term \"gas dwarfs\" may be more accurate for those at the higher end of the mass scale, although \"mini-Neptunes\" is a more common term.\nDefinition"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829956.7928, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829956.596, "finish": 1720829956.7928, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d94486c30ec443e88c62498de9149f1d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Kepler-452b\n", "output": [["Kepler-452b\n", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829956.7928, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829956.596, "finish": 1720829956.7928, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f2fd086d4be147828640eb841b7bf7eb", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Kepler-452b\n", "output": [["Kepler-452b\n", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: With a radius estimated at 1.1 Earth, Kepler-186f, discovery announced in April 2014, is the closest yet size to Earth of an exoplanet confirmed by the transit method though its mass remains unknown and its parent star is not a Solar analog.\nKapteyn b, discovered in June 2014 is a possible rocky world of about 4.8 Earth masses and about 1.5 Earth radii were found orbiting the habitable zone of the red subdwarf Kapteyn's Star, 12.8 light-years away.\nOn 6 January 2015, NASA announced the 1000th confirmed exoplanet discovered by the Kepler Space Telescope. Three of the newly confirmed exoplanets were found to orbit within habitable zones of their related stars: two of the three, Kepler-438b and Kepler-442b, are near-Earth-size and likely rocky; the third, Kepler-440b, is a super-Earth. However, Kepler-438b is found to be a subject of powerful flares, so it is now considered uninhabitable. 16 January, K2-3d a planet of 1.5 Earth radii was found orbiting within the habitable zone of K2-3, receiving 1.4 times the intensity of visible light as Earth.\nKepler-452b, announced on 23 July 2015 is 50% bigger than Earth, likely rocky and takes approximately 385 Earth days to orbit the habitable zone of its G-class (solar analog) star Kepler-452.\nThe discovery of a system of three tidally-locked planets orbiting the habitable zone of an ultracool dwarf star, TRAPPIST-1, was announced in May 2016. The discovery is considered significant because it dramatically increases the possibility of smaller, cooler, more numerous and closer stars possessing habitable planets.\nTwo potentially habitable planets, discovered by the K2 mission in July 2016 orbiting around the M dwarf K2-72 around 227 light years from the Sun: K2-72c and K2-72e are both of similar size to Earth and receive similar amounts of stellar radiation.\nAnnounced on the 20 April 2017, LHS 1140b is a super-dense super-Earth 39 light years away, 6.6 times Earth's mass and 1.4 times radius, its star 15% the mass of the Sun but with much less observable stellar flare activity than most M dwarfs. The planet is one of few observable by both transit and radial velocity that's mass is confirmed with an atmosphere may be studied.\nDiscovered by radial velocity in June 2017, with approximately three times the mass of Earth, Luyten b orbits within the habitable zone of Luyten's Star just 12.2 light-years away.\nAt 11 light-years away, the second closest planet, Ross 128 b, was announced in November 2017 following a decade's radial velocity study of relatively \"quiet\" red dwarf star Ross 128. At 1.35 times Earth's mass, is it roughly Earth-sized and likely rocky in composition.\nDiscovered in March 2018, K2-155d is about 1.64 times the radius of Earth, is likely rocky and orbits in the habitable zone of its red dwarf star 203 light years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829971.5119, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829971.3233, "finish": 1720829971.5119, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bfa4ec0838bb42ca97a27b4b461619a8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the deal with HD 205739 b?", "output": [["What's the deal with HD 205739 b?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829971.5119, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829971.3233, "finish": 1720829971.5119, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a76a25d7b22d4f00b2166f38d47a9987", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's the deal with HD 205739 b?", "output": [["What's the deal with HD 205739 b?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829982.0144, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829981.8047, "finish": 1720829982.0144, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0a3ac58db9b84ca69e24070d07127ad5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How far is HD 205739 b from Earth?", "output": [["How far is HD 205739 b from Earth?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829982.0144, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829981.8047, "finish": 1720829982.0144, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d24f2b6905f64eb4b344d9421186f934", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "How far is HD 205739 b from Earth?", "output": [["How far is HD 205739 b from Earth?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829989.0075, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829988.8241, "finish": 1720829989.0075, "ip": "", "conv_id": "08a639d690b044e58ac0c5143d31c97f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How far is HD 205739 b?", "output": [["How far is HD 205739 b?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829989.0075, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829988.8241, "finish": 1720829989.0075, "ip": "", "conv_id": "47df8fbb73e545139eda67bb89bcab55", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "How far is HD 205739 b?", "output": [["How far is HD 205739 b?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829998.6209, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829998.4379, "finish": 1720829998.6209, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7604072c92a6458e8ab4cfc5c2f8932f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is HD 205739 b?", "output": [["What is HD 205739 b?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829998.6209, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829998.4379, "finish": 1720829998.6209, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ead5bf723f764942882dee077241f0de", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is HD 205739 b?", "output": [["What is HD 205739 b?", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830005.5626, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830005.4, "finish": 1720830005.5626, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ad45124b30204354901f9af3d20afcdc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "HD 205739 b", "output": [["HD 205739 b", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830005.5626, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830005.4, "finish": 1720830005.5626, "ip": "", "conv_id": "aefb7d15867240cdbc22214d74caf911", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "HD 205739 b", "output": [["HD 205739 b", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830026.2871, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830026.0936, "finish": 1720830026.2871, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d3b3bc789d4f4b3ebb28338c11ef5580", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "List of potentially habitable exoplanets", "output": [["List of potentially habitable exoplanets", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830026.2871, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830026.0936, "finish": 1720830026.2871, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9e0f88583aee4ee6840f18c647be9af3", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "List of potentially habitable exoplanets", "output": [["List of potentially habitable exoplanets", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: Planetary mass natural satellites have the potential to be habitable as well. However, these bodies need to fulfill additional parameters, in particular being located within the circumplanetary habitable zones of their host planets. More specifically, moons need to be far enough from their host giant planets that they are not transformed by tidal heating into volcanic worlds like Io, but must remain within the Hill radius of the planet so that they are not pulled out of the orbit of their host planet. Red dwarfs that have masses less than 20% of that of the Sun cannot have habitable moons around giant planets, as the small size of the circumstellar habitable zone would put a habitable moon so close to the star that it would be stripped from its host planet. In such a system, a moon close enough to its host planet to maintain its orbit would have tidal heating so intense as to eliminate any prospects of habitability.\nA planetary object that orbits a star with high orbital eccentricity may spend only some of its year in the HZ and experience a large variation in temperature and atmospheric pressure. This would result in dramatic seasonal phase shifts where liquid water may exist only intermittently. It is possible that subsurface habitats could be insulated from such changes and that extremophiles on or near the surface might survive through adaptions such as hibernation (cryptobiosis) and/or hyperthermostability. Tardigrades, for example, can survive in a dehydrated state temperature between and . Life on a planetary object orbiting outside HZ might hibernate on the cold side as the planet approaches the apastron where the planet is coolest and become active on approach to the periastron when the planet is sufficiently warm.\nExtrasolar discoveries\nA 2015 review concluded that the exoplanets Kepler-62f, Kepler-186f and Kepler-442b were likely the best candidates for being potentially habitable. These are at a distance of 990, 490 and 1,120 light-years away, respectively. Of these, Kepler-186f is closest in size to Earth with 1.2 times Earth's radius, and it is located towards the outer edge of the habitable zone around its red dwarf star. Among nearest terrestrial exoplanet candidates, Tau Ceti e is 11.9 light-years away. It is in the inner edge of its planetary system's habitable zone, giving it an estimated average surface temperature of .\nStudies that have attempted to estimate the number of terrestrial planets within the circumstellar habitable zone tend to reflect the availability of scientific data. A 2013 study by Ravi Kumar Kopparapu put \u03b7e, the fraction of stars with planets in the HZ, at 0.48, meaning that there may be roughly 95\u2013180\u00a0billion habitable planets in the Milky Way. However, this is merely a statistical prediction; only a small fraction of these possible planets have yet been discovered."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830043.0127, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830042.8253, "finish": 1720830043.0127, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6dfe71a1489b4a49aacf5491d0f9f733", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "TRAPPIST-1d planet", "output": [["TRAPPIST-1d planet", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830043.0127, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830042.8253, "finish": 1720830043.0127, "ip": "", "conv_id": "616de244d4e54a8da582edecbb38840b", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "TRAPPIST-1d planet", "output": [["TRAPPIST-1d planet", "Title: Gliese 581d\n\nPassage: Gliese 581d (often shortened to Gl 581d or GJ 581d) is a doubtful, and frequently disputed, exoplanet candidate orbiting within the Gliese 581 system, approximately 20.4 light-years away in the Libra constellation. It was the third planet claimed in the system and the fourth (in a 4-planet model) or fifth (in a disproven 5- or 6-planet model) in order from the star. Multiple subsequent studies found that the planetary signal in fact originates from stellar activity, and thus the planet does not exist, but this remains disputed.\nThough significantly more massive than Earth (at a minimum mass of 6.98 Earth masses), this super-Earth was the first exoplanet of relatively low mass regarded as orbiting within the habitable zone of its parent star. Assuming its existence, computer climate simulations have confirmed the possibility of the existence of surface water and these factors combine to a relatively high measure of planetary habitability.\nHistory\nDiscovery\nA team of astronomers led by St\u00e9phane Udry of the Geneva Observatory used the HARPS instrument on the European Southern Observatory 3.6 meter telescope in La Silla, Chile, to discover the planet in 2007. Udry's team employed the radial velocity technique, in which the minimum mass of a planet is determined based on the small perturbations it induces in its parent star's orbit via gravity. This study estimated an orbital period of 83 days for the planet.\nIn late April 2009, the original discovery team revised its original estimate of the planet's orbital parameters, finding that it orbits closer to its star than originally determined with an orbital period of 66.8 days. They concluded that the planet is within the habitable zone where liquid water could exist. A 2010 study of aliasing in radial velocity data found that the true period of Gliese 581d remained unclear, with even a 1-day period being a possibility. Later models of the system including planet d from 2010-2013 supported a 67-day period.\nDisputed existence\nIn September 2012, Roman Baluev filtered out the \"red noise\" from the Keck data and concluded that this planet's existence is probable only to 2.2 standard deviations, and thus is uncertain. Earlier that same year, however, S. S. Vogt (USNO), together with R. P. Butler and N. Haghighipour, published a study that supported the existence of the planet with a much higher probability; they also pursued a dynamical analysis of the system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830079.5147, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830079.3327, "finish": 1720830079.5147, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6f8fd0e4a01c418493eab8211fb5959f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Besides Earth, which planet in the solar system may host life?", "output": [["Besides Earth, which planet in the solar system may host life?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720830079.5147, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720830079.3327, "finish": 1720830079.5147, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5bd428f050074e29970edb57015820cc", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Besides Earth, which planet in the solar system may host life?", "output": [["Besides Earth, which planet in the solar system may host life?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: K2-18b is an exoplanet 124 light-years away, orbiting in the habitable zone of the K2-18, a red dwarf. This planet is significant for water vapor found in its atmosphere; this was announced on September 17, 2019.\nIn September 2020, astronomers identified 24 superhabitable planet (planets better than Earth) contenders, from among more than 4000 confirmed exoplanets at present, based on astrophysical parameters, as well as the natural history of known life forms on the Earth.\nHabitability outside the HZ\nLiquid-water environments have been found to exist in the absence of atmospheric pressure and at temperatures outside the HZ temperature range. For example, Saturn's moons Titan and Enceladus and Jupiter's moons Europa and Ganymede, all of which are outside the habitable zone, may hold large volumes of liquid water in subsurface oceans.\nOutside the HZ, tidal heating and radioactive decay are two possible heat sources that could contribute to the existence of liquid water. Abbot and Switzer (2011) put forward the possibility that subsurface water could exist on rogue planets as a result of radioactive decay-based heating and insulation by a thick surface layer of ice.\nWith some theorising that life on Earth may have actually originated in stable, subsurface habitats, it has been suggested that it may be common for wet subsurface extraterrestrial habitats such as these to 'teem with life'. On Earth itself, living organisms may be found more than below the surface.\nAnother possibility is that outside the HZ organisms may use alternative biochemistries that do not require water at all. Astrobiologist Christopher McKay, has suggested that methane () may be a solvent conducive to the development of \"cryolife\", with the Sun's \"methane habitable zone\" being centered on from the star. This distance is coincident with the location of Titan, whose lakes and rain of methane make it an ideal location to find McKay's proposed cryolife. In addition, testing of a number of organisms has found some are capable of surviving in extra-HZ conditions.\nSignificance for complex and intelligent life\nThe Rare Earth hypothesis argues that complex and intelligent life is uncommon and that the HZ is one of many critical factors. According to Ward & Brownlee (2004) and others, not only is a HZ orbit and surface water a primary requirement to sustain life but a requirement to support the secondary conditions required for multicellular life to emerge and evolve. The secondary habitability factors are both geological (the role of surface water in sustaining necessary plate tectonics) and biochemical (the role of radiant energy in supporting photosynthesis for necessary atmospheric oxygenation). But others, such as Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen in their 2002 book Evolving the Alien argue that complex intelligent life may arise outside the HZ. Intelligent life outside the HZ may have evolved in subsurface environments, from alternative biochemistries or even from nuclear reactions."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-4172d4d7-0a9e-4cf2-bee9-1b1b98d47622.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-4172d4d7-0a9e-4cf2-bee9-1b1b98d47622.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index c17da9ddff8bb933192ad56cc4d4e197643a7e57..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-4172d4d7-0a9e-4cf2-bee9-1b1b98d47622.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721156542.3694, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721156489.515, "finish": 1721156542.3694, "ip": "", "conv_id": "65ac5a3e6e86485eb8c30a92dc02456e", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index c1659c2a16b931b0035ee21113e56abacae61909..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,24 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721352095.5931, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352072.0905, "finish": 1721352095.5931, "ip": "", "conv_id": "96b5fb73451943ea8b0ab7bf7e8c26a9", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "output": [["Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "Title: Leveraging Pre-trained Checkpoints for Sequence Generation Tasks\n\nAbstract: Unsupervised pre-training of large neural models has recently revolutionized Natural Language Processing. By warm-starting from the publicly released checkpoints, NLP practitioners have pushed the state-of-the-art on multiple benchmarks while saving significant amounts of compute time. So far the focus has been mainly on the Natural Language Understanding tasks. In this paper, we demonstrate the efficacy of pre-trained checkpoints for Sequence Generation. We developed a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model that is compatible with publicly available pre-trained BERT, GPT-2 and RoBERTa checkpoints and conducted an extensive empirical study on the utility of initializing our model, both encoder and decoder, with these checkpoints. Our models result in new state-of-the-art results on Machine Translation, Text Summarization, Sentence Splitting, and Sentence Fusion."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352095.5931, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352072.0905, "finish": 1721352095.5931, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a7e9fd24b6a74f3e82d08b83946a162d", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "output": [["Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "Title: Leveraging Pre-trained Checkpoints for Sequence Generation Tasks\n\nAbstract: Unsupervised pre-training of large neural models has recently revolutionized Natural Language Processing. By warm-starting from the publicly released checkpoints, NLP practitioners have pushed the state-of-the-art on multiple benchmarks while saving significant amounts of compute time. So far the focus has been mainly on the Natural Language Understanding tasks. In this paper, we demonstrate the efficacy of pre-trained checkpoints for Sequence Generation. We developed a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model that is compatible with publicly available pre-trained BERT, GPT-2 and RoBERTa checkpoints and conducted an extensive empirical study on the utility of initializing our model, both encoder and decoder, with these checkpoints. Our models result in new state-of-the-art results on Machine Translation, Text Summarization, Sentence Splitting, and Sentence Fusion."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352136.2451, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352135.7265, "finish": 1721352136.2451, "ip": "", "conv_id": "761b4b19e56a411b9f144ea7b3aff450", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Study on zero-shot music tagging and transfer learning using a joint music audio and natural language embedding.", "output": [["Study on zero-shot music tagging and transfer learning using a joint music audio and natural language embedding.", "Title: Zero-shot Learning and Knowledge Transfer in Music Classification and Tagging\n\nAbstract: Music classification and tagging is conducted through categorical supervised learning with a fixed set of labels. In principle, this cannot make predictions on unseen labels. Zero-shot learning is an approach to solve the problem by using side information about the semantic labels. We recently investigated this concept of zero-shot learning in music classification and tagging task by projecting both audio and label space on a single semantic space. In this work, we extend the work to verify the generalization ability of zero-shot learning model by conducting knowledge transfer to different music corpora."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352136.2451, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352135.7265, "finish": 1721352136.2451, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0893d5b370d94b4ab06c101da0a2d4f9", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "Study on zero-shot music tagging and transfer learning using a joint music audio and natural language embedding.", "output": [["Study on zero-shot music tagging and transfer learning using a joint music audio and natural language embedding.", "Title: Zero-shot Learning and Knowledge Transfer in Music Classification and Tagging\n\nAbstract: Music classification and tagging is conducted through categorical supervised learning with a fixed set of labels. In principle, this cannot make predictions on unseen labels. Zero-shot learning is an approach to solve the problem by using side information about the semantic labels. We recently investigated this concept of zero-shot learning in music classification and tagging task by projecting both audio and label space on a single semantic space. In this work, we extend the work to verify the generalization ability of zero-shot learning model by conducting knowledge transfer to different music corpora."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352143.3345, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352142.6857, "finish": 1721352143.3345, "ip": "", "conv_id": "44441b81472a410eaa3a5ce19a8f4c2c", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "New dataset for driving scenarios Q&A and LLM-based evaluation in autonomous vehicles", "output": [["New dataset for driving scenarios Q&A and LLM-based evaluation in autonomous vehicles", "Title: Driving with LLMs: Fusing Object-Level Vector Modality for Explainable Autonomous Driving\n\nAbstract: Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown promise in the autonomous driving sector, particularly in generalization and interpretability. We introduce a unique object-level multimodal LLM architecture that merges vectorized numeric modalities with a pre-trained LLM to improve context understanding in driving situations. We also present a new dataset of 160k QA pairs derived from 10k driving scenarios, paired with high quality control commands collected with RL agent and question answer pairs generated by teacher LLM (GPT-3.5). A distinct pretraining strategy is devised to align numeric vector modalities with static LLM representations using vector captioning language data. We also introduce an evaluation metric for Driving QA and demonstrate our LLM-driver's proficiency in interpreting driving scenarios, answering questions, and decision-making. Our findings highlight the potential of LLM-based driving action generation in comparison to traditional behavioral cloning. We make our benchmark, datasets, and model available for further exploration."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352143.3345, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352142.6857, "finish": 1721352143.3345, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b8324619123d46e3bafa693253f6c1ad", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "New dataset for driving scenarios Q&A and LLM-based evaluation in autonomous vehicles", "output": [["New dataset for driving scenarios Q&A and LLM-based evaluation in autonomous vehicles", "Title: Driving with LLMs: Fusing Object-Level Vector Modality for Explainable Autonomous Driving\n\nAbstract: Large Language Models (LLMs) have shown promise in the autonomous driving sector, particularly in generalization and interpretability. We introduce a unique object-level multimodal LLM architecture that merges vectorized numeric modalities with a pre-trained LLM to improve context understanding in driving situations. We also present a new dataset of 160k QA pairs derived from 10k driving scenarios, paired with high quality control commands collected with RL agent and question answer pairs generated by teacher LLM (GPT-3.5). A distinct pretraining strategy is devised to align numeric vector modalities with static LLM representations using vector captioning language data. We also introduce an evaluation metric for Driving QA and demonstrate our LLM-driver's proficiency in interpreting driving scenarios, answering questions, and decision-making. Our findings highlight the potential of LLM-based driving action generation in comparison to traditional behavioral cloning. We make our benchmark, datasets, and model available for further exploration."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352153.7941, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352153.316, "finish": 1721352153.7941, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8c41d8dd4a44482681bfaadd48343e1a", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "output": [["Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "Title: Misspelling Oblivious Word Embeddings\n\nAbstract: In this paper we present a method to learn word embeddings that are resilient to misspellings. Existing word embeddings have limited applicability to malformed texts, which contain a non-negligible amount of out-of-vocabulary words. We propose a method combining FastText with subwords and a supervised task of learning misspelling patterns. In our method, misspellings of each word are embedded close to their correct variants. We train these embeddings on a new dataset we are releasing publicly. Finally, we experimentally show the advantages of this approach on both intrinsic and extrinsic NLP tasks using public test sets."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352153.7941, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352153.316, "finish": 1721352153.7941, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e20bdda167e04c2bb0bc43a2ae8d693a", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "output": [["Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "Title: Misspelling Oblivious Word Embeddings\n\nAbstract: In this paper we present a method to learn word embeddings that are resilient to misspellings. Existing word embeddings have limited applicability to malformed texts, which contain a non-negligible amount of out-of-vocabulary words. We propose a method combining FastText with subwords and a supervised task of learning misspelling patterns. In our method, misspellings of each word are embedded close to their correct variants. We train these embeddings on a new dataset we are releasing publicly. Finally, we experimentally show the advantages of this approach on both intrinsic and extrinsic NLP tasks using public test sets."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352165.4228, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352164.9902, "finish": 1721352165.4228, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6d2271788a934a34b59c04a39777ee3b", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "A framework involving contrastive learning with knowledge-aware negative sampling for protein pretraining.", "output": [["A framework involving contrastive learning with knowledge-aware negative sampling for protein pretraining.", "Title: Adversarial Contrastive Pre-training for Protein Sequences\n\nAbstract: Recent developments in Natural Language Processing (NLP) demonstrate that large-scale, self-supervised pre-training can be extremely beneficial for downstream tasks. These ideas have been adapted to other domains, including the analysis of the amino acid sequences of proteins. However, to date most attempts on protein sequences rely on direct masked language model style pre-training. In this work, we design a new, adversarial pre-training method for proteins, extending and specializing similar advances in NLP. We show compelling results in comparison to traditional MLM pre-training, though further development is needed to ensure the gains are worth the significant computational cost."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352165.4228, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352164.9902, "finish": 1721352165.4228, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c88a6665ad64359bf114b86ebfcd2df", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "A framework involving contrastive learning with knowledge-aware negative sampling for protein pretraining.", "output": [["A framework involving contrastive learning with knowledge-aware negative sampling for protein pretraining.", "Title: Adversarial Contrastive Pre-training for Protein Sequences\n\nAbstract: Recent developments in Natural Language Processing (NLP) demonstrate that large-scale, self-supervised pre-training can be extremely beneficial for downstream tasks. These ideas have been adapted to other domains, including the analysis of the amino acid sequences of proteins. However, to date most attempts on protein sequences rely on direct masked language model style pre-training. In this work, we design a new, adversarial pre-training method for proteins, extending and specializing similar advances in NLP. We show compelling results in comparison to traditional MLM pre-training, though further development is needed to ensure the gains are worth the significant computational cost."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352174.8325, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352174.5146, "finish": 1721352174.8325, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4c17a9bfcc8a470a9e4a27ce2669e993", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "A study that introduces an extensive emoji sense inventory extracted from the web and linked to BabelNet definitions.", "output": [["A study that introduces an extensive emoji sense inventory extracted from the web and linked to BabelNet definitions.", "Title: EmojiNet: Building a Machine Readable Sense Inventory for Emoji\n\nAbstract: Emoji are a contemporary and extremely popular way to enhance electronic communication. Without rigid semantics attached to them, emoji symbols take on different meanings based on the context of a message. Thus, like the word sense disambiguation task in natural language processing, machines also need to disambiguate the meaning or sense of an emoji. In a first step toward achieving this goal, this paper presents EmojiNet, the first machine readable sense inventory for emoji. EmojiNet is a resource enabling systems to link emoji with their context-specific meaning. It is automatically constructed by integrating multiple emoji resources with BabelNet, which is the most comprehensive multilingual sense inventory available to date. The paper discusses its construction, evaluates the automatic resource creation process, and presents a use case where EmojiNet disambiguates emoji usage in tweets. EmojiNet is available online for use at http://emojinet.knoesis.org."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352174.8325, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352174.5146, "finish": 1721352174.8325, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f263909efa01425dbdb8ea1443a790e6", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "A study that introduces an extensive emoji sense inventory extracted from the web and linked to BabelNet definitions.", "output": [["A study that introduces an extensive emoji sense inventory extracted from the web and linked to BabelNet definitions.", "Title: EmojiNet: Building a Machine Readable Sense Inventory for Emoji\n\nAbstract: Emoji are a contemporary and extremely popular way to enhance electronic communication. Without rigid semantics attached to them, emoji symbols take on different meanings based on the context of a message. Thus, like the word sense disambiguation task in natural language processing, machines also need to disambiguate the meaning or sense of an emoji. In a first step toward achieving this goal, this paper presents EmojiNet, the first machine readable sense inventory for emoji. EmojiNet is a resource enabling systems to link emoji with their context-specific meaning. It is automatically constructed by integrating multiple emoji resources with BabelNet, which is the most comprehensive multilingual sense inventory available to date. The paper discusses its construction, evaluates the automatic resource creation process, and presents a use case where EmojiNet disambiguates emoji usage in tweets. EmojiNet is available online for use at http://emojinet.knoesis.org."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352181.8033, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352181.3317, "finish": 1721352181.8033, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4403240a5eee409f8bb04c13a0d834ab", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "output": [["A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "Title: Non-Autoregressive Neural Machine Translation\n\nAbstract: Existing approaches to neural machine translation condition each output word on previously generated outputs. We introduce a model that avoids this autoregressive property and produces its outputs in parallel, allowing an order of magnitude lower latency during inference. Through knowledge distillation, the use of input token fertilities as a latent variable, and policy gradient fine-tuning, we achieve this at a cost of as little as 2.0 BLEU points relative to the autoregressive Transformer network used as a teacher. We demonstrate substantial cumulative improvements associated with each of the three aspects of our training strategy, and validate our approach on IWSLT 2016 English-German and two WMT language pairs. By sampling fertilities in parallel at inference time, our non-autoregressive model achieves near-state-of-the-art performance of 29.8 BLEU on WMT 2016 English-Romanian."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352181.8033, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352181.3317, "finish": 1721352181.8033, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cadb72c8337a40f4828c033175e2a4ee", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "output": [["A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "Title: Non-Autoregressive Translation with Layer-Wise Prediction and Deep Supervision\n\nAbstract: How do we perform efficient inference while retaining high translation quality? Existing neural machine translation models, such as Transformer, achieve high performance, but they decode words one by one, which is inefficient. Recent non-autoregressive translation models speed up the inference, but their quality is still inferior. In this work, we propose DSLP, a highly efficient and high-performance model for machine translation. The key insight is to train a non-autoregressive Transformer with Deep Supervision and feed additional Layer-wise Predictions. We conducted extensive experiments on four translation tasks (both directions of WMT'14 EN-DE and WMT'16 EN-RO). Results show that our approach consistently improves the BLEU scores compared with respective base models. Specifically, our best variant outperforms the autoregressive model on three translation tasks, while being 14.8 times more efficient in inference."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352299.8464, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352276.462, "finish": 1721352299.8464, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3f4407ec9148408082bd04b412d52056", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "Study proposing a re-ranking method using pre-trained language models for passage scoring", "output": [["Study proposing a re-ranking method using pre-trained language models for passage scoring", "Title: Transparency robust to disorder in a periodic array of Helmholtz resonators\n\nAbstract: In this paper, the influence of disorder on 1D periodic lattice of resonant scatterers is inspected. These later have multiple resonance frequencies which produce bandgap in the transmission spectrum. One peculiarity of the presented system is that it is chosen with a nearly perfect overlap between the Bragg and the second hybridization bandgaps. In the case of a perfect ordered lattice, and around this overlap, this produces a narrow transparency band within a large second bandgap. As expected, the effect of the disorder is generally to increase the width of the bandgaps. Nevertheless, the transparency band appears to be robust with respect to an increase of the disorder. In this paper, we study this effect by means of experimental investigations and numerical simulations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352299.8464, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352276.462, "finish": 1721352299.8464, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6cc888848af14e28938d5b8185d35ce0", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Study proposing a re-ranking method using pre-trained language models for passage scoring", "output": [["Study proposing a re-ranking method using pre-trained language models for passage scoring", "Title: Re-Ranking Step by Step: Investigating Pre-Filtering for Re-Ranking with Large Language Models\n\nAbstract: Large Language Models (LLMs) have been revolutionizing a myriad of natural language processing tasks with their diverse zero-shot capabilities. Indeed, existing work has shown that LLMs can be used to great effect for many tasks, such as information retrieval (IR), and passage ranking. However, current state-of-the-art results heavily lean on the capabilities of the LLM being used. Currently, proprietary, and very large LLMs such as GPT-4 are the highest performing passage re-rankers. Hence, users without the resources to leverage top of the line LLMs, or ones that are closed source, are at a disadvantage. In this paper, we investigate the use of a pre-filtering step before passage re-ranking in IR. Our experiments show that by using a small number of human generated relevance scores, coupled with LLM relevance scoring, it is effectively possible to filter out irrelevant passages before re-ranking. Our experiments also show that this pre-filtering then allows the LLM to perform significantly better at the re-ranking task. Indeed, our results show that smaller models such as Mixtral can become competitive with much larger proprietary models (e.g., ChatGPT and GPT-4)."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352479.8486, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352452.1978, "finish": 1721352479.8486, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ef4fa12b83a467eb0bb0e0208986b84", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what is the oasis in ready player one", "output": [["what is the oasis in ready player one", "Title: Oasis (video game)\n\nPassage: Oasis is a turn-based strategy video game developed by American studio Mind Control Software and published for Microsoft Windows by PlayFirst in April 2005. Konami released a mobile phone port in 2006. Mind Control reacquired rights to the game from PlayFirst in 2010 and released an iPad version called Defense of the Oasis that same year. On August 25, 2020, the iPad version was published on Steam. Oasis is a casual game set in ancient Egypt that combines Civilization-style strategy and puzzle gameplay. Oasis has been described as \"Civilization meets Minesweeper\".\nGameplay\nEach level of Oasis consists of a single screen with a 10x10 grid of randomly generated terrain. Initially the map is covered with fog of war, but the player may remove the fog from tiles by clicking on them. Each click reveals a single tile and takes a turn; 85 turns are available for each level. The eponymous oasis covers several squares of each level and lying in a random oasis tile is the obelisk which contains the level's glyph of power. The primary goal is to find the glyph and protect it from barbarians who attack after the 85th turn from tiles marked by blue cairns. To stop the barbarians from destroying the glyph the player must find cities and use them to mount a defense. The player wins the game by finding and defending 12 glyphs.\nLayered on top of the basic gameplay are eight scenarios. Each scenario presents a narrative about a different land and the story of a different leader rising to power. In the first scenario players assume the role of an Egyptian noble, the son of the murdered Falcon King, who wishes to rebuild the nation and disperse the fog that has plunged the nation into chaos since his father's murder. Each scenario has its own theme, and each level within a scenario is distinguished by a mix of special gameplay elements related to the theme, such as barbarian strongholds, jungles, islands, plagues, and others.\nMost tiles give the player a number of followers when revealed. Followers are a resource; the player may spend them to build roads or send them to work in the mines. Both activities also cost a turn. Cities connected by roads gradually grow whereas followers working in mines research combat technology. Both benefits accrue over time, which encourages early investments in mines and roads. Turns can also be spent searching cities which reveals either treasures or advisors. Most treasures provide an attack bonus to the population in that city. When found, advisors pledge to join the player if enough cities survive the barbarian attack. Advisors grant bonuses to the player and substantially alter playing strategy."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352479.8486, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721352452.1978, "finish": 1721352479.8486, "ip": "", "conv_id": "caa4766817024439b2c7c6aa66404423", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "what is the oasis in ready player one", "output": [["what is the oasis in ready player one", "Title: Oasis (video game)\n\nPassage: Oasis is a turn-based strategy video game developed by American studio Mind Control Software and published for Microsoft Windows by PlayFirst in April 2005. Konami released a mobile phone port in 2006. Mind Control reacquired rights to the game from PlayFirst in 2010 and released an iPad version called Defense of the Oasis that same year. On August 25, 2020, the iPad version was published on Steam. Oasis is a casual game set in ancient Egypt that combines Civilization-style strategy and puzzle gameplay. Oasis has been described as \"Civilization meets Minesweeper\".\nGameplay\nEach level of Oasis consists of a single screen with a 10x10 grid of randomly generated terrain. Initially the map is covered with fog of war, but the player may remove the fog from tiles by clicking on them. Each click reveals a single tile and takes a turn; 85 turns are available for each level. The eponymous oasis covers several squares of each level and lying in a random oasis tile is the obelisk which contains the level's glyph of power. The primary goal is to find the glyph and protect it from barbarians who attack after the 85th turn from tiles marked by blue cairns. To stop the barbarians from destroying the glyph the player must find cities and use them to mount a defense. The player wins the game by finding and defending 12 glyphs.\nLayered on top of the basic gameplay are eight scenarios. Each scenario presents a narrative about a different land and the story of a different leader rising to power. In the first scenario players assume the role of an Egyptian noble, the son of the murdered Falcon King, who wishes to rebuild the nation and disperse the fog that has plunged the nation into chaos since his father's murder. Each scenario has its own theme, and each level within a scenario is distinguished by a mix of special gameplay elements related to the theme, such as barbarian strongholds, jungles, islands, plagues, and others.\nMost tiles give the player a number of followers when revealed. Followers are a resource; the player may spend them to build roads or send them to work in the mines. Both activities also cost a turn. Cities connected by roads gradually grow whereas followers working in mines research combat technology. Both benefits accrue over time, which encourages early investments in mines and roads. Turns can also be spent searching cities which reveals either treasures or advisors. Most treasures provide an attack bonus to the population in that city. When found, advisors pledge to join the player if enough cities survive the barbarian attack. Advisors grant bonuses to the player and substantially alter playing strategy."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721354511.842, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721354494.0578, "finish": 1721354511.842, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ec2dc298f374ae08d9855e88dd9be21", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "when does the men's worlds curling start", "output": [["when does the men's worlds curling start", "Title: John Shuster\n\nPassage: Post-Olympics\nTyler George left the team after the 2017\u201318 season and was replaced by Chris Plys. The team represented the United States at the second leg of the 2018\u201319 Curling World Cup in Omaha, Nebraska, where they beat Niklas Edin in the final in a re-match of the Olympic gold medal match. The team won the 2019 United States Men's Curling Championship and represented the United States at the 2019 World Men's Curling Championship, where they were knocked out in the quarterfinals. Shuster's team was also chosen to represent the United States for the final leg of the Curling World Cup, called the Grand Final, in Beijing. They finished in 6th place.\nShuster defended his United States title at the 2020 United States Men's Championship, defeating Rich Ruohonen in the final to finish the tournament undefeated. The national title would have earned Team Shuster a spot at the final Grand Slam of the season, the Champions Cup, as well as the chance to represent the United States at the 2020 World Men's Curling Championship, but both events were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.\nShuster was the skip for the United States team at the 2021 World Men's Curling Championship, which was played in a fan-less bubble in Calgary due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. There, he led his U.S. rink to a 10\u20133 round robin record, in third place. They played Switzerland in the playoffs, in a game which was delayed a day due to some curlers testing positive for the virus. In the game, Switzerland, skipped by Peter de Cruz, beat the Americans to advance to the semifinals.\nMixed doubles\nShuster competes in mixed doubles curling with Cory Christensen. The pair finished in second place at the 2017 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Olympic Trials and earned a national championship in 2019. At the 2019 World Championship Shuster and Christensen finished the round robin tied for first in their group with a record of 6\u20131. They later lost to Canada in the semifinals but defeated the Australian team of Dean Hewitt and Tahli Gill for the bronze medal.\n2022 Winter Olympics\nShuster competed for Team USA in the men's curling tournament at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. He served as one of the American flag bearers at the opening ceremony.\nPersonal life\nShuster is married to Sara Shuster and has two children. He was employed as a \"Team USA Sales Associate\" for Dick's Sporting Goods, and now works as a public speaker. He lives in Superior, Wisconsin.\nIn November 2022, Shuster became co-owner of Duluth FC in the National Premier Soccer League.\nGrand Slam record\nTeams\nMen's\nMixed doubles"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721354511.842, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721354494.0578, "finish": 1721354511.842, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ffeef6cf0c7a44b68691c0aa5b3b4e1e", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when does the men's worlds curling start", "output": [["when does the men's worlds curling start", "Title: Liu Rui\n\nPassage: Liu Rui (; born March 13, 1982, in Harbin, Heilongjiang; sometimes known as Rui Lui) is a Chinese curler. He was the skip of the Chinese men's Olympic Curling Team at the 2014 Winter Olympics.\nLiu played in his first World Curling Championships in 2008, playing third for Fengchun Wang. The team lost in the bronze medal game to Norway, settling for fourth place. After a slow start in the 2009 Ford World Men's Curling Championship, Liu switched to throw 4th stones while skip Fengchun Wang continued to call the game and throw 3rd stones. The team struggled, placing 9th. The team represented China at the 2010 Winter Olympics, with Liu throwing last rocks and Wang continuing to skip. The team finished 8th with a 2\u20137 record.\nAfter the Olympics, Liu took over skipping the team, leading China at the 2010 World Men's Curling Championship, placing 11th. He led China to a 6th place finish at the 2012 World Men's Curling Championship, the 2013 Ford World Men's Curling Championship and at the 2014 World Men's Curling Championship.\nPersonal life\nHe is married.\nTeams\nLiu was also part of the 2008 Continental Cup of Curling.\nGrand Slam record"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721424227.1943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721424203.8147, "finish": 1721424227.1943, "ip": "", "conv_id": "57bfe39ed44a4a7c80ba96334b8a2b9d", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "A system that enhances the trustworthiness of language model outputs by enabling attribution to external evidence.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721424227.1943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721424203.8147, "finish": 1721424227.1943, "ip": "", "conv_id": "35d8bf952323400482d2b5b5638a6d79", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "A system that enhances the trustworthiness of language model outputs by enabling attribution to external evidence.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721424233.8605, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721424233.347, "finish": 1721424233.8605, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4e4eb3dfacd544c6bd93a61412524829", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "Investigating the effectiveness of LLMs as heuristic guides for external planners and verifiers.", "output": [["Investigating the effectiveness of LLMs as heuristic guides for external planners and verifiers.", "Title: On the Planning Abilities of Large Language Models : A Critical Investigation\n\nAbstract: Intrigued by the claims of emergent reasoning capabilities in LLMs trained on general web corpora, in this paper, we set out to investigate their planning capabilities. We aim to evaluate (1) the effectiveness of LLMs in generating plans autonomously in commonsense planning tasks and (2) the potential of LLMs in LLM-Modulo settings where they act as a source of heuristic guidance for external planners and verifiers. We conduct a systematic study by generating a suite of instances on domains similar to the ones employed in the International Planning Competition and evaluate LLMs in two distinct modes: autonomous and heuristic. Our findings reveal that LLMs' ability to generate executable plans autonomously is rather limited, with the best model (GPT-4) having an average success rate of ~12% across the domains. However, the results in the LLM-Modulo setting show more promise. In the LLM-Modulo setting, we demonstrate that LLM-generated plans can improve the search process for underlying sound planners and additionally show that external verifiers can help provide feedback on the generated plans and back-prompt the LLM for better plan generation."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721424233.8605, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721424233.347, "finish": 1721424233.8605, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5e6ce6e7d9514858a1b91f05dc3e6721", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Investigating the effectiveness of LLMs as heuristic guides for external planners and verifiers.", "output": [["Investigating the effectiveness of LLMs as heuristic guides for external planners and verifiers.", "Title: LLMs Can't Plan, But Can Help Planning in LLM-Modulo Frameworks\n\nAbstract: There is considerable confusion about the role of Large Language Models (LLMs) in planning and reasoning tasks. On one side are over-optimistic claims that LLMs can indeed do these tasks with just the right prompting or self-verification strategies. On the other side are perhaps over-pessimistic claims that all that LLMs are good for in planning/reasoning tasks are as mere translators of the problem specification from one syntactic format to another, and ship the problem off to external symbolic solvers. In this position paper, we take the view that both these extremes are misguided. We argue that auto-regressive LLMs cannot, by themselves, do planning or self-verification (which is after all a form of reasoning), and shed some light on the reasons for misunderstandings in the literature. We will also argue that LLMs should be viewed as universal approximate knowledge sources that have much more meaningful roles to play in planning/reasoning tasks beyond simple front-end/back-end format translators. We present a vision of {\\bf LLM-Modulo Frameworks} that combine the strengths of LLMs with external model-based verifiers in a tighter bi-directional interaction regime. We will show how the models driving the external verifiers themselves can be acquired with the help of LLMs. We will also argue that rather than simply pipelining LLMs and symbolic components, this LLM-Modulo Framework provides a better neuro-symbolic approach that offers tighter integration between LLMs and symbolic components, and allows extending the scope of model-based planning/reasoning regimes towards more flexible knowledge, problem and preference specifications."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-479009f8-8879-4a72-a504-3324722048c7.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-479009f8-8879-4a72-a504-3324722048c7.jsonl
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@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721055203.9825, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055151.5463, "finish": 1721055203.9825, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f5f3ffd86f18430fbac1bfb856c24164", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "output": [["when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "Title: John Steinbeck\n\nPassage: Of Mice and Men was a drama about the dreams of two migrant agricultural laborers in California. Steinbeck, on vacations to Mexico, witnessed sold-out theater troupes with often poor and illiterate workers consisting of the audience. As such, Steinbeck chose to write Of Mice and Men with a stage play in mind. It was critically acclaimed and Steinbeck's 1962 Nobel Prize citation called it a \"little masterpiece\".\nIts stage production was a hit, starring Wallace Ford as George and Broderick Crawford as George's companion, the mentally childlike, but physically powerful itinerant farmhand Lennie. Steinbeck refused to travel from his home in California to attend any performance of the play during its New York run, telling director George S. Kaufman that the play as it existed in his own mind was \"perfect\" and that anything presented on stage would only be a disappointment. Steinbeck wrote two more stage plays (The Moon Is Down and Burning Bright).\nOf Mice and Men was also adapted as a 1939 Hollywood film, with Lon Chaney Jr. as Lennie (he had filled the role in the Los Angeles stage production) and Burgess Meredith as George. Meredith and Steinbeck became close friends for the next two decades. Another film based on the novella was made in 1992 starring Gary Sinise as George and John Malkovich as Lennie.\nSteinbeck followed this wave of success with The Grapes of Wrath (1939), based on newspaper articles about migrant agricultural workers that he had written in San Francisco. In August 1936, the San Francisco News asked Steinbeck to personally interview multiple families in the impoverished Hoovervilles of the San Joaquin Valley. As Steinbeck visited the slums that hugged the highways across the Central Valley, he was harrowed by what he saw. He talked with multiple families and vowed to make a book depicting their struggles. It is commonly considered his greatest work. According to The New York Times, it was the best-selling book of 1939 and 430,000 copies had been printed by February 1940. In that month, it won the National Book Award, favorite fiction book of 1939, voted by members of the American Booksellers Association. Later that year, it won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was adapted as a film directed by John Ford, starring Henry Fonda as Tom Joad; Fonda was nominated for the best actor Academy Award. Grapes was controversial. Steinbeck's New Deal political views, negative portrayal of aspects of capitalism, and sympathy for the plight of workers, led to a backlash against the author for displaying communist views, especially in his hometown of Salinas. Steinbeck received so many threats that he purchased a handgun for his own safety. Claiming the book both was obscene and misrepresented conditions in the county, the Kern County Board of Supervisors banned the book from the county's publicly funded schools and libraries in August 1939. This ban lasted until January 1941."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055203.9825, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055151.5463, "finish": 1721055203.9825, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d31a7ad3888a40049d1ed62ccab01116", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "output": [["when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "Title: Of Mice and Men (opera)\n\nPassage: Of Mice and Men is an opera in three acts by the American composer Carlisle Floyd. The English libretto was written by Floyd and is based on the 1937 novella of the same name by John Steinbeck. The opera was composed in 1969.\nHistory\nOf Mice and Men was first performed on January 22, 1970, by the Seattle Opera who revived the original production (with some cast changes) for the 1976/1977 season. The opera has been performed frequently within the United States. The work had its New York debut at the New York City Opera in 1983. In 2003, Albany Records produced a recording of the opera. The opera was performed in the 2011 Opera Australia season, directed by Australian film director Bruce Beresford. Sarasota Opera presented it in 2013. Manitoba Opera and Austin Opera performed it in 2016, and Florida State University Opera performed it in 2019.\nRoles\nSynopsis\nAct 1\nScene 1"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-4940f4fd-d704-4d3f-9a82-9ddd3a662f42.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-4940f4fd-d704-4d3f-9a82-9ddd3a662f42.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 0cd3de32f836f027ca79bedb09845fab22b5c8a1..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-4940f4fd-d704-4d3f-9a82-9ddd3a662f42.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721055563.1051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055518.4638, "finish": 1721055563.1051, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f2c235a3c9d84a8db5468f462c79fe93", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055563.1051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055518.4638, "finish": 1721055563.1051, "ip": "", "conv_id": "60caa251a157457492e0aef0cc674b6a", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055603.2925, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055603.1199, "finish": 1721055603.2925, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4c1b59ddd0404a548d3b42b5bd1f1e01", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "output": [["I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055603.2925, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055603.1199, "finish": 1721055603.2925, "ip": "", "conv_id": "74bff97e2008424dbc9f3fe44c041736", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "output": [["I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055655.2248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055654.9766, "finish": 1721055655.2248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dee23f59d7e74a3cad64ec98b031988b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I read this work about instruction tuning code large language models - Can you help me find it?", "output": [["I read this work about instruction tuning code large language models - Can you help me find it?", "Title: Instruction Tuning for Large Language Models: A Survey\n\nPassage: This paper surveys research works in the quickly advancing field of instruction tuning (IT), a crucial technique to enhance the capabilities and controllability of large language models (LLMs). Instruction tuning refers to the process of further training LLMs on a dataset consisting of \\textsc{(instruction, output)} pairs in a supervised fashion, which bridges the gap between the next-word prediction objective of LLMs and the users' objective of having LLMs adhere to human instructions. In this work, we make a systematic review of the literature, including the general methodology of IT, the construction of IT datasets, the training of IT models, and applications to different modalities, domains and applications, along with an analysis on aspects that influence the outcome of IT (e.g., generation of instruction outputs, size of the instruction dataset, etc). We also review the potential pitfalls of IT along with criticism against it, along with efforts pointing out current deficiencies of existing strategies and suggest some avenues for fruitful research. Project page: github.com/xiaoya-li/Instruction-Tuning-Survey"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055655.2248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055654.9766, "finish": 1721055655.2248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "aec298bd6c774e599d35dcb8e4edca08", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "I read this work about instruction tuning code large language models - Can you help me find it?", "output": [["I read this work about instruction tuning code large language models - Can you help me find it?", "Title: Instruction Tuning for Large Language Models: A Survey\n\nPassage: This paper surveys research works in the quickly advancing field of instruction tuning (IT), a crucial technique to enhance the capabilities and controllability of large language models (LLMs). Instruction tuning refers to the process of further training LLMs on a dataset consisting of \\textsc{(instruction, output)} pairs in a supervised fashion, which bridges the gap between the next-word prediction objective of LLMs and the users' objective of having LLMs adhere to human instructions. In this work, we make a systematic review of the literature, including the general methodology of IT, the construction of IT datasets, the training of IT models, and applications to different modalities, domains and applications, along with an analysis on aspects that influence the outcome of IT (e.g., generation of instruction outputs, size of the instruction dataset, etc). We also review the potential pitfalls of IT along with criticism against it, along with efforts pointing out current deficiencies of existing strategies and suggest some avenues for fruitful research. Project page: github.com/xiaoya-li/Instruction-Tuning-Survey"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055690.5338, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055690.3652, "finish": 1721055690.5338, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9cb424115304447888d3374e91a44e9a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055690.5338, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055690.3652, "finish": 1721055690.5338, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8c7070bee2e4c5097fbfcd395f66a68", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: CommitBERT: Commit Message Generation Using Pre-Trained Programming Language Model\n\nPassage: Commit message is a document that summarizes source code changes in natural language. A good commit message clearly shows the source code changes, so this enhances collaboration between developers. Therefore, our work is to develop a model that automatically writes the commit message. To this end, we release 345K datasets consisting of code modification and commit messages in six programming languages (Python, PHP, Go, Java, JavaScript, and Ruby). Similar to the neural machine translation (NMT) model, using our dataset, we feed the code modification to the encoder input and the commit message to the decoder input and measure the result of the generated commit message with BLEU-4. Also, we propose the following two training methods to improve the result of generating the commit message: (1) A method of preprocessing the input to feed the code modification to the encoder input. (2) A method that uses an initial weight suitable for the code domain to reduce the gap in contextual representation between programming language (PL) and natural language (NL). Training code, dataset, and pre-trained weights are available at https://github.com/graykode/commit-autosuggestions"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055759.2635, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055719.4861, "finish": 1721055759.2635, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae21cfe7eb01488793daa88df4c8c16c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055759.2635, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055719.4861, "finish": 1721055759.2635, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d84018fdcf1f485baa8b676fa411357a", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me a paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055792.221, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055792.0344, "finish": 1721055792.221, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8112e15aef6445db96b7ffd53557cb2", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055792.221, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055792.0344, "finish": 1721055792.221, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f9666c80624b49a69e76223ebc7453c3", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055818.8239, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055818.5968, "finish": 1721055818.8239, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9802ec78e9d74bb383c56800ea4bc6f3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a single task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is unclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity (STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking. This makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are constantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we introduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding tasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the benchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive benchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding method dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to converge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to provide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with open-source code and a public leaderboard at https://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721055818.8239, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721055818.5968, "finish": 1721055818.8239, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c5c69b2f7c6746d5833ea1cc6fa10c97", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a single task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is unclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity (STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking. This makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are constantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we introduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding tasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the benchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive benchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding method dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to converge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to provide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with open-source code and a public leaderboard at https://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-4ec2edc8-830b-4195-a4fe-45397b02217f.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-4ec2edc8-830b-4195-a4fe-45397b02217f.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 041c64578586181e1ae0cfa85c40afaec375e216..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-4ec2edc8-830b-4195-a4fe-45397b02217f.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720653122.0618, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720653080.5359, "finish": 1720653122.0618, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5265205a32f04232bdd89acd6cb918da", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when is the new season of chicago pd", "output": [["when is the new season of chicago pd", "Title: Dynamics of two-dimensional coherent structures in nonlocal nonlinear\n media\n\nPassage: We study stability and dynamics of the single cylindrically symmetric\nsolitary structures and dipolar solitonic molecules in spatially nonlocal\nmedia. The main properties of the solitons, vortex solitons, and dipolar\nsolitons are investigated analytically and numerically. The vortices and\nhigher-order solitons show the transverse symmetry-breaking azimuthal\ninstability below some critical power.\n We find the threshold of the vortex soliton stabilization using the linear\nstability analysis and direct numerical simulations. The higher-order solitons,\nwhich have a central peak and one or more surrounding rings, are also\ndemonstrated to be stabilized in nonlocal nonlinear media. Using direct\nnumerical simulations, we find a class of radially asymmetric, dipole-like\nsolitons and show that, at sufficiently high power, these structures are\nstable.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720653122.0618, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720653080.5359, "finish": 1720653122.0618, "ip": "", "conv_id": "07e2e77d8c5642f3b5e49aeb076d30f3", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "when is the new season of chicago pd", "output": [["when is the new season of chicago pd", "Title: Nilpotents Leave No Trace -- A Matrix Mystery for Pandemic Times\n\nPassage: Reopening a cold case, inspector Echelon, high-ranking in the Row Operations\nCenter, is searching for a lost linear map, known to be nilpotent. When a\npartially decomposed matrix is unearthed, he reconstructs its reduced form,\nfinding it singular. But were its roots nilpotent?\n"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-4ef51a42-1ec5-4e98-ab85-1da64f4800b2.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-4ef51a42-1ec5-4e98-ab85-1da64f4800b2.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index b623a2b1568218012a564d8394f867b1b8cb3785..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-4ef51a42-1ec5-4e98-ab85-1da64f4800b2.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720822656.5988, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822656.386, "finish": 1720822656.5988, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8d803eb83581428ea437df4b12771b53", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what episode does lori die on the walking dead", "output": [["what episode does lori die on the walking dead", "Title: The Walking Dead (comic book)\n\nPassage: With the premiere of the fifth season in 2014, Scott M. Gimple became the show's third showrunner. Gimple has said that he would stay closer in line to the comic book series events \"as much as possible\", but ultimately remix stories with certain characters, referencing original characters introduced to the show and deceased characters alive in the comic book as a reason for this. Robert Kirkman commented that he believed the series would be much closer to the comic series under Gimple. With the series' ninth season, which started broadcast in October 2018, Angela Kang was promoted to showrunner with Gimple becoming in charge of all Walking Dead properties at AMC. These included multiple spin-off series, continuing even after the main series concluded. These include Fear the Walking Dead, The Walking Dead: World Beyond, Tales of the Walking Dead, The Walking Dead: Dead City, The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon, and The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live. These spin-offs either introduce new characters and settings to the universe or continue plot threads from the original television series, with little connection to the comics.\nAnimation comic\nAMC released an animated short of the first part of Issue No. 1 of the comic with animation by Juice Films, voice acting by Phil LaMarr and art by Tony Moore.\nTelltale's The Walking Dead\nTelltale Games, an adventure game developer, secured the rights with Kirkman to make an episodic video game inspired by The Walking Dead comic book series in 2011. While video games have frequently dealt with the zombie genre, Kirkman said of Telltale's game that \"it [focuses] more on characterization and emotion than action\". Telltale opted to take a new approach to the typical adventure game, making it so that players would have to make decisions through conversation trees or through quick time events, that would propagate through the episode and as determinants into future ones, as to give more weight to the character-driven nature of their game.\nTelltale's game, The Walking Dead, first released in 2012, and followed the characters of Lee Everett, a former teacher convicted of murder, and Clementine, a pre-teen girl left alone at the start of the zombie apocalypse; it contained tie-ins with the comic by brief appearances of Glenn Rhee and Hershel Greene, narratively prior to their first appearances in the comic series. The series was a critical success, with much of the praise for the characterization of Clementine and Lee, and is stated to have caused a resurgence in the waning adventure game market since 2000. Telltale went on to develop a full-fledged series, with three additional seasons, additional downloadable content for the first season, and a spin-off title based on Michonne. In all but this spin-off, choices made by players in earlier games continued to set determinants used in later games as the stories followed Clementine's continued struggles to survive as she grows up in the years that followed."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-53b6ff88-dfee-4f2e-9e63-7d54759841fb.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-53b6ff88-dfee-4f2e-9e63-7d54759841fb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 3038efac94d87e1a14017d9511bb82cb25787f64..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-53b6ff88-dfee-4f2e-9e63-7d54759841fb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720914222.2386, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720914202.1973, "finish": 1720914222.2386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3f18e6cb4d914115beae23122a06aca7", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where does the sciatic nerve run in the foot", "output": [["where does the sciatic nerve run in the foot", "Title: A Biological Coevolution Model with Correlated Individual-Based Dynamics\n\nPassage: We study the effects of interspecific correlations in a biological coevolution model in which organisms are represented by genomes of bitstrings. We present preliminary results for this model, indicating that these correlations do not significantly affect the statistical behavior of the system."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 66f48798918b19391e8886e8657b1a15c9602fd4..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-565f2073-3e79-4f2c-a373-eed12613bb56.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720893553.6858, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893524.1095, "finish": 1720893553.6858, "ip": "", "conv_id": "79993bd6829a49ffb00d20c0fe886bea", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893584.9394, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893584.6714, "finish": 1720893584.9394, "ip": "", "conv_id": "54b0ab11f27b4bfea268bca0bb7d6e87", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "output": [["where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "Title: UW Health University Hospital\n\nPassage: UW Health University Hospital (UW Health, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics or UWHC) is a 614-bed academic regional referral center with 127 outpatient clinics, located on the western edge of the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison's campus in Madison, Wisconsin. It is an American College of Surgeons designated Level I adult and pediatric trauma center, one of only two in Wisconsin.\nUW Health describes itself as \"the integrated health system of the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison.\" It is the primary teaching affiliate of the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health (whose main building, the Health Sciences Learning Center, is connected to UW Health University Hospital). It is also the primary teaching affiliate of the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison's School of Nursing and School of Pharmacy, and is a teaching affiliate of Edgewood College's Henry Predolin School of Nursing."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893615.573, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893615.3223, "finish": 1720893615.573, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7e0bda8e3c574cd8b5c48a626933e4da", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: Bubba Smith\n\nPassage: Charles Aaron \"Bubba\" Smith (February 28, 1945 \u2013 August 3, 2011) was an American professional football defensive end and actor. Smith played in the National Football League (NFL) for the Baltimore Colts, Oakland Raiders, and Houston Oilers.\nSmith played college football for Michigan State University, where he twice earned All-American honors on the Spartans football team. Smith had a major role in a 10\u201310 tie against Notre Dame in 1966 that was billed as \"The Game of the Century\". He is one of only six players to have his jersey number retired by the program. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1988.\nThe first overall pick of the 1967 NFL/AFL draft, Smith played nine years in the NFL for the Colts, Raiders, and Oilers from 1967 to 1976. He was the Colts' starting left defensive end for five seasons, playing in Super Bowls III and V. He was named to two Pro Bowls and was a first-team All-Pro in 1971. He had tremendous quickness despite being and , a combination which usually earned him a double-team.\nDuring his acting career, Smith specialized in comedic roles in film, television, and television advertising. For about a decade following his retirement from football, he appeared in various commercials for Miller Lite, alongside Chicago Bears linebacker Dick Butkus. His best-known role was as Moses Hightower in the first six Police Academy movies.\nSmith was posthumously diagnosed with chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a neurological condition generally related to head trauma. He is one of at least 345 NFL players to be diagnosed after death with this disease.\nEarly life"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893683.7424, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893658.6866, "finish": 1720893683.7424, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d32d223a81084cabb4625fb1ca6d68d1", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Leonardo da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo da Vinci", "Title: Leonardo da Vinci\n\nPassage: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, he has also become known for his notebooks, in which he made drawings and notes on a variety of subjects, including anatomy, astronomy, botany, cartography, painting, and palaeontology. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works comprise a contribution to later generations of artists matched only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.\nBorn out of wedlock to a successful notary and a lower-class woman in, or near, Vinci, he was educated in Florence by the Italian painter and sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio. He began his career in the city, but then spent much time in the service of Ludovico Sforza in Milan. Later, he worked in Florence and Milan again, as well as briefly in Rome, all while attracting a large following of imitators and students. Upon the invitation of Francis I, he spent his last three years in France, where he died in 1519. Since his death, there has not been a time where his achievements, diverse interests, personal life, and empirical thinking have failed to incite interest and admiration, making him a frequent namesake and subject in culture.\nLeonardo is identified as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western art and is often credited as the founder of the High Renaissance. Despite having many lost works and fewer than 25 attributed major works including numerous unfinished works he created some of the most influential paintings in the Western canon. His magnum opus, the Mona Lisa, is his best known work and is the world's most famous individual painting. The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time and his Vitruvian Man drawing is also regarded as a cultural icon. In 2017, Salvator Mundi, attributed in whole or part to Leonardo, was sold at auction for , setting a new record for the most expensive painting ever sold at public auction.\nRevered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualised flying machines, a type of armoured fighting vehicle, concentrated solar power, a ratio machine that could be used in an adding machine, and the double hull. Relatively few of his designs were constructed or were even feasible during his lifetime, as the modern scientific approaches to metallurgy and engineering were only in their infancy during the Renaissance. Some of his smaller inventions, however, entered the world of manufacturing unheralded, such as an automated bobbin winder and a machine for testing the tensile strength of wire. He made substantial discoveries in anatomy, civil engineering, hydrodynamics, geology, optics, and tribology, but he did not publish his findings and they had little to no direct influence on subsequent science.\nBiography\nEarly life (1452\u20131472)\nBirth and background"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893683.7424, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893658.6866, "finish": 1720893683.7424, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ff55aad99c514604976bf458d0b71328", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Leonardo da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo da Vinci", "Title: Leonardo da Vinci\n\nPassage: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, he has also become known for his notebooks, in which he made drawings and notes on a variety of subjects, including anatomy, astronomy, botany, cartography, painting, and palaeontology. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works comprise a contribution to later generations of artists matched only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.\nBorn out of wedlock to a successful notary and a lower-class woman in, or near, Vinci, he was educated in Florence by the Italian painter and sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio. He began his career in the city, but then spent much time in the service of Ludovico Sforza in Milan. Later, he worked in Florence and Milan again, as well as briefly in Rome, all while attracting a large following of imitators and students. Upon the invitation of Francis I, he spent his last three years in France, where he died in 1519. Since his death, there has not been a time where his achievements, diverse interests, personal life, and empirical thinking have failed to incite interest and admiration, making him a frequent namesake and subject in culture.\nLeonardo is identified as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western art and is often credited as the founder of the High Renaissance. Despite having many lost works and fewer than 25 attributed major works including numerous unfinished works he created some of the most influential paintings in the Western canon. His magnum opus, the Mona Lisa, is his best known work and is the world's most famous individual painting. The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time and his Vitruvian Man drawing is also regarded as a cultural icon. In 2017, Salvator Mundi, attributed in whole or part to Leonardo, was sold at auction for , setting a new record for the most expensive painting ever sold at public auction.\nRevered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualised flying machines, a type of armoured fighting vehicle, concentrated solar power, a ratio machine that could be used in an adding machine, and the double hull. Relatively few of his designs were constructed or were even feasible during his lifetime, as the modern scientific approaches to metallurgy and engineering were only in their infancy during the Renaissance. Some of his smaller inventions, however, entered the world of manufacturing unheralded, such as an automated bobbin winder and a machine for testing the tensile strength of wire. He made substantial discoveries in anatomy, civil engineering, hydrodynamics, geology, optics, and tribology, but he did not publish his findings and they had little to no direct influence on subsequent science.\nBiography\nEarly life (1452\u20131472)\nBirth and background"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893761.8213, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893761.5048, "finish": 1720893761.8213, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8f42d4910c784721a088dcaf15645c51", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: Love\n\nPassage: Love encompasses a range of strong and positive emotional and mental states, from the most sublime virtue or good habit, the deepest interpersonal affection, to the simplest pleasure. An example of this range of meanings is that the love of a mother differs from the love of a spouse, which differs from the love for food. Most commonly, love refers to a feeling of strong attraction and emotional attachment.\nLove is considered to be both positive and negative, with its virtue representing human kindness, compassion, and affection\u2014\"the unselfish, loyal, and benevolent concern for the good of another\"\u2014and its vice representing a human moral flaw akin to vanity, selfishness, amour-propre, and egotism. It may also describe compassionate and affectionate actions towards other humans, oneself, or animals. In its various forms, love acts as a major facilitator of interpersonal relationships and, owing to its central psychological importance, is one of the most common themes in the creative arts. Love has been postulated to be a function that keeps human beings together against menaces and to facilitate the continuation of the species."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893761.8213, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893761.5048, "finish": 1720893761.8213, "ip": "", "conv_id": "28cd2f2b162841e880dc70278a6df263", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: Love\n\nPassage: Love encompasses a range of strong and positive emotional and mental states, from the most sublime virtue or good habit, the deepest interpersonal affection, to the simplest pleasure. An example of this range of meanings is that the love of a mother differs from the love of a spouse, which differs from the love for food. Most commonly, love refers to a feeling of strong attraction and emotional attachment.\nLove is considered to be both positive and negative, with its virtue representing human kindness, compassion, and affection\u2014\"the unselfish, loyal, and benevolent concern for the good of another\"\u2014and its vice representing a human moral flaw akin to vanity, selfishness, amour-propre, and egotism. It may also describe compassionate and affectionate actions towards other humans, oneself, or animals. In its various forms, love acts as a major facilitator of interpersonal relationships and, owing to its central psychological importance, is one of the most common themes in the creative arts. Love has been postulated to be a function that keeps human beings together against menaces and to facilitate the continuation of the species."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893770.3633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893770.0676, "finish": 1720893770.3633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ec4122d5d4a4c0c8cdfcdc5611f19e8", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893770.3633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893770.0676, "finish": 1720893770.3633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "54de9adedc9a4f9a81c923753dc58e53", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893781.3604, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893781.1323, "finish": 1720893781.3604, "ip": "", "conv_id": "54f35abe9d914302bd8e96bf1a94a8be", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Coruscant", "output": [["Coruscant", "Title: Ecumenopolis\n\nPassage: Doxiadis also created a scenario based on the traditions and trends of urban development of his time, predicting at first a European eperopolis (\"continent city\") which would be based on the area between London, Paris, Rhine-Ruhr and Amsterdam. In 2008, Time magazine coined Nylonkong to link New York City, London, and Hong Kong as the eperopolis of the Americas, Euro-Africa and Asia-Pacific respectively.\nIn popular culture\nBefore the term had been created, the concept had been previously discussed. The American religious leader Thomas Lake Harris (1823\u20131906) mentioned city-planets in his verses, and science fiction author Isaac Asimov used the city-planet Trantor as the setting of some of his Foundation novels.\nIn science fiction, the ecumenopolis has become a frequent topic and popularized in 1999 by the fictional city planet Coruscant in the Star Wars franchise, which is the capital of the Galactic Republic (later Empire) and home to the Jedi Order. In addition to Coruscant, Star Wars: The Force Awakens features the planet Hosnian Prime, the capital world of the New Republic. Star Wars Legends also features Nar Shaddaa, a moon ecumenopolis known for being almost entirely ruled by crime lords, and Taris, a former ecumenopolis wiped out in the course of a devastating civil war, eventually becoming a vast swampland of ruins.\nIn Dune, the Harkonnens' home world of Giedi Prime is a heavily polluted ecumenopolis infamous for its gladiator arenas.\nThe concept is depicted in the video game Stellaris, where players are given the option of transforming planets into ecumenopolises, which provides a great deal of housing and space for industrial production through the construction of arcologies, at the cost of making the planet's natural resources inaccessible.\nThe video game Star Citizen currently features an ecumenopolis called ArcCorp which is owned by a fictional in-game company of the same name. As of March 2024, its current implementation in the game is a de facto ecumenopolis. However, as development continues, it is expected to feature oceans and small parts of undeveloped land.\nA central setting in the tabletop wargame Warhammer 40,000 is a portrayal of Earth in the far future, where it is known as \"Holy Terra\" and is described as having been transformed into a vast, Gothic-style ecumenopolis sometime during the 30th millennium AD after its establishment as the \"Throneworld\", or capital, of an interstellar superpower known as the Imperium of Man.\nIn Magic: the Gathering, the plane of Ravnica is an ecumenopolis.\nDC Comics continuity features Darkseid's extra-dimensional home planet of Apokolips, often depicted as a hellish world covered entirely in industrial sprawl to feed Darkseid's brutal empire.\nThe manga and film of Blame! by Tsutomu Nihei is set in a far future in which Earth has become the ruins of planet-covering city, which is suggested to be so large that it has consumed most of the Solar System as well, it may also be along the lines of a hollow-world or dyson shell. Some of his other works also take place in this same setting."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893781.3604, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893781.1323, "finish": 1720893781.3604, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5b63918d98ee453995b26e56fc57ec22", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Coruscant", "output": [["Coruscant", "Title: Ecumenopolis\n\nPassage: Doxiadis also created a scenario based on the traditions and trends of urban development of his time, predicting at first a European eperopolis (\"continent city\") which would be based on the area between London, Paris, Rhine-Ruhr and Amsterdam. In 2008, Time magazine coined Nylonkong to link New York City, London, and Hong Kong as the eperopolis of the Americas, Euro-Africa and Asia-Pacific respectively.\nIn popular culture\nBefore the term had been created, the concept had been previously discussed. The American religious leader Thomas Lake Harris (1823\u20131906) mentioned city-planets in his verses, and science fiction author Isaac Asimov used the city-planet Trantor as the setting of some of his Foundation novels.\nIn science fiction, the ecumenopolis has become a frequent topic and popularized in 1999 by the fictional city planet Coruscant in the Star Wars franchise, which is the capital of the Galactic Republic (later Empire) and home to the Jedi Order. In addition to Coruscant, Star Wars: The Force Awakens features the planet Hosnian Prime, the capital world of the New Republic. Star Wars Legends also features Nar Shaddaa, a moon ecumenopolis known for being almost entirely ruled by crime lords, and Taris, a former ecumenopolis wiped out in the course of a devastating civil war, eventually becoming a vast swampland of ruins.\nIn Dune, the Harkonnens' home world of Giedi Prime is a heavily polluted ecumenopolis infamous for its gladiator arenas.\nThe concept is depicted in the video game Stellaris, where players are given the option of transforming planets into ecumenopolises, which provides a great deal of housing and space for industrial production through the construction of arcologies, at the cost of making the planet's natural resources inaccessible.\nThe video game Star Citizen currently features an ecumenopolis called ArcCorp which is owned by a fictional in-game company of the same name. As of March 2024, its current implementation in the game is a de facto ecumenopolis. However, as development continues, it is expected to feature oceans and small parts of undeveloped land.\nA central setting in the tabletop wargame Warhammer 40,000 is a portrayal of Earth in the far future, where it is known as \"Holy Terra\" and is described as having been transformed into a vast, Gothic-style ecumenopolis sometime during the 30th millennium AD after its establishment as the \"Throneworld\", or capital, of an interstellar superpower known as the Imperium of Man.\nIn Magic: the Gathering, the plane of Ravnica is an ecumenopolis.\nDC Comics continuity features Darkseid's extra-dimensional home planet of Apokolips, often depicted as a hellish world covered entirely in industrial sprawl to feed Darkseid's brutal empire.\nThe manga and film of Blame! by Tsutomu Nihei is set in a far future in which Earth has become the ruins of planet-covering city, which is suggested to be so large that it has consumed most of the Solar System as well, it may also be along the lines of a hollow-world or dyson shell. Some of his other works also take place in this same setting."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893816.2164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893815.9861, "finish": 1720893816.2164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "81b52575e32b497dbdbad5908897152c", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Which book famously introduced Psychohistory?", "output": [["Which book famously introduced Psychohistory?", "Title: Isaac Asimov\n\nPassage: Coined terms\nAsimov coined the term \"robotics\" in his 1941 story \"Liar!\", though he later remarked that he believed then that he was merely using an existing word, as he stated in Gold (\"The Robot Chronicles\"). While acknowledging the Oxford Dictionary reference, he incorrectly states that the word was first printed about one third of the way down the first column of page 100 in the March 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction \u2013 the printing of his short story \"Runaround\".\nIn the same story, Asimov also coined the term \"positronic\" (the counterpart to \"electronic\" for positrons).\nAsimov coined the term \"psychohistory\" in his Foundation stories to name a fictional branch of science which combines history, sociology, and mathematical statistics to make general predictions about the future behavior of very large groups of people, such as the Galactic Empire. Asimov said later that he should have called it psychosociology. It was first introduced in the five short stories (1942\u20131944) which would later be collected as the 1951 fix-up novel Foundation. Somewhat later, the term \"psychohistory\" was applied by others to research of the effects of psychology on history.\nOther writings\nIn addition to his interest in science, Asimov was interested in history. Starting in the 1960s, he wrote 14 popular history books, including The Greeks: A Great Adventure (1965), The Roman Republic (1966), The Roman Empire (1967), The Egyptians (1967) The Near East: 10,000 Years of History (1968), and Asimov's Chronology of the World (1991).\nHe published Asimov's Guide to the Bible in two volumes\u2014covering the Old Testament in 1967 and the New Testament in 1969\u2014and then combined them into one 1,300-page volume in 1981. Complete with maps and tables, the guide goes through the books of the Bible in order, explaining the history of each one and the political influences that affected it, as well as biographical information about the important characters. His interest in literature manifested itself in several annotations of literary works, including Asimov's Guide to Shakespeare (1970), Asimov's Annotated Don Juan (1972), Asimov's Annotated Paradise Lost (1974), and The Annotated Gulliver's Travels (1980).\nAsimov was also a noted mystery author and a frequent contributor to Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. He began by writing science fiction mysteries such as his Wendell Urth stories, but soon moved on to writing \"pure\" mysteries. He published two full-length mystery novels, and wrote 66 stories about the Black Widowers, a group of men who met monthly for dinner, conversation, and a puzzle. He got the idea for the Widowers from his own association in a stag group called the Trap Door Spiders, and all of the main characters (with the exception of the waiter, Henry, who he admitted resembled Wodehouse's Jeeves) were modeled after his closest friends. A parody of the Black Widowers, \"An Evening with the White Divorc\u00e9s,\" was written by author, critic, and librarian Jon L. Breen. Asimov joked, \"all I can do ... is to wait until I catch him in a dark alley, someday.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893816.2164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893815.9861, "finish": 1720893816.2164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df0efb12dba3486e99018b2cb02f45c0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which book famously introduced Psychohistory?", "output": [["Which book famously introduced Psychohistory?", "Title: Isaac Asimov\n\nPassage: Coined terms\nAsimov coined the term \"robotics\" in his 1941 story \"Liar!\", though he later remarked that he believed then that he was merely using an existing word, as he stated in Gold (\"The Robot Chronicles\"). While acknowledging the Oxford Dictionary reference, he incorrectly states that the word was first printed about one third of the way down the first column of page 100 in the March 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction \u2013 the printing of his short story \"Runaround\".\nIn the same story, Asimov also coined the term \"positronic\" (the counterpart to \"electronic\" for positrons).\nAsimov coined the term \"psychohistory\" in his Foundation stories to name a fictional branch of science which combines history, sociology, and mathematical statistics to make general predictions about the future behavior of very large groups of people, such as the Galactic Empire. Asimov said later that he should have called it psychosociology. It was first introduced in the five short stories (1942\u20131944) which would later be collected as the 1951 fix-up novel Foundation. Somewhat later, the term \"psychohistory\" was applied by others to research of the effects of psychology on history.\nOther writings\nIn addition to his interest in science, Asimov was interested in history. Starting in the 1960s, he wrote 14 popular history books, including The Greeks: A Great Adventure (1965), The Roman Republic (1966), The Roman Empire (1967), The Egyptians (1967) The Near East: 10,000 Years of History (1968), and Asimov's Chronology of the World (1991).\nHe published Asimov's Guide to the Bible in two volumes\u2014covering the Old Testament in 1967 and the New Testament in 1969\u2014and then combined them into one 1,300-page volume in 1981. Complete with maps and tables, the guide goes through the books of the Bible in order, explaining the history of each one and the political influences that affected it, as well as biographical information about the important characters. His interest in literature manifested itself in several annotations of literary works, including Asimov's Guide to Shakespeare (1970), Asimov's Annotated Don Juan (1972), Asimov's Annotated Paradise Lost (1974), and The Annotated Gulliver's Travels (1980).\nAsimov was also a noted mystery author and a frequent contributor to Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. He began by writing science fiction mysteries such as his Wendell Urth stories, but soon moved on to writing \"pure\" mysteries. He published two full-length mystery novels, and wrote 66 stories about the Black Widowers, a group of men who met monthly for dinner, conversation, and a puzzle. He got the idea for the Widowers from his own association in a stag group called the Trap Door Spiders, and all of the main characters (with the exception of the waiter, Henry, who he admitted resembled Wodehouse's Jeeves) were modeled after his closest friends. A parody of the Black Widowers, \"An Evening with the White Divorc\u00e9s,\" was written by author, critic, and librarian Jon L. Breen. Asimov joked, \"all I can do ... is to wait until I catch him in a dark alley, someday.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893923.9909, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893871.1462, "finish": 1720893923.9909, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e98e6cce0d5e47e78c66775d2c7b0ba5", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which book talks about Arthur Dent?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893923.9909, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893871.1462, "finish": 1720893923.9909, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0d82a223b5c043d1b9607a85b77963f3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which book talks about Arthur Dent?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893994.1354, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893993.9075, "finish": 1720893994.1354, "ip": "", "conv_id": "843d91a46d574b3db70bd61c87359610", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching for a planet that may harbor intelligent life.", "output": [["I am searching for a planet that may harbor intelligent life.", "Title: Fermi paradox\n\nPassage: The second part of the paradox, that humans see no evidence of extraterrestrial life, is also an active field of scientific research. This includes both efforts to find any indication of life, and efforts specifically directed to finding intelligent life. These searches have been made since 1960, and several are ongoing.\nAlthough astronomers do not usually search for extraterrestrials, they have observed phenomena that they could not immediately explain without positing an intelligent civilization as the source. For example, pulsars, when first discovered in 1967, were called little green men (LGM) because of the precise repetition of their pulses. In all cases, explanations with no need for intelligent life have been found for such observations, but the possibility of discovery remains. Proposed examples include asteroid mining that would change the appearance of debris disks around stars, or spectral lines from nuclear waste disposal in stars.\nExplanations based on technosignatures, such as radio communications, have been presented.\nElectromagnetic emissions\nRadio technology and the ability to construct a radio telescope are presumed to be a natural advance for technological species, theoretically creating effects that might be detected over interstellar distances. The careful searching for non-natural radio emissions from space may lead to the detection of alien civilizations. Sensitive alien observers of the Solar System, for example, would note unusually intense radio waves for a G2 star due to Earth's television and telecommunication broadcasts. In the absence of an apparent natural cause, alien observers might infer the existence of a terrestrial civilization. Such signals could be either \"accidental\" by-products of a civilization, or deliberate attempts to communicate, such as the Arecibo message. It is unclear whether \"leakage\", as opposed to a deliberate beacon, could be detected by an extraterrestrial civilization. The most sensitive radio telescopes on Earth, , would not be able to detect non-directional radio signals (such as broadband) even at a fraction of a light-year away, but other civilizations could hypothetically have much better equipment.\nA number of astronomers and observatories have attempted and are attempting to detect such evidence, mostly through SETI organizations such as the SETI Institute and Breakthrough Listen. Several decades of SETI analysis have not revealed any unusually bright or meaningfully repetitive radio emissions.\nDirect planetary observation\nExoplanet detection and classification is a very active sub-discipline in astronomy; the first candidate terrestrial planet discovered within a star's habitable zone was found in 2007. New refinements in exoplanet detection methods, and use of existing methods from space (such as the Kepler and TESS missions) are starting to detect and characterize Earth-size planets, to determine whether they are within the habitable zones of their stars. Such observational refinements may allow for a better estimation of how common these potentially habitable worlds are.\nConjectures about interstellar probes"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720893994.1354, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720893993.9075, "finish": 1720893994.1354, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f0e55b830783485596369c165f816297", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for a planet that may harbor intelligent life.", "output": [["I am searching for a planet that may harbor intelligent life.", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: Species, including humans, known to possess animal cognition require large amounts of energy, and have adapted to specific conditions, including an abundance of atmospheric oxygen and the availability of large quantities of chemical energy synthesized from radiant energy. If humans are to colonize other planets, true Earth analogs in the HZ are most likely to provide the closest natural habitat; this concept was the basis of Stephen H. Dole's 1964 study. With suitable temperature, gravity, atmospheric pressure and the presence of water, the necessity of spacesuits or space habitat analogs on the surface may be eliminated, and complex Earth life can thrive.\nPlanets in the HZ remain of paramount interest to researchers looking for intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. The Drake equation, sometimes used to estimate the number of intelligent civilizations in our galaxy, contains the factor or parameter , which is the average number of planetary-mass objects orbiting within the HZ of each star. A low value lends support to the Rare Earth hypothesis, which posits that intelligent life is a rarity in the Universe, whereas a high value provides evidence for the Copernican mediocrity principle, the view that habitability\u2014and therefore life\u2014is common throughout the Universe. A 1971 NASA report by Drake and Bernard Oliver proposed the \"water hole\", based on the spectral absorption lines of the hydrogen and hydroxyl components of water, as a good, obvious band for communication with extraterrestrial intelligence that has since been widely adopted by astronomers involved in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. According to Jill Tarter, Margaret Turnbull and many others, HZ candidates are the priority targets to narrow waterhole searches and the Allen Telescope Array now extends Project Phoenix to such candidates.\nBecause the HZ is considered the most likely habitat for intelligent life, METI efforts have also been focused on systems likely to have planets there. The 2001 Teen Age Message and 2003 Cosmic Call 2, for example, were sent to the 47 Ursae Majoris system, known to contain three Jupiter-mass planets and possibly with a terrestrial planet in the HZ. The Teen Age Message was also directed to the 55 Cancri system, which has a gas giant in its HZ. A Message from Earth in 2008, and Hello From Earth in 2009, were directed to the Gliese 581 system, containing three planets in the HZ\u2014Gliese 581 c, d, and the unconfirmed g."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720894012.7877, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720894012.5057, "finish": 1720894012.7877, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0e745818db014f9ba475b0e1d5e577cd", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What do you know about the TRAPPIST system and its planets?", "output": [["What do you know about the TRAPPIST system and its planets?", "Title: Orbital resonance\n\nPassage: TOI-178 has 6 confirmed planets, of which the outer 5 planets form a similar resonant chain in a rotating frame of reference, which can be expressed as 2:4:6:9:12 in period ratios, or as 18:9:6:4:3 in orbit ratios. In addition, the innermost planet b with period of 1.91d orbits close to where it would also be part of the same Laplace resonance chain, as a 3:5 resonance with the planet c would be fulfilled at period of ~1.95d, implying that it might have evolved there but pulled out of resonance, possibly by tidal forces.\nTRAPPIST-1's seven approximately Earth-sized planets are in a chain of near resonances (the longest such chain known), having an orbit ratio of approximately 24, 15, 9, 6, 4, 3 and 2, or nearest-neighbor period ratios (proceeding outward) of about 8/5, 5/3, 3/2, 3/2, 4/3 and 3/2 (1.603, 1.672, 1.506, 1.509, 1.342 and 1.519). They are also configured such that each triple of adjacent planets is in a Laplace resonance (i.e., b, c and d in one such Laplace configuration; c, d and e in another, etc.). The resonant configuration is expected to be stable on a time scale of billions of years, assuming it arose during planetary migration. A musical interpretation of the resonance has been provided.\nKepler-29 has a pair of planets in a 7:9 resonance (ratio of 1/1.28587).\nKepler-36 has a pair of planets close to a 6:7 resonance.\nKepler-37 d, c and b are within one percent of a resonance with an 8:15:24 orbit ratio and a 15:8:5 ratio of periods (39.792187, 21.301886 and 13.367308 days).\nOf Kepler-90's eight known planets, the period ratios b:c, c:i and i:d are close to 4:5, 3:5 and 1:4, respectively (4:4.977, 3:4.97 and 1:4.13) and d, e, f, g and h are close to a 2:3:4:7:11 period ratio (2: 3.078: 4.182: 7.051: 11.102; also 7: 11.021). f, g and h are also close to a 3:5:8 period ratio (3: 5.058: 7.964). Relevant to systems like this and that of Kepler-36, calculations suggest that the presence of an outer gas giant planet facilitates the formation of closely packed resonances among inner super-Earths.\nHD 41248 has a pair of super-Earths within 0.3% of a 5:7 resonance (ratio of 1/1.39718)."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720894012.7877, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720894012.5057, "finish": 1720894012.7877, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2721cfd1a1ff4e8e85c88b6a71506631", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What do you know about the TRAPPIST system and its planets?", "output": [["What do you know about the TRAPPIST system and its planets?", "Title: Orbital resonance\n\nPassage: TOI-178 has 6 confirmed planets, of which the outer 5 planets form a similar resonant chain in a rotating frame of reference, which can be expressed as 2:4:6:9:12 in period ratios, or as 18:9:6:4:3 in orbit ratios. In addition, the innermost planet b with period of 1.91d orbits close to where it would also be part of the same Laplace resonance chain, as a 3:5 resonance with the planet c would be fulfilled at period of ~1.95d, implying that it might have evolved there but pulled out of resonance, possibly by tidal forces.\nTRAPPIST-1's seven approximately Earth-sized planets are in a chain of near resonances (the longest such chain known), having an orbit ratio of approximately 24, 15, 9, 6, 4, 3 and 2, or nearest-neighbor period ratios (proceeding outward) of about 8/5, 5/3, 3/2, 3/2, 4/3 and 3/2 (1.603, 1.672, 1.506, 1.509, 1.342 and 1.519). They are also configured such that each triple of adjacent planets is in a Laplace resonance (i.e., b, c and d in one such Laplace configuration; c, d and e in another, etc.). The resonant configuration is expected to be stable on a time scale of billions of years, assuming it arose during planetary migration. A musical interpretation of the resonance has been provided.\nKepler-29 has a pair of planets in a 7:9 resonance (ratio of 1/1.28587).\nKepler-36 has a pair of planets close to a 6:7 resonance.\nKepler-37 d, c and b are within one percent of a resonance with an 8:15:24 orbit ratio and a 15:8:5 ratio of periods (39.792187, 21.301886 and 13.367308 days).\nOf Kepler-90's eight known planets, the period ratios b:c, c:i and i:d are close to 4:5, 3:5 and 1:4, respectively (4:4.977, 3:4.97 and 1:4.13) and d, e, f, g and h are close to a 2:3:4:7:11 period ratio (2: 3.078: 4.182: 7.051: 11.102; also 7: 11.021). f, g and h are also close to a 3:5:8 period ratio (3: 5.058: 7.964). Relevant to systems like this and that of Kepler-36, calculations suggest that the presence of an outer gas giant planet facilitates the formation of closely packed resonances among inner super-Earths.\nHD 41248 has a pair of super-Earths within 0.3% of a 5:7 resonance (ratio of 1/1.39718)."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 16729d14191ef2cf68fb16356897a1a59f7994b3..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-5e12bb1f-49db-4ff9-a5ea-202ebe4d4938.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720599606.6742, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599570.4421, "finish": 1720599606.6742, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ce8bc3de56bc406394ab1d5e898f194b", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "how many wars held between india and pakistan", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599606.6742, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599570.4421, "finish": 1720599606.6742, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fa68c02aefec42189c8d00d093676c61", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "how many wars held between india and pakistan", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599833.7077, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599788.9844, "finish": 1720599833.7077, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a16ca5f96328464aa92e0b9078c5f709", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "when are the next commonwealth games going to be held", "output": [["when are the next commonwealth games going to be held", "Title: The Oxford Olympics Study 2024: Are Cost and Cost Overrun at the Games\n Coming Down?\n\nPassage: The present paper is an update of the \"Oxford Olympics Study 2016\" (Flyvbjerg\net al. 2016). We document that the Games remain costly and continue to have\nlarge cost overruns, to a degree that threatens their viability. The IOC is\naware of the problem and has initiated reform. We assess the reforms and find:\n(a) Olympic costs are statistically significantly increasing; prior analysis\ndid not show this trend; it is a step in the wrong direction. (b) Cost overruns\nwere decreasing until 2008, but have increased since then; again a step in the\nwrong direction. (c) At present, the cost of Paris 2024 is USD 8.7 billion\n(2022 level) and cost overruns is 115% in real terms; this is not the cheap\nGames that were promised. (d) Cost overruns are the norm for the Games, past,\npresent, and future; they are the only project type that never delivered on\nbudget. We assess a new IOC policy of reducing cost by reusing existing venues\ninstead of building new ones. We find that reuse did not have the desired\neffect for Tokyo 2020 and also look ineffective for Paris 2024. Finally, we\nrecommend that the Games look to other types of megaprojects for better data,\nbetter forecasting, and how to generate the positive learning curves that are\nnecessary for bringing costs and overrun down. Only if this happens are Los\nAngeles 2028 and Brisbane 2032 likely to live up to the IOC's intentions of a\nmore affordable Games that more cities will want to host.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599833.7077, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599788.9844, "finish": 1720599833.7077, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df325130f32a4dc7bc328a57bd5c4716", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when are the next commonwealth games going to be held", "output": [["when are the next commonwealth games going to be held", "Title: Implications of the XENON1T Excess on the Dark Matter Interpretation\n\nPassage: The dark matter interpretation for a recent observation of excessive electron\nrecoil events at the XENON1T detector seems challenging because its velocity is\nnot large enough to give rise to recoiling electrons of $\\mathcal{O}({\\rm\nkeV})$. Fast-moving or boosted dark matter scenarios are receiving attention as\na remedy for this issue, rendering the dark matter interpretation a possibility\nto explain the anomaly. We investigate various scenarios where such dark matter\nof spin 0 and 1/2 interacts with electrons via an exchange of vector,\npseudo-scalar, or scalar mediators. We find parameter values not only to\nreproduce the excess but to be consistent with existing bounds. Our study\nsuggests that the scales of mass and coupling parameters preferred by the\nexcess can be mostly affected by the type of mediator, and that significantly\nboosted dark matter can explain the excess depending on the mediator type and\nits mass choice. The method proposed in this work is general, and hence readily\napplicable to the interpretation of observed data in the dark matter direct\ndetection experiment.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720638396.8085, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720638376.2055, "finish": 1720638396.8085, "ip": "", "conv_id": "15ce31c814234bda9d06eb87354e5068", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: MDLP\n\nPassage: MDLP is an acronym standing for:\nMiniDisc Long-Play, a method for doubling or quadrupling the amount of audio that a MiniDisc can hold, using ATRAC3 compression\nMesa Distance Learning Program, a distance learning program based in Mesa, Arizona.\nMinimum description length principle"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720638430.0441, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720638414.006, "finish": 1720638430.0441, "ip": "", "conv_id": "925f30307f904da5bcb305f74de1ac95", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720638518.6214, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720638518.3169, "finish": 1720638518.6214, "ip": "", "conv_id": "472bd3be2f2a4929bea65b6bc088abc4", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who was the aztec ruler when the spanish arrived", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720638518.6214, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720638518.3169, "finish": 1720638518.6214, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e43d32f5619d41feacbc77864a0b7b1d", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who was the aztec ruler when the spanish arrived", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720640847.8129, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720640847.5782, "finish": 1720640847.8129, "ip": "", "conv_id": "05f4dba79465460f9c29ccf6f21f33ab", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-61d55ed0-bc0c-450a-9d2b-a05081e6af7a.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-61d55ed0-bc0c-450a-9d2b-a05081e6af7a.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index ff79f6575b36c7ac0a16efa7c6b15fb496e536de..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-61d55ed0-bc0c-450a-9d2b-a05081e6af7a.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720588691.1292, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588663.7944, "finish": 1720588691.1292, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0cd99b0dd0ab4e2f902c6b7d31858681", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588733.1911, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588732.9306, "finish": 1720588733.1911, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d09ad2d5c99f49feb322cc17afc4e70e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "output": [["I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "Title: Diogo Rodrigues\n\nPassage: Rodrigues Island"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588741.8355, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588741.6484, "finish": 1720588741.8355, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fc6e72b77ce84467af0bacfe5d051069", "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: "]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 899da6492b27766deadce86c041109bb3ac3dddf..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,31 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720597360.4139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720597322.5421, "finish": 1720597360.4139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e255916866d747e0bee95d745bf8c18f", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "when did the animal rights movement began in the us", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720597360.4139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720597322.5421, "finish": 1720597360.4139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "543e4606da07436dac380e3346a35146", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "when did the animal rights movement began in the us", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720597877.1708, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720597839.7094, "finish": 1720597877.1708, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a8e74614503a414faf15eb445b886091", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Search query\n\nPassage: Search query may refer to:\nDatabase query\nWeb search query"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598137.1451, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598136.9366, "finish": 1720598137.1451, "ip": "", "conv_id": "22dc4ed2b698459b9375a60dba177ccb", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who is allowed to be apart of the european union", "output": [["who is allowed to be apart of the european union", "Title: List of the names of bodies of the European Union in its official languages\n\nPassage: This is a list of the names of the bodies of the European Union in its official languages."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598147.2614, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598147.1001, "finish": 1720598147.2614, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dcbe19822faa47b0aba27b02f84d1f05", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who started the american red cross and why", "output": [["who started the american red cross and why", "Title: Japanese Red Cross Society\n\nPassage: The is the Japanese affiliate of the International Red Cross."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598180.8716, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598165.1861, "finish": 1720598180.8716, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fa0e5d2cac86440eab48c92ff9be8937", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who started the american red cross and why", "output": [["who started the american red cross and why", "Title: British Red Cross\n\nPassage: The British Red Cross Society () is the United Kingdom body of the worldwide neutral and impartial humanitarian network the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement. The society was formed in 1870, and is a registered charity with more than 17,200 volunteers and 3,400 staff. At the heart of their work is providing help to people in crisis, both in the UK and overseas. The Red Cross is committed to helping people without discrimination, regardless of their ethnic origin, nationality, political beliefs or religion. Queen Elizabeth II was the patron of the society until her death in 2022, and was replaced by her successor King Charles III, who previously served as president between 2003 and 2024.\nIn the year ending December 2022, the charity's income was \u00a3439 million, which included \u00a337M from government contracts and \u00a344M from government grants. It spent \u00a3367M (82%) of its income delivering its charitable activities.\nGuiding ethos\nThe mission of the British Red Cross is to mobilise the power of humanity so that individuals and communities can prepare for, deal with and recover from a crisis, summed up by the strapline 'refusing to ignore people in crisis'. In fulfilling this mission, all volunteers and staff must abide by the seven fundamental principles of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, which are:\nThe British Red Cross also has four values, which guide the way they work. These are:\nHistory\nFormation"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598217.0667, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598202.5584, "finish": 1720598217.0667, "ip": "", "conv_id": "526dc5a7b68c4fad953d8343a968a135", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who plays the mayor in once upon a time", "output": [["who plays the mayor in once upon a time", "Title: Fully Bayesian inference for spatiotemporal data with the\n multi-resolution approximation\n\nPassage: Large spatiotemporal datasets are a challenge for conventional Bayesian\nmodels because of the cubic computational complexity of the algorithms for\nobtaining the Cholesky decomposition of the covariance matrix in the\nmultivariate normal density. Moreover, standard numerical algorithms for\nposterior estimation, such as Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC), are intractable\nin this context, as they require thousands, if not millions, of costly\nlikelihood evaluations. To overcome those limitations, we propose IS-MRA\n(Importance sampling - Multi-Resolution Approximation), which takes advantage\nof the sparse inverse covariance structure produced by the Multi-Resolution\nApproximation (MRA) approach. IS-MRA is fully Bayesian and facilitates the\napproximation of the hyperparameter marginal posterior distributions. We apply\nIS-MRA to large MODIS Level 3 Land Surface Temperature (LST) datasets, sampled\nbetween May 18 and May 31, 2012 in the western part of the state of\nMaharashtra, India. We find that IS-MRA can produce realistic prediction\nsurfaces over regions where concentrated missingness, caused by sizable cloud\ncover, is observed. Through a validation analysis and simulation study, we also\nfind that predictions tend to be very accurate.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598244.9564, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598244.8498, "finish": 1720598244.9564, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7fa4744674114e52bc5ff5b3dab5f2d1", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "Title: On virtual phonons, photons and electrons\n\nPassage: A macroscopic realization of the strange virtual particles is presented. The\nclassical Helmholtz and the quantum mechanical Schr\\\"odinger equations are\nanalogous differential equations. Their imaginary solutions are called\nevanescent modes in the case of elastic and electromagnetic fields. In the case\nof non-relativistic quantum mechanical fields they are called tunneling\nsolutions. The imaginary solutions of this differential equation point to\nstrange consequences: They are non local, they are not observable, and they\ndescribed as virtual particles. During the last two decades QED calculations of\nthe imaginary solutions have been experimentally confirmed for phonons,\nphotons, and for electrons. The experimental proofs of the predictions of the\nnon-relativistic quantum mechanics and of the Wigner phase time approach for\nthe elastic, the electromagnetic and the Schr\\\"odinger fields will be presented\nin this article. The results are zero tunneling time and an interaction time\n(i.e. a phase shift) at the barrier interfaces. The measured barrier\ninteraction time (i.e. the barrier transmission time) scales approximately\ninversely with the particle energy.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598273.5019, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598261.0862, "finish": 1720598273.5019, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d068ccfb4cc9453bb68998880ae68865", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598354.195, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598294.6181, "finish": 1720598354.195, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c4210a7dacc4d94844cc9affa651e43", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "Title: Scaling Laws for Neural Language Models\n\nPassage: We study empirical scaling laws for language model performance on the\ncross-entropy loss. The loss scales as a power-law with model size, dataset\nsize, and the amount of compute used for training, with some trends spanning\nmore than seven orders of magnitude. Other architectural details such as\nnetwork width or depth have minimal effects within a wide range. Simple\nequations govern the dependence of overfitting on model/dataset size and the\ndependence of training speed on model size. These relationships allow us to\ndetermine the optimal allocation of a fixed compute budget. Larger models are\nsignificantly more sample-efficient, such that optimally compute-efficient\ntraining involves training very large models on a relatively modest amount of\ndata and stopping significantly before convergence.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598614.1462, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598576.1019, "finish": 1720598614.1462, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e6a9666a84ec46f09a341fb01910f6be", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598636.0934, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598623.7423, "finish": 1720598636.0934, "ip": "", "conv_id": "58d30e46bbcd4d18929ff320b48c32dd", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "Title: Factoriality and the Connes invariant T(M) for free products of von\n Neumann algebras\n\nPassage: This revised version corrects some substancial errors in the proofs. The old\nproofs were only valid for (finite dimensional) * (finite dimensional). The\nscope of the results remains the same, however for type I_\\infty algebras, the\nresults of the original version were incorrect.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598661.0213, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598647.2046, "finish": 1720598661.0213, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0f6ce489c7d241e494dd66e82eddaf3a", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598682.3001, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598669.7152, "finish": 1720598682.3001, "ip": "", "conv_id": "235219b25f9c43ed8e1dad2eb693b37c", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "Title: Resource Sharing and Coevolution in Evolving Cellular Automata\n\nPassage: Evolving one-dimensional cellular automata (CAs) with genetic algorithms has\nprovided insight into how improved performance on a task requiring global\ncoordination emerges when only local interactions are possible. Two approaches\nthat can affect the search efficiency of the genetic algorithm are coevolution,\nin which a population of problems---in our case, initial configurations of the\nCA lattice---evolves along with the population of CAs; and resource sharing, in\nwhich a greater proportion of a limited fitness resource is assigned to those\nCAs which correctly solve problems that fewer other CAs in the population can\nsolve. Here we present evidence that, in contrast to what has been suggested\nelsewhere, the improvements observed when both techniques are used together\ndepend largely on resource sharing alone.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598695.7588, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598695.6587, "finish": 1720598695.7588, "ip": "", "conv_id": "270f5dea5bc240f2a84cad0478d15d8a", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "Title: On virtual phonons, photons and electrons\n\nPassage: A macroscopic realization of the strange virtual particles is presented. The\nclassical Helmholtz and the quantum mechanical Schr\\\"odinger equations are\nanalogous differential equations. Their imaginary solutions are called\nevanescent modes in the case of elastic and electromagnetic fields. In the case\nof non-relativistic quantum mechanical fields they are called tunneling\nsolutions. The imaginary solutions of this differential equation point to\nstrange consequences: They are non local, they are not observable, and they\ndescribed as virtual particles. During the last two decades QED calculations of\nthe imaginary solutions have been experimentally confirmed for phonons,\nphotons, and for electrons. The experimental proofs of the predictions of the\nnon-relativistic quantum mechanics and of the Wigner phase time approach for\nthe elastic, the electromagnetic and the Schr\\\"odinger fields will be presented\nin this article. The results are zero tunneling time and an interaction time\n(i.e. a phase shift) at the barrier interfaces. The measured barrier\ninteraction time (i.e. the barrier transmission time) scales approximately\ninversely with the particle energy.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598716.6715, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598702.8805, "finish": 1720598716.6715, "ip": "", "conv_id": "570b440525564d81991a4c81818b262f", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "output": [["Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models", "Title: Reproducibility Report for \"Learning To Count Objects In Natural Images\n For Visual Question Answering\"\n\nPassage: This is the reproducibility report for the paper \"Learning To Count Objects\nIn Natural Images For Visual QuestionAnswering\"\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598777.0937, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598761.3865, "finish": 1720598777.0937, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f6cf6453eac5440fb555fcb84abcb05c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where did the term hot rod come from", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598777.0937, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598761.3865, "finish": 1720598777.0937, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dba3eda614ca450e9f9c81f2c9e8b0f0", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "where did the term hot rod come from", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598809.3728, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598808.9907, "finish": 1720598809.3728, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ccc83b1a5ae47aab892da2590a9ee3e", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who won the battle of stirling bridge 1297", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720598809.3728, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720598808.9907, "finish": 1720598809.3728, "ip": "", "conv_id": "02e658742fef464caeb3a2975472281e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who won the battle of stirling bridge 1297", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599271.7348, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599271.6043, "finish": 1720599271.7348, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0119f083594d4dd29c140351e72609b7", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Inference by Conversion\n\nPassage: This paper has been withdrawn by the authors.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599284.9007, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599284.6781, "finish": 1720599284.9007, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f711f5b82cb34f50b46af9829713841a", "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\"."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599284.9007, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599284.6781, "finish": 1720599284.9007, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3e786b1af0cf4f82bfc7a3c0d20d3953", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "output": [["I am looking for information regarding minority interest", "Title: Instruments used in general medicine\n\nPassage: Image gallery"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599301.9419, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599301.7051, "finish": 1720599301.9419, "ip": "", "conv_id": "88d00dfc90b84308a08d74c07faaf76c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599301.9419, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599301.7051, "finish": 1720599301.9419, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4b54a020308f4870bf1800e83d5b0e62", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599328.2952, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599328.1065, "finish": 1720599328.2952, "ip": "", "conv_id": "14ac5db8044e47228c30f888ba3fe056", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who sings jungle book i wanna be like you", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599328.2952, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599328.1065, "finish": 1720599328.2952, "ip": "", "conv_id": "aaf68970341f44799826b02102fa886e", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "who sings jungle book i wanna be like you", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599345.0328, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599344.7813, "finish": 1720599345.0328, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9cd9c57e32b548d98499ffab4f139e41", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who presides over the highest criminal court in a district", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599345.0328, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599344.7813, "finish": 1720599345.0328, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dacfa484034b448087d7b40556624880", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who presides over the highest criminal court in a district", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599377.7661, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599359.9595, "finish": 1720599377.7661, "ip": "", "conv_id": "301eeda78bb742c6a5449ae420629cc9", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who brought the idea of castles to england", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720599377.7661, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599359.9595, "finish": 1720599377.7661, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3fffadbc1c4846778310b48ea3c7b4f2", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who brought the idea of castles to england", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-635bd7fb-fc6f-41c5-88d8-b40c736ed682.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-635bd7fb-fc6f-41c5-88d8-b40c736ed682.jsonl
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@@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720817328.7144, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720817286.8649, "finish": 1720817328.7144, "ip": "", "conv_id": "005e9af7d3204bcea0e1849b38d9b1d8", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "how do you determine what the root of the triad is", "output": [["how do you determine what the root of the triad is", "Title: Trace (deconstruction)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720817328.7144, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720817286.8649, "finish": 1720817328.7144, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b5fd7a50dae4494294b6ccb1647d4497", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "how do you determine what the root of the triad is", "output": [["how do you determine what the root of the triad is", "Title: Triad (sociology)\n\nPassage: Triad refers to a group of three people in sociology. It is one of the simplest human groups that can be studied and is mostly looked at by microsociology. The study of triads and dyads was pioneered by German sociologist Georg Simmel at the end of the nineteenth century.\nA triad can be viewed as a group of three people that can create different group interactions. This specific grouping is common yet overlooked in society for many reasons. Those being that it is compared to the lives of others, how they shape society, and how communication plays a role in different relationships scenarios.\nIt was derived in the late 1800s to early 1900s and evolved throughout time to shape group interactions in the present. Simmel also hypothesized between dyads and triads and how they may differ. A dyad is a group of two people that interact while a triad is another person added on to create more communicational interactions. For example: adding an extra person, therefore creating a triad, this can result in different language barriers, personal connection, and an overall impression of the third person.\nSimmel wanted to convey to his audience that a triad is not a basic group with positive interactions, but how these interactions can differ depending on person to person.\nStudies conducted\nSibling relationships"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720817348.8862, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720817333.3645, "finish": 1720817348.8862, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef358bd7d2324e54a8cf683897d33b65", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where does sex and the city take place", "output": [["where does sex and the city take place", "Title: City of Golden Shadow\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720817348.8862, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720817333.3645, "finish": 1720817348.8862, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63c5515bd70b472d9f050641110ebc4a", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where does sex and the city take place", "output": [["where does sex and the city take place", "Title: Sex and the City (film)\n\nPassage: Sex and the City (advertised as Sex and the City: The Movie) is a 2008 American romantic comedy film written and directed by Michael Patrick King in his feature film directorial debut. It is a continuation of the 1998\u20132004 television series about four friends, Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker), Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall), Charlotte York Goldenblatt (Kristin Davis), and Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon), and their lives in New York City.\nThe world premiere took place at Leicester Square in London on May 15, 2008, and premiered on May 28, 2008, in the United Kingdom and on May 30, 2008, in North America. Despite mixed reviews from critics, calling the film an extended episode of the series, it was a commercial success, grossing over $415 million worldwide from a $65 million budget.\nA sequel to the film, titled Sex and the City 2, was released in 2010 to similar commercial success but even larger critical failure. A third film was announced in December 2016, but was ultimately cancelled and replaced by a sequel series, And Just Like That..., on HBO Max.\nPlot"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720819732.2837, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720819693.5916, "finish": 1720819732.2837, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8a2bb80fdba047dbafc35f48d18adb1f", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where does the coral sea meet the pacific ocean", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720819732.2837, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720819693.5916, "finish": 1720819732.2837, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a0e39f76d00840bc96c9284b53cc29d8", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where does the coral sea meet the pacific ocean", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720819801.1895, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720819782.4966, "finish": 1720819801.1895, "ip": "", "conv_id": "76caf58f501d4126b8ea22b5138fe70f", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "who owns the golden nugget casino in atlantic city", "output": [["who owns the golden nugget casino in atlantic city", "Title: Golden Nugget Hotel & Casinos\n\nPassage: Golden Nugget Hotels & Casinos is an American chain of luxury hotels and casinos. It currently operates six casino resorts in Nevada, Louisiana, New Jersey, Illinois, and Mississippi.\nThe original location was the Golden Nugget Las Vegas which opened in 1946. The company runs as a division of Landry's Hospitality within the Fertitta Entertainment portfolio.\nHistory\nOriginal Golden Nugget\nThe Golden Nugget Las Vegas opened in 1946 in Downtown Las Vegas. Over time, notable members of the ownership group featured Jackie Gaughan and Steve Wynn. Wynn later became the majority stakeholder in 1973, making him the youngest casino owner in Las Vegas. Under Wynn, the casino brand expanded greatly. Once gaining the controlling sharehold, Wynn created Golden Nugget Companies Inc. The first hotel tower opened in 1977, which lead for the property to get awarded a four diamond rating from Mobil Travel Guide."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720819801.1895, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720819782.4966, "finish": 1720819801.1895, "ip": "", "conv_id": "32ff5a0cf78e4e47a2beea988c83950e", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who owns the golden nugget casino in atlantic city", "output": [["who owns the golden nugget casino in atlantic city", "Title: Golden Nugget Las Vegas\n\nPassage: The Casino (2004), a Fox reality television series is based on the story of the Golden Nugget'''s acquisition by Poster Financial Group.\nIn 2010, the casino's pool and shark aquarium were featured throughout an episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.\nThe casino was a recurring property in Billion Dollar Buyer on CNBC.\nIn games\nIn all Street Fighter II games (except HD Remix), Balrog's (M. Bison in Japanese) stage is set in front of the Golden Nugget, with the sign clearly seen in the back. In HD Remix, it has been changed to the \"Crazy Buffalo\", presumably in reference to the name of Balrog's original Super Combo. The updated version of the scenario that appears in Street Fighter V changes the name of the casino to the \"Golden Bullion\", most likely to avoid legal issues.\nThe name Golden Nugget also designates several casino games: Golden Nugget (1997), Golden Nugget 64 (1998), Golden Nugget Casino (2004; Game Boy Advance), and Golden Nugget Casino DS (2006).\nIn Fallout: New Vegas, the logo of the \"Silver Rush\", formerly a gambling hall, shows a similarity to the logo of the Golden Nugget.\nAttractions\nThe world's largest gold nugget on display, the Hand of Faith, is still shown today in the Golden Nugget lobby. Weighing and in length, the Hand of Faith was found near Kingower, Victoria, Australia, and put on display at the casino in 1981 amid a number of other gold nuggets.\nThe casino's large hotel sign at its entrance off Fremont and Casino Center was removed in 1984 when the casino underwent renovations. The old sign presently sits at the YESCO signage yard.\nThe expanded resort is built around two aquariums. The larger faces the swimming pool and incorporates a slide through the tank containing full-grown sharks. The smaller aquarium is in the lobby of the Rush Tower.\nA total of five specialty restaurants were added: Vic & Anthony's Steakhouse, Grotto Ristorante, Lillie's Asian Cuisine, Red Sushi and Chart House. The Chart House has a view of one of the aquariums. The pool is a $30 million unique three-level adventure with an enclosed slide through a shark tank, hidden grottos, swim-up bars, jacuzzis and multi-depth areas.\nGolden Nugget and Poster Financial group\nTom Breitling and Tim Poster were the highest profile successful entrepreneurs who profited in the downtown market during the last crisis. As recounted in Tom Breitling's book, Double or Nothing'', the partners agreed to buy the Golden Nugget and had an agreement to sell the property after operating it for only one year. The partners made $113 million in profit, called the highest rate of return in such a short time in the gaming industry. However, the partners had a negative income for the year and the fortune was made while total revenue for downtown was still basically flat."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720820411.0164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720820381.7056, "finish": 1720820411.0164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6931ca6d4b2a4998bdd27fe6a6b81822", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "when did gimme gimme gimme start", "output": [["when did gimme gimme gimme start", "Title: Gimme, Gimme, Gimme (Narada Michael Walden song)\n\nPassage: \"Gimme, Gimme, Gimme\" is a 1985 song performed by Narada Michael Walden and Patti Austin. Not wildly successful in US or the UK, it was a big hit in Sweden and Norway in 1985.\nCharts\nWeekly charts\nYear-end charts"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720820411.0164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720820381.7056, "finish": 1720820411.0164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e60c2943a694d3bbf9cffa04c16edcf", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "when did gimme gimme gimme start", "output": [["when did gimme gimme gimme start", "Title: Since When\n\nPassage: Since When is a 1998 album by Canadian rock band 54-40. It marks the band's return to the more acoustic folk rock sound of their 1980s albums. The album was the highest-charting album in the band's history, peaking at No.\u00a019 on the RPM Canadian Albums Chart. Also, the album's lead single and title track, \"Since When\", is the highest-charting single in the band's history. The album features the song \"Stormy\", which had been written in the early 1990s.\nTrack listing\n\"In Your Image\" \u2013 3:52\n\"Lost and Lazy\" \u2013 3:17\n\"Since When\" \u2013 4:14\n\"I Could Give You More\" \u2013 3:31\n\"You Should Come Over\" \u2013 3:37\n\"Runaway John\" \u2013 2:18\n\"Pay for Living\" \u2013 3:17\n\"Angel in My Bed\" \u2013 3:24\n\"Playground\" \u2013 2:23\n\"Greatest Mistake\" \u2013 3:26\n\"Stormy\" \u2013 5:31\n\"Last People on Earth\" \u2013 2:10\n\"Extra Special Mystery Bonus Track\" \u2013 1:25"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-6ae7e7f2-08f1-48ce-8f23-9224c75729a9.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-6ae7e7f2-08f1-48ce-8f23-9224c75729a9.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 50e30134a1579846649d95347bbc6610248a13c5..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-6ae7e7f2-08f1-48ce-8f23-9224c75729a9.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720822830.491, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822800.0384, "finish": 1720822830.491, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ed845e4f3d243408380200c09a43330", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what was the first star trek enterprise ship", "output": [["what was the first star trek enterprise ship", "Title: List of Star Trek reference books\n\nPassage: This is a list of reference books on the subject(s) of Star Trek, which does not include fan-published works. For more details on in-universe technical manuals, please see List of Star Trek technical manuals.\nReference books"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-71529d77-19d7-4e72-9308-e915c7a35bd8.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-71529d77-19d7-4e72-9308-e915c7a35bd8.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 4e4f762ebed78f196005dde7bf8ea7b786006da1..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-71529d77-19d7-4e72-9308-e915c7a35bd8.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720652918.4974, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720652872.6508, "finish": 1720652918.4974, "ip": "", "conv_id": "430c280e9d514e60aadc53231396f807", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "when did mcgee became a regular on ncis", "output": [["when did mcgee became a regular on ncis", "Title: NCIS season 4\n\nPassage: In December 2006, Bill Keveney from USA Today announced that the \"CBS investigative drama NCIS topped the Nielsen viewership list for the first time with 17.4 million. CBS was the No. 1 network in viewers and young adults (ages 18 to 49) for the week of Dec. 11\u201317.\"\nTV Guide reported on May 5, 2007, that creator and showrunner Donald Bellisario would step down and leave the series due to a disagreement with series star Mark Harmon. Because of Bellisario's \"chaotic management style\", Harmon threatened to leave NCIS. Co-executive producer Chas. Floyd Johnson and head writer Shane Brennan replaced Bellisario as showrunner.\nCast\nMain\nMark Harmon as Leroy Jethro Gibbs, NCIS Supervisory Special Agent (SSA) of the Major Case Response Team (MCRT) assigned to Washington's Navy Yard\nMichael Weatherly as Anthony DiNozzo, NCIS Senior Special Agent, second in command of MCRT\nCote de Pablo as Ziva David, Mossad Liaison Officer to NCIS\nPauley Perrette as Abby Sciuto, Forensic Specialist for NCIS\nSean Murray as Timothy McGee, NCIS Junior Special Agent\nLauren Holly as Jenny Shepard, NCIS Director\nDavid McCallum as Dr. Donald \"Ducky\" Mallard, Chief Medical Examiner for NCIS\nRecurring\nJoe Spano as Tobias Fornell, FBI Senior Special Agent\nJessica Steen as Paula Cassidy, NCIS Senior Special Agent\nBrian Dietzen as Jimmy Palmer, Assistant Medical Examiner for NCIS\nTroian Bellisario as Sarah McGee, Tim McGee's sister\nMary Mouser as Kelly Gibbs, Gibbs' deceased daughter\nStephanie Mello as Cynthia Summer, NCIS Secretary to Director Shepard\nMuse Watson as Mike Franks, retired Senior Special Agent for NCIS and Gibbs' former boss\nDon Franklin as Ron Sacks, FBI Special Agent\nScottie Thompson as Jeanne Benoit, Tony's girlfriend while undercover\nArmand Assante as Ren\u00e9 Benoit, NCIS target\nSusanna Thompson as Hollis Mann, Gibbs' girlfriend and Army CID Agent\nLiza Lapira as Michelle Lee, NCIS Special Agent\nDavid Dayan Fisher as Trent Kort, CIA Agent\nSandra Hess as Regine Smidt, associate of Ren\u00e9 Benoit\nCorey Stoll as Martin Quinn, associate of Ren\u00e9 Benoit\nEnzo Cilenti as Mamoun Sharif, NCIS target\nPayton Spencer as Emily Fornell, Tobias Fornell's daughter\nEpisodes\nDVD special features\nCast and Crew Commentaries on Select Episodes\nCast Roundtable (Parts 1 & 2)\nDucky's World\nBehind the Set: The Production Design of N.C.I.S.\nDressed to Kill: Dressing the Sets of N.C.I.S.\nProp Master\nPicture Perfect: The Looks of N.C.I.S.\nSeason of Secrets"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720652918.4974, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720652872.6508, "finish": 1720652918.4974, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6b37166c1fdf450da037e71d4362b39a", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "when did mcgee became a regular on ncis", "output": [["when did mcgee became a regular on ncis", "Title: Michael McGee Jr.\n\nPassage: Michael Imanu McGee Jr. (born Michael Imanu Jackson; October 7, 1969), is an American politician who served as alderman of Milwaukee's Sixth District. He was elected in April 2004 to become along with his father, former alderman Michael McGee Sr., the first father and son in the history of Milwaukee to serve on the Common Council. His controversial tenure on the Milwaukee Common Council culminated in his arrest on Memorial Day weekend, 2007. He subsequently won the primary election from jail and lost the general election for re-election.\nEarly life"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-7632238d-5996-41fb-b512-cbf48c2926f3.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-7632238d-5996-41fb-b512-cbf48c2926f3.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 5e801d26267aa2da4696e3ffcc92d61b1c1cbb8e..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-7632238d-5996-41fb-b512-cbf48c2926f3.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722045049.816, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045023.906, "finish": 1722045049.816, "ip": "", "conv_id": "28b37c28f711487ea968710a14074143", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "theme of the song roar by katy perry", "output": [["theme of the song roar by katy perry", "Title: Roar (song)\n\nPassage: \"Roar\" is a song by American singer Katy Perry. It was released on August 10, 2013, by Capitol Records as the lead single from her fourth studio album, Prism (2013). Perry co-wrote the song with Bonnie McKee and its producers Dr. Luke, Max Martin, and Cirkut. It is a power pop song containing elements of arena rock and lyrics centering on standing up for oneself and self-empowerment."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045587.0413, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045568.1618, "finish": 1722045587.0413, "ip": "", "conv_id": "62522f0a431143eb9edc445fcdc701b0", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "output": [["type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "Title: Karst\n\nPassage: Ab\u00eeme, a vertical shaft in karst that may be very deep and usually opens into a network of subterranean passages\nCenote, a deep sinkhole, characteristic of Mexico, resulting from collapse of limestone bedrock that exposes groundwater underneath\nDoline, also sink or sinkhole, is a closed depression draining underground in karst areas. The name \"doline\" comes from dolina, meaning \"valley\", and derives from South Slavic languages.\nFoibe, an inverted funnel-shaped sinkhole\nKarst window (also known as a \"karst fenster\"), a feature where a spring emerges briefly, with the water discharge then abruptly disappearing into a nearby sinkhole\nKarst spring, a spring emerging from karst, originating a flow of water on the surface\nLimestone pavement, a landform consisting of a flat, incised surface of exposed limestone that resembles an artificial pavement\nLosing stream, sinking river or ponornica in South Slavic languages.\nPolje (karst polje, karst field), a large flat specifically karst plain. The word polje derives from South Slavic languages.\nPonor, same as estavelle, sink or sinkhole in South Slavic languages, where surface flow enters an underground system\nScowle, porous irregular karst landscape in a region of England.\nTurlough (turlach), a type of disappearing lake characteristic of Irish karst.\nUvala, a collection of multiple smaller individual sinkholes that coalesce into a compound sinkhole. The term derives from South Slavic languages."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045587.0413, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045568.1618, "finish": 1722045587.0413, "ip": "", "conv_id": "efcc63c86a9e415c9d5e7ee80b443135", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "output": [["type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "Title: The Burren\n\nPassage: Due to the processes mentioned, there are very few permanent surface rivers in the region. The Caher, flowing into the sea at Fanore, is one of the most stable. Some of the large valleys, mostly running south to north, that are still visible today are in fact the remains of pre-glacial river valleys. The rivers disappeared from the surface when the upper layers of stone had been stripped away.\nAnother characteristic feature of the Burren is closed roughly circular depressions with no surface outlets for water (called poljes). Around 100 of these exist, mostly in the eastern Burren. The most notable are the valleys of Kilcorney, Poulawilan, Caherconnel and Carran, generally stretching from northeast to southwest. The largest is the Carran depression, more than two miles long, up to a mile wide and over 200 feet deep. This is where the pre-glacial rivers of the area first eroded away the upper layers and started to dissolve the exposed limestone. Some of the smaller ones were created when caves underneath collapsed (one example of this is the Glen of Clab).\nGlaciers also deposited numerous granite and limestone erratics on the pavements. The former were carried south across Galway Bay by the second-to-last glaciation. Granite boulders can be found mostly in the north of the Burren. The final ice cover came from the northeast and mostly deposited limestone erratics. On Slieve Elva these are visible today at elevations of up to mabove sea level. The characteristic terracing of the hills occurred when vertical joints weathered and large blocks of limestone fell off and were further eroded away."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045859.7127, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045859.2693, "finish": 1722045859.7127, "ip": "", "conv_id": "02e572f482244b96b20618356793134c", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "output": [["what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "Title: Brown Girl in the Ring (song)\n\nPassage: 1993 remix Following the successful sales of the compilation album Gold \u2013 20 Super Hits, Frank Farian remixed \"Brown Girl in the Ring\" for a single release in April of 1993 with new lead vocals by Liz Mitchell. The single reached number seven in Denmark and 38 in the UK, while failing to chart in Germany. The single also included a new remix of \"The Calendar Song\". A \"rap version\" with vocals from Marlon B was the B-side to most versions of the 1993 remix single.\n12\" single\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)\" (MCI/BMG 74321 13705 1, 1993)\nSide A\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Funny Girl Club Mix) \u2013 5:45\n\"The Calendar Song (January, February, March...)\" (Remix '93) \u2013 3:24\nSide B\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Club Mix \u2013 Rap Version) \u2013 5:45\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Radio Version) \u2013 3:58\nCD\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)\" (MCI/BMG 74321 13705 2, 1993)\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Radio Version) \u2013 3:58\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Funny Girl Club Mix) \u2013 5:45\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Club Mix \u2013 Rap Version) \u2013 5:45\n\"The Calendar Song (January, February, March...)\" (Remix '93) \u2013 3:24\nRecordings by other artists\nLord Invader, a calypsonian from Trinidad, recorded a version circa 1946\u20131947 in New York. The recording is now part of the Smithsonian Folkways collection and was only released in 2000 on Lord Invader Calypso in New York CD."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045859.7127, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045859.2693, "finish": 1722045859.7127, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d12025d0f7f841a982b9446c9d429b1e", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "output": [["what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "Title: Brown Girl in the Ring (song)\n\nPassage: \"Brown Girl in the Ring\" is a traditional children's song in the islands of the West Indies. Originally said to have originated in Jamaica, as part of the children's game also known as \"Brown Girl in the Ring\". The songs lyrics instruct the game's performance: as a girl enters the ring, formed by children holding hands, and performs a dance.\nThe song became internationally known when it was recorded by Euro-Caribbean vocal group Boney M. in 1978. Originally it was the B-side of their hit \"Rivers of Babylon\" but soon became a hit in its own right and included on their third album, Nightflight to Venus (1978). The song had previously been recorded in 1975 by the group Malcolm's Locks, leading to a dispute over royalties. Bahamian musician Exuma also recorded a version of the song that appears on his 1972 album Reincarnation. The Boney M. version was remixed in 1993 by Frank Farian.\nOrigin\nChildren play ring games in many parts of the world, especially during their pre-teen years. In There's a Brown Girl in the Ring, an anthology of Eastern Caribbean song games by Alan Lomax, J.D. Elder and Bess Lomax Hawes, it is suggested that ring games are a children's precursor to adult courtship."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045885.2524, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045884.3847, "finish": 1722045885.2524, "ip": "", "conv_id": "73cf73bdec2e4d7f940a12b1e598b9ca", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who is the first wife on sister wives", "output": [["who is the first wife on sister wives", "Title: Sister Wives\n\nPassage: Sister Wives is an American reality television series broadcast on TLC that premiered on September 26, 2010. The show documents the life of a polygamist family, which includes Kody Brown, his wife Robyn (n\u00e9e Sullivan), ex-wives Meri (n\u00e9e Barber), Janelle (n\u00e9e Schriever), and Christine (n\u00e9e Allred), and their 18 children (1 by Meri, 6 by both Janelle and Christine, 5 by Robyn although 3 were between her and her ex-husband David Preston Jessop). The family began the series living in Lehi, Utah, moved to Las Vegas in 2011, and to Flagstaff, Arizona, in mid-2018.\nBrown and his four wives have stated they participated in the show to make the public aware of polygamist families and to combat societal prejudices. Brown argues that his polygamist arrangement is legal because he is married (legally) to only one woman (Meri, then later Robyn), while the other marriages are \"spiritual unions\".\nBackground\nThe show follows the lives of Kody Brown, wife Robyn, ex-wives (Meri, Janelle, Christine), and their 18 children. In the first season, the show televised Kody's courting of and marriage to his fourth wife, Robyn, in 2010. Robyn was the first new wife to enter the family in 16 years.\nThe crews continued to film them after the marriage in case the series was picked up for a second season. Sister Wives was publicly introduced on August 6, 2010, at the Television Critics Association summer media tour in Beverly Hills. The series' first episode, an hour-long, was broadcast on TLC on September 26, 2010, and the first season continued with six half-hour episodes until October 17, 2010."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045885.2524, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045884.3847, "finish": 1722045885.2524, "ip": "", "conv_id": "47b914ac47744b479577d91f6479f0c3", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "who is the first wife on sister wives", "output": [["who is the first wife on sister wives", "Title: Sister Wives\n\nPassage: Sister Wives is an American reality television series broadcast on TLC that premiered on September 26, 2010. The show documents the life of a polygamist family, which includes Kody Brown, his wife Robyn (n\u00e9e Sullivan), ex-wives Meri (n\u00e9e Barber), Janelle (n\u00e9e Schriever), and Christine (n\u00e9e Allred), and their 18 children (1 by Meri, 6 by both Janelle and Christine, 5 by Robyn although 3 were between her and her ex-husband David Preston Jessop). The family began the series living in Lehi, Utah, moved to Las Vegas in 2011, and to Flagstaff, Arizona, in mid-2018.\nBrown and his four wives have stated they participated in the show to make the public aware of polygamist families and to combat societal prejudices. Brown argues that his polygamist arrangement is legal because he is married (legally) to only one woman (Meri, then later Robyn), while the other marriages are \"spiritual unions\".\nBackground\nThe show follows the lives of Kody Brown, wife Robyn, ex-wives (Meri, Janelle, Christine), and their 18 children. In the first season, the show televised Kody's courting of and marriage to his fourth wife, Robyn, in 2010. Robyn was the first new wife to enter the family in 16 years.\nThe crews continued to film them after the marriage in case the series was picked up for a second season. Sister Wives was publicly introduced on August 6, 2010, at the Television Critics Association summer media tour in Beverly Hills. The series' first episode, an hour-long, was broadcast on TLC on September 26, 2010, and the first season continued with six half-hour episodes until October 17, 2010."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045897.6015, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045897.2248, "finish": 1722045897.6015, "ip": "", "conv_id": "979503ccce9d4f2c8cb6f28f141d9465", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "output": [["who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "Title: Aladdin (2011 musical)\n\nPassage: Aladdin uses his third and final wish to set Genie free. He then admits to Jasmine that he loves her, but he cannot pretend to be someone he's not. Seeing the nobility in Aladdin, the Sultan decrees that henceforth the Princess can marry whomever she pleases. Babkak, Omar and Kassim are made royal advisors, while Iago is arrested. Aladdin and Jasmine are married, and Genie prepares for a long-awaited vacation. All ends well as Aladdin and Jasmine board the magic carpet and take flight (Finale Ultimo: \"Arabian Nights\"/\"A Whole New World\" (Reprises)).\nCasting controversy\nAlthough the film was Disney's first to feature non-white human protagonists, Disney did not consider ethnicity in the casting process for the musical. This 'colourblind' policy sparked some controversy, with the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee receiving numerous complaints from actors of Middle Eastern descent. The executive director of a US minority rights organisation lamented that the production had 'missed an opportunity' to showcase Arab-American actors, who remain underrepresented on Broadway.\nRoles and principal cast members\nJonathan Freeman had reprised his role of Jafar from the original film. He departed from the cast in 2022.\nOriginal casts\nNotable cast replacements\nBroadway\nAladdin: Telly Leung, Ainsley Melham, Josh Dela Cruz, Michael Maliakel"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045897.6015, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045897.2248, "finish": 1722045897.6015, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a88f06cbd74943e38387b1b8213ad38e", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "output": [["who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "Title: Genie (Disney)\n\nPassage: Theme parks Genie is a meet-and-greet character at Disney Parks. On August 18, 2021, Disney announced the Genie would be the mascot of a new paid skip-the-line service called Genie+, which was implemented later that fall.\nAladdin (musical)\nGenie plays a notable role in the Broadway stage adaptation of the 1992 film, portrayed by James Monroe Iglehart. In this version, Genie replaces the Peddler at the beginning of the story singing \"Arabian Nights\".\nSince the show's debut, Iglehart's portrayal of Genie has received critical acclaim from audiences and critics, which includes winning a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical.\nParodies\nThe Genie (voiced by Dan Castellaneta) appears in The Simpsons episode \"MyPods and Boomsticks\" (2008) during a dream of Homer (a character also voiced by Castellaneta), where he uses his magic to transform Springfield into an Islamic republic.\nThe Genie (voiced by Isaiah Mustafa) has an appearance in the Robot Chicken episode \"May Cause Immaculate Conception\" (2021), where one of the bell-ringers that he made appear during the Agrabah parade asks him for food for the animals that were part of the parade.\nReception\nReception to Williams' involvement influenced tributes following his 2014 death, with critics considering the Genie to have been his most memorable performance. Aladdin composer Alan Menken lamented that Williams was \"a brilliant, adorable, hilarious, compassionate, vulnerable manifestation of the human condition.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045936.3176, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045935.4333, "finish": 1722045936.3176, "ip": "", "conv_id": "52c3574f6e174cdd8c8748f90ef5fb74", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what did the treaty of paris do for the united states", "output": [["what did the treaty of paris do for the united states", "Title: Treaty of Paris (1783)\n\nPassage: Establishing the boundaries of the United States, including but not limited to those between the United States and British North America from the Mississippi River to the Southern colonies. Britain surrenders their previously owned land,\nGranting fishing rights to United States fishermen in the Grand Banks, off the coast of Newfoundland and in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence;\nRecognizing the lawful contracted debts to be paid to creditors on either side;\nThe Congress of the Confederation will \"earnestly recommend\" to state legislatures to recognize the rightful owners of all confiscated lands and \"provide for the restitution of all estates, rights, and properties, which have been confiscated belonging to British subjects\" (Loyalists);\nThe United States will prevent future confiscations of the property of Loyalists;\nPrisoners-of-war on both sides are to be released. All British property now in the United States is to remain with them and to be forfeited;\nBoth Great Britain and the United States are to be given perpetual access to the Mississippi River;\nTerritories captured by either side subsequent to the treaty will be returned without compensation;\nRatification of the treaty is to occur within six months from its signing.\nEschatocol. \"Done at Paris, this third day of September in the year of our Lord, one thousand seven hundred and eighty-three.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045936.3176, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045935.4333, "finish": 1722045936.3176, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0e1bdd5a3de447f4875e243e70842e3d", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "what did the treaty of paris do for the united states", "output": [["what did the treaty of paris do for the united states", "Title: Treaty of Paris (1783)\n\nPassage: The Treaty of Paris, signed in Paris by representatives of King George III of Great Britain and representatives of the United States on September 3, 1783, officially ended the American Revolutionary War and recognized the Thirteen Colonies, which had been part of colonial British America, to be free, sovereign and independent states.\nThe treaty set the boundaries between British North America, later called Canada, and the United States, on lines the British labeled as \"exceedingly generous\", although exact boundary definitions in the far-northwest and to the south continued to be subject to some controversy. Details included fishing rights and restoration of property and prisoners of war.\nThis treaty and the separate peace treaties between Great Britain and the nations that supported the American cause, including France and Spain, are known collectively as the Peace of Paris. Only Article 1 of the treaty, which acknowledges the United States' existence as free, sovereign, and independent states, remains in force.\nAgreement\nPeace negotiations began in Paris in April 1782, following the victory of George Washington and the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. The negotiations continued through the summer of 1782. Representing the United States were Benjamin Franklin, John Jay, Henry Laurens, and John Adams. Representing the Kingdom of Great Britain and King George III were David Hartley and Richard Oswald.\nThe treaty was drafted on November 30, 1782, and signed at the H\u00f4tel d'York at present-day 56 Rue Jacob in Paris on September 3, 1783, by Adams, Franklin, Jay, and Hartley."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045972.5386, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045972.0817, "finish": 1722045972.5386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fa8cf530440a4f229b1a8ddacbd425f5", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "output": [["who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "Title: Church of the Holy Sepulchre\n\nPassage: Aedicule restoration After seven decades of being held together by steel girders, the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA) declared the visibly deteriorating Aedicule structure unsafe. A restoration of the Aedicule was agreed upon and executed from May 2016 to March 2017. Much of the $4 million project was funded by the World Monuments Fund, as well as $1.3 million from Mica Ertegun and a significant sum from King Abdullah II of Jordan. The existence of the original limestone cave walls within the Aedicule was confirmed, and a window was created to view this from the inside. The presence of moisture led to the discovery of an underground shaft resembling an escape tunnel carved into the bedrock, seeming to lead from the tomb. For the first time since at least 1555, on 26 October 2016, marble cladding that protects the supposed burial bed of Jesus was removed. Members of the National Technical University of Athens were present. Initially, only a layer of debris was visible. This was cleared in the next day, and a partially broken marble slab with a Crusader-style cross carved was revealed. By the night of 28 October, the original limestone burial bed was shown to be intact. The tomb was resealed shortly thereafter. Mortar from just above the burial bed was later dated to the mid-fourth century.\n2020 pandemic\nOn 25 March 2020, Israeli health officials ordered the site closed to the public due to the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the keeper of the keys, it was the first such closure since 1349, during the Black Death. Clerics continued regular prayers inside the building, and it reopened to visitors two months later, on 24 May.\nCrusader altar slab discovered (2022)\nDuring church renovations in 2022, a stone slab covered in modern graffiti was moved from a wall, revealing Cosmatesque-style decoration on one face. According to an IAA archaeologist, the decoration was once inlaid with pieces of glass and fine marble; it indicates that the relic was the front of the church's high altar from the Crusader era (c.\u00a01149), which was later used by the Greek Orthodox until being damaged in the 1808 fire.\nDescription\nParvis (courtyard)\nThe courtyard facing the entrance to the church is known as the parvis. Two streets open into the parvis: St Helena Road (west) and Suq ed-Dabbagha (east). Around the parvis are a few smaller structures.\nSouth of the parvis, opposite the church:"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045972.5386, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045972.0817, "finish": 1722045972.5386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d6f183b73044a119ea57e4995915eb9", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "output": [["who opens the church of the holy sepulchre", "Title: Church of the Holy Sepulchre\n\nPassage: The primary custodians are the Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox and Armenian Apostolic churches. The Greek Orthodox act through the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate as well as through the Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre. Roman Catholics act through the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land. In the 19th century, the Coptic Orthodox, the Ethiopian Orthodox and the Syriac Orthodox also acquired lesser responsibilities, which include shrines and other structures in and around the building.\nNone of these controls the main entrance. In 1192, Saladin assigned door-keeping responsibilities to the Muslim Nusaybah family. The wooden doors that compose the main entrance are the original, highly carved doors. The Joudeh al-Goudia (al-Ghodayya) family were entrusted as custodian to the keys of the Holy Sepulchre by Saladin in 1187. Despite occasional disagreements, religious services take place in the Church with regularity and coexistence is generally peaceful. An example of concord between the Church custodians is the full restoration of the Aedicule from 2016 to 2017.\nInterdenominational issues\nThe establishment of the modern Status Quo in 1853 did not halt controversy and occasional violence.\nIn 1902, 18 friars were hospitalized and some monks were jailed after the Franciscans and Greeks disagreed over who could clean the lowest step of the Chapel of the Franks. In the aftermath, the Greek patriarch, Franciscan custos, Ottoman governor and French consul general signed a convention that both denominations could sweep it."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046032.0396, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045991.9165, "finish": 1722046032.0396, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f1d80dfe84fa4c32be7f78b794c3e213", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "output": [["what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "Title: 1924 Cuba hurricane\n\nPassage: After a reanalysis of hurricanes between 1921 and 1925, the National Hurricane Centers Atlantic reanalysis project determined that this hurricane attained maximum sustained winds of , making it a Category 5 hurricane on the Saffir\u2013Simpson Hurricane Scale. The hurricane is the earliest known to have attained the intensity, besting the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane, which was previously thought to be the earliest storm of this intensity. It is also one of only two on record to make landfall in Cuba at Category\u00a05 status, with the other being Hurricane Irma of 2017, which also made landfall with maximum sustained winds of . A hurricane in 1846 that hit the country was also thought to have struck at Category\u00a05 status, although the storm existed prior to the start of the Atlantic hurricane database.\nWhen the steamship \"Toledo\" recorded an atmospheric pressure of during the 1924 Cuba hurricane, it was the lowest pressure recorded in an Atlantic hurricane, breaking the previous record of 924 mbar (27.28 inHg) in the Atlantic hurricane of 1853. The record during this storm lasted until the 1932 Cuba hurricane, when a minimum pressure of was reported. The reading of at Los Arroyos in Mantua, Pinar del R\u00edo remains the lowest pressure recorded on land in Cuba."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046032.0396, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722045991.9165, "finish": 1722046032.0396, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d0f5843ab8cb4bac80c5c35f0467be03", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "output": [["what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "Title: Hurricane Irma\n\nPassage: Records Irma set multiple records for intensity, especially at easterly longitudes, time spent at such an intensity, and its intensity at landfall. When Irma reached Category\u00a05 intensity with winds of at 11:45\u00a0UTC on September 5 at 57.7\u00b0W, it became the easternmost Atlantic hurricane of this strength on record, surpassing Hurricane David of 1979, later beaten by Hurricane Lorenzo 2 years later. By 00:15\u00a0UTC on September 6, Irma reached peak intensity with () winds and a minimum pressure of . This ties it with Hurricane Mitch of 1998 and Hurricane Rita of 2005 as the sixth-strongest Atlantic hurricane by wind speed. Only five other Atlantic hurricanes have been recorded with wind speeds higher than Irma: Hurricane Allen of 1980, which had maximum sustained winds of , and the 1935 Labor Day hurricane, Hurricane Gilbert of 1988, Hurricane Wilma of 2005, and Hurricane Dorian of 2019, all of which had peak winds of . At the time, Irma was also the strongest hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic Ocean outside the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico; later surpassed by Hurricane Dorian, and was the strongest Atlantic hurricane since Wilma in terms of maximum sustained winds, and the most intense in terms of pressure since Dean in 2007. In addition, Irma achieved one of the longest durations of Category\u00a05 strength winds, and the third-highest accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index for a tropical cyclone in the Atlantic basin, with a value of 64.9\u00a0units. Only the 1899 San Ciriaco hurricane and Hurricane Ivan in 2004 achieved higher values."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046197.327, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046197.0731, "finish": 1722046197.327, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5b8f85f3302a45acb27ec4841114b040", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "third president of the united states of america", "output": [["third president of the united states of america", "Title: Thomas Jefferson\n\nPassage: Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743 \u2013 July 4, 1826) was an American statesman, diplomat, lawyer, architect, philosopher, and Founding Father who served as the third president of the United States from 1801 to 1809. He was the primary author of the Declaration of Independence. Following the American Revolutionary War and prior to becoming president in 1801, Jefferson was the nation's first U.S. secretary of state under George Washington and then the nation's second vice president under John Adams. Jefferson was a leading proponent of democracy, republicanism, and individual rights, and produced formative documents and decisions at the state, national, and international levels. His writings and advocacy for human rights, including freedom of thought, speech, and religion, served as substantial inspirations to the American Revolution and subsequent Revolutionary War in which the Thirteen Colonies succeeded in breaking from British America and establishing the United States as a sovereign nation.\nDuring the American Revolution, Jefferson represented Virginia at the Second Continental Congress and served as the second governor of Virginia from 1779 to 1781. In 1785, Congress appointed Jefferson U.S. minister to France, where he served from 1785 to 1789. President Washington then appointed Jefferson the nation's first secretary of state, where he served from 1790 to 1793. During this time, in the early 1790s, Jefferson and James Madison organized the Democratic-Republican Party to oppose the Federalist Party during the formation of the nation's First Party System. Jefferson and Federalist John Adams became both friends and political rivals. In the 1796 U.S. presidential election between the two, Jefferson came in second, which made him Adams' vice president under the electoral laws of the time. Four years later, in the 1800 presidential election, Jefferson again challenged Adams, and won the presidency. In 1804, Jefferson was reelected overwhelmingly to a second term."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046197.327, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046197.0731, "finish": 1722046197.327, "ip": "", "conv_id": "347dce561ef24e1d93c95a8d2f80cd6f", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "third president of the united states of america", "output": [["third president of the united states of america", "Title: Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, third and fourth terms\n\nPassage: The third presidential term of Franklin D. Roosevelt began on January 20, 1941, when he was once again inaugurated as the 32nd president of the United States, and the fourth term of his presidency ended with his death on April 12, 1945. Roosevelt won a third term by defeating Republican nominee Wendell Willkie in the 1940 United States presidential election. He remains the only president to serve for more than two terms. Unlike his first two terms, Roosevelt's third and fourth terms were dominated by foreign policy concerns, as the United States became involved in World War II in December 1941."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046224.87, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046224.6598, "finish": 1722046224.87, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2d2a3ce15be14d9ab1182bd6eb6155ec", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "output": [["who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "Title: James Lafferty\n\nPassage: James Martin Lafferty (born July 25, 1985) is an American actor, director, and producer. He is best known for his portrayal of Nathan Scott on The WB/CW teen drama television series One Tree Hill (2003\u20132012).\nEarly life\nLafferty was born in Hemet, California, to Angelica and Jeffrey Lafferty, who own a local construction company. He has a younger brother, actor Stuart Lafferty."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046224.87, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046224.6598, "finish": 1722046224.87, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ee9c5b633adf4fbebe3994003e71626d", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "output": [["who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "Title: Nathan Scott\n\nPassage: Nathan Royal Scott is a fictional character from the CW television series One Tree Hill created by Mark Schwahn and portrayed by James Lafferty. Following Lucas Scott's departure, Nathan became the main character and central figure of the show. Nathan is Lucas's younger half-brother. He fell in love with Lucas's best friend, Haley James; and they married at the end of the first season. Despite various problems in their relationship, the couple remains together married for most of the shows run, and had a son, Jamie, in season four and a daughter, Lydia, in season eight. Considered to be an anti-hero at the beginning of the first season, Nathan became a much friendlier and more caring person as the series progressed, due to his relationship with Haley and other characters.\nCharacter development\nCasting and creation\nThe writers originally wanted Chad Michael Murray to play Nathan, but he chose to portray Lucas as his mother had abandoned him, which helped him relate to the character. James Lafferty was subsequently cast, as he was a talented basketball player."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046242.8633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046242.63, "finish": 1722046242.8633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "37094c5061e74f64bcd261fa08164c0f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where does some like it hot take place", "output": [["where does some like it hot take place", "Title: Some Like It Hot\n\nPassage: Plot In February 1929, in Prohibition-era Chicago, Joe is a jazz saxophone player and an irresponsible, impulsive ladies' man; his anxious friend Jerry is a jazz double bass player. They work in a speakeasy owned by gangster \"Spats\" Colombo. Tipped off by informant \"Toothpick\" Charlie, the police raid the joint. Joe and Jerry escape, but later accidentally witness Spats and his henchmen gunning down \"Toothpick\" and his gang in revenge, which was inspired by the real-life Saint Valentine's Day Massacre. Spats and his gang see them as they flee. Broke, terrified, and desperate to get out of town, Joe and Jerry disguise themselves as women named Josephine and Daphne so they can join Sweet Sue and her Society Syncopators, an all-female band headed by train to Miami. On the train, Joe and Jerry befriend Sugar Kane, the band's vocalist and ukulele player.\nJoe and Jerry become obsessed with Sugar and compete for her affection while maintaining their disguises. Sugar confides to \"Josephine\" that she has sworn off male saxophone players, who have taken advantage of her in the past. She hopes to find a gentle, bespectacled millionaire in Florida. During the forbidden drinking and partying on the train, \"Josephine\" and \"Daphne\" become close friends with Sugar, and struggle to remember that they are supposed to be girls and cannot make passes at her."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046242.8633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046242.63, "finish": 1722046242.8633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d7f573f5056749b3832c01a1bb04970c", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "where does some like it hot take place", "output": [["where does some like it hot take place", "Title: Some Like It Hot\n\nPassage: Some Like It Hot is a 1959 American crime comedy film directed, produced and co-written by Billy Wilder. It stars Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon, with George Raft, Pat O'Brien, Joe E. Brown, Joan Shawlee and Nehemiah Persoff in supporting roles. The screenplay by Wilder and I. A. L. Diamond is based on a screenplay by Robert Thoeren and Michael Logan from the 1935 French film Fanfare of Love. The film is about two musicians who disguise themselves by dressing as women to escape from mafia gangsters whom they witnessed committing a crime.\nSome Like It Hot opened to critical and commercial success and is considered to be one of the greatest films of all time. The film received six Academy Award nominations, including Best Actor, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay, winning for Best Costume Design. In 1989, the Library of Congress selected it as one of the first 25 films for preservation in the United States National Film Registry for being \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\".\nThe film was produced without approval from the Motion Picture Production Code (Hays Code) because it features cross-dressing. The code had been gradually weakening in its scope since the early 1950s, owing to greater social tolerance for taboo topics in film, but it was enforced until the mid-1960s. The overwhelming success of Some Like It Hot is considered one of the reasons behind the retirement of the Hays Code."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046272.2034, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046271.6783, "finish": 1722046272.2034, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef4f76bb51ee441f92005be565a38359", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "output": [["who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "Title: Bancassurance\n\nPassage: Bancassurance is a relationship between a bank and an insurance company that is aimed at offering insurance products or insurance benefits to the bank's customers. In this partnership, bank staff and tellers become the point of sale and point of contact for the customer. Bank staff are advised and supported by the insurance company through wholesale product information, marketing campaigns and sales training. The bank and the insurance company share the commission. Insurance policies are processed and administered by the insurance company."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046272.2034, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046271.6783, "finish": 1722046272.2034, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bd3a5ce005c940da96ae0fadaf257402", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "output": [["who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "Title: Primerica\n\nPassage: In a separate offering, private equity firm Warburg Pincus bought a 23 percent stake in Primerica, and had the option to purchase an additional 10 percent stake from Citi. On December 19, 2011, Citigroup sold its remaining equity stake in Primerica.\nPrimerica was listed by Forbes as one of \"America's 50 Most Trustworthy Financial Companies\" in 2015.\nIn July 2021, Primerica acquired e-Telequote, a health insurance marketer.\nProducts and business model\nPrimerica uses a multi-level marketing strategy, with eleven tiers of representatives and recruiters selling financial products and services for commission.\nThe company primarily sells term life insurance, as well as other financial services including auto and home insurance, mutual funds, and credit monitoring.\nIn 2010, Primerica was reported to have over 100,000 representatives selling the company's financial products, with individual earnings averaging $5,156 per year. Some people working for Primerica and similar multi-level marketing organizations reported that they ended up losing money, due to the fees they had to pay.\nIn 2012, Primerica was the target of multiple lawsuits alleging that the company's representatives sought to profit by earning commissions after convincing Florida firefighters, teachers, and other public workers to divest from safe government-secured retirement investments to high-risk retirement products offered by Primerica. In January 2014, the company announced that it was working on a settlement with up to 238 plaintiffs, for $15.4 million."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046299.2698, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046299.0669, "finish": 1722046299.2698, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c81c6a79e8e6425eb073d802310f22ef", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Computing Machinery and Intelligence\n\nPassage: \"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" is a seminal paper written by Alan Turing on the topic of artificial intelligence. The paper, published in 1950 in Mind, was the first to introduce his concept of what is now known as the Turing test to the general public.\nTuring's paper considers the question \"Can machines think?\" Turing says that since the words \"think\" and \"machine\" cannot be clearly defined we should \"replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" To do this, he must first find a simple and unambiguous idea to replace the word \"think\", second he must explain exactly which \"machines\" he is considering, and finally, armed with these tools, he formulates a new question, related to the first, that he believes he can answer in the affirmative."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046299.2698, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046299.0669, "finish": 1722046299.2698, "ip": "", "conv_id": "01a613392aeb4acd8784693f8b9092a9", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "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: Turing test\n\nPassage: The 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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046318.0443, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046317.8382, "finish": 1722046318.0443, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9c3ec7b52b7e42d6a2ac94bc785a93b8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Planetary habitability in the Solar System\n\nPassage: Planetary habitability in the Solar System is the study that searches the possible existence of past or present extraterrestrial life in those celestial bodies. As exoplanets are too far away and can only be studied by indirect means, the celestial bodies in the Solar System allow for a much more detailed study: direct telescope observation, space probes, rovers and even human spaceflight."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046318.0443, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046317.8382, "finish": 1722046318.0443, "ip": "", "conv_id": "415ad0e808cf4db486f66b43dfdfa17a", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "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: Planetary habitability in the Solar System\n\nPassage: Titan Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, is the only known moon in the Solar System with a significant atmosphere. Data from the Cassini\u2013Huygens mission refuted the hypothesis of a global hydrocarbon ocean, but later demonstrated the existence of liquid hydrocarbon lakes in the polar regions\u2014the first stable bodies of surface liquid discovered outside Earth. Analysis of data from the mission has uncovered aspects of atmospheric chemistry near the surface that are consistent with\u2014but do not prove\u2014the hypothesis that organisms there, if present, could be consuming hydrogen, acetylene and ethane, and producing methane. NASA's Dragonfly mission is slated to land on Titan in the mid-2030s with a VTOL-capable rotorcraft with a launch date set for 2027.\nUranus\nThe planet Uranus, an ice giant, is unlikely to be habitable. The local temperatures and pressures may be too extreme, and the materials too volatile.\nNeptune\nThe planet Neptune, another ice giant, is also unlikely to be habitable. The local temperatures and pressures may be too extreme, and the materials too volatile.\nPluto\nThe dwarf planet Pluto is too cold to sustain life on the surface. It has an average of -232\u00a0\u00b0C, and surface water only exists in a rocky state. The interior of Pluto may be warmer and perhaps contain a subsurface ocean. Also, the possibility of geothermal activity comes into play. That combined with the fact that Pluto has an eccentric orbit, making it sometimes closer to the sun, means that there is a slight chance that the dwarf planet could contain life.\nKuiper belt\nThe dwarf planet Makemake is not habitable, due to its extremely low temperatures. The same thing goes for Haumea and Eris."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-7c372305-69f6-42d4-a945-c1821167f4cb.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-7c372305-69f6-42d4-a945-c1821167f4cb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8c991c90152aaedc7d973390608d8975200181a4..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-7c372305-69f6-42d4-a945-c1821167f4cb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722129178.2969, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722129153.0381, "finish": 1722129178.2969, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dd2629181df04374a8e75f7528546bfd", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which paper proposes a new model for vision-and-language interaction named InterBERT?", "output": [["Which paper proposes a new model for vision-and-language interaction named InterBERT?", "Title: InterBERT: Vision-and-Language Interaction for Multi-modal Pretraining\n\nAbstract: Multi-modal pretraining for learning high-level multi-modal representation is a further step towards deep learning and artificial intelligence. In this work, we propose a novel model, namely InterBERT (BERT for Interaction), which is the first model of our series of multimodal pretraining methods M6 (MultiModality-to-MultiModality Multitask Mega-transformer). The model owns strong capability of modeling interaction between the information flows of different modalities. The single-stream interaction module is capable of effectively processing information of multiple modalilties, and the two-stream module on top preserves the independence of each modality to avoid performance downgrade in single-modal tasks. We pretrain the model with three pretraining tasks, including masked segment modeling (MSM), masked region modeling (MRM) and image-text matching (ITM); and finetune the model on a series of vision-and-language downstream tasks. Experimental results demonstrate that InterBERT outperforms a series of strong baselines, including the most recent multi-modal pretraining methods, and the analysis shows that MSM and MRM are effective for pretraining and our method can achieve performances comparable to BERT in single-modal tasks. Besides, we propose a large-scale dataset for multi-modal pretraining in Chinese, and we develop the Chinese InterBERT which is the first Chinese multi-modal pretrained model. We pretrain the Chinese InterBERT on our proposed dataset of 3.1M image-text pairs from the mobile Taobao, the largest Chinese e-commerce platform. We finetune the model for text-based image retrieval, and recently we deployed the model online for topic-based recommendation."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722129178.2969, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722129153.0381, "finish": 1722129178.2969, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6166099fff3543fabfefac86e239bdd4", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Which paper proposes a new model for vision-and-language interaction named InterBERT?", "output": [["Which paper proposes a new model for vision-and-language interaction named InterBERT?", "Title: InterBERT: Vision-and-Language Interaction for Multi-modal Pretraining\n\nAbstract: Multi-modal pretraining for learning high-level multi-modal representation is a further step towards deep learning and artificial intelligence. In this work, we propose a novel model, namely InterBERT (BERT for Interaction), which is the first model of our series of multimodal pretraining methods M6 (MultiModality-to-MultiModality Multitask Mega-transformer). The model owns strong capability of modeling interaction between the information flows of different modalities. The single-stream interaction module is capable of effectively processing information of multiple modalilties, and the two-stream module on top preserves the independence of each modality to avoid performance downgrade in single-modal tasks. We pretrain the model with three pretraining tasks, including masked segment modeling (MSM), masked region modeling (MRM) and image-text matching (ITM); and finetune the model on a series of vision-and-language downstream tasks. Experimental results demonstrate that InterBERT outperforms a series of strong baselines, including the most recent multi-modal pretraining methods, and the analysis shows that MSM and MRM are effective for pretraining and our method can achieve performances comparable to BERT in single-modal tasks. Besides, we propose a large-scale dataset for multi-modal pretraining in Chinese, and we develop the Chinese InterBERT which is the first Chinese multi-modal pretrained model. We pretrain the Chinese InterBERT on our proposed dataset of 3.1M image-text pairs from the mobile Taobao, the largest Chinese e-commerce platform. We finetune the model for text-based image retrieval, and recently we deployed the model online for topic-based recommendation."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722129236.9137, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722129192.7009, "finish": 1722129236.9137, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8302bd55f31a4ff6ab606302527bac10", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "gw", "output": [["gw", "Title: Binary inspiral, gravitational radiation, and cosmology\n\nAbstract: Observations of binary inspiral in a single interferometric gravitational wave detector can be cataloged according to signal-to-noise ratio $\\rho$ and chirp mass $\\cal M$. The distribution of events in a catalog composed of observations with $\\rho$ greater than a threshold $\\rho_0$ depends on the Hubble expansion, deceleration parameter, and cosmological constant, as well as the distribution of component masses in binary systems and evolutionary effects. In this paper I find general expressions, valid in any homogeneous and isotropic cosmological model, for the distribution with $\\rho$ and $\\cal M$ of cataloged events; I also evaluate these distributions explicitly for relevant matter-dominated Friedmann-Robertson-Walker models and simple models of the neutron star mass distribution. In matter dominated Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmological models advanced LIGO detectors will observe binary neutron star inspiral events with $\\rho>8$ from distances not exceeding approximately $2\\,\\text{Gpc}$, corresponding to redshifts of $0.48$ (0.26) for $h=0.8$ ($0.5$), at an estimated rate of 1 per week. As the binary system mass increases so does the distance it can be seen, up to a limit: in a matter dominated Einstein-deSitter cosmological model with $h=0.8$ ($0.5$) that limit is approximately $z=2.7$ (1.7) for binaries consisting of two $10\\,\\text{M}_\\odot$ black holes. Cosmological tests based on catalogs of the kind discussed here depend on the distribution of cataloged events with $\\rho$ and $\\cal M$. The distributions found here will play a pivotal role in testing cosmological models against our own universe and in constructing templates for the detection of cosmological inspiraling binary neutron stars and black holes."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722129236.9137, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722129192.7009, "finish": 1722129236.9137, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9e9ef8d95ae240159d28489fa3c09a58", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "gw", "output": [["gw", "Title: Gravitational-wave cosmological distances in scalar-tensor theories of gravity\n\nAbstract: We analyze the propagation of high-frequency gravitational waves (GW) in scalar-tensor theories of gravity, with the aim of examining properties of cosmological distances as inferred from GW measurements. By using symmetry principles, we first determine the most general structure of the GW linearized equations and of the GW energy momentum tensor, assuming that GW move with the speed of light. Modified gravity effects are encoded in a small number of parameters, and we study the conditions for ensuring graviton number conservation in our covariant set-up. We then apply our general findings to the case of GW propagating through a perturbed cosmological space-time, deriving the expressions for the GW luminosity distance $d_L^{({\\rm GW})}$ and the GW angular distance $d_A^{({\\rm GW})}$. We prove for the first time the validity of Etherington reciprocity law $d_L^{({\\rm GW})}\\,=\\,(1+z)^2\\,d_A^{({\\rm GW})}$ for a perturbed universe within a scalar-tensor framework. We find that besides the GW luminosity distance, also the GW angular distance can be modified with respect to General Relativity. We discuss implications of this result for gravitational lensing, focussing on time-delays of lensed GW and lensed photons emitted simultaneously during a multimessenger event. We explicitly show how modified gravity effects compensate between different coefficients in the GW time-delay formula: lensed GW arrive at the same time as their lensed electromagnetic counterparts, in agreement with causality constraints."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-81e097d6-3874-42a8-8b62-4607bc9a913a.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-81e097d6-3874-42a8-8b62-4607bc9a913a.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index fd2c2e874b0e667c14ca0ee50ffb3f33afe0607a..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-81e097d6-3874-42a8-8b62-4607bc9a913a.jsonl
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@@ -1,126 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721157711.1164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157664.1446, "finish": 1721157711.1164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bb3b2aa0ed084b40b1985cc0dbed5c18", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who said beware of the ides of march", "output": [["who said beware of the ides of march", "Title: Assassination of Julius Caesar\n\nPassage: Finally, somebody brought up the idea to assassinate Caesar at one of the senate meetings. All other plans had one detriment: while Caesar had no official bodyguards, he asked his friends to protect him in public. Most of these friends were imposing and dangerous-looking and the conspirators were afraid that they would interfere with the assassination. Here, this would not be an issue, since only senators were allowed in the Senate House. Some also said that the murder of a tyrant in full view of the Senate would not be seen as a political plot, but as a noble act, done on behalf of their country. The conspirators ultimately settled on this as the chosen plan. Caesar would be leaving the city on 18 March to embark on a military campaign against the Getae and the Parthians. The last senate meeting before that date was on the 15th, the Ides of March, and so the conspirators chose this as the day of the assassination.\nIn the days leading up to the Ides, Caesar was not completely oblivious to what was being planned. According to the ancient historian Plutarch, a seer had warned Caesar that his life would be in danger no later than the Ides of March. The Roman biographer Suetonius identifies this seer as a haruspex named Spurinna. In addition, on 1 March, Caesar watched Cassius speaking with Brutus at the senate house and said to an aide, \"What do you think Cassius is up to? I don't like him, he looks pale.\"\nTwo days before the assassination, Cassius met with the conspirators and told them that, should anyone discover the plan, they were to turn their knives on themselves.\nIdes of March\nOn the Ides of March of 44\u00a0BC, conspirators and non-conspirators met at the Senate House of Pompey, located in the Theatre of Pompey, for the senate meeting. Usually, the senators would be meeting at the Roman Forum, but Caesar was financing a reconstruction of the forum and so the senators met in other venues throughout Rome, this being one of them. There were gladiatorial games underway at the Theatre, and Decimus Brutus, who owned a company of gladiators, stationed them in the Portico of Pompey, also located in the Theatre of Pompey. The gladiators could be useful to the conspirators: if a fight broke out to protect Caesar, the gladiators could intervene; if Caesar was killed but the conspirators came under attack, the gladiators could protect them; and since it was impossible to enter the Senate House without going through the Portico, the gladiators could block entrance to both if necessary."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157711.1164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157664.1446, "finish": 1721157711.1164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3e36a500c7e34c4fbe123d4b2d9d347d", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who said beware of the ides of march", "output": [["who said beware of the ides of march", "Title: Philippicae\n\nPassage: The speeches were delivered in the aftermath of the assassination of Julius Caesar, during a power struggle between Caesar's supporters and his assassins. Although Cicero was not involved in the assassination, he agreed with it and felt that Antony should also have been eliminated. In the Philippics, Cicero attempted to rally the Senate against Antony, whom he denounced as a threat to the Roman Republic.\nThe Philippics convinced the Senate to declare Antony an enemy of the state and send an army against him. However, the commanders were killed in battle, so the Senate's army came under the control of Octavian. When Octavian, Antony and Marcus Lepidus formed the Second Triumvirate, Antony insisted that they proscribe Cicero in revenge for the Philippics. Cicero was hunted down and killed soon after.\nPolitical climate\nCicero was taken by surprise when Gaius Julius Caesar, the dictator of the Roman Republic, was assassinated on the fifteenth day of March, 44 BC (the Ides of March) by a group of Roman senators who called themselves Liberatores. Cicero was not included in the conspiracy even though the conspirators were sure of his sympathy. When Marcus Junius Brutus, one of the killers, lifted his bloodstained dagger after the assassination, he called out Cicero's name, beseeching him to \"restore the Republic!\". A letter Cicero wrote in February 43 BC to Trebonius, one of the conspirators, began, \"How I wish that you had invited me to that most glorious banquet on the Ides of March!\"\nCaesar had used his dominant position simply to appoint his supporters to magistracies (which were normally elected positions) and promagistracies (which were usually assigned by the Senate). This was a clear violation of the Roman constitution and left Caesar's supporters, known as the Caesarian faction, vulnerable to their appointments being declared illegal by the Senate. Following the assassination, the Caesarians sought to legitimise their positions and to take revenge on the assassins.\nWith the Caesarians and supporters of the assassins deadlocked in the Senate, Cicero brokered a compromise: he arranged for the Senate to confirm Caesar's appointees in their posts and in exchange issue an amnesty for the assassins. This brought an uneasy peace between the factions, though it would last less than a year.\nCicero became a popular leader during the subsequent months of instability. He was opposed by Mark Antony, one of the consuls for 44\u00a0BC and the leader of the Caesarian faction. In private Cicero expressed his regret that the assassins had not eliminated Antony as well as Caesar. The two men had never been on friendly terms and their relationship worsened when Antony began acting as the unofficial executor of Caesar's will. Cicero made it clear that he felt Antony was misrepresenting Caesar's wishes and intentions for his own gain."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157774.3227, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157723.5362, "finish": 1721157774.3227, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9f59c6ef3e7943a993544b305e698d63", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "can a ucc be filed on an individual", "output": [["can a ucc be filed on an individual", "Title: UCC-1 financing statement\n\nPassage: Pursuant to the standards set forth in the UCC, at 9-503 and 9\u2013504, the financing statement need only contain three pieces of information:\nthe debtor's name and address\nthe creditor's name and address\nan indication of the collateral, \"whether or not it is specific, if it reasonably identifies what is described.\" (UCC 9-108)\nThe financing statement is generally filed with the office of the state secretary of state, in the state where the debtor is located - for an individual, the state where the debtor resides, for most kinds of business organizations the state of incorporation or organization. Many states have a state agency that operates under the secretary of state, which is tasked with overseeing business organizations and activities, including receipt of financing statements. However, an exception exists if the collateral is something that is tied to a particular piece of real property, such as timber, mineral rights, or fixtures. In that case, the filing must be made in the county where the property is located, usually in the recording office or county court, because that is where third parties are most likely to search for such record.\nIn the case of a loan secured by personal property collateral, the filing of a financing statement gives notice of a lien against the property so that other lenders or buyers of the personal property will know of the security interest. In the case of a filing of a financing statement by a lessor of fixtures, the filing of the financing statement gives notice of the lessor's interests to others who acquire an interest in the real property and related fixtures. The financing statement does not create a lien nor does it create any additional rights against a lessee in favor of a lessor, the filing of a financing statement just gives notice of whatever rights the creditor or lessor have under their loan documents or lease, respectively.\nA filed financing statement typically has a duration of five years from when it was filed before a lapse may occur. Upon a lapse, a financing statement is no longer effective and any security interest that was perfected by the financing statement becomes unperfected. A secured party can continue their security interest by filing a continuation six months before the expiration date of the financing statement."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157774.3227, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157723.5362, "finish": 1721157774.3227, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9cca56e971b94acebb25585c0b7c7aae", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "can a ucc be filed on an individual", "output": [["can a ucc be filed on an individual", "Title: UCC-1 financing statement\n\nPassage: Pursuant to the standards set forth in the UCC, at 9-503 and 9\u2013504, the financing statement need only contain three pieces of information:\nthe debtor's name and address\nthe creditor's name and address\nan indication of the collateral, \"whether or not it is specific, if it reasonably identifies what is described.\" (UCC 9-108)\nThe financing statement is generally filed with the office of the state secretary of state, in the state where the debtor is located - for an individual, the state where the debtor resides, for most kinds of business organizations the state of incorporation or organization. Many states have a state agency that operates under the secretary of state, which is tasked with overseeing business organizations and activities, including receipt of financing statements. However, an exception exists if the collateral is something that is tied to a particular piece of real property, such as timber, mineral rights, or fixtures. In that case, the filing must be made in the county where the property is located, usually in the recording office or county court, because that is where third parties are most likely to search for such record.\nIn the case of a loan secured by personal property collateral, the filing of a financing statement gives notice of a lien against the property so that other lenders or buyers of the personal property will know of the security interest. In the case of a filing of a financing statement by a lessor of fixtures, the filing of the financing statement gives notice of the lessor's interests to others who acquire an interest in the real property and related fixtures. The financing statement does not create a lien nor does it create any additional rights against a lessee in favor of a lessor, the filing of a financing statement just gives notice of whatever rights the creditor or lessor have under their loan documents or lease, respectively.\nA filed financing statement typically has a duration of five years from when it was filed before a lapse may occur. Upon a lapse, a financing statement is no longer effective and any security interest that was perfected by the financing statement becomes unperfected. A secured party can continue their security interest by filing a continuation six months before the expiration date of the financing statement."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158051.9685, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157976.7847, "finish": 1721158051.9685, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d404724f2a8a443aa9fe08812885aef1", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "what does left and right mean in nz politics", "output": [["what does left and right mean in nz politics", "Title: New Zealand Labour Party\n\nPassage: The New Zealand Labour Party, also known simply as Labour (), is a centre-left political party in New Zealand. The party's platform programme describes its founding principle as democratic socialism, while observers describe Labour as social democratic and pragmatic in practice. The party participates in the international Progressive Alliance. It is one of two major political parties in New Zealand, alongside its traditional rival, the National Party.\nThe New Zealand Labour Party formed in 1916 out of various socialist parties and trade unions. It is the country's oldest political party still in existence. Alongside the National Party, Labour has alternated in leading governments of New Zealand since the 1930s. , there have been six periods of Labour government under 11 Labour prime ministers. The party has traditionally been supported by the working classes, M\u0101ori, Pasifika, and has had strongholds in inner cities and the M\u0101ori seats for much of its existence. Labour also won the party vote in 71 out of 72 electorates in that election, making it overwhelmingly the most successful political party of the MMP era.\nThe party first came to power under prime ministers Michael Joseph Savage and Peter Fraser from 1935 to 1949, when it established New Zealand's welfare state. It governed from 1957 to 1960, and again from 1972 to 1975. In 1974, prime minister Norman Kirk died in office, which contributed to a decline in party support. However, Labour won the popular vote in 1978 and 1981, with the first-past-the-post voting system preventing them from governing. Up to the 1980s, the party advocated a strong role for governments in economic and social matters. When it governed from 1984 to 1990, Labour's emergent neoliberal faction had a strong influence; the party broke precedent and transformed the economy from a protectionist one through extensive deregulation. As part of Rogernomics, Labour privatised state assets and greatly reduced the role of the state, causing a party split in 1989. Labour prime minister David Lange, a member of the party's left, also introduced New Zealand's nuclear-free policy. After a significant defeat in the 1990 election, Labour's neoliberal faction would largely defect from the party and form ACT New Zealand. Labour again became the largest party from 1999 to 2008, when it governed in coalition with, or based on negotiated support from, several minor parties; Helen Clark became the first Labour prime minister to secure a third term in office. Clark's government was marked by the creation of Kiwibank, a state-owned banking corporation; strong opposition to the Iraq War; and the foreshore and seabed controversy, which caused disillusioned M\u0101ori Labour MPs to split and create the M\u0101ori Party."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158051.9685, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157976.7847, "finish": 1721158051.9685, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c8f26e17124c427eba2d461cb975e888", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "what does left and right mean in nz politics", "output": [["what does left and right mean in nz politics", "Title: New Zealand Labour Party\n\nPassage: The New Zealand Labour Party, also known simply as Labour (), is a centre-left political party in New Zealand. The party's platform programme describes its founding principle as democratic socialism, while observers describe Labour as social democratic and pragmatic in practice. The party participates in the international Progressive Alliance. It is one of two major political parties in New Zealand, alongside its traditional rival, the National Party.\nThe New Zealand Labour Party formed in 1916 out of various socialist parties and trade unions. It is the country's oldest political party still in existence. Alongside the National Party, Labour has alternated in leading governments of New Zealand since the 1930s. , there have been six periods of Labour government under 11 Labour prime ministers. The party has traditionally been supported by the working classes, M\u0101ori, Pasifika, and has had strongholds in inner cities and the M\u0101ori seats for much of its existence. Labour also won the party vote in 71 out of 72 electorates in that election, making it overwhelmingly the most successful political party of the MMP era.\nThe party first came to power under prime ministers Michael Joseph Savage and Peter Fraser from 1935 to 1949, when it established New Zealand's welfare state. It governed from 1957 to 1960, and again from 1972 to 1975. In 1974, prime minister Norman Kirk died in office, which contributed to a decline in party support. However, Labour won the popular vote in 1978 and 1981, with the first-past-the-post voting system preventing them from governing. Up to the 1980s, the party advocated a strong role for governments in economic and social matters. When it governed from 1984 to 1990, Labour's emergent neoliberal faction had a strong influence; the party broke precedent and transformed the economy from a protectionist one through extensive deregulation. As part of Rogernomics, Labour privatised state assets and greatly reduced the role of the state, causing a party split in 1989. Labour prime minister David Lange, a member of the party's left, also introduced New Zealand's nuclear-free policy. After a significant defeat in the 1990 election, Labour's neoliberal faction would largely defect from the party and form ACT New Zealand. Labour again became the largest party from 1999 to 2008, when it governed in coalition with, or based on negotiated support from, several minor parties; Helen Clark became the first Labour prime minister to secure a third term in office. Clark's government was marked by the creation of Kiwibank, a state-owned banking corporation; strong opposition to the Iraq War; and the foreshore and seabed controversy, which caused disillusioned M\u0101ori Labour MPs to split and create the M\u0101ori Party."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158119.0938, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158074.1866, "finish": 1721158119.0938, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2a6795c0a664401793ebda6a1df10059", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who played cruella de vil in 101 dalmatians", "output": [["who played cruella de vil in 101 dalmatians", "Title: Cruella de Vil\n\nPassage: Cruella de Vil is a fictional character in British author Dodie Smith's 1956 novel The Hundred and One Dalmatians. A pampered and glamorous London heiress and fashion designer, she appears in Walt Disney Productions' animated feature film One Hundred and One Dalmatians (1961), voiced by Betty Lou Gerson; in Disney's 101 Dalmatians II: Patch's London Adventure (2003), voiced by Susanne Blakeslee; in Disney's live-action 101 Dalmatians (1996) and 102 Dalmatians (2000), portrayed by Glenn Close; as well as Cruella (2021), portrayed by Emma Stone; and in many other Disney sequels and spin-offs.\nIn most of her incarnations, Cruella kidnaps the 15 puppies of the main Dalmatian characters, Pongo and Perdita, intending to turn them into fur coats along with 84 other Dalmatian puppies she legally bought before. The live-action Disney film reveals that Cruella chooses to skin puppies because when short-haired dogs grow older, their fur becomes very coarse and does not sell as well in the fur fashion industry as the fine, soft fur of puppies.\nThe character became a pop-culture icon and a famous symbol of dastardly greed, vanity and evil. Disney's Cruella ranked 39th on AFI's list \"100 Years...100 Heroes and Villains\".\nName\nThe name Cruella de Vil is a pun of the words cruel and devil, an allusion that is emphasized by having her English country house nicknamed 'Hell Hall'. The name 'de Vil' is also a literary allusion to Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897), in which the realty firm Mitchell, Sons & Candy write a letter to Lord Godalming, informing him that the purchaser of a house in Piccadilly, London is \"a foreign nobleman, Count De Ville\". Count De Ville, however, proves to be an alias for Count Dracula himself.\nIt is also believed that the name is inspired by the Rolls-Royce 25/30 \"Sedanca de Ville\" motorcar bought by Dodie Smith in 1939, in which she and her pet Dalmatian \"Pongo\" frequently travelled, which also formed the basis of the cartoon imagery of Cruella's own motorcar. In automotive coachbuilding, the term \"de Ville\" had originally indicated a vehicle with a separate compartment for the driver or chauffeur but by mid-twentieth century simply bespoke ostentatious luxury, as befits the overprivileged Cruella.\nIn some translations of the name, other wordplay is used to similar effect as the name in English. For instance:\nIn Bulgarian, her name is \u041a\u0440\u0443\u0435\u043b\u0430 \u0414\u0435 \u0412\u0438\u043b (Kruela De Vil), but some properties use her translated name, \u0417\u043b\u043e\u0431\u0430\u0440\u0430 \u0414\u0435 \u041c\u043e\u043d (Zlobara De Mon)\u2014\"\u0437\u043b\u043e\u0431\u0430\" meaning malice, spite, or malevolence.\nIn Dutch, the name remains 'De Vil'. By coincidence, the Dutch verb for 'skinning' is villen, and vil is the conjugation of this verb for the first person singular.\nIn Finnish, she is known as Julmia Juoninen, a name formed from the words julma (cruel) and juoni (plot, scheme).\nIn French, she is referred as 'Cruella d'Enfer'\u2014literally meaning 'Cruella of Hell' or 'from Hell'."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158119.0938, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158074.1866, "finish": 1721158119.0938, "ip": "", "conv_id": "83a9f6d84e464932b4516e019ff75cd1", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who played cruella de vil in 101 dalmatians", "output": [["who played cruella de vil in 101 dalmatians", "Title: Dalla\n\nPassage: Dalla was a band specialising in traditional Cornish music who were active from the late 1990s until about 2017. They were known mainly for their festival and concert performances, but until about 2013 also played music for Cornish Nos Lowen dance nights. After this, they used the name 'Skillywidden' when playing as a dance band. Skillywidden continues to be one of the main Nos Lowen dance bands.\nMembers play the clarinet, bouzouki, fiddle, viola, accordion and percussion. They sing in both Cornish and English.\nVarious members of Dalla formerly played in Bucca (a Cornish band named for the supernatural sea deities called Bucca), Sowena, Anao Atao and other bands. The music displays influences from these previous sounds. Dalla often appear with many additional instruments, which vary from event to event.\nOrigins\nDalla had its roots in 'The Jack and Jenny Band'. In 1999 they became Sowena, and two years later, the band underwent a second transformation as remaining additional members left and Neil Davey joined to complete the classic Dalla sound. Dalla's Myspace profile cites a wide range of influences.\nInfluence\nDalla has greatly influenced Cornish music, encouraging the formation of 'Noze looan' bands, particularly by younger people and\nThey have been involved in numerous Cornish music projects, run by Cumpas such as 'kick up your heels' in which young people from across Cornwall played in a large underground concert at Carnglaze Caverns, or the 'crowders and horners' project, to encourage processional Cornish music and dance.\nReview\nIn the Cornish Guardian, Bert Biscoe wrote \"There is an intelligence that inhabits and underpins the various activities of Dalla...\"\nMembers\nHilary Coleman, clarinet, bass clarinet, vocals\nNeil Davey, fiddle, bouzouki\nBec Applebee, vocals, crowdy crawn and other percussion\nJen Dyer, viola, vocals\nKyt Le Nen Davey, accordion\nSimon Lockley and Steve Hunt are former members of the group.\nAlthough Dalla has a core of two to three members they rarely perform without additional musicians, and on such occasions when there are only two they are usually referred to as the 'dalla duo'.\nDiscography\nAlbums\nA Richer Vein (2001)\nMore Salt/Hollan Mouy (2004)\nRooz (2007)\nCribbar (2010)\nK5'' (2013)"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158197.6739, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158163.7071, "finish": 1721158197.6739, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2426e423bd014b4abd827739002c6feb", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "what is the definition of ph in water", "output": [["what is the definition of ph in water", "Title: Alkalinity\n\nPassage: Alkalinity (from ) is the capacity of water to resist acidification. It should not be confused with basicity, which is an absolute measurement on the pH scale. Alkalinity is the strength of a buffer solution composed of weak acids and their conjugate bases. It is measured by titrating the solution with an acid such as HCl until its pH changes abruptly, or it reaches a known endpoint where that happens. Alkalinity is expressed in units of concentration, such as meq/L (milliequivalents per liter), \u03bceq/kg (microequivalents per kilogram), or mg/L CaCO3 (milligrams per liter of calcium carbonate). Each of these measurements corresponds to an amount of acid added as a titrant.\nIn freshwater, particularly those on non-limestone terrains, alkalinities are low and involve a lot of ions. In the ocean, on the other hand, alkalinity is completely dominated by carbonate and bicarbonate plus a small contribution from borate.\nAlthough alkalinity is primarily a term used by limnologists and oceanographers, it is also used by hydrologists to describe temporary hardness. Moreover, measuring alkalinity is important in determining a stream's ability to neutralize acidic pollution from rainfall or wastewater. It is one of the best measures of the sensitivity of the stream to acid inputs. There can be long-term changes in the alkalinity of streams and rivers in response to human disturbances such as acid rain generated by SOx and NOx emissions.\nHistory\nIn 1884, Professor Wilhelm (William) Dittmar of Anderson College, now the University of Strathclyde, analysed 77 pristine seawater samples from around the world brought back by the Challenger expedition. He found that in seawater the major ions were in a fixed ratio, confirming the hypothesis of Johan Georg Forchhammer, that is now known as the Principle of Constant Proportions. However, there was one exception. Dittmar found that the concentration of calcium was slightly greater in the deep ocean, and named this increase alkalinity.\nAlso in 1884, Svante Arrhenius submitted his PhD theses in which he advocated the existence of ions in solution, and defined acids as hydronium ion donors and bases as hydroxide ion donors. For that work, he received the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1903. See also Svante Arrhenius#Ionic disassociation.\nSimplified summary"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158197.6739, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158163.7071, "finish": 1721158197.6739, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f49b07362621442bafd3b90f01d6272c", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "what is the definition of ph in water", "output": [["what is the definition of ph in water", "Title: .ph\n\nPassage: .ph is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for the Philippines.\nThe official domain registry of the .ph domain is dotPH Domains Inc. dotPH holds and maintains the database of PH domain names, specifically .ph, .com.ph, .net.ph, and .org.ph. Its domain name registrars are not only individuals, businesses, and organizations in the Philippines, but also those in other parts of the world.\nThe PH domain is currently administered by Jos\u00e9 Emmanuel \"Joel\" Disini, who is also dotPH's current CEO. Disini has been the domain administrator since Jon Postel assigned him the domain in 1990. The domain is sponsored by the PH Domain Foundation, a social outreach arm of dotPH which was also founded by Disini together with a group of IT professionals in August 1999.\nIn 1994, the administration of the .gov.ph domain was sub-delegated to the Government of the Philippines. In like manner, .edu.ph was sub-delegated to the Philippine Network Foundation, Inc. (PHNET).\nAside from being the registry, dotPH sells domains and web-related services such as web hosting, co-location, private registration and e-mail forwarding. dotPH also offers a free referral service which connects Small- and Medium-sized Enterprises with a network of over 300 accredited professional Filipino web designers. It formerly offered a free blogging service through .i.ph domains.\nHistory\nBirth of the .ph registry"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158246.2079, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158215.5264, "finish": 1721158246.2079, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b2420a02f4194ff0ac61101aba015e6f", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "which church was given a letter in the book of revelation", "output": [["which church was given a letter in the book of revelation", "Title: Revelation in Mormonism\n\nPassage: In Mormonism, revelation is communication from God to man. Latter Day Saints teach that the Latter Day Saint movement began with a revelation from God, which began a process of restoring the gospel of Jesus Christ to the earth. Latter Day Saints also teach that revelation is the foundation of the church established by Jesus Christ and that it remains an essential element of his true church today. Continuous revelation provides individual Latter Day Saints with a \"testimony\", described by Richard Bushman as \"one of the most potent words in the Mormon lexicon\".\nIn response to an inquiry on the beliefs of the church, Joseph Smith wrote what came to be called the Wentworth Letter, the last section of which was canonized as the Articles of Faith. The fifth, sixth, seventh and ninth articles state the essence of Latter Day Saint belief concerning revelation:\n5 We believe that a man must be called of God, by prophecy, and by the laying on of hands by those who are in authority, to preach the Gospel and administer in the ordinances thereof.\n6 We believe in the same organization that existed in the Primitive Church, namely, apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers, evangelists, and so forth.\n7 We believe in the gift of tongues, prophecy, revelation, visions, healing, interpretation of tongues, and so forth.\n9 We believe all that God has revealed, all that He does now reveal, and we believe that He will yet reveal many great and important things pertaining to the Kingdom of God.\nMost Latter Day Saint denominations believe that the Lord \"will yet reveal many great and important things\" to his church through modern apostles and prophets; some go as far as to claim that all leaders of their churches are \"called of God, by prophecy\"; and that each member of the church can receive personal revelation to strengthen their faith and guide them in their own lives.\nDoctrine\nThe Latter Day Saint concept of revelation includes the belief that revelation from God is available to all those who earnestly seek it with the intent of doing good."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158246.2079, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158215.5264, "finish": 1721158246.2079, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6c5fd750031a4792a4891c43f4bd3f99", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "which church was given a letter in the book of revelation", "output": [["which church was given a letter in the book of revelation", "Title: Laodicean Church\n\nPassage: The Laodicean Church was a Christian community established in the ancient city of Laodicea (on the river Lycus, in the Roman province of Asia, and one of the early centers of Christianity). The church was established in the Apostolic Age, the earliest period of Christianity, and is probably best known for being one of the Seven churches of Asia addressed by name in the Book of Revelation (Rev. 3.14\u201322)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158856.9557, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158855.8665, "finish": 1721158856.9557, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f16309c661984b628d93e9d3b5e71f74", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where was the world economic forum held this year", "output": [["where was the world economic forum held this year", "Title: World Economic Forum\n\nPassage: In 2018, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gave the keynote speech, becoming the first head of government from India to deliver the inaugural keynote for the annual plenary at Davos. Modi highlighted global warming (climate change), terrorism and protectionism as the three major global challenges, and expressed confidence that they can be tackled with collective effort.\nIn 2019, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro gave the keynote address at the plenary session of the conference. On his first international trip to Davos, he emphasized liberal economic policies despite his populist agenda, and attempted to reassure the world that Brazil is a protector of the rain forest while utilizing its resources for food production and export. He stated that \"his government will seek to better integrate Brazil into the world by mainstreaming international best practices, such as those adopted and promoted by the OECD\". Environmental concerns like extreme weather events, and the failure of climate change mitigation and adaptation were among the top-ranking global risks expressed by WEF attendees. On June 13, 2019, the WEF and the United Nations signed a \"Strategic Partnership Framework\" in order to \"jointly accelerate the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.\"\nThe 2021 World Economic Forum was due to be held from 17 to 20 August in Singapore. However, on 17 May the Forum was cancelled; with a new meeting to take place in the first half of 2022 instead with a final location and date to be determined later in 2021.\nIn late December 2021, the World Economic Forum said in a release that pandemic conditions had made it extremely difficult to stage a global in-person meeting the following month; transmissibility of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant and its impact on travel and mobility had made deferral necessary, with the meeting in Davos eventually rescheduled for 22 to 26 May 2022.\nTopics in the 2022 annual meeting included the Russian invasion of Ukraine, climate change, energy insecurity and inflation. Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy gave a special address at the meeting, thanking the global community for its efforts but also calling for more support. The 2022 Forum was marked by the absence of a Russian delegation for the first time since 1991, which The Wall Street Journal described as signalling the \"unraveling of globalization.\" The former Russia House was used to present Russia's war crimes.\nThe 2023 annual meeting of the World Economic Forum took place in Davos, Switzerland from 16\u201320 January under the theme \"Cooperation in a fragmented world\".\nOrganization\nHeadquartered in Cologny, the WEF also has offices in New York, Beijing and Tokyo. In January 2015, it was designated an NGO with \"other international body\" status by the Swiss Federal Government under the Swiss Host-State Act."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158856.9557, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158855.8665, "finish": 1721158856.9557, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae407a41c2224200afd9c71622bf12dc", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "where was the world economic forum held this year", "output": [["where was the world economic forum held this year", "Title: World Economic Forum\n\nPassage: In 2018, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi gave the keynote speech, becoming the first head of government from India to deliver the inaugural keynote for the annual plenary at Davos. Modi highlighted global warming (climate change), terrorism and protectionism as the three major global challenges, and expressed confidence that they can be tackled with collective effort.\nIn 2019, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro gave the keynote address at the plenary session of the conference. On his first international trip to Davos, he emphasized liberal economic policies despite his populist agenda, and attempted to reassure the world that Brazil is a protector of the rain forest while utilizing its resources for food production and export. He stated that \"his government will seek to better integrate Brazil into the world by mainstreaming international best practices, such as those adopted and promoted by the OECD\". Environmental concerns like extreme weather events, and the failure of climate change mitigation and adaptation were among the top-ranking global risks expressed by WEF attendees. On June 13, 2019, the WEF and the United Nations signed a \"Strategic Partnership Framework\" in order to \"jointly accelerate the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.\"\nThe 2021 World Economic Forum was due to be held from 17 to 20 August in Singapore. However, on 17 May the Forum was cancelled; with a new meeting to take place in the first half of 2022 instead with a final location and date to be determined later in 2021.\nIn late December 2021, the World Economic Forum said in a release that pandemic conditions had made it extremely difficult to stage a global in-person meeting the following month; transmissibility of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant and its impact on travel and mobility had made deferral necessary, with the meeting in Davos eventually rescheduled for 22 to 26 May 2022.\nTopics in the 2022 annual meeting included the Russian invasion of Ukraine, climate change, energy insecurity and inflation. Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelenskyy gave a special address at the meeting, thanking the global community for its efforts but also calling for more support. The 2022 Forum was marked by the absence of a Russian delegation for the first time since 1991, which The Wall Street Journal described as signalling the \"unraveling of globalization.\" The former Russia House was used to present Russia's war crimes.\nThe 2023 annual meeting of the World Economic Forum took place in Davos, Switzerland from 16\u201320 January under the theme \"Cooperation in a fragmented world\".\nOrganization\nHeadquartered in Cologny, the WEF also has offices in New York, Beijing and Tokyo. In January 2015, it was designated an NGO with \"other international body\" status by the Swiss Federal Government under the Swiss Host-State Act."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158877.2397, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158876.8822, "finish": 1721158877.2397, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e5abaffab2e4a2887e63dd8782abfdb", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who developed the first printing press in 1430s", "output": [["who developed the first printing press in 1430s", "Title: Johannes Gutenberg\n\nPassage: Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg ( \u2013 3 February 1468) was a German inventor and craftsman who invented the movable-type printing press. Though movable type was already in use in East Asia, Gutenberg's invention of the printing press enabled a much faster rate of printing. The printing press later spread across the world, and led to an information revolution and the unprecedented mass-spread of literature throughout Europe. It had a profound impact on the development of the Renaissance, Reformation, and humanist movements."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158877.2397, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158876.8822, "finish": 1721158877.2397, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8e9a914dd99d461f8503ab78988f04a3", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who developed the first printing press in 1430s", "output": [["who developed the first printing press in 1430s", "Title: Johannes Gutenberg\n\nPassage: Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg ( \u2013 3 February 1468) was a German inventor and craftsman who invented the movable-type printing press. Though movable type was already in use in East Asia, Gutenberg's invention of the printing press enabled a much faster rate of printing. The printing press later spread across the world, and led to an information revolution and the unprecedented mass-spread of literature throughout Europe. It had a profound impact on the development of the Renaissance, Reformation, and humanist movements."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158883.6597, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158883.2929, "finish": 1721158883.6597, "ip": "", "conv_id": "90e392e641ae429fb64de0b2e306d6ae", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where did the term goody two shoes come from", "output": [["where did the term goody two shoes come from", "Title: Shoeshiner\n\nPassage: Shoeshine, a 1946 Italian film which received honours at the 1948 Academy Awards\nBoot Polish, a 1954 Hindi film\nEl Bolero de Raquel, 1956 Mexican film starring Cantinflas\nPrince of Space, a 1959 science-fiction film\nUnderdog, a 1964 animated television series in which an anthropomorphic dog, Shoeshine Boy, battles crime as the titular canine superhero.\nThe Adventures of Timothy Pilgrim, a 1975 Canadian children's TV series\nGoodfellas, Martin Scorsese's 1990 gangster film, features a scene in which hair trigger-tempered Lucchese crime family wiseguy, Tommy DeVito (Joe Pesci), brutally beats Gambino crime family mobster, Billy Batts (Frank Vincent), for insulting him about being a shoeshine boy in Tommy's younger days. The film is based on the real-life experiences of Henry Hill and the people he met through the Vario brothers, who owned a shoeshine stand and other businesses. In real life, William \"Billy Batts\" Bentvena taunted Thomas \"Two Gun Tommy\" DeSimone, calling him \"spit-shine Tommy\". DeSimone retorted by yelling, \"Shine these fuckin' shoes\", and then executing Batts.\nParks and Recreation, a 2009 American TV show, in which Andy Dwyer, one of the main characters gets a job in Pawnee City Hall shining shoes.\nLe Havre, Aki Kaurism\u00e4ki, 2011.\nCoco, a 2017 film, in which the character of Miguel worked as a shoeshiner before going into shoemaking.\nPolice Squad!, the spoof police procedural starring Leslie Nielsen featured a shoe shiner called Johnny, played by William Duell. As well as shining shoes and giving inside info on the latest case to main character Frank Drebin, Johnny appeared to have a vast knowledge of just about any subject his customers would ask him about, from fire safety to medical procedures, for a small tip.\nLiterature and publications\nSam Weller, fictional Cockney bootblack in The Pickwick Papers (1836) by Charles Dickens.\nRagged Dick, an 1867 dime novel by Horatio Alger Jr. about a poor but honest shoeshiner and his rise to middle-class comfort and respectability through good moral behavior, clean living, and determination. Shine!, a musical based on Alger's work, particularly Ragged Dick, was produced in 1982.\nRajbahadur Bakhia the arch-villain in novels of Surender Mohan Pathak, was originally a shoeshiner at flora fountain area of Mumbai, and had his introduction with underworld over a payment dispute with a small-time gangster who refused to pay him.\nScrooge McDuck, the Dell Comics character, famously won his Number One Dime shining shoes.\nMusic\nThe opening lines of \"Chattanooga Choo Choo\" (1941) are dialogue between a passenger and a shoeshine boy.\n\"Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy\" (1949), a song performed by Red Foley, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra amongst others.\nIn \"Get Rhythm\" (1956), written and performed by Johnny Cash, the song's narrator asks a \"little shoeshine boy\" who has \"the dirtiest job in town\" how he keeps from getting the blues. The shoeshine boy \"grinned as he raised his little head / He popped a shoeshine rag, and then he said / Get rhythm...\"\n\"Shoeshine Man\" (1970), a song by Tom T. Hall."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158883.6597, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158883.2929, "finish": 1721158883.6597, "ip": "", "conv_id": "12ed8f9296214dada4322968b0ab1805", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "where did the term goody two shoes come from", "output": [["where did the term goody two shoes come from", "Title: Shoeshiner\n\nPassage: Shoeshine, a 1946 Italian film which received honours at the 1948 Academy Awards\nBoot Polish, a 1954 Hindi film\nEl Bolero de Raquel, 1956 Mexican film starring Cantinflas\nPrince of Space, a 1959 science-fiction film\nUnderdog, a 1964 animated television series in which an anthropomorphic dog, Shoeshine Boy, battles crime as the titular canine superhero.\nThe Adventures of Timothy Pilgrim, a 1975 Canadian children's TV series\nGoodfellas, Martin Scorsese's 1990 gangster film, features a scene in which hair trigger-tempered Lucchese crime family wiseguy, Tommy DeVito (Joe Pesci), brutally beats Gambino crime family mobster, Billy Batts (Frank Vincent), for insulting him about being a shoeshine boy in Tommy's younger days. The film is based on the real-life experiences of Henry Hill and the people he met through the Vario brothers, who owned a shoeshine stand and other businesses. In real life, William \"Billy Batts\" Bentvena taunted Thomas \"Two Gun Tommy\" DeSimone, calling him \"spit-shine Tommy\". DeSimone retorted by yelling, \"Shine these fuckin' shoes\", and then executing Batts.\nParks and Recreation, a 2009 American TV show, in which Andy Dwyer, one of the main characters gets a job in Pawnee City Hall shining shoes.\nLe Havre, Aki Kaurism\u00e4ki, 2011.\nCoco, a 2017 film, in which the character of Miguel worked as a shoeshiner before going into shoemaking.\nPolice Squad!, the spoof police procedural starring Leslie Nielsen featured a shoe shiner called Johnny, played by William Duell. As well as shining shoes and giving inside info on the latest case to main character Frank Drebin, Johnny appeared to have a vast knowledge of just about any subject his customers would ask him about, from fire safety to medical procedures, for a small tip.\nLiterature and publications\nSam Weller, fictional Cockney bootblack in The Pickwick Papers (1836) by Charles Dickens.\nRagged Dick, an 1867 dime novel by Horatio Alger Jr. about a poor but honest shoeshiner and his rise to middle-class comfort and respectability through good moral behavior, clean living, and determination. Shine!, a musical based on Alger's work, particularly Ragged Dick, was produced in 1982.\nRajbahadur Bakhia the arch-villain in novels of Surender Mohan Pathak, was originally a shoeshiner at flora fountain area of Mumbai, and had his introduction with underworld over a payment dispute with a small-time gangster who refused to pay him.\nScrooge McDuck, the Dell Comics character, famously won his Number One Dime shining shoes.\nMusic\nThe opening lines of \"Chattanooga Choo Choo\" (1941) are dialogue between a passenger and a shoeshine boy.\n\"Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy\" (1949), a song performed by Red Foley, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra amongst others.\nIn \"Get Rhythm\" (1956), written and performed by Johnny Cash, the song's narrator asks a \"little shoeshine boy\" who has \"the dirtiest job in town\" how he keeps from getting the blues. The shoeshine boy \"grinned as he raised his little head / He popped a shoeshine rag, and then he said / Get rhythm...\"\n\"Shoeshine Man\" (1970), a song by Tom T. Hall."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158888.9156, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158888.5527, "finish": 1721158888.9156, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0c4361d7e5fd4d7ca3f7e8ec206405aa", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who wrote the original little red riding hood story", "output": [["who wrote the original little red riding hood story", "Title: Adaptations of Little Red Riding Hood\n\nPassage: Scarlet (2013) by Marissa Meyer. The second book in The Lunar Chronicles, a series of interconnected fairy-tale retellings in a gritty futuristic setting.\nRed Riding Hood (2019) Lost Story by Beatrix Potter and illustrated by Helen Oxenbury adapted from the French of Charles Perrault.\nPicture books\nThe Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck (1908) by Beatrix Potter was heavily based upon Red Riding Hood.\nChapeuzinho Amarelo by Chico Buarque (1970).\nFlossie & the Fox by Patricia McKissack.\nLon Po Po: A Red-Riding Hood Story from China by Ed Young (1990).\nKawoni's Journey Across the Mountain: A Cherokee Little Red Riding Hood by Cordellya Smith (2014).\nPetite Rouge: A Cajun Red Riding Hood by Jim Harris (illustrator) Mike Artell (2001).\nBeware of the Storybook Wolves by Lauren Child.\nThe Girl in Red (2012), a modern reimagining of the fairy tale, which is written by Aaron Frisch and illustrated by Roberto Innocenti.\nLittle Red Overalls (2013) by Aaron Burakoff\nPoetry\n\"How Little Red Riding Hood Came to be Eaten\" by Guy Wetmore Carryl in Grimm Tales Made Gay (1902).\n\"Little Red Riding Hood\" by Olga Broumas, published in Beginning With O (1977).\n\"Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf\" by Roald Dahl, published in Revolting Rhymes (1983) \u2013 features a comical and violent twist in which Red turns the wolf into a wolf-skin coat.\n\"The Waiting Wolf\" by Gwen Strauss, published in Trail of Stones (1990).\n\"On a Nineteenth Century Color Lithograph of Red Riding Hood by the Artist J.H.\" by Alice Wirth Gray, published in What the Poor Eat (1993).\nby Lawrence Schimel, published in Black Thorn, White Rose (1994).\nby Ellen Steiber, published in The Armless Maiden (1996).\n\"Little Red Cap\" by Carol Ann Duffy, published in The World's Wife (1999).\n\"Grandmother\" by Lawrence Syndal, published in Conjunctions #31 (1999).\n\"Red Riding Hood's Dilemma\" by \u00d3rfhlaith Foyle, published in Red Riding Hood's Dilemma (2009).\nShort stories\nIn 1940, Howard L. Chace, a professor of French, wrote Ladle rat rotten hut, where the story is told using incorrect homonyms of the correct English words.\n\"The Company of Wolves\" by Angela Carter, published in The Bloody Chamber (1979). This famous and influential version was the basis for the Neil Jordan film (below).\n\"Wolfland\" by Tanith Lee, published in Red as Blood (1983).\n\"I Shall Do Thee Mischief in the Woods\" by Kathe Koja, published in Snow White, Blood Red (1993).\n\"Little Red\" by Wendy Wheeler, published in Snow White, Blood Red (1993).\nThe Apprentice\" by Miriam Grace Monfredo, published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (November 1993).\n\"Little Red Riding Hood\" published in James Finn Garner's Politically Correct Bedtime Stories (1994) satirises politically correct speech, focusing on such things as womyn's rights. See also Politically Correct Red Riding Hood, which features a very different outcome.\n\"The Good Mother\" by Priscilla Galloway, published in Truly Grim Tales (1995).\n\"Riding the Red\" by Nalo Hopkinson, published in Black Swan, White Raven (1997)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158888.9156, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158888.5527, "finish": 1721158888.9156, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b05f7f4ec559441d9e65f046bda39380", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who wrote the original little red riding hood story", "output": [["who wrote the original little red riding hood story", "Title: Adaptations of Little Red Riding Hood\n\nPassage: Scarlet (2013) by Marissa Meyer. The second book in The Lunar Chronicles, a series of interconnected fairy-tale retellings in a gritty futuristic setting.\nRed Riding Hood (2019) Lost Story by Beatrix Potter and illustrated by Helen Oxenbury adapted from the French of Charles Perrault.\nPicture books\nThe Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck (1908) by Beatrix Potter was heavily based upon Red Riding Hood.\nChapeuzinho Amarelo by Chico Buarque (1970).\nFlossie & the Fox by Patricia McKissack.\nLon Po Po: A Red-Riding Hood Story from China by Ed Young (1990).\nKawoni's Journey Across the Mountain: A Cherokee Little Red Riding Hood by Cordellya Smith (2014).\nPetite Rouge: A Cajun Red Riding Hood by Jim Harris (illustrator) Mike Artell (2001).\nBeware of the Storybook Wolves by Lauren Child.\nThe Girl in Red (2012), a modern reimagining of the fairy tale, which is written by Aaron Frisch and illustrated by Roberto Innocenti.\nLittle Red Overalls (2013) by Aaron Burakoff\nPoetry\n\"How Little Red Riding Hood Came to be Eaten\" by Guy Wetmore Carryl in Grimm Tales Made Gay (1902).\n\"Little Red Riding Hood\" by Olga Broumas, published in Beginning With O (1977).\n\"Little Red Riding Hood and the Wolf\" by Roald Dahl, published in Revolting Rhymes (1983) \u2013 features a comical and violent twist in which Red turns the wolf into a wolf-skin coat.\n\"The Waiting Wolf\" by Gwen Strauss, published in Trail of Stones (1990).\n\"On a Nineteenth Century Color Lithograph of Red Riding Hood by the Artist J.H.\" by Alice Wirth Gray, published in What the Poor Eat (1993).\nby Lawrence Schimel, published in Black Thorn, White Rose (1994).\nby Ellen Steiber, published in The Armless Maiden (1996).\n\"Little Red Cap\" by Carol Ann Duffy, published in The World's Wife (1999).\n\"Grandmother\" by Lawrence Syndal, published in Conjunctions #31 (1999).\n\"Red Riding Hood's Dilemma\" by \u00d3rfhlaith Foyle, published in Red Riding Hood's Dilemma (2009).\nShort stories\nIn 1940, Howard L. Chace, a professor of French, wrote Ladle rat rotten hut, where the story is told using incorrect homonyms of the correct English words.\n\"The Company of Wolves\" by Angela Carter, published in The Bloody Chamber (1979). This famous and influential version was the basis for the Neil Jordan film (below).\n\"Wolfland\" by Tanith Lee, published in Red as Blood (1983).\n\"I Shall Do Thee Mischief in the Woods\" by Kathe Koja, published in Snow White, Blood Red (1993).\n\"Little Red\" by Wendy Wheeler, published in Snow White, Blood Red (1993).\nThe Apprentice\" by Miriam Grace Monfredo, published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (November 1993).\n\"Little Red Riding Hood\" published in James Finn Garner's Politically Correct Bedtime Stories (1994) satirises politically correct speech, focusing on such things as womyn's rights. See also Politically Correct Red Riding Hood, which features a very different outcome.\n\"The Good Mother\" by Priscilla Galloway, published in Truly Grim Tales (1995).\n\"Riding the Red\" by Nalo Hopkinson, published in Black Swan, White Raven (1997)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158893.8059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158893.4654, "finish": 1721158893.8059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2e5d37648f7f4217b25aab4b787e632f", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who has the most conference championships in college basketball", "output": [["who has the most conference championships in college basketball", "Title: Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball\n\nPassage: The Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball program is the men's college basketball team of the University of Kentucky. It has eight NCAA championships, the best all-time winning percentage, and the most all-time victories. The Wildcats compete in the Southeastern Conference and are coached by Mark Pope.\nAdolph Rupp first brought Kentucky to national prominence, winning four NCAA titles. Since then, Joe B. Hall, Rick Pitino, Tubby Smith, and John Calipari each won a national championship, making Kentucky the only school with five coaches to win NCAA championships and placing it second only to UCLA for most titles. Kentucky has finished as the NCAA runner-up four times, making it tied with UCLA and North Carolina for all-time title game appearances at 12. The program has played in 17 NCAA Final Fours, tying Duke for third-all time behind North Carolina and UCLA. Kentucky leads all schools in several NCAA tournament stats: Elite Eight appearances at 38, Sweet Sixteen appearances at 45, total NCAA tournament appearances at 60, and tournament games played at 184. The program is behind only North Carolina with 131 NCAA tournament wins, North Carolina has 132. Kentucky has also won the National Invitation Tournament twice, making it the only school to win multiple NCAA and NIT championships, and it leads all schools in total postseason appearances at 68. Additionally, the Helms Athletic Foundation declared Kentucky the 1933 and 1954 national champions, the latter being Kentucky's only undefeated team in the modern era (post-1930). The 1948 NCAA champion team, coached by Rupp, represented the United States in the Olympics and won a gold medal.\nKentucky was the first program to 1000 wins in 1968 and the first to 2000 wins in 2009. The program leads all schools with sixty-three 20-win seasons, sixteen 30-win seasons, and six 35-win seasons. Additionally, Kentucky is second among all teams in conference regular season championships with 53."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158893.8059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158893.4654, "finish": 1721158893.8059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c54cb968631a40ae9e62027247020807", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who has the most conference championships in college basketball", "output": [["who has the most conference championships in college basketball", "Title: 2008\u201309 Big East Conference men's basketball season\n\nPassage: The 2008\u201309 Big East Conference men's basketball season was the 30th in conference history, and involved its 16 full-time member schools. Leading up to, during, and following the season, it has been widely regarded as one of the most successful seasons in Big East Conference history, fielding multiple teams that received national recognition and achieved high levels of success.\nLouisville won the outright championship with a 16-2 record (1st). They were also champions of the Big East tournament (1st).\nRegular season\nSeason summary & highlights\nLouisville won both the regular season outright and the tournament championship."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158977.4208, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158977.0691, "finish": 1721158977.4208, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6c283cc0f5f5414aba7279dbcdf320f4", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "output": [["when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "Title: Birth certificate\n\nPassage: The U.S. State Department issues a Consular Report of Birth Abroad (which does not technically certify birth but often substitutes for a birth certificate) for children born to U.S. citizens or non-citizen nationals (who are also eligible for citizenship or non-citizen nationality), including births on military bases in foreign territory. Children who do not receive the certificate at the time of birth may apply for it anytime until the age of 18. Natural-born citizens of the United States born abroad may receive a USCIS Certificate of Citizenship instead to prove their citizenship status.\nThe federal and state governments have traditionally cooperated to some extent to improve vital statistics. From 1900 to 1946 the U.S. Census Bureau designed standard birth certificates, collected vital statistics on a national basis, and generally sought to improve the accuracy of vital statistics. In 1946 that responsibility was passed to the U.S. Public Health Service. Unlike the British system of recording all births in \"registers\", the states file an individual document for each and every birth.\nThe U.S. National Center for Health Statistics creates standard forms that are recommended for use by the individual states to document births. However, states are free to create their own forms. As a result, neither the appearance nor the information content of birth certificate forms is uniform across states. These forms are completed by the attendant at birth or a hospital administrator, which are then forwarded to a local or state registrar, who stores the record and issues certified copies upon request.\nBirth certificates for individuals born in or adopted to the United States\nAccording to the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, there were more than 6,000 entities issuing birth certificates. The Inspector General report stated that according to the staff at the Immigration and Naturalization Service's Forensics Document Laboratory the number of legitimate birth certificate versions in use exceeded 14,000.\nShort-form birth certificates and acceptance thereof\nIn the case of applying for a U.S. passport, not all legitimate government-issued birth certificates are acceptable:\nThe U.S. State Department has paid close attention to abstract certificates from both Texas and California. There have been reports of a high incidence of midwife registration fraud along the border region between Texas and Mexico, and the Texas abstract certificate form does not list the name or occupation of the attendant. The California Abstract of Birth did not include an embossed seal, was no longer considered a secure document, and have not been issued in California since 2001.\nSouvenir birth certificates\nMost hospitals in the U.S. issue a souvenir birth certificate which may include the footprints of the newborn. However, these birth certificates are not legally accepted as proof of age or citizenship, and are frequently rejected by the Bureau of Consular Affairs during passport applications. Many Americans believe the souvenir records to be their official birth certificates when, in reality, they hold little legal value.\nBirth certificates after adoption"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158977.4208, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158977.0691, "finish": 1721158977.4208, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5627e612dbd94bfabe365dc1bf9d1249", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "output": [["when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "Title: Birth certificate\n\nPassage: The U.S. State Department issues a Consular Report of Birth Abroad (which does not technically certify birth but often substitutes for a birth certificate) for children born to U.S. citizens or non-citizen nationals (who are also eligible for citizenship or non-citizen nationality), including births on military bases in foreign territory. Children who do not receive the certificate at the time of birth may apply for it anytime until the age of 18. Natural-born citizens of the United States born abroad may receive a USCIS Certificate of Citizenship instead to prove their citizenship status.\nThe federal and state governments have traditionally cooperated to some extent to improve vital statistics. From 1900 to 1946 the U.S. Census Bureau designed standard birth certificates, collected vital statistics on a national basis, and generally sought to improve the accuracy of vital statistics. In 1946 that responsibility was passed to the U.S. Public Health Service. Unlike the British system of recording all births in \"registers\", the states file an individual document for each and every birth.\nThe U.S. National Center for Health Statistics creates standard forms that are recommended for use by the individual states to document births. However, states are free to create their own forms. As a result, neither the appearance nor the information content of birth certificate forms is uniform across states. These forms are completed by the attendant at birth or a hospital administrator, which are then forwarded to a local or state registrar, who stores the record and issues certified copies upon request.\nBirth certificates for individuals born in or adopted to the United States\nAccording to the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General, there were more than 6,000 entities issuing birth certificates. The Inspector General report stated that according to the staff at the Immigration and Naturalization Service's Forensics Document Laboratory the number of legitimate birth certificate versions in use exceeded 14,000.\nShort-form birth certificates and acceptance thereof\nIn the case of applying for a U.S. passport, not all legitimate government-issued birth certificates are acceptable:\nThe U.S. State Department has paid close attention to abstract certificates from both Texas and California. There have been reports of a high incidence of midwife registration fraud along the border region between Texas and Mexico, and the Texas abstract certificate form does not list the name or occupation of the attendant. The California Abstract of Birth did not include an embossed seal, was no longer considered a secure document, and have not been issued in California since 2001.\nSouvenir birth certificates\nMost hospitals in the U.S. issue a souvenir birth certificate which may include the footprints of the newborn. However, these birth certificates are not legally accepted as proof of age or citizenship, and are frequently rejected by the Bureau of Consular Affairs during passport applications. Many Americans believe the souvenir records to be their official birth certificates when, in reality, they hold little legal value.\nBirth certificates after adoption"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158982.5093, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158982.1309, "finish": 1721158982.5093, "ip": "", "conv_id": "67487f958cc5491db65ec8beabd82073", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who breaks a tie in the us senate", "output": [["who breaks a tie in the us senate", "Title: Casting vote\n\nPassage: A casting vote is a vote that someone may exercise to resolve a tied vote in a deliberative body. A casting vote is typically by the presiding officer of a council, legislative body, committee, etc., and may only be exercised to break a deadlock.\nExamples of presiding officers who hold casting votes are the speaker of the House of Commons in the United Kingdom and the president of the United States Senate (an ex-officio role of the vice president of the United States).\nIn some legislatures, a casting vote may be exercised however the presiding officer wishes. For example, the vice president of the United States may exercise their casting vote when the Senate is evenly divided according to their own personal beliefs; by virtue of the vice president's political leanings and affiliations, the vice president's political party is able to serve as the majority party in the Senate and elect one of their own to serve as Majority Leader.\nIn some other legislatures, by contrast, a casting vote can only be exercised according to strict rules or constitutional conventions. For example, the speaker of the British House of Commons (a position whose functions and conventions of operation inspire similar roles in several other nations using the Westminster system) is expected by convention to follow Speaker Denison's rule (i.e., to vote to allow further discussion, if this is possible, and otherwise to vote in favour of the status quo). This in effect means \"Yes/Yea/Aye\" on the first and second reading of a bill, \"No/Nay\" on the third, \"Yes/Yea/Aye\" on the government's budget, and \"No/Nay\" on a motion of no confidence."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158982.5093, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158982.1309, "finish": 1721158982.5093, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ea8fd4d4691f43a1ad89aad65ed63abe", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who breaks a tie in the us senate", "output": [["who breaks a tie in the us senate", "Title: President of the Senate\n\nPassage: The president is Carolyn Trench-Sandiford.\nCanada\nWhile the speaker of the Senate of Canada, who serves as the presiding officer of the Senate of Canada, is not described as a \"president\" in English, the position is called in French. They are appointed by the governor general on the prime minister's advice.\nMexico\nThe Senate of Mexico, at the beginning of each annual legislative session, elects an executive board (Mesa Directiva) from among its 128 members. The executive board comprises a president, three vice presidents, and four secretaries, elected by an absolute majority of the senators. Members of the executive board may be re-elected for the following year without restriction. The president of the executive board also serves as the president of the Senate.\nThe president of the Senate for the current LXIV Legislature is Ana Lilia Rivera, a former National Regeneration Movement (MORENA) deputy for the Federal District, and former president of MORENA.\nTrinidad and Tobago\nThe president of the Senate of Trinidad and Tobago, who is generally elected from the government benches, chairs debates in the chamber and stands in for the country's president during periods of absence or illness (Constitution, section 27). A vice-president of the Senate is also elected from among the senators. The current president of the Senate is Nigel de Freitas.\nUnited States\nThe vice president of the United States is assigned the responsibility of presiding over the Senate and designated as its president by the United States Constitution. The vice president, as president of the Senate, has the authority (ex officio, as they are not an elected member of the Senate) to cast a tie-breaking vote. Other than this, the rules of the Senate grant its president very little power (in contrast to the powerful office of speaker of the House of Representatives).\nWhile vice presidents used to regularly preside over the Senate, modern vice presidents have done so only rarely, as the daily procedures are routine. Vice presidents usually personally preside over swearing in new senators, during joint sessions, announcing the result of a vote on a significant bill or confirmation, or when casting a tie-breaking vote. The Senate chooses a president pro tempore to preside in the vice president's absence. Modern presidents pro tempore, too, rarely preside over the Senate. In practice, junior senators of the majority party typically preside over routine functions to learn Senate procedure.\nVice presidents have cast 301 tie-breaking votes since the U.S. federal government was established in 1789. The vice president with the most tie-breaking votes is Kamala Harris (serving since 2021) with 33. The most recent vice president to have completed his term of office, Mike Pence, in office from 2017 to 2021, cast 13 tie-breaking votes. Kamala Harris was sworn in as the new president of the Senate on January 20, 2021 and has cast 33 tie-breaking votes as of January 2024.\nU.S. state senates"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158990.2554, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158989.8955, "finish": 1721158990.2554, "ip": "", "conv_id": "658667d1589040989fa3fc54a0d11fe9", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where does the brazos river start and stop", "output": [["where does the brazos river start and stop", "Title: Navasota River\n\nPassage: The Navasota River is a river in east Texas, United States. It is about 125 miles (201\u00a0km) long, beginning near Mount Calm and flowing south into the Brazos River at a point where Brazos, Grimes, and Washington counties converge.\nName\nThe river has been known by several names. The indigenous people called it the Nabasoto, Domingo Ter\u00e1n de los R\u00edos called it San Cypriano, Fray Isidro F\u00e9lix de Espinosa called it the San Buenaventura, and in 1727, Pedro de Rivera y Villal\u00f3n named it the Navasota.\nLakes\nThe Navasota River is dammed to form several lakes, including Lake Mexia, Springfield Lake, Joe Echols Lake, Lake Groesbeck, Lake Limestone, and Lake Fort Parker in Fort Parker State Park."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721158990.2554, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721158989.8955, "finish": 1721158990.2554, "ip": "", "conv_id": "efc2dbd4af9441ecab73de32ca223a15", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "where does the brazos river start and stop", "output": [["where does the brazos river start and stop", "Title: Brazos River\n\nPassage: The river is closely associated with Texas history, particularly the Austin settlement and Texas Revolution eras. Today major Texas institutions such as Texas Tech University, Baylor University, and Texas A&M University are located close to the river's basin, as are parts of metropolitan Houston.\nGeography\nThe Brazos proper begins at the confluence of the Salt Fork and Double Mountain Fork, two tributaries of the Upper Brazos that rise on the high plains of the Llano Estacado, flowing southeast through the center of Texas. Another major tributary of the Upper Brazos is the Clear Fork Brazos River, which passes by Abilene and joins the main river near Graham. Important tributaries of the Lower Brazos include the Paluxy River, the Bosque River, the Little River, Yegua Creek, the Nolan River, the Leon River, the San Gabriel River, the Lampasas River, and the Navasota River.\nInitially running east towards Dallas-Fort Worth, the Brazos turns south, passing through Waco and the Baylor University campus, further south to near Calvert, Texas, then past Bryan and College Station, then through Richmond, Texas, in Fort Bend County, and empties into the Gulf of Mexico in the marshes just south of Freeport.\nThe main stem of the Brazos is dammed in three places, all north of Waco, forming Possum Kingdom Lake, Lake Granbury, and Lake Whitney. Of these three, Granbury was the last to be completed, in 1969. When its construction was proposed in the mid-1950s, John Graves wrote the book Goodbye to a River. The Whitney Dam, located on the upper Brazos, provides hydroelectric power, flood control, and irrigation to enable efficient cotton growth in the river valley. A small municipal dam (Lake Brazos Dam) is near the downstream city limit of Waco at the end of the Baylor campus; it raises the level of the river through the city to form a town lake. This impoundment of the Brazos through Waco is locally called Lake Brazos. Nineteen major reservoirs are located along the Brazos.\nHistory\nIn 1822, the lower river valley of the Brazos River became one of the major Anglo-American settlement sites in Texas. This was one of the first English-speaking colonies along the Brazos and was founded by Stephen F. Austin at San Felipe de Austin. In 1836, Texas declared independence from Mexico at Washington-on-the-Brazos, a settlement in now Washington County that is known as \"the birthplace of Texas\". Brazos River was also the scene of a battle between the Texas Navy and Mexican Navy during the Texas Revolution. Texas Navy ship Independence was defeated by one Mexican vessel."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166743.7333, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166718.7489, "finish": 1721166743.7333, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2148077de78648c785cabaac677e6b76", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is PEORL and how does it integrate symbolic planning and hierarchical reinforcement learning?", "output": [["What is PEORL and how does it integrate symbolic planning and hierarchical reinforcement learning?", "Title: PEORL: Integrating Symbolic Planning and Hierarchical Reinforcement Learning for Robust Decision-Making\n\nPassage: Reinforcement learning and symbolic planning have both been used to build intelligent autonomous agents. Reinforcement learning relies on learning from interactions with real world, which often requires an unfeasibly large amount of experience. Symbolic planning relies on manually crafted symbolic knowledge, which may not be robust to domain uncertainties and changes. In this paper we present a unified framework {\\em PEORL} that integrates symbolic planning with hierarchical reinforcement learning (HRL) to cope with decision-making in a dynamic environment with uncertainties. Symbolic plans are used to guide the agent's task execution and learning, and the learned experience is fed back to symbolic knowledge to improve planning. This method leads to rapid policy search and robust symbolic plans in complex domains. The framework is tested on benchmark domains of HRL."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166743.7333, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166718.7489, "finish": 1721166743.7333, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d61c892995844b9ea04f695635f9a596", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is PEORL and how does it integrate symbolic planning and hierarchical reinforcement learning?", "output": [["What is PEORL and how does it integrate symbolic planning and hierarchical reinforcement learning?", "Title: PEORL: Integrating Symbolic Planning and Hierarchical Reinforcement Learning for Robust Decision-Making\n\nPassage: Reinforcement learning and symbolic planning have both been used to build intelligent autonomous agents. Reinforcement learning relies on learning from interactions with real world, which often requires an unfeasibly large amount of experience. Symbolic planning relies on manually crafted symbolic knowledge, which may not be robust to domain uncertainties and changes. In this paper we present a unified framework {\\em PEORL} that integrates symbolic planning with hierarchical reinforcement learning (HRL) to cope with decision-making in a dynamic environment with uncertainties. Symbolic plans are used to guide the agent's task execution and learning, and the learned experience is fed back to symbolic knowledge to improve planning. This method leads to rapid policy search and robust symbolic plans in complex domains. The framework is tested on benchmark domains of HRL."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166901.9178, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166901.753, "finish": 1721166901.9178, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c1c685c06e674d7e98071158d1e68b53", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What challenges do spatially constrained spectral clustering algorithms address?", "output": [["What challenges do spatially constrained spectral clustering algorithms address?", "Title: Spatially Constrained Spectral Clustering Algorithms for Region Delineation\n\nPassage: Regionalization is the task of dividing up a landscape into homogeneous patches with similar properties. Although this task has a wide range of applications, it has two notable challenges. First, it is assumed that the resulting regions are both homogeneous and spatially contiguous. Second, it is well-recognized that landscapes are hierarchical such that fine-scale regions are nested wholly within broader-scale regions. To address these two challenges, first, we develop a spatially constrained spectral clustering framework for region delineation that incorporates the tradeoff between region homogeneity and spatial contiguity. The framework uses a flexible, truncated exponential kernel to represent the spatial contiguity constraints, which is integrated with the landscape feature similarity matrix for region delineation. To address the second challenge, we extend the framework to create fine-scale regions that are nested within broader-scaled regions using a greedy, recursive bisection approach. We present a case study of a terrestrial ecology data set in the United States that compares the proposed framework with several baseline methods for regionalization. Experimental results suggest that the proposed framework for regionalization outperforms the baseline methods, especially in terms of balancing region contiguity and homogeneity, as well as creating regions of more similar size, which is often a desired trait of regions."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166901.9178, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166901.753, "finish": 1721166901.9178, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fcaae934a295439a9041672feb625935", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What challenges do spatially constrained spectral clustering algorithms address?", "output": [["What challenges do spatially constrained spectral clustering algorithms address?", "Title: Spectral Clustering in Convex and Constrained Settings\n\nPassage: Spectral clustering methods have gained widespread recognition for their effectiveness in clustering high-dimensional data. Among these techniques, constrained spectral clustering has emerged as a prominent approach, demonstrating enhanced performance by integrating pairwise constraints. However, the application of such constraints to semidefinite spectral clustering, a variant that leverages semidefinite programming to optimize clustering objectives, remains largely unexplored. In this paper, we introduce a novel framework for seamlessly integrating pairwise constraints into semidefinite spectral clustering. Our methodology systematically extends the capabilities of semidefinite spectral clustering to capture complex data structures, thereby addressing real-world clustering challenges more effectively. Additionally, we extend this framework to encompass both active and self-taught learning scenarios, further enhancing its versatility and applicability. Empirical studies conducted on well-known datasets demonstrate the superiority of our proposed framework over existing spectral clustering methods, showcasing its robustness and scalability across diverse datasets and learning settings. By bridging the gap between constrained learning and semidefinite spectral clustering, our work contributes to the advancement of spectral clustering techniques, offering researchers and practitioners a versatile tool for addressing complex clustering challenges in various real-world applications. Access to the data, code, and experimental results is provided for further exploration (https://github.com/swarupbehera/SCCCS)."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166933.5125, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166933.3021, "finish": 1721166933.5125, "ip": "", "conv_id": "30af50740ef44e9ea5660b432ef37d30", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the method proposed in SNeCT for multi-platform data analysis?", "output": [["What is the method proposed in SNeCT for multi-platform data analysis?", "Title: SNeCT: Scalable network constrained Tucker decomposition for integrative multi-platform data analysis\n\nPassage: Motivation: How do we integratively analyze large-scale multi-platform genomic data that are high dimensional and sparse? Furthermore, how can we incorporate prior knowledge, such as the association between genes, in the analysis systematically? Method: To solve this problem, we propose a Scalable Network Constrained Tucker decomposition method we call SNeCT. SNeCT adopts parallel stochastic gradient descent approach on the proposed parallelizable network constrained optimization function. SNeCT decomposition is applied to tensor constructed from large scale multi-platform multi-cohort cancer data, PanCan12, constrained on a network built from PathwayCommons database. Results: The decomposed factor matrices are applied to stratify cancers, to search for top-k similar patients, and to illustrate how the matrices can be used for personalized interpretation. In the stratification test, combined twelve-cohort data is clustered to form thirteen subclasses. The thirteen subclasses have a high correlation to tissue of origin in addition to other interesting observations, such as clear separation of OV cancers to two groups, and high clinical correlation within subclusters formed in cohorts BRCA and UCEC. In the top-k search, a new patient's genomic profile is generated and searched against existing patients based on the factor matrices. The similarity of the top-k patient to the query is high for 23 clinical features, including estrogen/progesterone receptor statuses of BRCA patients with average precision value ranges from 0.72 to 0.86 and from 0.68 to 0.86, respectively. We also provide an illustration of how the factor matrices can be used for interpretable personalized analysis of each patient."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166933.5125, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166933.3021, "finish": 1721166933.5125, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c31f0f2f9c0d47f79747d34ec324bc87", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the method proposed in SNeCT for multi-platform data analysis?", "output": [["What is the method proposed in SNeCT for multi-platform data analysis?", "Title: SNeCT: Scalable network constrained Tucker decomposition for integrative multi-platform data analysis\n\nPassage: Motivation: How do we integratively analyze large-scale multi-platform genomic data that are high dimensional and sparse? Furthermore, how can we incorporate prior knowledge, such as the association between genes, in the analysis systematically? Method: To solve this problem, we propose a Scalable Network Constrained Tucker decomposition method we call SNeCT. SNeCT adopts parallel stochastic gradient descent approach on the proposed parallelizable network constrained optimization function. SNeCT decomposition is applied to tensor constructed from large scale multi-platform multi-cohort cancer data, PanCan12, constrained on a network built from PathwayCommons database. Results: The decomposed factor matrices are applied to stratify cancers, to search for top-k similar patients, and to illustrate how the matrices can be used for personalized interpretation. In the stratification test, combined twelve-cohort data is clustered to form thirteen subclasses. The thirteen subclasses have a high correlation to tissue of origin in addition to other interesting observations, such as clear separation of OV cancers to two groups, and high clinical correlation within subclusters formed in cohorts BRCA and UCEC. In the top-k search, a new patient's genomic profile is generated and searched against existing patients based on the factor matrices. The similarity of the top-k patient to the query is high for 23 clinical features, including estrogen/progesterone receptor statuses of BRCA patients with average precision value ranges from 0.72 to 0.86 and from 0.68 to 0.86, respectively. We also provide an illustration of how the factor matrices can be used for interpretable personalized analysis of each patient."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166955.8643, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166955.7019, "finish": 1721166955.8643, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7cf6ba5e35714244916be94095e65fde", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the key concept of the Confidence-Constrained Maximum Entropy Framework?", "output": [["What is the key concept of the Confidence-Constrained Maximum Entropy Framework?", "Title: Confidence-Constrained Maximum Entropy Framework for Learning from Multi-Instance Data\n\nPassage: Multi-instance data, in which each object (bag) contains a collection of instances, are widespread in machine learning, computer vision, bioinformatics, signal processing, and social sciences. We present a maximum entropy (ME) framework for learning from multi-instance data. In this approach each bag is represented as a distribution using the principle of ME. We introduce the concept of confidence-constrained ME (CME) to simultaneously learn the structure of distribution space and infer each distribution. The shared structure underlying each density is used to learn from instances inside each bag. The proposed CME is free of tuning parameters. We devise a fast optimization algorithm capable of handling large scale multi-instance data. In the experimental section, we evaluate the performance of the proposed approach in terms of exact rank recovery in the space of distributions and compare it with the regularized ME approach. Moreover, we compare the performance of CME with Multi-Instance Learning (MIL) state-of-the-art algorithms and show a comparable performance in terms of accuracy with reduced computational complexity."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166955.8643, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166955.7019, "finish": 1721166955.8643, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f5205b3f974845fb9e3503bd624d5fdd", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the key concept of the Confidence-Constrained Maximum Entropy Framework?", "output": [["What is the key concept of the Confidence-Constrained Maximum Entropy Framework?", "Title: Notes on Generalizing the Maximum Entropy Principle to Uncertain Data\n\nPassage: The principle of maximum entropy is a broadly applicable technique for computing a distribution with the least amount of information possible constrained to match empirical data, for instance, feature expectations. We seek to generalize this principle to scenarios where the empirical feature expectations cannot be computed because the model variables are only partially observed, which introduces a dependency on the learned model. Generalizing the principle of latent maximum entropy, we introduce uncertain maximum entropy and describe an expectation-maximization based solution to approximately solve these problems. We show that our technique additionally generalizes the principle of maximum entropy. We additionally discuss the use of black box classifiers with our technique, which simplifies the process of utilizing sparse, large data sets."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166990.3724, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166990.2159, "finish": 1721166990.3724, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6239c1ef1fe64c0ca8fb27ce06cbdad7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the impact of contrastive pre-training on text and code embeddings?", "output": [["What is the impact of contrastive pre-training on text and code embeddings?", "Title: Text and Code Embeddings by Contrastive Pre-Training\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are useful features in many applications such as semantic search and computing text similarity. Previous work typically trains models customized for different use cases, varying in dataset choice, training objective and model architecture. In this work, we show that contrastive pre-training on unsupervised data at scale leads to high quality vector representations of text and code. The same unsupervised text embeddings that achieve new state-of-the-art results in linear-probe classification also display impressive semantic search capabilities and sometimes even perform competitively with fine-tuned models. On linear-probe classification accuracy averaging over 7 tasks, our best unsupervised model achieves a relative improvement of 4% and 1.8% over previous best unsupervised and supervised text embedding models respectively. The same text embeddings when evaluated on large-scale semantic search attains a relative improvement of 23.4%, 14.7%, and 10.6% over previous best unsupervised methods on MSMARCO, Natural Questions and TriviaQA benchmarks, respectively. Similarly to text embeddings, we train code embedding models on (text, code) pairs, obtaining a 20.8% relative improvement over prior best work on code search."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721166990.3724, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721166990.2159, "finish": 1721166990.3724, "ip": "", "conv_id": "778825fce2a04f8b8dd1c3994f6b17e6", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the impact of contrastive pre-training on text and code embeddings?", "output": [["What is the impact of contrastive pre-training on text and code embeddings?", "Title: Text and Code Embeddings by Contrastive Pre-Training\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are useful features in many applications such as semantic search and computing text similarity. Previous work typically trains models customized for different use cases, varying in dataset choice, training objective and model architecture. In this work, we show that contrastive pre-training on unsupervised data at scale leads to high quality vector representations of text and code. The same unsupervised text embeddings that achieve new state-of-the-art results in linear-probe classification also display impressive semantic search capabilities and sometimes even perform competitively with fine-tuned models. On linear-probe classification accuracy averaging over 7 tasks, our best unsupervised model achieves a relative improvement of 4% and 1.8% over previous best unsupervised and supervised text embedding models respectively. The same text embeddings when evaluated on large-scale semantic search attains a relative improvement of 23.4%, 14.7%, and 10.6% over previous best unsupervised methods on MSMARCO, Natural Questions and TriviaQA benchmarks, respectively. Similarly to text embeddings, we train code embedding models on (text, code) pairs, obtaining a 20.8% relative improvement over prior best work on code search."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167011.9771, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167011.8986, "finish": 1721167011.9771, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0f0fc49bdc9649979e1a5f47b56ef8e8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How can text embeddings be used for document retrieval?\\", "output": [["How can text embeddings be used for document retrieval?\\", "Title: Text Embeddings for Retrieval From a Large Knowledge Base\n\nPassage: Text embedding representing natural language documents in a semantic vector space can be used for document retrieval using nearest neighbor lookup. In order to study the feasibility of neural models specialized for retrieval in a semantically meaningful way, we suggest the use of the Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) in an open-domain question answering context, where the first task is to find paragraphs useful for answering a given question. First, we compare the quality of various text-embedding methods on the performance of retrieval and give an extensive empirical comparison on the performance of various non-augmented base embedding with, and without IDF weighting. Our main results are that by training deep residual neural models, specifically for retrieval purposes, can yield significant gains when it is used to augment existing embeddings. We also establish that deeper models are superior to this task. The best base baseline embeddings augmented by our learned neural approach improves the top-1 paragraph recall of the system by 14%."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167011.9771, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167011.8986, "finish": 1721167011.9771, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2f4f38f0b88d420e8697dae4b440f649", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How can text embeddings be used for document retrieval?\\", "output": [["How can text embeddings be used for document retrieval?\\", "Title: Text Embeddings for Retrieval From a Large Knowledge Base\n\nPassage: Text embedding representing natural language documents in a semantic vector space can be used for document retrieval using nearest neighbor lookup. In order to study the feasibility of neural models specialized for retrieval in a semantically meaningful way, we suggest the use of the Stanford Question Answering Dataset (SQuAD) in an open-domain question answering context, where the first task is to find paragraphs useful for answering a given question. First, we compare the quality of various text-embedding methods on the performance of retrieval and give an extensive empirical comparison on the performance of various non-augmented base embedding with, and without IDF weighting. Our main results are that by training deep residual neural models, specifically for retrieval purposes, can yield significant gains when it is used to augment existing embeddings. We also establish that deeper models are superior to this task. The best base baseline embeddings augmented by our learned neural approach improves the top-1 paragraph recall of the system by 14%."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167039.0811, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167038.9472, "finish": 1721167039.0811, "ip": "", "conv_id": "24011f51c8aa4a729e54f060c5156491", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is Word Mover's Embedding and how does it differ from Word2Vec?", "output": [["What is Word Mover's Embedding and how does it differ from Word2Vec?", "Title: Word Mover's Embedding: From Word2Vec to Document Embedding\n\nPassage: While the celebrated Word2Vec technique yields semantically rich representations for individual words, there has been relatively less success in extending to generate unsupervised sentences or documents embeddings. Recent work has demonstrated that a distance measure between documents called \\emph{Word Mover's Distance} (WMD) that aligns semantically similar words, yields unprecedented KNN classification accuracy. However, WMD is expensive to compute, and it is hard to extend its use beyond a KNN classifier. In this paper, we propose the \\emph{Word Mover's Embedding } (WME), a novel approach to building an unsupervised document (sentence) embedding from pre-trained word embeddings. In our experiments on 9 benchmark text classification datasets and 22 textual similarity tasks, the proposed technique consistently matches or outperforms state-of-the-art techniques, with significantly higher accuracy on problems of short length."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167039.0811, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167038.9472, "finish": 1721167039.0811, "ip": "", "conv_id": "612af5e9ae5449958ea99c78e55eec24", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is Word Mover's Embedding and how does it differ from Word2Vec?", "output": [["What is Word Mover's Embedding and how does it differ from Word2Vec?", "Title: Word Mover's Embedding: From Word2Vec to Document Embedding\n\nPassage: While the celebrated Word2Vec technique yields semantically rich representations for individual words, there has been relatively less success in extending to generate unsupervised sentences or documents embeddings. Recent work has demonstrated that a distance measure between documents called \\emph{Word Mover's Distance} (WMD) that aligns semantically similar words, yields unprecedented KNN classification accuracy. However, WMD is expensive to compute, and it is hard to extend its use beyond a KNN classifier. In this paper, we propose the \\emph{Word Mover's Embedding } (WME), a novel approach to building an unsupervised document (sentence) embedding from pre-trained word embeddings. In our experiments on 9 benchmark text classification datasets and 22 textual similarity tasks, the proposed technique consistently matches or outperforms state-of-the-art techniques, with significantly higher accuracy on problems of short length."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167097.4519, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167097.2909, "finish": 1721167097.4519, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b2f687c8dfe04757b80a6814f26ef336", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How does Topological Data Analysis contribute to text classification?", "output": [["How does Topological Data Analysis contribute to text classification?", "Title: Topological Data Analysis in Text Classification: Extracting Features with Additive Information\n\nPassage: While the strength of Topological Data Analysis has been explored in many studies on high dimensional numeric data, it is still a challenging task to apply it to text. As the primary goal in topological data analysis is to define and quantify the shapes in numeric data, defining shapes in the text is much more challenging, even though the geometries of vector spaces and conceptual spaces are clearly relevant for information retrieval and semantics. In this paper, we examine two different methods of extraction of topological features from text, using as the underlying representations of words the two most popular methods, namely word embeddings and TF-IDF vectors. To extract topological features from the word embedding space, we interpret the embedding of a text document as high dimensional time series, and we analyze the topology of the underlying graph where the vertices correspond to different embedding dimensions. For topological data analysis with the TF-IDF representations, we analyze the topology of the graph whose vertices come from the TF-IDF vectors of different blocks in the textual document. In both cases, we apply homological persistence to reveal the geometric structures under different distance resolutions. Our results show that these topological features carry some exclusive information that is not captured by conventional text mining methods. In our experiments we observe adding topological features to the conventional features in ensemble models improves the classification results (up to 5\\%). On the other hand, as expected, topological features by themselves may be not sufficient for effective classification. It is an open problem to see whether TDA features from word embeddings might be sufficient, as they seem to perform within a range of few points from top results obtained with a linear support vector classifier."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167097.4519, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167097.2909, "finish": 1721167097.4519, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fb3cf121fe8d499d97f57f953ebf81fc", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How does Topological Data Analysis contribute to text classification?", "output": [["How does Topological Data Analysis contribute to text classification?", "Title: A Novel Method of Extracting Topological Features from Word Embeddings\n\nPassage: In recent years, topological data analysis has been utilized for a wide range of problems to deal with high dimensional noisy data. While text representations are often high dimensional and noisy, there are only a few work on the application of topological data analysis in natural language processing. In this paper, we introduce a novel algorithm to extract topological features from word embedding representation of text that can be used for text classification. Working on word embeddings, topological data analysis can interpret the embedding high-dimensional space and discover the relations among different embedding dimensions. We will use persistent homology, the most commonly tool from topological data analysis, for our experiment. Examining our topological algorithm on long textual documents, we will show our defined topological features may outperform conventional text mining features."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167257.9479, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167257.7597, "finish": 1721167257.9479, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cdd57c21ab934d2f8183ddb4cb8c9ed0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the significance of error exponents in detecting text generated by large-scale language models?", "output": [["What is the significance of error exponents in detecting text generated by large-scale language models?", "Title: Limits of Detecting Text Generated by Large-Scale Language Models\n\nPassage: Some consider large-scale language models that can generate long and coherent pieces of text as dangerous, since they may be used in misinformation campaigns. Here we formulate large-scale language model output detection as a hypothesis testing problem to classify text as genuine or generated. We show that error exponents for particular language models are bounded in terms of their perplexity, a standard measure of language generation performance. Under the assumption that human language is stationary and ergodic, the formulation is extended from considering specific language models to considering maximum likelihood language models, among the class of k-order Markov approximations; error probabilities are characterized. Some discussion of incorporating semantic side information is also given."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167257.9479, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167257.7597, "finish": 1721167257.9479, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dff342e330534913b5d28fc139c68e29", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the significance of error exponents in detecting text generated by large-scale language models?", "output": [["What is the significance of error exponents in detecting text generated by large-scale language models?", "Title: Limits of Detecting Text Generated by Large-Scale Language Models\n\nPassage: Some consider large-scale language models that can generate long and coherent pieces of text as dangerous, since they may be used in misinformation campaigns. Here we formulate large-scale language model output detection as a hypothesis testing problem to classify text as genuine or generated. We show that error exponents for particular language models are bounded in terms of their perplexity, a standard measure of language generation performance. Under the assumption that human language is stationary and ergodic, the formulation is extended from considering specific language models to considering maximum likelihood language models, among the class of k-order Markov approximations; error probabilities are characterized. Some discussion of incorporating semantic side information is also given."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167304.9971, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167304.8451, "finish": 1721167304.9971, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bea2b058e9554f68b302de2d96593a90", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How does the technique of paraphrasing work with large language models?", "output": [["How does the technique of paraphrasing work with large language models?", "Title: Paraphrasing with Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Recently, large language models such as GPT-2 have shown themselves to be extremely adept at text generation and have also been able to achieve high-quality results in many downstream NLP tasks such as text classification, sentiment analysis and question answering with the aid of fine-tuning. We present a useful technique for using a large language model to perform the task of paraphrasing on a variety of texts and subjects. Our approach is demonstrated to be capable of generating paraphrases not only at a sentence level but also for longer spans of text such as paragraphs without needing to break the text into smaller chunks."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167304.9971, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167304.8451, "finish": 1721167304.9971, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b52cdf30a6bc455baf8adc359ab22084", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How does the technique of paraphrasing work with large language models?", "output": [["How does the technique of paraphrasing work with large language models?", "Title: Paraphrasing with Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Recently, large language models such as GPT-2 have shown themselves to be extremely adept at text generation and have also been able to achieve high-quality results in many downstream NLP tasks such as text classification, sentiment analysis and question answering with the aid of fine-tuning. We present a useful technique for using a large language model to perform the task of paraphrasing on a variety of texts and subjects. Our approach is demonstrated to be capable of generating paraphrases not only at a sentence level but also for longer spans of text such as paragraphs without needing to break the text into smaller chunks."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167346.2255, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167346.0705, "finish": 1721167346.2255, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ed176a70dfc04fa9807c0989fdca73d4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Vitamin D deficiency effects the term of delivery.", "output": [["Vitamin D deficiency effects the term of delivery.", "Title: Chronic stress may disrupt covariant fluctuations of vitamin D and cortisol plasma levels in pregnant sheep during the last trimester: a preliminary report\n\nPassage: Psychosocial stress during pregnancy is a known contributor to preterm birth, but also has been increasingly appreciated as an in utero insult acting long-term on prenatal and postnatal neurodevelopmental trajectories. These events impact many information molecules, including both vitamin D and cortisol. Both have been linked to low birth premature babies. Cortisol tends to be further elevated in women, while vitamin D tends to be decreased from their normal levels during pregnancy. One facilitates labor in part by elevating placental CRH, the other by limiting CRH in placental tissue. Both are linked to managing adversity. Studies in large animal models with high resemblance to human physiology are sparse to model the changes induced by such stress exposure. Using an established pregnant sheep model of stress during human development, here we focused on measuring the changes in maternal Vitamin D and cortisol responses due to chronic inescapable stress mimicking daily challenges in the last trimester of human pregnancy. The present pilot data show that chronic maternal stress during pregnancy results in endocrine and metabolic chronic habituation paralleled by sensitization to acute stress challenges. Chronic stress appears to disrupt a physiological relationship between oscillations of vitamin D and cortisol. These speculations need to be explored in future studies."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721167346.2255, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721167346.0705, "finish": 1721167346.2255, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9265cd0aaafd4fe4adbdd596b4a347dd", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Vitamin D deficiency effects the term of delivery.", "output": [["Vitamin D deficiency effects the term of delivery.", "Title: Cord-blood vitamin D level and night sleep duration in preschoolers in the EDEN mother-child birth cohort\n\nPassage: Objective: 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) deficiency has been associated with sleep disorders in adults. Only three cross-sectional studies were performed in children and showed an association between 25OHD deficiency and both obstructive sleep apnea syndrome and primary snoring. No longitudinal study has been performed in children from the general population. We analyzed the association between cord-blood vitamin D level at birth and night-sleep duration trajectories for children between 2 and 5-6 years old in a non-clinical cohort.Method: We included 264 children from the French EDEN mother-child birth-cohort with both cord-blood 25OHD level determined by radio-immunoassay at birth, and night-sleep trajectories for children between 2 and 5-6 years old obtained by the group-based trajectory modeling method. Associations between 25OHD and sleep trajectories were assessed by multinomial logistic regression adjusted for maternal and child characteristics.Results: The trajectories short sleep (<10h30/night), medium-low sleep (10h30-11h00/night), medium-high sleep ($\\approx$11h30/night), long sleep ($\\ge$11h30/night) and changing sleep (decreased from $\\ge$11h30 to 10h30-11h00/night) represented 5%, 46%, 37%, 4% and 8% of the children, respectively. The mean 25OHD level was 19 ng/ml (SD=11, range 3 to 63). It was 12 (SD=7), 20 (SD=11), 19 (SD=10), 14 (SD=7) and 16 (SD=8) ng/ml for children with short, medium-low, medium-high, long and changing sleep trajectories, respectively. On adjusted analysis, for each 1-ng/ml decrease in 25OHD level, the odds of belonging to the short sleep versus medium-high sleep trajectory was increased (odds ratio =1.12, 95% confidence interval [1.01-1.25]). We found no other significant association between 25OHD level and other trajectories.Conclusion: Low 25OHD level at birth may be associated with increased probability of being a persistent short sleeper in preschool years. These results need confirmation."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168557.9824, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168557.7699, "finish": 1721168557.9824, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ccdce0e91e034d5f8af6f436028aa5fe", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How does the method enforce encoder-decoder modularity in seq2seq models?", "output": [["How does the method enforce encoder-decoder modularity in seq2seq models?", "Title: Enforcing Encoder-Decoder Modularity in Sequence-to-Sequence Models\n\nPassage: Inspired by modular software design principles of independence, interchangeability, and clarity of interface, we introduce a method for enforcing encoder-decoder modularity in seq2seq models without sacrificing the overall model quality or its full differentiability. We discretize the encoder output units into a predefined interpretable vocabulary space using the Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) loss. Our modular systems achieve near SOTA performance on the 300h Switchboard benchmark, with WER of 8.3% and 17.6% on the SWB and CH subsets, using seq2seq models with encoder and decoder modules which are independent and interchangeable."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168557.9824, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168557.7699, "finish": 1721168557.9824, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2f36602dc5f3464183b8885ba8f9dfa6", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How does the method enforce encoder-decoder modularity in seq2seq models?", "output": [["How does the method enforce encoder-decoder modularity in seq2seq models?", "Title: Enforcing Encoder-Decoder Modularity in Sequence-to-Sequence Models\n\nPassage: Inspired by modular software design principles of independence, interchangeability, and clarity of interface, we introduce a method for enforcing encoder-decoder modularity in seq2seq models without sacrificing the overall model quality or its full differentiability. We discretize the encoder output units into a predefined interpretable vocabulary space using the Connectionist Temporal Classification (CTC) loss. Our modular systems achieve near SOTA performance on the 300h Switchboard benchmark, with WER of 8.3% and 17.6% on the SWB and CH subsets, using seq2seq models with encoder and decoder modules which are independent and interchangeable."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168570.0025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168569.8428, "finish": 1721168570.0025, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1eff484317f74086b8247dc409922a4e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How can disaster tweets be classified using BERT-Based language model?", "output": [["How can disaster tweets be classified using BERT-Based language model?", "Title: Disaster Tweets Classification using BERT-Based Language Model\n\nPassage: Social networking services have became an important communication channel in time of emergency. The aim of this study is to create a machine learning language model that is able to investigate if a person or area was in danger or not. The ubiquitousness of smartphones enables people to announce an emergency they are observing in real-time. Because of this, more agencies are interested in programmatically monitoring Twitter (i.e. disaster relief organizations and news agencies). Design a language model that is able to understand and acknowledge when a disaster is happening based on the social network posts will become more and more necessary over time."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168570.0025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168569.8428, "finish": 1721168570.0025, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8adcd7cf95d3407a9d67dee04c8facae", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How can disaster tweets be classified using BERT-Based language model?", "output": [["How can disaster tweets be classified using BERT-Based language model?", "Title: Disaster Tweets Classification using BERT-Based Language Model\n\nPassage: Social networking services have became an important communication channel in time of emergency. The aim of this study is to create a machine learning language model that is able to investigate if a person or area was in danger or not. The ubiquitousness of smartphones enables people to announce an emergency they are observing in real-time. Because of this, more agencies are interested in programmatically monitoring Twitter (i.e. disaster relief organizations and news agencies). Design a language model that is able to understand and acknowledge when a disaster is happening based on the social network posts will become more and more necessary over time."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168582.3787, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168582.2134, "finish": 1721168582.3787, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d5d07f0eed3f489693dcd6584b44c6d1", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the level of corruption robustness of vision transformers and MLP-Mixers compared to ResNet-50?", "output": [["What is the level of corruption robustness of vision transformers and MLP-Mixers compared to ResNet-50?", "Title: Exploring Corruption Robustness: Inductive Biases in Vision Transformers and MLP-Mixers\n\nPassage: Recently, vision transformers and MLP-based models have been developed in order to address some of the prevalent weaknesses in convolutional neural networks. Due to the novelty of transformers being used in this domain along with the self-attention mechanism, it remains unclear to what degree these architectures are robust to corruptions. Despite some works proposing that data augmentation remains essential for a model to be robust against corruptions, we propose to explore the impact that the architecture has on corruption robustness. We find that vision transformer architectures are inherently more robust to corruptions than the ResNet-50 and MLP-Mixers. We also find that vision transformers with 5 times fewer parameters than a ResNet-50 have more shape bias. Our code is available to reproduce."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168582.3787, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168582.2134, "finish": 1721168582.3787, "ip": "", "conv_id": "498ef1ad738c4f7a9c55359c73038373", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the level of corruption robustness of vision transformers and MLP-Mixers compared to ResNet-50?", "output": [["What is the level of corruption robustness of vision transformers and MLP-Mixers compared to ResNet-50?", "Title: Exploring Corruption Robustness: Inductive Biases in Vision Transformers and MLP-Mixers\n\nPassage: Recently, vision transformers and MLP-based models have been developed in order to address some of the prevalent weaknesses in convolutional neural networks. Due to the novelty of transformers being used in this domain along with the self-attention mechanism, it remains unclear to what degree these architectures are robust to corruptions. Despite some works proposing that data augmentation remains essential for a model to be robust against corruptions, we propose to explore the impact that the architecture has on corruption robustness. We find that vision transformer architectures are inherently more robust to corruptions than the ResNet-50 and MLP-Mixers. We also find that vision transformers with 5 times fewer parameters than a ResNet-50 have more shape bias. Our code is available to reproduce."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168647.7135, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168647.5649, "finish": 1721168647.7135, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7e290daf6d8548ce888788e93c7e36cf", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the novel attack method FILM in federated learning of language models?", "output": [["What is the novel attack method FILM in federated learning of language models?", "Title: Recovering Private Text in Federated Learning of Language Models\n\nPassage: Federated learning allows distributed users to collaboratively train a model while keeping each user's data private. Recently, a growing body of work has demonstrated that an eavesdropping attacker can effectively recover image data from gradients transmitted during federated learning. However, little progress has been made in recovering text data. In this paper, we present a novel attack method FILM for federated learning of language models (LMs). For the first time, we show the feasibility of recovering text from large batch sizes of up to 128 sentences. Unlike image-recovery methods that are optimized to match gradients, we take a distinct approach that first identifies a set of words from gradients and then directly reconstructs sentences based on beam search and a prior-based reordering strategy. We conduct the FILM attack on several large-scale datasets and show that it can successfully reconstruct single sentences with high fidelity for large batch sizes and even multiple sentences if applied iteratively. We evaluate three defense methods: gradient pruning, DPSGD, and a simple approach to freeze word embeddings that we propose. We show that both gradient pruning and DPSGD lead to a significant drop in utility. However, if we fine-tune a public pre-trained LM on private text without updating word embeddings, it can effectively defend the attack with minimal data utility loss. Together, we hope that our results can encourage the community to rethink the privacy concerns of LM training and its standard practices in the future."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168647.7135, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168647.5649, "finish": 1721168647.7135, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ea7a04474e8f41bb847e0b5329721f49", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the novel attack method FILM in federated learning of language models?", "output": [["What is the novel attack method FILM in federated learning of language models?", "Title: Recovering Private Text in Federated Learning of Language Models\n\nPassage: Federated learning allows distributed users to collaboratively train a model while keeping each user's data private. Recently, a growing body of work has demonstrated that an eavesdropping attacker can effectively recover image data from gradients transmitted during federated learning. However, little progress has been made in recovering text data. In this paper, we present a novel attack method FILM for federated learning of language models (LMs). For the first time, we show the feasibility of recovering text from large batch sizes of up to 128 sentences. Unlike image-recovery methods that are optimized to match gradients, we take a distinct approach that first identifies a set of words from gradients and then directly reconstructs sentences based on beam search and a prior-based reordering strategy. We conduct the FILM attack on several large-scale datasets and show that it can successfully reconstruct single sentences with high fidelity for large batch sizes and even multiple sentences if applied iteratively. We evaluate three defense methods: gradient pruning, DPSGD, and a simple approach to freeze word embeddings that we propose. We show that both gradient pruning and DPSGD lead to a significant drop in utility. However, if we fine-tune a public pre-trained LM on private text without updating word embeddings, it can effectively defend the attack with minimal data utility loss. Together, we hope that our results can encourage the community to rethink the privacy concerns of LM training and its standard practices in the future."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168665.4559, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168665.2907, "finish": 1721168665.4559, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b0e6dbae810a48728135aa9775487840", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How can transformers simplify neural video compression?", "output": [["How can transformers simplify neural video compression?", "Title: VCT: A Video Compression Transformer\n\nPassage: We show how transformers can be used to vastly simplify neural video compression. Previous methods have been relying on an increasing number of architectural biases and priors, including motion prediction and warping operations, resulting in complex models. Instead, we independently map input frames to representations and use a transformer to model their dependencies, letting it predict the distribution of future representations given the past. The resulting video compression transformer outperforms previous methods on standard video compression data sets. Experiments on synthetic data show that our model learns to handle complex motion patterns such as panning, blurring and fading purely from data. Our approach is easy to implement, and we release code to facilitate future research."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168665.4559, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168665.2907, "finish": 1721168665.4559, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2dc870b2e3414fffb61078283883c136", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How can transformers simplify neural video compression?", "output": [["How can transformers simplify neural video compression?", "Title: VCT: A Video Compression Transformer\n\nPassage: We show how transformers can be used to vastly simplify neural video compression. Previous methods have been relying on an increasing number of architectural biases and priors, including motion prediction and warping operations, resulting in complex models. Instead, we independently map input frames to representations and use a transformer to model their dependencies, letting it predict the distribution of future representations given the past. The resulting video compression transformer outperforms previous methods on standard video compression data sets. Experiments on synthetic data show that our model learns to handle complex motion patterns such as panning, blurring and fading purely from data. Our approach is easy to implement, and we release code to facilitate future research."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168685.8643, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168685.7276, "finish": 1721168685.8643, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5afa14cc5ac44a72bc032df01b5d1c33", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the primary finding regarding pre-training objectives for down-scaled language models?", "output": [["What is the primary finding regarding pre-training objectives for down-scaled language models?", "Title: Benchmarking down-scaled (not so large) pre-trained language models\n\nPassage: Large Transformer-based language models are pre-trained on corpora of varying sizes, for a different number of steps and with different batch sizes. At the same time, more fundamental components, such as the pre-training objective or architectural hyperparameters, are modified. In total, it is therefore difficult to ascribe changes in performance to specific factors. Since searching the hyperparameter space over the full systems is too costly, we pre-train down-scaled versions of several popular Transformer-based architectures on a common pre-training corpus and benchmark them on a subset of the GLUE tasks (Wang et al., 2018). Specifically, we systematically compare three pre-training objectives for different shape parameters and model sizes, while also varying the number of pre-training steps and the batch size. In our experiments MLM + NSP (BERT-style) consistently outperforms MLM (RoBERTa-style) as well as the standard LM objective. Furthermore, we find that additional compute should be mainly allocated to an increased model size, while training for more steps is inefficient. Based on these observations, as a final step we attempt to scale up several systems using compound scaling (Tan and Le, 2019) adapted to Transformer-based language models."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168685.8643, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168685.7276, "finish": 1721168685.8643, "ip": "", "conv_id": "285f9c6767554ef98ed7dbdca6359ff5", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the primary finding regarding pre-training objectives for down-scaled language models?", "output": [["What is the primary finding regarding pre-training objectives for down-scaled language models?", "Title: Benchmarking down-scaled (not so large) pre-trained language models\n\nPassage: Large Transformer-based language models are pre-trained on corpora of varying sizes, for a different number of steps and with different batch sizes. At the same time, more fundamental components, such as the pre-training objective or architectural hyperparameters, are modified. In total, it is therefore difficult to ascribe changes in performance to specific factors. Since searching the hyperparameter space over the full systems is too costly, we pre-train down-scaled versions of several popular Transformer-based architectures on a common pre-training corpus and benchmark them on a subset of the GLUE tasks (Wang et al., 2018). Specifically, we systematically compare three pre-training objectives for different shape parameters and model sizes, while also varying the number of pre-training steps and the batch size. In our experiments MLM + NSP (BERT-style) consistently outperforms MLM (RoBERTa-style) as well as the standard LM objective. Furthermore, we find that additional compute should be mainly allocated to an increased model size, while training for more steps is inefficient. Based on these observations, as a final step we attempt to scale up several systems using compound scaling (Tan and Le, 2019) adapted to Transformer-based language models."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168718.7701, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168718.6289, "finish": 1721168718.7701, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2c8919b1251b402880f8636665df65e5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How was the performance of fine-tuned transformers in biomedical data-to-text generation?", "output": [["How was the performance of fine-tuned transformers in biomedical data-to-text generation?", "Title: Biomedical Data-to-Text Generation via Fine-Tuning Transformers\n\nPassage: Data-to-text (D2T) generation in the biomedical domain is a promising - yet mostly unexplored - field of research. Here, we apply neural models for D2T generation to a real-world dataset consisting of package leaflets of European medicines. We show that fine-tuned transformers are able to generate realistic, multisentence text from data in the biomedical domain, yet have important limitations. We also release a new dataset (BioLeaflets) for benchmarking D2T generation models in the biomedical domain."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721168718.7701, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721168718.6289, "finish": 1721168718.7701, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0c2820ee117b42abba713aac9d9d366e", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "How was the performance of fine-tuned transformers in biomedical data-to-text generation?", "output": [["How was the performance of fine-tuned transformers in biomedical data-to-text generation?", "Title: Biomedical Data-to-Text Generation via Fine-Tuning Transformers\n\nPassage: Data-to-text (D2T) generation in the biomedical domain is a promising - yet mostly unexplored - field of research. Here, we apply neural models for D2T generation to a real-world dataset consisting of package leaflets of European medicines. We show that fine-tuned transformers are able to generate realistic, multisentence text from data in the biomedical domain, yet have important limitations. We also release a new dataset (BioLeaflets) for benchmarking D2T generation models in the biomedical domain."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169373.6729, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169373.1251, "finish": 1721169373.6729, "ip": "", "conv_id": "31714f279a9a43d599f8d94c923a4bd3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "in new york the supreme court ranks below the court of appeals", "output": [["in new york the supreme court ranks below the court of appeals", "Title: New York Court of Appeals\n\nPassage: The New York Court of Appeals is the highest court in the Unified Court System of the State of New York. It consists of seven judges: the Chief Judge and six associate judges, who are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state senate to 14-year terms. The Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals also heads administration of the state's court system, and thus is also known as the Chief Judge of the State of New York. The Court of Appeals was founded in 1847 and is located in the New York Court of Appeals Building in Albany, New York.\nNomenclature\nIn the Federal court system, and all other U.S. states, the court of last resort is known as the \"Supreme Court\". New York, however, calls its lower courts the \"Supreme Court\" \u2013 consisting of the trial court and the intermediate appellate court, known as the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court \u2013 and the court of last resort the Court of Appeals."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169373.6729, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169373.1251, "finish": 1721169373.6729, "ip": "", "conv_id": "47bbb36e4a33441b9a0e5d4b70a07267", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "in new york the supreme court ranks below the court of appeals", "output": [["in new york the supreme court ranks below the court of appeals", "Title: New York Court of Appeals\n\nPassage: The New York Court of Appeals is the highest court in the Unified Court System of the State of New York. It consists of seven judges: the Chief Judge and six associate judges, who are appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state senate to 14-year terms. The Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals also heads administration of the state's court system, and thus is also known as the Chief Judge of the State of New York. The Court of Appeals was founded in 1847 and is located in the New York Court of Appeals Building in Albany, New York.\nNomenclature\nIn the Federal court system, and all other U.S. states, the court of last resort is known as the \"Supreme Court\". New York, however, calls its lower courts the \"Supreme Court\" \u2013 consisting of the trial court and the intermediate appellate court, known as the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court \u2013 and the court of last resort the Court of Appeals."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169385.8688, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169385.6495, "finish": 1721169385.8688, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a911d4c272b942e486543fc3f0ad6499", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when was the minimum wage established in the united states", "output": [["when was the minimum wage established in the united states", "Title: Minimum wage in the United States\n\nPassage: However, at the same time, in the United States, the late 19th century ideas for favoring a minimum wage (rather than wage subsidies) coincided with the eugenics movement. As a consequence, many prominent Progressive economists at the time, including Royal Meeker, Henry Rogers Seager, and Edward Cummings, argued for adoption of a minimum wage for the explicit purpose of supporting the \"right\" sort of semi- and unskilled laborers while forcing the \"wrong\" sort (including immigrants, racial minorities, women, and the disabled) out of the labor market and, over the longer term, impeding their ability to thrive and have families, or, in the case of women, push them out of the labor pool and back towards the home. The recognized result of a minimum wage, a contraction in a firm's labor force and societal elimination of the \"wrong\" sort of people, was the specific stated outcome, with a view to applying it across the entirety of the American body politic.\nNew Deal\nIn 1933, the Roosevelt administration during the New Deal made the first attempt at establishing a national minimum wage regiment with the National Industrial Recovery Act, which set minimum wage and maximum hours on an industry and regional basis. The Supreme Court, however, in Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States (1935) ruled the act unconstitutional, and the minimum wage regulations were abolished. Two years later after President Roosevelt's overwhelming reelection in 1936 and discussion of judicial reform, the Supreme Court took up the issue of labor legislation again in West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish (1937) and upheld the constitutionality of minimum wage legislation enacted by Washington state and overturned the Adkins decision which marked the end of the Lochner era. In 1938, the minimum wage was re-established pursuant to the Fair Labor Standards Act, this time at a uniform rate of 25\u00a2 per hour (equivalent to $ in ). The Supreme Court upheld the Fair Labor Standards Act in United States v. Darby Lumber Co. (1941), holding that Congress had the power under the Commerce Clause to regulate employment conditions."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169385.8688, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169385.6495, "finish": 1721169385.8688, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c6a53091f92f4a1b93c9d358d1f756e1", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "when was the minimum wage established in the united states", "output": [["when was the minimum wage established in the united states", "Title: Minimum wage in the United States\n\nPassage: In the United States, the minimum wage is set by U.S. labor law and a range of state and local laws. The first federal minimum wage was instituted in the National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933, signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, but later found to be unconstitutional. In 1938, the Fair Labor Standards Act established it at 25\u00a2 an hour . Its purchasing power peaked in 1968, at $1.60 In 2009, it was increased to $7.25 per hour, and has not been increased since.\nEmployers have to pay workers the highest minimum wage of those prescribed by federal, state, and local laws. In August 2022, 30 states and the District of Columbia had minimum wages higher than the federal minimum. In January 2020, almost 90% of Americans earning just minimum wage got more than $7.25 an hour. The effective nationwide minimum wage (the wage that the average minimum-wage worker earns) was $11.80 in May 2019; this was the highest it had been since at least 1994, the earliest year for which effective-minimum-wage data are available.\nIn 2021, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that incrementally raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour by 2025 would benefit 17 million workers but would also reduce employment by 1.4 million people. It would also lift about 900,000 people out of poverty and might raise wages for 10 million more workers, cause prices to rise and overall economic output to decrease slightly, and increase the federal budget deficit by $54 billion over the next 10 years. An Ipsos survey in August 2020 found that support for a rise in the federal minimum wage had grown substantially during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, with 72% of Americans in favor, including 62% of Republicans and 87% of Democrats. A March 2021 poll by Monmouth University Polling Institute, conducted as a minimum-wage increase was being considered in Congress, found 53% of respondents supporting an increase to $15 an hour and 45% opposed.\nIn 2019, 1.6 million Americans earned no more than the federal minimum wage\u2014about 1% of workers, and less than 2% of those paid by the hour. Less than half worked full time; almost half were aged 16\u201325; and more than 60% worked in the leisure and hospitality industries, where many workers received tips in addition to their hourly wages. No significant differences existed among ethnic or racial groups; women were about twice as likely as men to earn minimum wage or less. In May 2022, the legislature of Hawaii passed a bill to raise the minimum wage to $18 by 2028, the highest state minimum wage in the United States. Governor David Ige signed the bill the next month.\nHistory"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169620.0791, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169619.795, "finish": 1721169620.0791, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6934b9d42d3c4703951688c1a2c367b3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the most popular religion in sweden", "output": [["what is the most popular religion in sweden", "Title: Religion in Sweden\n\nPassage: Religion in Sweden has, over the years, become increasingly diverse. Christianity was the religion of virtually all of the Swedish population from the 12th to the early 20th century, but it has rapidly declined throughout the late 20th and early 21st century.\nChristianity came to Sweden as early as the 9th century mainly as a result of an expansion in trade. The ancient Nordic religions were slowly replaced. Several centuries later all monarchs were Christian and Christianity became the established official religion. The church belonged to the Catholic Church until 1527 when the Swedish state church was established as a Protestant church based on Lutheran principles, following the Protestant Reformation enacted by Martin Luther which converted most of Germanic Europe. The Lutheran Church of Sweden was formed and remained the official religion of the Christian state until the turn of the 21st century.\nIn recent years, the Swedish religious landscape has become increasingly diverse, with Christians comprising in 2021 some 59.6% (of which 53.2% belonging to the Church of Sweden) of the total population and rising numbers of people of other religions (2.5%) and people who do not belong to any church (37.9%). The Lutheran Church of Sweden \u2013 which was the state religion until 2000 \u2013 is by far the largest Christian denomination but is facing a continuous decline in registered membership down to 52.8 % of the total population in 2022 Other minor Christian denominations include Free churches, the Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Churches, while members of other religions are mostly Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus and Jews.\nHistory\nHistorical Norse religion\nBefore the 11th century, Swedes practised Norse religion, worshipping a variety of Germanic deities. An important religious centre was the Temple at Uppsala. The shape and location of this temple is sparsely documented, but it is referenced in the Norse sagas and Saxo Grammaticus' , and is also described by Adam of Bremen. It was probably destroyed by King Ingold I in 1087.\nWhile Norse religion was officially abandoned with the Christianization of Scandinavia, belief in many spirits of Norse mythology such as tomtar, trolls, elves and dwarves lived on for a long time in Scandinavian folklore.\n9th\u201312th century: Conversion to Catholicism"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169620.0791, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169619.795, "finish": 1721169620.0791, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ff31e064182840689b08e39fda189942", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what is the most popular religion in sweden", "output": [["what is the most popular religion in sweden", "Title: Religion in Sweden\n\nPassage: Religion in Sweden has, over the years, become increasingly diverse. Christianity was the religion of virtually all of the Swedish population from the 12th to the early 20th century, but it has rapidly declined throughout the late 20th and early 21st century.\nChristianity came to Sweden as early as the 9th century mainly as a result of an expansion in trade. The ancient Nordic religions were slowly replaced. Several centuries later all monarchs were Christian and Christianity became the established official religion. The church belonged to the Catholic Church until 1527 when the Swedish state church was established as a Protestant church based on Lutheran principles, following the Protestant Reformation enacted by Martin Luther which converted most of Germanic Europe. The Lutheran Church of Sweden was formed and remained the official religion of the Christian state until the turn of the 21st century.\nIn recent years, the Swedish religious landscape has become increasingly diverse, with Christians comprising in 2021 some 59.6% (of which 53.2% belonging to the Church of Sweden) of the total population and rising numbers of people of other religions (2.5%) and people who do not belong to any church (37.9%). The Lutheran Church of Sweden \u2013 which was the state religion until 2000 \u2013 is by far the largest Christian denomination but is facing a continuous decline in registered membership down to 52.8 % of the total population in 2022 Other minor Christian denominations include Free churches, the Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodox Churches, while members of other religions are mostly Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus and Jews.\nHistory\nHistorical Norse religion\nBefore the 11th century, Swedes practised Norse religion, worshipping a variety of Germanic deities. An important religious centre was the Temple at Uppsala. The shape and location of this temple is sparsely documented, but it is referenced in the Norse sagas and Saxo Grammaticus' , and is also described by Adam of Bremen. It was probably destroyed by King Ingold I in 1087.\nWhile Norse religion was officially abandoned with the Christianization of Scandinavia, belief in many spirits of Norse mythology such as tomtar, trolls, elves and dwarves lived on for a long time in Scandinavian folklore.\n9th\u201312th century: Conversion to Catholicism"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169629.5803, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169629.3128, "finish": 1721169629.5803, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9e596ec893b844d6a7e717a524ee6e63", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what was the purpose of the bay of pigs mission", "output": [["what was the purpose of the bay of pigs mission", "Title: Bay of Pigs Invasion\n\nPassage: The Bay of Pigs Invasion (, sometimes called or after the Playa Gir\u00f3n) was a failed military landing operation on the southwestern coast of Cuba in 1961 by the Cuban Democratic Revolutionary Front (DRF), consisting of Cuban exiles who opposed Fidel Castro's Cuban Revolution, clandestinely financed and directed by the U.S. government. The operation took place at the height of the Cold War, and its failure influenced relations between Cuba, the United States, and the Soviet Union.\nIn 1952, the American-allied dictator General Fulgencio Batista led a coup against President Carlos Pr\u00edo and forced Pr\u00edo into exile in Miami, Florida. Pr\u00edo's exile inspired Castro's 26th of July Movement against Batista. The movement succeeded in overthrowing Batista during the Cuban Revolution in January 1959. Castro nationalized American businesses, including banks, oil refineries, and sugar and coffee plantations. The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) began planning the overthrow of Castro, which U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower approved in March 1960, and the U.S. began its embargo of the island. This led Castro to reach out to its Cold War rival, the Soviet Union, after which the US severed diplomatic relations. Cuban exiles who had moved to the U.S. following Castro's takeover had formed the counter-revolutionary military unit Brigade 2506, which was the armed wing of the DRF. The CIA funded the brigade, which also included approximately 60 members of the Alabama Air National Guard, and trained the unit in Guatemala."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169629.5803, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169629.3128, "finish": 1721169629.5803, "ip": "", "conv_id": "21395022e33c44cdb48d4b303a5e5406", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what was the purpose of the bay of pigs mission", "output": [["what was the purpose of the bay of pigs mission", "Title: Operation Mongoose\n\nPassage: In a testimony given during the Taylor Committee investigation of the Bay of Pigs invasion, Gen. Shoup admitted that then as well as the now no operation like the Bay of Pigs could have been covert in nature. This was admitted after a lengthy question and answer dialogue where Attorney General Robert Kennedy attempted to establish that General Shoup Failed to meet his responsibilities during the Invasion. Most of the content of his, General Shoup's, answers related to transporting men and supplies to the beaches during the Bay of Pigs Invasion.\nPlanning\nThe U.S. Defense Department's Joint Chiefs of Staff saw the project's ultimate objective to be to provide adequate justification for U.S. military intervention in Cuba. They requested that Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara assign them responsibility for the project, but Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy retained effective control.\nOn January 8, 1960 General Cabell, the Deputy Director of Central Intelligence (DDCI), held a joint briefing on Cuba for the Department of State and the Joint Chiefs of Staff. During this meeting Colonel L. K. White had mentioned that Fidel Castro was going to need to be dealt with. At this time the DDCI also discussed the need to increase covert and semi-covert programs aimed at Castro. These programs included psychological warfare, political action, economic action, and para-military action.\nBy the 18th of January, the DDCI had come up with various Cuban operations.\nLater it was proposed that a separate branch should be created to handle everything about the anti-Castro movement. The White House division organized Branch 4 (WH/4) as the new task force to run Cuban Operations. The task force included 40 personnel, with 18 at headquarters, 20 at the Havana station, and two at Santiago base. The state department was concerned that if Castro were overthrown, then the people to come after him would be worse than him \u2013 primarily Che Guevara and Raul Castro. So they proposed a way of getting a better leader that they approved of in his place. The CIA began to worry that their involvement with the anti-Castro movement would lead to an anti-US movement. On March 14 of 1960, Dulles presented a \"General Covert Action Plan for Cuba\" that would focus only on the Cuban problems. Guerrilla capacity in the anti-Castro groups both in and out of Cuba was discussed."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169633.1244, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169632.8715, "finish": 1721169633.1244, "ip": "", "conv_id": "517b4d90f5a74aca93c87e8a2e6ef5bf", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what percentage of global man-made co2 emissions comes from worldwide aviation", "output": [["what percentage of global man-made co2 emissions comes from worldwide aviation", "Title: Climate change mitigation\n\nPassage: Hybrid and all electric ferries are suitable for short distances. Norway's goal is an all electric fleet by 2025.\nAir transport\nJet airliners contribute to climate change by emitting carbon dioxide, nitrogen oxides, contrails and particulates. Their radiative forcing is estimated at 1.3\u20131.4 that of alone, excluding induced cirrus cloud. In 2018, global commercial operations generated 2.4% of all emissions.\nThe aviation industry has become more fuel efficient. But overall emissions have risen as the volume of air travel has increased. By 2020, aviation emissions were 70% higher than in 2005 and they could grow by 300% by 2050.\nIt is possible to reduce aviation's environmental footprint by better fuel economy in aircraft. Optimising flight routes to lower non- effects on climate from nitrogen oxides, particulates or contrails can also help. Aviation biofuel, carbon emission trading and carbon offsetting, part of the 191 nation ICAO's Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA), can lower emissions. Short-haul flight bans, train connections, personal choices and taxation on flights can lead to fewer flights. Hybrid electric aircraft and electric aircraft or hydrogen-powered aircraft may replace fossil fuel-powered aircraft.\nExperts expect emissions from aviation to rise in most projections, at least until 2040. They currently amount to 180\u00a0Mt of or 11% of transport emissions. Aviation biofuel and hydrogen can only cover a small proportion of flights in the coming years. Experts expect hybrid-driven aircraft to start commercial regional scheduled flights after 2030. Battery-powered aircraft are likely to enter the market after 2035. Under CORSIA, flight operators can purchase carbon offsets to cover their emissions above 2019 levels. CORSIA will be compulsory from 2027.\nAgriculture, forestry and land use\nAlmost 20% of greenhouse gas emissions come from the agriculture and forestry sector. To significantly reduce these emissions, annual investments in the agriculture sector need to increase to $260 billion by 2030. The potential benefits from these investments are estimated at about $4.3 trillion by 2030, offering a substantial economic return of 16-to-1.\nMitigation measures in the food system can be divided into four categories. These are demand-side changes, ecosystem protections, mitigation on farms, and mitigation in supply chains. On the demand side, limiting food waste is an effective way to reduce food emissions. Changes to a diet less reliant on animal products such as plant-based diets are also effective.\nWith 21% of global methane emissions, cattle are a major driver of global warming. When rainforests are cut and the land is converted for grazing, the impact is even higher. In Brazil, producing 1\u00a0kg of beef can result in the emission of up to 335\u00a0kg CO2-eq. Other livestock, manure management and rice cultivation also emit greenhouse gases, in addition to fossil fuel combustion in agriculture."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169633.1244, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169632.8715, "finish": 1721169633.1244, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b549c4a55f1743168975beb8e633e882", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what percentage of global man-made co2 emissions comes from worldwide aviation", "output": [["what percentage of global man-made co2 emissions comes from worldwide aviation", "Title: Airborne fraction\n\nPassage: Discussion about the trend of airborne fraction\nAnthropogenic CO2 that is released into the atmosphere is partitioned into three components: approximately 45% remains in the atmosphere (referred to as the airborne fraction), while about 24% and 31% are absorbed by the oceans (ocean sink) and terrestrial biosphere (land sink), respectively. If the airborne fraction increases, this indicates that a smaller amount of the CO2 released by humans is being absorbed by land and ocean sinks, due to factors such as warming oceans or thawing permafrost. As a result, a greater proportion of anthropogenic emissions remains in the atmosphere, thereby accelerating the rate of climate change. This has implications for future projections of atmospheric CO2 levels, which must be adjusted to account for this trend. The question of whether the airborne fraction is rising, remaining steady at approximately 45%, or declining remains a matter of debate. Resolving this question is critical for comprehending the global carbon cycle and has relevance for policymakers and the general public.\nThe quantity \u201cairborne fraction\u201d is termed by Charles David Keeling in 1973, and studies conducted in the 1970s and 1980s defined airborne fraction from cumulative carbon inventory changes as,\nOr,\nIn which C is atmospheric carbon dioxide, t is time, FF is fossil-fuel emissions and LU is the emission to the atmosphere due to land use change.\nAt present, studies examining the trends in airborne fraction are producing contradictory outcomes, with emissions linked to land use and land cover change representing the most significant source of uncertainty. Some studies show that there is no statistical evidence of an increasing airborne fraction and calculated airborne fraction as,\nWhere Gt is growth of atmospheric CO2 concentration, EFF is the fossil-fuel emissions flux, ELUC is the land use change emissions flux.\nAnother argument was presented that the airborne fraction of CO2 released by human activities, particularly through fossil-fuel emissions, cement production, and land-use changes, is on the rise. Since 1959, the average CO2 airborne fraction has been 0.43, but it has shown an increase of approximately 0.2% per year over that period.\nOn the other hand, the findings of another group suggest that the CO2 airborne fraction has declined by 0.014 \u00b1 0.010 per decade since 1959. This indicates that the combined land-ocean sink has expanded at a rate that is at least as rapid as anthropogenic emissions. The way they calculated the airborne fraction is:\nWhere, AF is airborne fraction and SF is sink fraction. ELULCC is the land use and land cover change emissions flux, EFF is the fossil-fuel emissions flux, and SO and SL are the ocean and land sinks, respectively.\nThe trend analyses of airborne fraction may be affected by external natural occurrences, such as the El Ni\u00f1o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), volcanic eruptions, and other similar events. It is possible that the methodologies used in these studies to analyze the trend of airborne fraction are not robust, and therefore, the conclusions drawn from them are not warranted."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169668.799, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169668.638, "finish": 1721169668.799, "ip": "", "conv_id": "641f2102cf864bcab88817640a90fbbd", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who appoints the members of the given branch in the united states", "output": [["who appoints the members of the given branch in the united states", "Title: Judicial appointment history for United States federal courts\n\nPassage: The appointment of federal judges for United States federal courts is done via nomination by the President of the United States and confirmation by the United States Senate. The tables below provide the composition of all Article III courts which include the Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeals at the end of each four year presidential term, as well as the current compositions of the District Courts and the Court of International Trade, categorizing the judges by the presidential term during which they were first appointed to their seats."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169668.799, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169668.638, "finish": 1721169668.799, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3171b0c82ed43b599745d0d1e08551e", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who appoints the members of the given branch in the united states", "output": [["who appoints the members of the given branch in the united states", "Title: Federal government of the United States\n\nPassage: Since the American Civil War, the powers of the federal government have generally expanded greatly, although there have been periods since that time of legislative branch dominance (e.g., the decades immediately following the Civil War) or when states' rights proponents have succeeded in limiting federal power through legislative action, executive prerogative or by a constitutional interpretation by the courts.\nOne of the theoretical pillars of the U.S. Constitution is the idea of \"checks and balances\" among the powers and responsibilities of the three branches of American government: the executive, the legislative, and the judiciary. For example, while the legislative branch (Congress) has the power to create law, the executive branch under the president can veto any legislation\u2014an act which, in turn, can be overridden by Congress. The president nominates judges to the nation's highest judiciary authority, the Supreme Court (as well as to lower federal courts), but those nominees must be approved by Congress. The Supreme Court, in turn, can invalidate unconstitutional laws passed by the Congress. These and other examples are examined in more detail in the text below.\nLegislative branch\nThe United States Congress, under Article I of the Constitution, is the legislative branch of the federal government. It is bicameral, comprising the House of Representatives and the Senate.\nMakeup of Congress\nHouse of Representatives\nThe U.S. House of Representatives is made up of 435 voting members, each of whom represents a congressional district in a state from where they were elected. Apportionment of seats among the 50 states is determined by state populations, and it is updated after each decennial U.S. Census. Each member serves a two-year term.\nIn order to be elected as a representative, an individual must be at least 25 years of age, must have been a U.S. citizen for at least seven years, and must live in the state that they represent.\nIn addition to the 435 voting members, there are six non-voting members, consisting of five delegates and one resident commissioner. There is one delegate each from Washington, D.C., Guam, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and a resident commissioner from Puerto Rico.\nUnlike the U.S. Senate, all members of the U.S. House must be elected and cannot be appointed. In the case of a vacancy, the seat must be filled through a special election, as required under Article 1 of the U.S. Constitution.\nSenate\nIn contrast, the Senate is made up of two senators from each state, regardless of population. There are currently 100 senators (2 from each of the 50 states), who each serve six-year terms. Approximately one-third of the Senate stands for election every two years.\nIf a vacancy occurs, the state governor appoints a replacement to complete the term or to hold the office until a special election can take place.\nSeparate powers"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169682.2835, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169682.0055, "finish": 1721169682.2835, "ip": "", "conv_id": "544bab39b2644459bf648ca28f97a2b8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "winner of first series of great british bake off", "output": [["winner of first series of great british bake off", "Title: Challney High School for Girls\n\nPassage: Challney High School for Girls is a school comprehensive secondary school for girls, located in the Challney area of Luton, Bedfordshire, England. The school is situated next to Challney High School for Boys and the M1 motorway.\nThe school educates girls aged 11 \u2013 16. For further education courses such as A levels, graduating students usually go on to attend Luton Sixth Form College.\nIn 2006, Challney High School for Girls was awarded specialist status as a Science College. The school continues to offer science as a specialism today.\nIn January 2011, Challney High School for Girls moved into a newly built school on Addington Way not far, almost directly opposite the old building.\nIn February 2017, the school was converted to an academy by Ofsted. The academy still operates under the name Challney High School for Girls, within the Chiltern Learning Trust. Recently, the school has been rewarded \u2018Outstanding\u2019 by Ofsted.\nNotable former pupils\nNadiya Hussain, winner of the sixth series of The Great British Bake Off"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169682.2835, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169682.0055, "finish": 1721169682.2835, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae29b87512b744c7997aac1ebd9d51de", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "winner of first series of great british bake off", "output": [["winner of first series of great british bake off", "Title: The Big Fat Quiz of the Year\n\nPassage: Danny Dyer appeared in the studio to provide a live guest question. Pre-recorded guest questions were provided by Russell Brand, Anchorman 2 stars Steve Carell, Will Ferrell, and Paul Rudd; Olly Murs, Christine Ohuruogu, Louis Walsh, Richard Osman, The Great Gonzo (promoting Muppets Most Wanted), Harry Hill, and Sophie Ellis-Bextor. Educating Yorkshire teachers Mr Mitchell and Mr Burton, The Great British Bake Off series 4 runner-up Ruby Tandoh, Rizzle Kicks, and astronaut Chris Hadfield. The children of Mitchell Brook Primary School returned to act out Edward Snowden's spy leaks. Jon Snow reported on \"Wrecking Ball\" and Charles Dance read from the autobiography of Lauren Goodger. The mystery guest was Natalie Holt, who threw eggs at Simon Cowell on the final of Britain's Got Talent.\nThe show was dedicated to comedy agent and producer Addison Cresswell, who died on 22 December 2013.\nJonathan Ross brought most of a turkey, a loaf of bread and champagne. He ended up making sandwiches for the others.\n2014\nThe 2014 edition was recorded on 1 December and aired on 26 December 2014.\nPre-recorded guest questions came from Michael Palin, Tom Daley, the cast of The Inbetweeners, Game of Thrones actress Natalie Dormer, Lily Allen, Rio Ferdinand, Pixie Lott and Status Quo members Francis Rossi and Rick Parfitt. Paralympic gold medallists Kelly Gallagher and Charlotte Evans provided the in-studio guest question. Charles Dance read from the autobiography of Joey Essex. The children of Mitchell Brook Primary School acted out the Bernie Ecclestone trial. Jon Snow gave his news report about \"All About That Bass\". The mystery guest was Dean Farley, the jogger who ran into David Cameron.\nMel B's performance received notable negative attention on social media and in the press as having brought down the show by being perceived as sour and humorless.\n2015\nThe 2015 edition was recorded on 14 December 2015 and aired on 26 December 2015. The teams did not take names.\nPre-recorded guest questions came from Quentin Tarantino, Rita Ora, Simon Pegg, Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg, Josh Groban, Olly Murs, Katie Price and Heston Blumenthal. The Great British Bake Off winner, Nadiya Hussain, provided the in-studio guest question. The children of Mitchell Brook Primary School acted out Jeremy Clarkson's dismissal from Top Gear. Jon Snow reported on Drake's \"Hotline Bling\". Charles Dance read from List of the Lost, the debut novel by Morrissey. The mystery guest was Cecilia Bleasdale, who took a photo of a black and blue dress which appeared white and gold to some people on the photo, leading to the dress becoming an internet meme. Davies and Ayoade's early answer \"Bad Dong\" becomes a running joke throughout the episode.\nOne of the running gags is the panelists deciding to make an alliance against Jimmy by helping Richard & Greg with getting their answers deliberately wrong. Rob even goes far as becoming the host of the program for two minutes however the alliance breaks down after a debate about The Dress.\n2016"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169697.055, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169696.8302, "finish": 1721169697.055, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dfaceb35ad204b3988e1c9130c092823", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who was the movie citizen kane based on", "output": [["who was the movie citizen kane based on", "Title: Marion Davies\n\nPassage: In the spring of 1961, Davies underwent surgery for malignant osteomyelitis. Twelve days after the operation, she fell in her hospital room and broke her leg. Her health failed rapidly over the summer. Davies died of the malignant osteomyelitis on September\u00a022, 1961, in Hollywood. Over 200 mourners and many Hollywood celebrities, including her friends Mary Pickford, Harold Lloyd, Charles \"Buddy\" Rogers, Glenn Ford, Kay Williams, and Johnny Weissmuller attended her funeral at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Hollywood. Davies was buried in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery. She left an estate estimated at $20\u00a0million ().\nCultural legacy\nSusan Alexander Kane\nAccording to biographers, the release of Orson Welles's Citizen Kane (1941) destroyed Davies' reputation. Film audiences mistakenly assumed Davies was the unalloyed inspiration for the character of Susan Alexander in the film, which was based loosely on Hearst's life. Many viewers, including journalists, \"assumed that the powerful publisher Charles Kane in the film was Mr. Hearst, the huge castle Xanadu was in reality Mr. Hearst's fabulous estate San Simeon and the blonde young singer he tried to turn into a diva, although she had no voice, was in reality Miss Davies\".\nConsequently, a retroactive myth soon developed that Davies was \"not a great actress and the films she made were not among the more impressive or profitable releases\". By the time of her prolonged death from cancer, press obituaries erroneously depicted Davies to have been an extremely mediocre and unpopular actress during her lifetime. However, contrary to the retroactive myth that Davies' films were neither popular nor profitable, most of Davies' films made money, and she remained a popular star for most of her career. She was the number one female box office star of 1922\u201323 because of the enormous popularity of 1922's When Knighthood Was in Flower and 1923's Little Old New York, which ranked among the biggest box-office hits of 1922 and 1923, respectively.\nOver time, the popular association with the character of Susan Alexander Kane led to later revisionist portrayals of Davies as a talentless opportunist. In his later years, Orson Welles attempted to correct the widespread misconceptions which Citizen Kane had created about Davies' popularity and talents as an actress. In his foreword to Davies' autobiography, The Times We Had (published posthumously in 1975), Welles wrote that the fictional Susan Alexander Kane bears no resemblance to Davies:\nWelles told filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich that Samuel Insull's construction of the Chicago Opera House, and Harold Fowler McCormick's lavish promotion of the opera career of his second wife Ganna Walska, were the actual influences for the Susan Alexander character in the Citizen Kane screenplay. \"As for Marion,\" Welles said, \"she was an extraordinary woman\u2014nothing like the character Dorothy Comingore played in the movie\u00a0... Marion was much better than Susan\u2014whom people wrongly equated with her\".\nCritical reassessment"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169697.055, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169696.8302, "finish": 1721169697.055, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c9270ae318d141b09ae5ddfa6603e8b4", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who was the movie citizen kane based on", "output": [["who was the movie citizen kane based on", "Title: Joseph Cotten\n\nPassage: When released on May 1, 1941, Citizen Kane\u00a0\u2013 based in part on the life of William Randolph Hearst\u00a0\u2013 did not do much business at theaters; Hearst owned numerous major newspapers, and forbade them to carry advertisements for the film. Nominated for nine Academy Awards in 1942, the film won only for Best Screenplay, for Mankiewicz and Welles. Citizen Kane launched the film careers of the Mercury Players, including Agnes Moorehead (who played Kane's mother), Ruth Warrick (Kane's first wife), and Ray Collins (Kane's political opponent). However, Cotten was the only one of the four to find major success as a lead in Hollywood outside of Citizen Kane; Moorehead and Collins became successful character film actors. Moorehead starred in Bewitched and Warrick spent decades in a career in daytime television.\nThe Los Angeles Times, in an otherwise mixed review of the film, said that \"Cotten's work is vital and distinctive ... He is an important 'find.'\" Alexander Korda hired him to play Merle Oberon's leading man in Lydia (1941). \"I didn't care about the movies, really\", Cotten said later. \"I was tall. I had curly hair. I could talk. It was easy to do.\"\nThe Magnificent Ambersons (1942)\nCotten starred in Welles's adaptation and production of The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). After the commercial disappointment of Citizen Kane, RKO was apprehensive about the new film, and after poor preview responses, cut it by nearly an hour before its release. Though at points the film appeared disjointed, it was well received by critics. Despite the critical accolades Cotten received for his performance, he was again snubbed by the academy.\nJourney into Fear (1943)\nCotten was cast in the Nazi-related thriller Journey into Fear (1943) based on the novel by Eric Ambler. It was originally scripted by Ben Hecht but Welles, who was supervising, disliked it, and he rewrote it with Cotten. Released by RKO, the Mercury production was directed by Norman Foster. It was a collaborative effort due to the difficulties shooting the film and the pressures related to Welles's imminent departure to South America to begin work on It's All True.\nAlfred Hitchcock hired Cotten to play a charming serial killer in Shadow of a Doubt (1943). It was made for Universal Pictures, for whom Cotten then appeared in Hers to Hold (1943), as Deanna Durbin's leading man.\nAfter Welles's return he and Cotten co-produced The Mercury Wonder Show for members of the U.S. armed services. Opening August 3, 1943, the all-star magic and variety show was presented in a tent at 9000 Cahuenga Boulevard in Hollywood. Featured were Welles (Orson the Magnificent), Cotten (Jo-Jo the Great), Rita Hayworth (forced to quit by Columbia Pictures boss Harry Cohn and replaced by Marlene Dietrich), Agnes Moorehead (Calliope Aggie) and others. Tickets were free to servicemen, and more than 48,000 of them had seen show by September 1943."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169704.2956, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169704.141, "finish": 1721169704.2956, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4418ef37511349c2b05bd52f50510180", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who does the civil rights act of 1964 protect", "output": [["who does the civil rights act of 1964 protect", "Title: Civil Rights Act of 1964\n\nPassage: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 () is a landmark civil rights and labor law in the United States that outlaws discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. It prohibits unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation in schools and public accommodations, and employment discrimination. The act \"remains one of the most significant legislative achievements in American history\".\nInitially, powers given to enforce the act were weak, but these were supplemented during later years. Congress asserted its authority to legislate under several different parts of the United States Constitution, principally its enumerated power to regulate interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause of Article I, Section VIII, its duty to guarantee all citizens equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment, and its duty to protect voting rights under the Fifteenth Amendment.\nThe legislation was proposed by President John F. Kennedy in June 1963, but it was opposed by filibuster in the Senate. After Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson pushed the bill forward. The United States House of Representatives passed the bill on February 10, 1964, and after a 72-day filibuster, it passed the United States Senate on June 19, 1964. The final vote was 290\u2013130 in the House of Representatives and 73\u201327 in the Senate. After the House agreed to a subsequent Senate amendment, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed into law by President Johnson at the White House on July 2, 1964.\nBackground\nReconstruction and New Deal era"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169704.2956, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169704.141, "finish": 1721169704.2956, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0271d0176e834fc39bdc9f462be19da8", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who does the civil rights act of 1964 protect", "output": [["who does the civil rights act of 1964 protect", "Title: Civil Rights Act of 1964\n\nPassage: The Civil Rights Act of 1964 () is a landmark civil rights and labor law in the United States that outlaws discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. It prohibits unequal application of voter registration requirements, racial segregation in schools and public accommodations, and employment discrimination. The act \"remains one of the most significant legislative achievements in American history\".\nInitially, powers given to enforce the act were weak, but these were supplemented during later years. Congress asserted its authority to legislate under several different parts of the United States Constitution, principally its enumerated power to regulate interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause of Article I, Section VIII, its duty to guarantee all citizens equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment, and its duty to protect voting rights under the Fifteenth Amendment.\nThe legislation was proposed by President John F. Kennedy in June 1963, but it was opposed by filibuster in the Senate. After Kennedy was assassinated on November 22, 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson pushed the bill forward. The United States House of Representatives passed the bill on February 10, 1964, and after a 72-day filibuster, it passed the United States Senate on June 19, 1964. The final vote was 290\u2013130 in the House of Representatives and 73\u201327 in the Senate. After the House agreed to a subsequent Senate amendment, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed into law by President Johnson at the White House on July 2, 1964.\nBackground\nReconstruction and New Deal era"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169710.0629, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169709.8494, "finish": 1721169710.0629, "ip": "", "conv_id": "985a61193943482c973209fb6f1f5e0f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when does jenny humphrey come back to gossip girl", "output": [["when does jenny humphrey come back to gossip girl", "Title: Vanessa Abrams\n\nPassage: Characterization\nSzohr's character enters the wealthy world of Manhattan and occasional love interest of her longtime best friend, Dan Humphrey. People magazine cites her television portrayal of her character especially Ziegesar saying that Vanessa on the show \"has more of a bohemian hipster look\". During an interview for Ocean Drive magazine Szohr commented on her character's noted honesty, stating that \"Vanessa doesn't change for other people. She says what she thinks, and that's a hard thing to do in high school[...] she\u2019s just a badass girl from Brooklyn\". Szohr finds her character as the most relatable series since Vanessa doesn't have the same lifestyle as most of the other wealthy characters on the show do. During an interview for Vanity Fair, Eric Daman described Vanessa's style as \"a breath of fresh air. She\u2019s the Lower East Side, Raising Victor Vargas home-girl.\" and cited two-time Grammy award-winning artist M.I.A. as an influence.\nSeason 1\nVanessa is officially introduced in the sixth episode of the season, entitled \"The Handmaiden's Tale.\" While talking on the phone with Dan, she appears on his fire escape and the two gladly reunite. She announces that she's decided to move back to the city and live with her sister, Ruby. She also mentions that she missed Dan while she was away and has repeatedly thought about the last words he said to her before she moved to Vermont. Vanessa helps Dan's younger sister, Jenny Humphrey, sneak into a masquerade ball, and she decides to sneak in herself, where she spots Dan and attempts to reconcile their relationship. It is then revealed that Dan's last words to Vanessa were \"I love you,\" but despite this fact, Dan says that he's moved on and is dating Serena. Vanessa gets teary-eyed and abandons the party, however the two friends make up later in Dan's bedroom. They share a snack while Dan fills her in on everything that's changed in his life.\nIn \" Victor/Victrola,\" Vanessa acts as a mentor for Jenny, giving the young blond some advice about parental issues. She seems to express some jealousy when she stumbles in on Dan and Serena about to have sex. However, in the next episode, she and Serena bond over Guitar Hero after Dan explains that Vanessa is his best friend and that the two will always share a special bond from their childhood. Later, Serena and Vanessa engage in conversation and get to know each other better. On Christmas Day, Serena feels a bit jealous when Vanessa gets Dan the perfect present (by publishing his short story in The New Yorker). Vanessa makes a rival out of Blair Waldorf when Blair suspects her of liking Dan as 'more than a friend.' Despite her suspicions, Vanessa helps Serena create the only thing Dan wanted for Christmas \u2013 snow."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169710.0629, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169709.8494, "finish": 1721169710.0629, "ip": "", "conv_id": "40d7fee209fc4374aae650aa4ebae384", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "when does jenny humphrey come back to gossip girl", "output": [["when does jenny humphrey come back to gossip girl", "Title: Gossip Girl\n\nPassage: The success of Gossip Girl led to many adaptations outside the United States. The series received numerous award nominations and won 18 Teen Choice Awards. The CW officially renewed Gossip Girl for a sixth and final season on May 11, 2012. The final season, consisting of 10 episodes, premiered on October 8, 2012, and ended on December 17, 2012.\nPremise\nThe series focuses on a group of privileged teenagers who attend a prestigious high school in the Upper East Side of New York City as their private lives are constantly commented upon by an unknown blogger under the pseudonym \"Gossip Girl\".\nGossip Girl chronicles the scandals and intimate details of these characters' lives during high school, college, and after. All of their ups and downs are available for the public to read about. Throughout this time, the characters strive to unveil Gossip Girl's true identity.\nEpisodes\nCast and characters\nMain\nBlake Lively as Serena van der Woodsen, a student at the Constance Billard School for Girls. She is an it girl who frequently receives media attention.\nLeighton Meester as Blair Waldorf, the queen bee of Constance Billard. She is best friends with Serena and highly focused on status, wealth and academic achievement. Her relationship with Chuck is a key theme throughout all six seasons.\nPenn Badgley as Dan Humphrey, an outcast student at St. Jude's School for Boys. Dan initially does not fit in with the Upper East Side teenagers as he lives in Brooklyn and is not a legacy student, but rather attends St. Jude's with a partial scholarship. Dan aspires to be a writer.\nChace Crawford as Nate Archibald, a student at St. Jude's, Blair's childhood boyfriend, and the UES golden boy.\nTaylor Momsen as Jenny Humphrey (seasons 1\u20134; guest, season 6), a student at Constance Billard's and Dan's younger sister. Jenny dreams of becoming a fashion designer, and begins as one of Blair's minions in order to gain status. She later rejects the Upper East Side life and becomes rivals with Blair and sleeps with Chuck.\nEd Westwick as Chuck Bass, a student at St. Jude's. He is the son of one of New York's most successful real estate moguls. Decadent and amoral, Chuck is mainly interested in women and alcohol. Once his father dies in the second season, he inherits Bass Industries and becomes a young billionaire. He is romantically involved with Blair throughout the series but they do not start officially dating until the third season. Blair and Chuck's relationship is a key theme throughout all six seasons.\nKelly Rutherford as Lily van der Woodsen (n\u00e9e Rhodes), Serena and Eric's mother and a three-time divorc\u00e9e. A former photographer, Lily has become one of the UES's most influential socialites. She and Serena often have a strained and rocky relationship."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169847.5192, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169847.3187, "finish": 1721169847.5192, "ip": "", "conv_id": "68041e9b81d44691b95014bc755130ac", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "scaling", "output": [["scaling", "Title: Selection of the scaling solution in a cluster coalescence model\n\nPassage: The scaling properties of the cluster size distribution of a system of diffusing clusters is studied in terms of a simple kinetic mean field model. It is shown that a one parameter family of mathematically valid scaling solutions exists. Despite this, the kinetics reaches a unique scaling solution independent of initial conditions. This selected scaling solution is marginally physical; i.e., it is the borderline solution between the unphysical and physical branches of the family of solutions."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169847.5192, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169847.3187, "finish": 1721169847.5192, "ip": "", "conv_id": "32634710f7bc43faab7a6a9938a58d4c", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "scaling", "output": [["scaling", "Title: Tomography of scaling\n\nPassage: Scaling describes how a given quantity $Y$ that characterizes a system varies with its size $P$. For most complex systems it is of the form $Y\\sim P^\\beta$ with a nontrivial value of the exponent $\\beta$, usually determined by regression methods. The presence of noise can make it difficult to conclude about the existence of a non-linear behavior with $\\beta\\neq 1$ and we propose here to circumvent fitting problems by investigating how two different systems of sizes $P_1$ and $P_2$ are related to each other. This leads us to define a local scaling exponent $\\beta_{\\mathrm{loc}}$ that we study versus the ratio $P_2/P_1$ and provides some sort of `tomography scan' of scaling across different values of the size ratio, allowing us to assess the relevance of nonlinearity in the system and to identify an effective exponent that minimizes the error for predicting the value of $Y$. We illustrate this method on various real-world datasets for cities and show that our method reinforces in some cases the standard analysis, but is also able to provide new insights in inconclusive cases and to detect problems in the scaling form such as the absence of a single scaling exponent or the presence of threshold effects."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169857.2527, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169857.085, "finish": 1721169857.2527, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f5d6731d25574a4593cfcaa4af49d529", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "llms", "output": [["llms", "Title: LaMSUM: A Novel Framework for Extractive Summarization of User Generated Content using LLMs\n\nPassage: Large Language Models (LLMs) have demonstrated impressive performance across a wide range of NLP tasks, including summarization. Inherently LLMs produce abstractive summaries, and the task of achieving extractive summaries through LLMs still remains largely unexplored. To bridge this gap, in this work, we propose a novel framework LaMSUM to generate extractive summaries through LLMs for large user-generated text by leveraging voting algorithms. Our evaluation on three popular open-source LLMs (Llama 3, Mixtral and Gemini) reveal that the LaMSUM outperforms state-of-the-art extractive summarization methods. We further attempt to provide the rationale behind the output summary produced by LLMs. Overall, this is one of the early attempts to achieve extractive summarization for large user-generated text by utilizing LLMs, and likely to generate further interest in the community."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169857.2527, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169857.085, "finish": 1721169857.2527, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d2cc40fcb91a4b699f30687bd6d872f9", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "llms", "output": [["llms", "Title: Caveat Lector: Large Language Models in Legal Practice\n\nPassage: The current fascination with large language models, or LLMs, derives from the fact that many users lack the expertise to evaluate the quality of the generated text. LLMs may therefore appear more capable than they actually are. The dangerous combination of fluency and superficial plausibility leads to the temptation to trust the generated text and creates the risk of overreliance. Who would not trust perfect legalese? Relying recent findings in both technical and legal scholarship, this Article counterbalances the overly optimistic predictions as to the role of LLMs in legal practice. Integrating LLMs into legal workstreams without a better comprehension of their limitations, will create inefficiencies if not outright risks. Notwithstanding their unprecedented ability to generate text, LLMs do not understand text. Without the ability to understand meaning, LLMs will remain unable to use language, to acquire knowledge and to perform complex reasoning tasks. Trained to model language on the basis of stochastic word predictions, LLMs cannot distinguish fact from fiction. Their knowledge of the law is limited to word strings memorized in their parameters. It is also incomplete and largely incorrect. LLMs operate at the level of word distributions, not at the level of verified facts. The resulting propensity to hallucinate, to produce statements that are incorrect but appear helpful and relevant, is alarming in high-risk areas like legal services. At present, lawyers should beware of relying on text generated by LLMs."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169954.0549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169953.8759, "finish": 1721169954.0549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1446c247ed4c429fa1f6b2a570744884", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where in the constitution is the executive branch referenced", "output": [["where in the constitution is the executive branch referenced", "Title: Federal government of the United States\n\nPassage: It applies to cabinet departments, executive agencies, regulatory commissions, and the presidency.\nCongress' oversight function takes many forms:\nCommittee inquiries and hearings\nFormal consultations with and reports from the president\nSenate advice and consent for presidential nominations and for treaties\nHouse impeachment proceedings and subsequent Senate trials\nHouse and Senate proceedings under the 25th Amendment if the president becomes disabled or if the office of the vice president falls vacant\nInformal meetings between legislators and executive officials\nCongressional membership: each state is allocated a number of seats based on its representation (or ostensible representation, in the case of D.C.) in the House of Representatives. Each state is allocated two senators regardless of its population. , the District of Columbia elects a non-voting representative to the House of Representatives along with American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Northern Mariana Islands.\nExecutive branch\nPresident\nExecutive powers and duties\nThe executive branch is established in Article Two of the United States Constitution, which vests executive power in the president of the United States. The president is both the head of state (performing ceremonial functions) and the head of government (the chief executive). The Constitution directs the president to \"take care that the laws be faithfully executed\" and requires the president to swear or affirm to \"preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.\" Legal scholars William P. Marshall and Saikrishna B. Prakash write of the Clause: \"the President may neither breach federal law nor order their subordinates to do so, for defiance cannot be considered faithful execution. The Constitution also incorporates the English bars on dispensing or suspending the law, with some supposing that the Clause itself prohibits both.\" Many presidential actions are undertaken via executive orders, presidential proclamations, and presidential memoranda.\nThe president is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Under the Reception Clause, the president is empowered to \"receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers\"; the president has broad authority to conduct foreign relations, is generally considered to have the sole power of diplomatic recognition, and is the United States' chief diplomat, although the Congress also has an important role in legislating on foreign affairs, and can, for example, \"institute a trade embargo, declare war upon a foreign government that the President had recognized, or decline to appropriate funds for an embassy in that country.\" The president may also negotiate and sign treaties, but ratifying treaties requires the consent of two-thirds of the Senate.\nArticle II's Appointments Clause provides that the president \"shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States\" while providing that \"Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.\" These appointments delegate \"by legal authority a portion of the sovereign powers of the federal government.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169954.0549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169953.8759, "finish": 1721169954.0549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "72ea4c477809465ebb40a210acb76b38", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where in the constitution is the executive branch referenced", "output": [["where in the constitution is the executive branch referenced", "Title: Federal government of the United States\n\nPassage: It applies to cabinet departments, executive agencies, regulatory commissions, and the presidency.\nCongress' oversight function takes many forms:\nCommittee inquiries and hearings\nFormal consultations with and reports from the president\nSenate advice and consent for presidential nominations and for treaties\nHouse impeachment proceedings and subsequent Senate trials\nHouse and Senate proceedings under the 25th Amendment if the president becomes disabled or if the office of the vice president falls vacant\nInformal meetings between legislators and executive officials\nCongressional membership: each state is allocated a number of seats based on its representation (or ostensible representation, in the case of D.C.) in the House of Representatives. Each state is allocated two senators regardless of its population. , the District of Columbia elects a non-voting representative to the House of Representatives along with American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Northern Mariana Islands.\nExecutive branch\nPresident\nExecutive powers and duties\nThe executive branch is established in Article Two of the United States Constitution, which vests executive power in the president of the United States. The president is both the head of state (performing ceremonial functions) and the head of government (the chief executive). The Constitution directs the president to \"take care that the laws be faithfully executed\" and requires the president to swear or affirm to \"preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.\" Legal scholars William P. Marshall and Saikrishna B. Prakash write of the Clause: \"the President may neither breach federal law nor order their subordinates to do so, for defiance cannot be considered faithful execution. The Constitution also incorporates the English bars on dispensing or suspending the law, with some supposing that the Clause itself prohibits both.\" Many presidential actions are undertaken via executive orders, presidential proclamations, and presidential memoranda.\nThe president is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Under the Reception Clause, the president is empowered to \"receive Ambassadors and other public Ministers\"; the president has broad authority to conduct foreign relations, is generally considered to have the sole power of diplomatic recognition, and is the United States' chief diplomat, although the Congress also has an important role in legislating on foreign affairs, and can, for example, \"institute a trade embargo, declare war upon a foreign government that the President had recognized, or decline to appropriate funds for an embassy in that country.\" The president may also negotiate and sign treaties, but ratifying treaties requires the consent of two-thirds of the Senate.\nArticle II's Appointments Clause provides that the president \"shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, Judges of the supreme Court, and all other Officers of the United States\" while providing that \"Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.\" These appointments delegate \"by legal authority a portion of the sovereign powers of the federal government.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169970.3997, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169970.0126, "finish": 1721169970.3997, "ip": "", "conv_id": "533de38d253445e59ad7f1fcc5096e0c", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where does arsenic and old lace take place", "output": [["where does arsenic and old lace take place", "Title: Arsenic and Old Lace (play)\n\nPassage: Arsenic and Old Lace is a play by American playwright Joseph Kesselring, written in 1939. It has become best known through the 1944 film adaptation starring Cary Grant and directed by Frank Capra.\nThe play was produced by Lindsay and Crouse and directed by Bretaigne Windust, and opened on Broadway at the Fulton Theatre on January 10, 1941. On September 25, 1943, the play moved to the Hudson Theatre, closing there on June 17, 1944, having played 1,444 performances. The West End production \u2013 directed by Marcel Varnel and produced at London's Strand Theatre \u2013 enjoyed a similarly long run. Opening on December 23, 1942, and closing on March 2, 1946, it totalled 1,337 performances.\nOf the 12 plays written by Kesselring, Arsenic and Old Lace was by far the most successful. According to the opening night review in The New York Times, the play was \"so funny that none of us will ever forget it.\"\nPlot\nThe play is a farcical black comedy revolving around the Brewster family, descended from Mayflower settlers but now composed of maniacs, most of them homicidal. The hero, Mortimer Brewster, is a drama critic who must deal with his crazy, murderous family and local police in Brooklyn, New York, as he debates whether to go through with his recent promise to marry the woman he loves, Elaine Harper, who lives next door and is the daughter of the local minister.\nHis family includes two spinster aunts, Abby and Martha Brewster, who have taken to murdering lonely old men by poisoning them with a glass of home-made elderberry wine laced with arsenic, strychnine, and \"just a pinch\" of cyanide; a brother, Teddy, who believes he is Theodore Roosevelt and digs locks for the Panama Canal in the cellar of the Brewster home (which then serve as graves for the aunts' victims; he thinks that they died of yellow fever); and a murderous brother, Jonathan, who has received plastic surgery performed by an alcoholic accomplice, Dr. Einstein (a character based on real-life gangland surgeon Joseph Moran) to conceal his identity, and now looks like horror-film actor Boris Karloff (a self-referential joke, as the part was originally played on Broadway by Karloff)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169970.3997, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169970.0126, "finish": 1721169970.3997, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9d03adcb76a940e8b249425974efdff4", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "where does arsenic and old lace take place", "output": [["where does arsenic and old lace take place", "Title: Arsenic and Old Lace (play)\n\nPassage: The film adaptation follows the same basic plot, with a few minor changes.\nThe character Mortimer Brewster says of his family\u2019s history that it is as if \"...Strindberg wrote Hellzapoppin.\"\nCast\nThe opening night cast consisted of:\nJean Adair as Martha Brewster\nJohn Alexander as Teddy Brewster\nWyrley Birch as The Rev. Dr. Harper\nHelen Brooks as Elaine Harper\nBruce Gordon as Officer Klein\nHenry Herbert as Mr. Gibbs\nJosephine Hull as Abby Brewster\nAllyn Joslyn as Mortimer Brewster\nBoris Karloff as Jonathan Brewster\nWilliam Parke as Mr. Witherspoon\nJohn Quigg as Officer Brophy\nAnthony Ross as Officer O'Hara\nEdgar Stehli as Dr. Einstein\nVictor Sutherland as Lieutenant Rooney\nInspiration\nWhen Kesselring taught at Bethel College in North Newton, Kansas, he lived in a boarding house called the Goerz House, and many of the features of its living room are reflected in the Brewster sisters' living room, where the action of the play is set. The Goerz House is now the home of the college president.\nThe \"murderous old lady\" plot line may also have been inspired by actual events that occurred in a house on Prospect St in Windsor, Connecticut, where a woman, Amy Archer-Gilligan, took in boarders, promising \"lifetime care,\" and poisoned them for their pensions. M. William Phelps book The Devil's Rooming House (2010) tells the story of the police officers and reporters from the Hartford Courant who solved the case. Kesselring originally conceived the play as a heavy drama, but it is widely believed that producers Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse (who were also well known as play doctors) convinced Kesselring that it would be much more effective as a comedy. According to The Encyclopedia of American Humorists, Lindsay and Crouse gave the play its title by adapting the title of a Frank Sullivan humor collection called Broccoli and Old Lace.\nNational tours\nIn parallel with the main Broadway run (January 10, 1941\u2013June 17, 1944), a series of national roadshows took place, the first one in 1941\u20131942 which travelled to 57 cities in about 18 months, opening in Chicago on April 1, 1941. The cast comprised Laura Hope Crews as Abby Brewster, Effie Shannon as Martha Brewster, Angie Adams as Elaine Harper, Erich von Stroheim as Jonathan Brewster, Jack Whiting as Mortimer Brewster, and Forrest Orr as Teddy Brewster. In December 1941, von Stroheim returned to New York to take over the role of Jonathan Brewster from Karloff on Broadway.\nA second national tour started on August 5\u201318, 1943 in San Francisco, then continued in Los Angeles from August 20 until October 24. The cast included Minna Phillips as Abby Brewster, Ida Moore as Martha Brewster, Louise Arthur as Elaine Harper, Bela Lugosi as Jonathan Brewster, Michael Whalen as Mortimer Brewster, and Herbert Corthell as Teddy Brewster."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169981.9945, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169981.6844, "finish": 1721169981.9945, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c59c735234a54c8ca0a466e910a67828", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where did they get the vibranium to make captain americas shield", "output": [["where did they get the vibranium to make captain americas shield", "Title: Captain America (1979 film)\n\nPassage: As Captain America, Steve's conversion van is re-configured so that it can launch a high-tech motorcycle. The bike features rocket thrust \u2014 a jet booster for rapid acceleration \u2014 and a stealth setting that reduces engine and road noise. In the sequel, Captain America II: Death Too Soon it also possesses a detachable wing resembling a hang glider that allows limited gravity-powered flight. In addition, the bike has a detachable round windscreen that becomes Rogers' shield when he goes on foot, resembling the comics' shield with the white stripes being transparent. It is bulletproof, and can be thrown as a returning weapon without having to be ricocheted off surfaces.\nIt soon is revealed that the villain intends to threaten to destroy a community with a neutron bomb. Unfortunately, when Captain America stops the truck transporting it and diverts an exhaust into the trailer to subdue any guards inside, he finds out that villain himself was inside wearing a deadman's switch detonator to the bomb measuring his heartbeat and is seriously affected by carbon monoxide poisoning. As a result, Captain America and Dr. Mills have to apply emergency first aid and are successful in keeping the villain alive so that detonator could be safely removed in custody.\nIn the final act of the film, Rogers decides to become the same Captain America as his father had been, donning a uniform identical to the one his father had worn: the \"classic\" Captain America uniform.\nCast\nRelease\nThe film was released theatrically in Colombia in 1981.\nReception\nThe movie received a mixed reception from critics.\nAdaptation of elements in other media\nThe elements of the TV movies were slightly emulated in the Captain America comic book series.\nIn issue #237, Rogers establishes himself as a commercial artist. Although his professional career has waxed and waned in its depiction, it is permanently established in later works like The Adventures of Captain America that Rogers was a Fine Arts student specializing in illustration in the 1930s, working in the Works Progress Administration's Federal Arts Project before he was recruited into Project Rebirth.\nIn issue #259, a young man that Captain America redeemed from associating with a criminal gang built a custom high-performance motorcycle in gratitude, which became a signature vehicle of the character for years. Apart from having considerable speed, the design is standard apart from its American Flag paint motif.\nIn issue #318, Rogers receives a specially customized conversion van courtesy of King T'Challa of Wakanda aka The Black Panther. The van has special communications equipment, an extendable periscope, a sleeping bunk when Rogers is travelling, a special frame so Rogers can launch from the van while riding his motorcycle, and has a special paint that can instantly change colors when Rogers desires it for stealth purposes."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721169981.9945, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721169981.6844, "finish": 1721169981.9945, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0789c3f2a6364878af6da9ece8b0125c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where did they get the vibranium to make captain americas shield", "output": [["where did they get the vibranium to make captain americas shield", "Title: Wakanda\n\nPassage: Below are Wakanda's featured appearances:\nWakanda is briefly shown on a holographic map in Iron Man 2 and is mentioned in Avengers: Age of Ultron as the source nation of vibranium.\nIn the mid-credit scene of Captain America: Civil War (2016), Steve Rogers oversees Bucky Barnes, having been granted refuge there, going into cryogenic sleep until Hydras brainwashing can be removed. This is Wakanda's first appearance.\nIn Black Panther (2018), Wakanda's background and culture is expanded, which establishes that, like in the comics, the Black Panther's superhuman abilities come from consuming the \"heart-shaped herb\", local vegetation that was mutated over millions of years following exposure to Vibranium.\nIn Avengers: Infinity War (2018), members of the Avengers; Rogers, Sam Wilson, Natasha Romanoff, James Rhodes, Wanda Maximoff, Vision, and Bruce Banner travel in a Quinjet to Wakanda landing in the capital city so Shuri's advanced science can remove the Mind Stone from Vision safely. Wakanda is shortly attacked by the Outriders led by Proxima Midnight and Cull Obsidian, members of the Black Order. The Avengers and Barnes join forces with the Wakandan army to fight them on the open grassland outside of the city. They are aided by the arrival of Thor, Rocket Raccoon, and Groot who arrive via Bifrost and assist in defeating the army. In the forest below the Wakandan medical center, the Avengers witness Thanos arrive through a Wormhole and defeat them one by one, ultimately claiming the Mind Stone and completing the Infinity Gauntlet. He then snaps his fingers, eliminating half the population of the universe, including T'Challa and many other Wakandans."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170002.9783, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170002.7189, "finish": 1721170002.9783, "ip": "", "conv_id": "32f0212929ad4c13b1c10b436cb0032f", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who sings i just want to use your love tonight", "output": [["who sings i just want to use your love tonight", "Title: The One That You Love\n\nPassage: \"The One That You Love\" is a song by British-Australian soft rock duo Air Supply, released as a single from their sixth studio album of the same name. It was written by member Graham Russell. The song reached No. 1 in the United States, topping the Billboard Hot 100 chart on 25 July 1981 and remaining there for one week; it is the duo's only No. 1 hit. The song's lead vocals are sung by Russell Hitchcock. Graham Russell provides backing vocals on this song.\n\"The One That You Love\" also peaked at No. 2 for five weeks on the Adult Contemporary chart, behind \"I Don't Need You\" by Kenny Rogers.\nReception\nCash Box said \"Australia's Air Supply leaps back onto the charts with the title track from its forthcoming follow-up LP. A grandoise, string-laden number, with Graham Russell's [sic] unmistakable vocals, this recaptures the urgent romanticism of 'Lost in Love' and 'All Out Of Love' with plaintive backup vocals.\" Record World described it as a \"loving ballad that can't miss.\"\nCharts\nWeekly charts\nYear-end charts\nCertifications\nPersonnel\nRussell Hitchcock - vocals\nGraham Russell - vocals, guitar"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170002.9783, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170002.7189, "finish": 1721170002.9783, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a902632b509f4ae59dce9eed31d9bb75", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who sings i just want to use your love tonight", "output": [["who sings i just want to use your love tonight", "Title: Just for Tonight (One Night Only song)\n\nPassage: \"Just for Tonight\" is a song by British indie rock band One Night Only from their 2008 debut album, Started a Fire. The song was released as the album's second single on 21 January 2008, reaching 9 on the UK Singles Chart and No. 4 on the Dutch Single Top 100.\nBackground and composition\n\"Just for Tonight\" is an indie pop song. In an interview with Digital Spy's Nick Levine, frontman George Craig explained that One Night Only were inspired to write the song after recording demos next to a power station that experienced an intense voltage spike, astounding the band. \"We really wanted to put that huge, powerful vibe into a really anthemic song,\" Craig said, \"and 'Just For Tonight' was the result.\" According to the sheet music, the song is written in common time with a key of D major and possesses a tempo of 140 beats per minute.\nRelease and reception\nPrior to its release, \"Just for Tonight\" served as the theme for the E4 television programme Nearly Famous. Following this exposure, Vertigo Records released the single in the United Kingdom on 21 January 2008. It debuted at number 49 on the UK Singles Chart six days later. The following week, the song rose to its peak of number nine, giving One Night Only their highest-charting single in the UK as well as their sole top-20 hit. It is also their longest-charting song, remaining in the top 100 for 17 weeks. It ended 2008 as the UK's 86th-best-performing single and was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in October 2022 for sales and streaming figures exceeding 200,000 units.\nIn the Netherlands, the track was played during highlights of the 2008 UEFA European Football Championship, which took place from 7 to 29 June 2008, and the band performed an acoustic version during the tournament's final night. The song charted on both the Dutch Top 40 and the Single Top 100, peaking at number 10 on the former listing and number four on the latter in July 2008. The Dutch Top 40 placed the track at number 98 on its year-end ranking for 2008. In the Flanders region of Belgium, the song appeared on the Ultratip chart, peaking at number 22 in May 2008.\nMusic video\nFollowing on from their successful video for the debut single, \"You and Me\", which was shot in their native Helmsley, the band kept faith with North Yorkshire locations and shot the video for \"Just for Tonight\" in various locations in Scarborough.\nTrack listings\nUK CD single\n\"Just for Tonight\"\n\"Do You Know What I Mean?\"\nUK 7-inch single\nA. \"Just for Tonight\"\nB. \"Go On\" (demo)\nUK 7-inch picture disc\nA. \"Just for Tonight\" (original edit)\nB. \"Just for Tonight\" (Seamus Haji Big Love dub edit)\nCharts\nWeekly charts\nYear-end charts\nCertifications"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170027.8139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170027.5116, "finish": 1721170027.8139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0626b25560c84b8eaa82ad596febff63", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who enforces the charter of rights and freedoms", "output": [["who enforces the charter of rights and freedoms", "Title: Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms\n\nPassage: The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (), often simply referred to as the Charter in Canada, is a bill of rights entrenched in the Constitution of Canada, forming the first part of the Constitution Act, 1982. The Charter guarantees certain political rights to Canadian citizens and civil rights of everyone in Canada from the policies and actions of all governments in Canada. It is designed to unify Canadians around a set of principles that embody those rights. The Charter was proclaimed in force by Queen Elizabeth II of Canada on April 17, 1982, as part of the Constitution Act, 1982.\nThe Charter was preceded by the Canadian Bill of Rights, enacted in 1960, which was a federal statute rather than a constitutional document. The Bill of Rights exemplified an international trend towards formalizing human rights protections following the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, instigated by the movement for human rights and freedoms that emerged after World War\u00a0II. As a federal statute, the Bill of Rights could be amended through the ordinary legislative process and had no application to provincial laws. The Supreme Court of Canada also narrowly interpreted the Bill of Rights, showing reluctance to declare laws inoperative. Between 1960 and 1982, only five of the thirty-five cases concerning the Bill of Rights that were heard by the Supreme Court of Canada resulted in a successful outcome for claimants. The relative ineffectiveness of the Canadian Bill of Rights motivated many to improve rights protections in Canada. The British Parliament formally enacted the Charter as a part of the Canada Act 1982 at the request of the Parliament of Canada in 1982, the result of the efforts of the government of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.\nThe Charter greatly expanded the scope of judicial review, because the Charter is more explicit with respect to the guarantee of rights and the role of judges in enforcing them than was the Canadian Bill of Rights. Canadian courts, when confronted with violations of Charter rights, have struck down unconstitutional federal and provincial statutes and regulations or parts of statutes and regulations, as they did when Canadian case law was primarily concerned with resolving issues of federalism. The Charter, however, granted new powers to the courts to enforce remedies that are more creative and to exclude more evidence in trials. These powers are greater than what was typical under the common law and under a system of government that, influenced by Canada's parent country the United Kingdom, was based upon Parliamentary supremacy. As a result, the Charter has attracted both broad support from a majority of the electorate and criticisms by opponents of increased judicial power. The Charter applies only to government laws and actions (including the laws and actions of federal, provincial, and municipal governments and public school boards), and sometimes to the common law, not to private activity.\nFeatures"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170027.8139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170027.5116, "finish": 1721170027.8139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a1f279960c8e49118f4fb3a0a4e8c4bd", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who enforces the charter of rights and freedoms", "output": [["who enforces the charter of rights and freedoms", "Title: Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms\n\nPassage: The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (), often simply referred to as the Charter in Canada, is a bill of rights entrenched in the Constitution of Canada, forming the first part of the Constitution Act, 1982. The Charter guarantees certain political rights to Canadian citizens and civil rights of everyone in Canada from the policies and actions of all governments in Canada. It is designed to unify Canadians around a set of principles that embody those rights. The Charter was proclaimed in force by Queen Elizabeth II of Canada on April 17, 1982, as part of the Constitution Act, 1982.\nThe Charter was preceded by the Canadian Bill of Rights, enacted in 1960, which was a federal statute rather than a constitutional document. The Bill of Rights exemplified an international trend towards formalizing human rights protections following the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights, instigated by the movement for human rights and freedoms that emerged after World War\u00a0II. As a federal statute, the Bill of Rights could be amended through the ordinary legislative process and had no application to provincial laws. The Supreme Court of Canada also narrowly interpreted the Bill of Rights, showing reluctance to declare laws inoperative. Between 1960 and 1982, only five of the thirty-five cases concerning the Bill of Rights that were heard by the Supreme Court of Canada resulted in a successful outcome for claimants. The relative ineffectiveness of the Canadian Bill of Rights motivated many to improve rights protections in Canada. The British Parliament formally enacted the Charter as a part of the Canada Act 1982 at the request of the Parliament of Canada in 1982, the result of the efforts of the government of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.\nThe Charter greatly expanded the scope of judicial review, because the Charter is more explicit with respect to the guarantee of rights and the role of judges in enforcing them than was the Canadian Bill of Rights. Canadian courts, when confronted with violations of Charter rights, have struck down unconstitutional federal and provincial statutes and regulations or parts of statutes and regulations, as they did when Canadian case law was primarily concerned with resolving issues of federalism. The Charter, however, granted new powers to the courts to enforce remedies that are more creative and to exclude more evidence in trials. These powers are greater than what was typical under the common law and under a system of government that, influenced by Canada's parent country the United Kingdom, was based upon Parliamentary supremacy. As a result, the Charter has attracted both broad support from a majority of the electorate and criticisms by opponents of increased judicial power. The Charter applies only to government laws and actions (including the laws and actions of federal, provincial, and municipal governments and public school boards), and sometimes to the common law, not to private activity.\nFeatures"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170080.4503, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170080.1191, "finish": 1721170080.4503, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6fadd908bf3046b5a0ec69c70efe8382", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "is martin freeman in season 2 of fargo", "output": [["is martin freeman in season 2 of fargo", "Title: Peter Stormare\n\nPassage: Rolf Peter Ingvar Stormare (born Storm, August 27, 1953), better known as Peter Stormare (), is a Swedish actor. He played Gaear Grimsrud in the film Fargo (1996) and John Abruzzi in the television series Prison Break (2005\u20132007). He has appeared in films including The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997), Playing God (1997), The Big Lebowski (1998), Armageddon (1998), 8mm (1999), Dancer in the Dark (2000), Windtalkers (2002), Minority Report (2002), Bad Boys II (2003), Constantine (2005), and 22 Jump Street (2014), and the video games Destiny (2014), Until Dawn (2015), and Destiny 2 (2017).\nEarly life"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170080.4503, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170080.1191, "finish": 1721170080.4503, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b0346b9f40a347128dc4af03cdf65223", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "is martin freeman in season 2 of fargo", "output": [["is martin freeman in season 2 of fargo", "Title: Earl Patrick Freeman\n\nPassage: Earl Patrick Freeman (August 23, 1932 \u2013 December 28, 1989) was a Canadian professional wrestler, best known by his ring name Paddy Ryan, who competed in North American and international promotions during the 1950s and 60s.\nWhile competing in western Canada and the Pacific Northwest, Freeman was involved in memorable feuds with Lumberjack Luke, Ripper Collins and \"Crippler\" Ray Stevens as a mainstay of NWA All-Star Wrestling, Pacific Northwest Wrestling and Stampede Wrestling during the late 1970s.\nCareer\nBorn in Hamilton, Ontario, Freeman began wrestling professionally during the 1950s finding success in Northland Wrestling Enterprise in North Bay, Ontario, Renfrew, Ontario and Western Quebec as Bud Freeman. Competing in European and Japanese promotions during the 1970s as both Bud Freeman and The Zebra Kid, Freeman returned to North America in the 1970s. While wrestling for Buffalo promoter Pedro Martinez, he teamed with The Assassin against Johnny Fargo and Chief White Owl at the War Memorial Auditorium in Buffalo, New York, on March 22, 1972. Losing to Pampero Firpo on March 29, he would team with Luis Martinez against the Fargo Brothers (Don and Johnny Fargo) on April 29. After losing to Chief White Owl on May 24, he would leave for Canada later that year facing The Beast at the Ontario Place Forum in Toronto, Ontario on June 15, 1972.\nAs Paddy Ryan, Freeman would find great success in Superstar Championship Wrestling teaming with John Quinn to defeat Ray Steele and Luke Brown for the SCW Western States Tag Team Championship in Seattle, Washington, on November 20, 1973. Defeating Eddie Sullivan for the SCW Western States Heavyweight Championship in 1975. In addition, he had a longstanding hot feud with Lumberjack Luke. He later lost the title to Ripper Sawyer.\nAfter the close of SCW in 1976, Freeman appeared in Stampede Wrestling teaming with Bret Hart in his debut match against Mr. Hito and Mr. Sakurada in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. In 1978, he would hold the Stampede North American Heavyweight Championship defeating Mr. Sakurada in Calgary, Alberta on September 1, 1978. He eventually lost the title to Kasavubu.\nDuring the early 1980s, Ryan wrestled for Al Tomko's All-Star Wrestling based in Vancouver, British Columbia. Teaming with Chief Jay Strongbow and Goldie Rodgers, he also served as a mentor to younger wrestlers such as Greg Lake. After his retirement in 1982, he lived in Port Moody, British Columbia and because of difficult living and ring injuries, he remained in poor health before his death on December 28, 1989, following a massive heart attack.\nChampionships and accomplishments\nDiamond Belt Championship Wrestling\nDBCW Western States Heavyweight Championship (1 time)\nStampede Wrestling\nStampede North American Heavyweight Championship (1 time)\nSuperstar Championship Wrestling\nSCW Western States Heavyweight Championship (1 time)\nSCW Western States Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with John Quinn"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170090.1386, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170089.8629, "finish": 1721170090.1386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "87fb4a41348346f8b256204d0daea9bf", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "output": [["type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "Title: Carmel National Nature Reserve\n\nPassage: Turlough\nIts remarkable geology is mainly Carboniferous Limestone, and is the location of a turlough or disappearing lake. They are more frequent in Ireland. The lake fills up in the autumn and winter, being fed only by groundwater. The lake disappears by the summer, and is the only known example in Britain.\nPant-y-Llyn turlough occupies a small depression on the northern perimeter of the South Wales Coalfield at Cernydd Carmel. This depression represents a glacial channel formed along the Betws Fault where displacement has brought Carboniferous Limestone into contact with older impervious Devonian rock. The hydrological regime of the waterbody is linked to local groundwater behaviour within the limestone. The basin fills to a depth of about 3 m during late autumn and remains full until the following summer when it empties completely, thus reflecting the characteristic behaviour of turloughs. There are no surface drainage channels and a swallow hole is located at the northern end of the basin.\nAll of the turloughs are found in limestone areas. This is because limestone can be dissolved away by rainwater, which becomes mildly acidic by picking up carbon dioxide as it passes through the atmosphere. The cracks or joints in the rock become widened to such an extent that eventually all of the rain falling on the limestone disappears underground and the water moves through the rock openings ranging from cracks a few millimetres wide to large cave passages. The limestone is then said to be karstified with many characteristic landscape features.\nFlora\nOver one hundred species of indigenous woodland plants have been recorded on the site, and a similar number of mosses and other non-vascular plants live there. Some parts of the woodland, which has been in existence since the Middle Ages, are coppiced in order to encourage the growth of wildflowers that need more light, but other parts are managed on a 'minimal intervention' basis and left largely alone. Some rare species found here include mezereon (Daphne mezereum), toothwort (Lathraea squamaria), lily-of-the-valley (Convallaria majalis) and herb paris (Paris quadrifolia).\nFauna\nFrogs, toads and newts breed in the turlough lake and nearby caves are home to bats, including the rare greater horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus ferrumequinium). Dormice are present in the coppiced woodland. There are several species of butterfly here as well as a great variety of insect life.\nThe soils provide an unusual combination of habitats to exist side by side, including ash woods, species-rich grassland, heathland and open water. The spring flowers include the primrose or Primula vulgaris and the lesser celandine. The local landscape is a mix of traditional agriculture and quarrying activity, with ancient woodlands, and field systems. Forestry is also practised."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170090.1386, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170089.8629, "finish": 1721170090.1386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ac3d0d8a366b41a2bfbe9132e88fc379", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "output": [["type of disappearing lake found in limestone areas in the west of ireland", "Title: Carmel National Nature Reserve\n\nPassage: Turlough\nIts remarkable geology is mainly Carboniferous Limestone, and is the location of a turlough or disappearing lake. They are more frequent in Ireland. The lake fills up in the autumn and winter, being fed only by groundwater. The lake disappears by the summer, and is the only known example in Britain.\nPant-y-Llyn turlough occupies a small depression on the northern perimeter of the South Wales Coalfield at Cernydd Carmel. This depression represents a glacial channel formed along the Betws Fault where displacement has brought Carboniferous Limestone into contact with older impervious Devonian rock. The hydrological regime of the waterbody is linked to local groundwater behaviour within the limestone. The basin fills to a depth of about 3 m during late autumn and remains full until the following summer when it empties completely, thus reflecting the characteristic behaviour of turloughs. There are no surface drainage channels and a swallow hole is located at the northern end of the basin.\nAll of the turloughs are found in limestone areas. This is because limestone can be dissolved away by rainwater, which becomes mildly acidic by picking up carbon dioxide as it passes through the atmosphere. The cracks or joints in the rock become widened to such an extent that eventually all of the rain falling on the limestone disappears underground and the water moves through the rock openings ranging from cracks a few millimetres wide to large cave passages. The limestone is then said to be karstified with many characteristic landscape features.\nFlora\nOver one hundred species of indigenous woodland plants have been recorded on the site, and a similar number of mosses and other non-vascular plants live there. Some parts of the woodland, which has been in existence since the Middle Ages, are coppiced in order to encourage the growth of wildflowers that need more light, but other parts are managed on a 'minimal intervention' basis and left largely alone. Some rare species found here include mezereon (Daphne mezereum), toothwort (Lathraea squamaria), lily-of-the-valley (Convallaria majalis) and herb paris (Paris quadrifolia).\nFauna\nFrogs, toads and newts breed in the turlough lake and nearby caves are home to bats, including the rare greater horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus ferrumequinium). Dormice are present in the coppiced woodland. There are several species of butterfly here as well as a great variety of insect life.\nThe soils provide an unusual combination of habitats to exist side by side, including ash woods, species-rich grassland, heathland and open water. The spring flowers include the primrose or Primula vulgaris and the lesser celandine. The local landscape is a mix of traditional agriculture and quarrying activity, with ancient woodlands, and field systems. Forestry is also practised."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170101.1238, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170100.7802, "finish": 1721170101.1238, "ip": "", "conv_id": "79ed5550973b413e9563da6d721288d5", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "why was the building of a settlement in mexico in 1519 significant", "output": [["why was the building of a settlement in mexico in 1519 significant", "Title: History of Mexico\n\nPassage: By 1519, the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan, the site of modern-day Mexico City, was one of the largest cities in the world, with an estimated population between 200,000 and 300,000.\nSpanish conquest of the Aztec Empire\nA phase of inland expeditions and conquest followed the first mainland explorations. The Spanish crown extended the Reconquista effort, completed in Spain in 1492, to non-Catholic people in new territories. In 1502, on the coast of present-day Colombia, near the Gulf of Urab\u00e1, Spanish explorers led by Vasco N\u00fa\u00f1ez de Balboa explored and conquered the area near the Atrato River. The conquest was of the Chibcha-speaking nations, mainly the Muisca and Tairona indigenous people that lived here. The Spanish founded San Sebastian de Uraba in 1509\u2014abandoned within the year, and in 1510, the first permanent Spanish mainland settlement in America, Santa Mar\u00eda la Antigua del Dari\u00e9n.\nThe first Europeans to arrive in modern-day Mexico were the survivors of a Spanish shipwreck in 1511. Only two survived, Ger\u00f3nimo de Aguilar and Gonzalo Guerrero, until further contact was made with Spanish explorers years later. On 8 February 1517, an expedition led by Francisco Hern\u00e1ndez de C\u00f3rdoba left the harbor of Santiago de Cuba to explore the shores of southern Mexico. During this expedition, many of Hern\u00e1ndez's men were killed, most during a battle near the town of Champot\u00f3n against a Maya army. Hern\u00e1ndez himself was injured and died a few days shortly after his return to Cuba. This was the Europeans' first encounter with a civilization in the Americas with buildings and complex social organizations that they recognized as comparable to the Old World. Hern\u00e1n Cort\u00e9s led a new expedition to Mexico, landing ashore at present-day Veracruz on 22 April 1519, a date which marks the beginning of 300 years of Spanish hegemony over the region.\nThe 'Spanish conquest of Mexico denotes the conquest of the central region of Mesoamerica, where the Aztec Empire was based. The fall of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan in 1521 was a decisive event, but the conquest of other regions of Mexico, such as Yucat\u00e1n, extended long after the Spaniards consolidated control of central Mexico. The Spanish conquest of Yucat\u00e1n was a much longer campaign, from 1551 to 1697, against the Maya peoples of the Maya civilization in the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula of present-day Mexico and northern Central America.\nSmallpox (Variola major and Variola minor) began to spread in Mesoamerica immediately after the arrival of Europeans. The indigenous peoples, who had no immunity to it, eventually died in the millions. A third of all the natives of the Valley of Mexico succumbed to it within six months of the Spaniards' arrival.\nTenochtitlan was almost destroyed by fire and cannon fire. Cort\u00e9s imprisoned the royal families of the valley. To prevent another revolt, he tortured and killed Cuauht\u00e9moc, the last Aztec Emperor; Coanacoch, the King of Texcoco, and Tetlepanquetzal, King of Tlacopan."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170101.1238, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170100.7802, "finish": 1721170101.1238, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7cda693b6f01438f956ec8a42705bcc0", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "why was the building of a settlement in mexico in 1519 significant", "output": [["why was the building of a settlement in mexico in 1519 significant", "Title: History of Mexico\n\nPassage: By 1519, the Aztec capital, Tenochtitlan, the site of modern-day Mexico City, was one of the largest cities in the world, with an estimated population between 200,000 and 300,000.\nSpanish conquest of the Aztec Empire\nA phase of inland expeditions and conquest followed the first mainland explorations. The Spanish crown extended the Reconquista effort, completed in Spain in 1492, to non-Catholic people in new territories. In 1502, on the coast of present-day Colombia, near the Gulf of Urab\u00e1, Spanish explorers led by Vasco N\u00fa\u00f1ez de Balboa explored and conquered the area near the Atrato River. The conquest was of the Chibcha-speaking nations, mainly the Muisca and Tairona indigenous people that lived here. The Spanish founded San Sebastian de Uraba in 1509\u2014abandoned within the year, and in 1510, the first permanent Spanish mainland settlement in America, Santa Mar\u00eda la Antigua del Dari\u00e9n.\nThe first Europeans to arrive in modern-day Mexico were the survivors of a Spanish shipwreck in 1511. Only two survived, Ger\u00f3nimo de Aguilar and Gonzalo Guerrero, until further contact was made with Spanish explorers years later. On 8 February 1517, an expedition led by Francisco Hern\u00e1ndez de C\u00f3rdoba left the harbor of Santiago de Cuba to explore the shores of southern Mexico. During this expedition, many of Hern\u00e1ndez's men were killed, most during a battle near the town of Champot\u00f3n against a Maya army. Hern\u00e1ndez himself was injured and died a few days shortly after his return to Cuba. This was the Europeans' first encounter with a civilization in the Americas with buildings and complex social organizations that they recognized as comparable to the Old World. Hern\u00e1n Cort\u00e9s led a new expedition to Mexico, landing ashore at present-day Veracruz on 22 April 1519, a date which marks the beginning of 300 years of Spanish hegemony over the region.\nThe 'Spanish conquest of Mexico denotes the conquest of the central region of Mesoamerica, where the Aztec Empire was based. The fall of the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan in 1521 was a decisive event, but the conquest of other regions of Mexico, such as Yucat\u00e1n, extended long after the Spaniards consolidated control of central Mexico. The Spanish conquest of Yucat\u00e1n was a much longer campaign, from 1551 to 1697, against the Maya peoples of the Maya civilization in the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula of present-day Mexico and northern Central America.\nSmallpox (Variola major and Variola minor) began to spread in Mesoamerica immediately after the arrival of Europeans. The indigenous peoples, who had no immunity to it, eventually died in the millions. A third of all the natives of the Valley of Mexico succumbed to it within six months of the Spaniards' arrival.\nTenochtitlan was almost destroyed by fire and cannon fire. Cort\u00e9s imprisoned the royal families of the valley. To prevent another revolt, he tortured and killed Cuauht\u00e9moc, the last Aztec Emperor; Coanacoch, the King of Texcoco, and Tetlepanquetzal, King of Tlacopan."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170115.9116, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170115.6025, "finish": 1721170115.9116, "ip": "", "conv_id": "42bc77f00943400f8b4a39077e56bc0b", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "output": [["who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "Title: Aaron Rodgers\n\nPassage: Aaron Charles Rodgers (born December 2, 1983) is an American football quarterback for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the California Golden Bears (where he set several career passing records, including lowest single-season and career interception rates), before being selected in the first round of the 2005 NFL draft by the Green Bay Packers, spending 18 seasons with the team. He is regarded among the greatest and most talented quarterbacks of all time."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170115.9116, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170115.6025, "finish": 1721170115.9116, "ip": "", "conv_id": "af2048efb74540b39edfb7f26375b1f7", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "output": [["who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "Title: Aaron Rodgers\n\nPassage: Aaron Charles Rodgers (born December 2, 1983) is an American football quarterback for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the California Golden Bears (where he set several career passing records, including lowest single-season and career interception rates), before being selected in the first round of the 2005 NFL draft by the Green Bay Packers, spending 18 seasons with the team. He is regarded among the greatest and most talented quarterbacks of all time."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170157.0177, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170156.671, "finish": 1721170157.0177, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3a454cf25c944a51879ccb87a1f75bad", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "bosnia and herzegovina croatia macedonia and slovenia all used to be parts of", "output": [["bosnia and herzegovina croatia macedonia and slovenia all used to be parts of", "Title: Herzegovina\n\nPassage: Herzegovina ( or ; , ) is the southern and smaller of two main geographical regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the other being Bosnia. It has never had strictly defined geographical, cultural or historical borders, nor has it ever been defined as an administrative whole in the geopolitical and economic subdivision of Bosnia and Herzegovina."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170157.0177, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170156.671, "finish": 1721170157.0177, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b4bdab3529584852bf375fd56c70fb8b", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "bosnia and herzegovina croatia macedonia and slovenia all used to be parts of", "output": [["bosnia and herzegovina croatia macedonia and slovenia all used to be parts of", "Title: Montenegro\n\nPassage: Montenegro ( ; / ; ; ) is a country in Southeast Europe, located in the Balkans. It is bordered by Bosnia and Herzegovina to the north, Serbia to the northeast, Kosovo to the east, Albania to the southeast, and Croatia and the Adriatic Sea to the northwest with a coastline of 293.5\u00a0km. Podgorica (Cyrillic: ) is the country's capital and its largest city; it covers 10.4% of Montenegro's territory of , and is home to roughly 31% of its total population of 621,000. Cetinje (Cyrillic: ) is the former royal capital and cultural centre of Montenegro and is the location of several national institutions, including the official residence of the President of Montenegro.\nDuring the Early Medieval period, three principalities were located on the territory of modern-day Montenegro: Duklja, roughly corresponding to the southern half; Travunia, the west; and Rascia proper, the north. The Principality of Zeta emerged in the 14th and 15th centuries. From the late 14th century to the late 18th century, large parts of southern Montenegro were ruled by the Venetian Republic and incorporated into Venetian Albania. The name Montenegro was first used to refer to the country in the late 15th century. After falling under Ottoman Empire rule, Montenegro gained semi-autonomy in 1696 under the rule of the House of Petrovi\u0107-Njego\u0161, first as a theocracy and later as a secular principality. Montenegro's independence was recognised by the Great Powers at the Congress of Berlin in 1878. In 1910, the country became a kingdom. After World War I, the kingdom became part of Yugoslavia. Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, the republics of Serbia and Montenegro together proclaimed a federation. In June 2006 Montenegro declared its independence from Serbia and Montenegro following an independence referendum, creating Montenegro and Serbia as they exist today. Montenegro is therefore one of the newest internationally-recognised countries in the world.\nMontenegro has an upper-middle-income economy, and ranks 49th in the Human Development Index. It is a member of the United Nations, NATO, the World Trade Organization, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, the Council of Europe, and the Central European Free Trade Agreement. Montenegro is also a founding member of the Union for the Mediterranean, and has been in the process of joining the European Union since 2012.\nEtymology\nThe country's English name derives from a Venetian calque of the Serbian phrase \"Crna Gora\", meaning literally \"Black Mountain\", deriving from the appearance of Mount Lov\u0107en which was covered in dense evergreen forests. Crna Gora was mentioned for the first time in edicts issued by Stefan Uro\u0161 I to the Serbian Orthodox Zeta Episcopate seat at Vranjina island in Lake Skadar. It came to denote the majority of contemporary Montenegro in the 15th century."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170169.6408, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170169.3456, "finish": 1721170169.6408, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5f1c841d72e84df38fe62a93b3e23c5d", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "animals that are active at dawn and dusk", "output": [["animals that are active at dawn and dusk", "Title: List of nocturnal animals\n\nPassage: This is a list of nocturnal animals and groups of animals. Birds are listed separately in the list of nocturnal birds.\nKnown nocturnal animals\nAardvark\nAye-aye\nAfrican elephant (possibly crepuscular; when near humans, otherwise diurnal)\nAmerican black bear\nBadger\nBandicoot\nBat\nBat-eared fox\nBeaver\nBilby\nBinturong\nBlack rhinoceros\nBlack rat\nBlack-footed cat\nBobcat\nBrown rat\nGalago (bushbaby)\nBush rat\nCapybara (some are crepuscular)\nCaracal\nCat (can be awake at any time of day or night but are mostly crepuscular)\nCatfish\nChinchilla\nCivet\nCockroach\nCougar\nCoyote\nCricket\nCacomistle\nCyprus spiny mouse\nDingo\nDolphin\nDwarf crocodile\nEastern woolly lemur\nFirefly\nFlying squirrel\nGenet (animal)\nGerbil (some are diurnal or crepuscular)\nGiraffe (possibly crepuscular)\nGray wolf\nGreat grey slug\nGreat white shark (possibly crepuscular)\nHamster\nHedgehog\nHermit crab\nHippopotamus\nHoney badger\nHyena\nHoffmann's two-toed sloth\nIranian jerboa\nJaguar (bordering on crepuscular)\nKangaroo (most, a few are crepuscular)\nKoala (mostly nocturnal)\nKinkajou\nKit fox (mostly)\nLeopard\nLeopard Gecko\nLhasa Apso\nLion (bordering on crepuscular)\nLynx\nMargay\nMink (bordering on crepuscular)\nMole\nMouse\nNightingale\nNightjar\nNine-banded armadillo\nOctodon (except the diurnal degus species)\nOncilla\nOcelot\nOpossum\nOtter\nOwl\nOwl monkey\nPacarana\nPanamanian night monkey\nPangolin\nPlatypus\nParadoxical frog\nPorcupine\nPossum\nPuma\nPython regius\nQuoll\nRabbit rat\nRaccoon\nRed-eyed tree frog\nRed fox\nRingtail\nScorpion\nSkunk\nSlender loris\nSlow loris\nSpectacled bear\nSportive lemur\nSugar glider\nTapeti\nTarantula\nTarsier\nTasmanian devil\nTiger (most species)\nTurtle\nOnychophora\nWestern woolly lemur\nWhale\nWhale shark\nWhip-poor-will\nWhite-faced storm petrel (when caring for young)\nWhite-tailed deer (bordering on crepuscular)\nWild boar\nWolverine\nWombat\nExtinct nocturnal animals\nAllosaurus\nCeratosaurus\nCoelophysis\nCtenochasma\nDeinonychus\nMajungasaurus\nOrnitholestes\nPalaeochiropteryx\nPanthera onca augusta (Pleistocene North American jaguar)\nPanthera onca mesembrina (Pleistocene South American jaguar)\nRhamphorhynchus\nShuvuuia\nThylacinus cynocephalus (Thylacine)\nTroodon\nTyrannosaurus\nVelociraptor"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170169.6408, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170169.3456, "finish": 1721170169.6408, "ip": "", "conv_id": "12a5eef4b216427482c6fa06107f2f50", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "animals that are active at dawn and dusk", "output": [["animals that are active at dawn and dusk", "Title: List of nocturnal animals\n\nPassage: This is a list of nocturnal animals and groups of animals. Birds are listed separately in the list of nocturnal birds.\nKnown nocturnal animals\nAardvark\nAye-aye\nAfrican elephant (possibly crepuscular; when near humans, otherwise diurnal)\nAmerican black bear\nBadger\nBandicoot\nBat\nBat-eared fox\nBeaver\nBilby\nBinturong\nBlack rhinoceros\nBlack rat\nBlack-footed cat\nBobcat\nBrown rat\nGalago (bushbaby)\nBush rat\nCapybara (some are crepuscular)\nCaracal\nCat (can be awake at any time of day or night but are mostly crepuscular)\nCatfish\nChinchilla\nCivet\nCockroach\nCougar\nCoyote\nCricket\nCacomistle\nCyprus spiny mouse\nDingo\nDolphin\nDwarf crocodile\nEastern woolly lemur\nFirefly\nFlying squirrel\nGenet (animal)\nGerbil (some are diurnal or crepuscular)\nGiraffe (possibly crepuscular)\nGray wolf\nGreat grey slug\nGreat white shark (possibly crepuscular)\nHamster\nHedgehog\nHermit crab\nHippopotamus\nHoney badger\nHyena\nHoffmann's two-toed sloth\nIranian jerboa\nJaguar (bordering on crepuscular)\nKangaroo (most, a few are crepuscular)\nKoala (mostly nocturnal)\nKinkajou\nKit fox (mostly)\nLeopard\nLeopard Gecko\nLhasa Apso\nLion (bordering on crepuscular)\nLynx\nMargay\nMink (bordering on crepuscular)\nMole\nMouse\nNightingale\nNightjar\nNine-banded armadillo\nOctodon (except the diurnal degus species)\nOncilla\nOcelot\nOpossum\nOtter\nOwl\nOwl monkey\nPacarana\nPanamanian night monkey\nPangolin\nPlatypus\nParadoxical frog\nPorcupine\nPossum\nPuma\nPython regius\nQuoll\nRabbit rat\nRaccoon\nRed-eyed tree frog\nRed fox\nRingtail\nScorpion\nSkunk\nSlender loris\nSlow loris\nSpectacled bear\nSportive lemur\nSugar glider\nTapeti\nTarantula\nTarsier\nTasmanian devil\nTiger (most species)\nTurtle\nOnychophora\nWestern woolly lemur\nWhale\nWhale shark\nWhip-poor-will\nWhite-faced storm petrel (when caring for young)\nWhite-tailed deer (bordering on crepuscular)\nWild boar\nWolverine\nWombat\nExtinct nocturnal animals\nAllosaurus\nCeratosaurus\nCoelophysis\nCtenochasma\nDeinonychus\nMajungasaurus\nOrnitholestes\nPalaeochiropteryx\nPanthera onca augusta (Pleistocene North American jaguar)\nPanthera onca mesembrina (Pleistocene South American jaguar)\nRhamphorhynchus\nShuvuuia\nThylacinus cynocephalus (Thylacine)\nTroodon\nTyrannosaurus\nVelociraptor"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170204.5548, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170204.4023, "finish": 1721170204.5548, "ip": "", "conv_id": "51c1f138d0c84ea49c5d4f53cb1273ec", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where is avon park florida on the map", "output": [["where is avon park florida on the map", "Title: Avon Park, Florida\n\nPassage: History\nThe first permanent white settler in Avon Park was Oliver Martin Crosby, a Connecticut native who moved to the area in 1884 to study the wildlife of the Everglades. By 1886, enough people had followed that the \"Town of Lake Forest\" was founded. As president of the Florida Development Company, he recruited settlers to the area, many of whom were from England, including many from the town of Stratford-upon-Avon, who gave the town its name.\nIn 2006, then-mayor Thomas Macklin (Republican) proposed City Ordinance 08-06, which would have blocked the issuance or renewal of city licenses to businesses that hired undocumented aliens, fined any property owner who rented and leased property to undocumented aliens, and established English as the city's official language, banning the use of other languages during the conduct of official business except where specified under state or federal law. The ordinance was defeated by the city council, on a 3\u20132 vote.\nGeography\nAvon Park is located in northwestern Highlands County at (27.594418, \u201381.503437). 27/98 is the main highway through the city, leading north to Lake Wales and south to Sebring. Florida State Road 17 (Main Street) leads east through the center of Avon Park, then south 10 miles to the center of Sebring. Florida State Road 64 leads west from Avon Park to Zolfo Springs.\nAccording to the U.S. Census Bureau, Avon Park has a total area of , of which are land and , or 12.43%, are water.\nThe city is located in a karst landscape underlain by the limestone Florida Platform, and numerous circular lakes are either within the city limits (Lake Tulane, Lake Verona, and Lake Isis) or border the city (Lake Anoka, Lake Lelia, Lake Glenada, Lake Lotela, Lake Denton, Little Red Water Lake, Pioneer Lake, Lake Brentwood, Lake Byrd, Lake Damon, and Lake Lillian).\nClimate\nThe climate in this area is characterized by hot, humid summers and warm winters. According to the K\u00f6ppen climate classification system, Avon Park has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa).\nDemographics\n2010 and 2020 census\nAs of the 2020 United States census, there were 9,658 people, 3,787 households, and 2,420 families residing in the city.\nAs of the 2010 United States census, there were 8,836 people, 3,146 households, and 2,146 families residing in the city.\n2000 census\nAt the 2000 census, there were 8,542 people, 3,218 households and 2,114 families residing in the city. The population density was . There were 3,916 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the city was 58.90% White, 29.2% African American, 0.32% Native American, 0.69% Asian, 0.05% Pacific Islander, 8.35% from other races, and 2.28% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 18.71% of the population."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721170204.5548, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721170204.4023, "finish": 1721170204.5548, "ip": "", "conv_id": "759a163d8b9649619d7e3efb11237bc4", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "where is avon park florida on the map", "output": [["where is avon park florida on the map", "Title: Avon Park, Florida\n\nPassage: History\nThe first permanent white settler in Avon Park was Oliver Martin Crosby, a Connecticut native who moved to the area in 1884 to study the wildlife of the Everglades. By 1886, enough people had followed that the \"Town of Lake Forest\" was founded. As president of the Florida Development Company, he recruited settlers to the area, many of whom were from England, including many from the town of Stratford-upon-Avon, who gave the town its name.\nIn 2006, then-mayor Thomas Macklin (Republican) proposed City Ordinance 08-06, which would have blocked the issuance or renewal of city licenses to businesses that hired undocumented aliens, fined any property owner who rented and leased property to undocumented aliens, and established English as the city's official language, banning the use of other languages during the conduct of official business except where specified under state or federal law. The ordinance was defeated by the city council, on a 3\u20132 vote.\nGeography\nAvon Park is located in northwestern Highlands County at (27.594418, \u201381.503437). 27/98 is the main highway through the city, leading north to Lake Wales and south to Sebring. Florida State Road 17 (Main Street) leads east through the center of Avon Park, then south 10 miles to the center of Sebring. Florida State Road 64 leads west from Avon Park to Zolfo Springs.\nAccording to the U.S. Census Bureau, Avon Park has a total area of , of which are land and , or 12.43%, are water.\nThe city is located in a karst landscape underlain by the limestone Florida Platform, and numerous circular lakes are either within the city limits (Lake Tulane, Lake Verona, and Lake Isis) or border the city (Lake Anoka, Lake Lelia, Lake Glenada, Lake Lotela, Lake Denton, Little Red Water Lake, Pioneer Lake, Lake Brentwood, Lake Byrd, Lake Damon, and Lake Lillian).\nClimate\nThe climate in this area is characterized by hot, humid summers and warm winters. According to the K\u00f6ppen climate classification system, Avon Park has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa).\nDemographics\n2010 and 2020 census\nAs of the 2020 United States census, there were 9,658 people, 3,787 households, and 2,420 families residing in the city.\nAs of the 2010 United States census, there were 8,836 people, 3,146 households, and 2,146 families residing in the city.\n2000 census\nAt the 2000 census, there were 8,542 people, 3,218 households and 2,114 families residing in the city. The population density was . There were 3,916 housing units at an average density of . The racial makeup of the city was 58.90% White, 29.2% African American, 0.32% Native American, 0.69% Asian, 0.05% Pacific Islander, 8.35% from other races, and 2.28% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 18.71% of the population."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721171039.8708, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721171039.6702, "finish": 1721171039.8708, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8c239c3ebee249afa9b2cb8aacb689da", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "forney's sister in where the heart is", "output": [["forney's sister in where the heart is", "Title: Sister Beiter and Kloosterman: a tale of cyclotomic coefficients and modular inverses\n\nPassage: For a fixed prime $p$, the maximum coefficient (in absolute value) $M(p)$ of the cyclotomic polynomial $\\Phi_{pqr}(x)$, where $r$ and $q$ are free primes satisfying $r>q>p$ exists. Sister Beiter conjectured in 1968 that $M(p)\\le(p+1)/2$. In 2009 Gallot and Moree showed that $M(p)\\ge 2p(1-\\epsilon)/3$ for every $p$ sufficiently large. In this article Kloosterman sums (`cloister man sums') and other tools from the distribution of modular inverses are applied to quantify the abundancy of counter-examples to Sister Beiter's conjecture and sharpen the above lower bound for $M(p)$."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721171039.8708, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721171039.6702, "finish": 1721171039.8708, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1bd0470b88fb4ff892e4a87052adc2a3", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "forney's sister in where the heart is", "output": [["forney's sister in where the heart is", "Title: Beyond Barker: Infant Mortality at Birth and Ischaemic Heart Disease in Older Age\n\nPassage: Adverse conditions in early life can have consequential impacts on individuals' health in older age. In one of the first papers on this topic, Barker and Osmond 1986 show a strong positive relationship between infant mortality rates in the 1920s and ischaemic heart disease in the 1970s. We go 'beyond Barker', first by showing that this relationship is robust to the inclusion of local geographic area fixed effects, but not family fixed effects. Second, we explore whether the average effects conceal underlying heterogeneity: we examine if the infant mortality effect offsets or reinforces one's genetic predisposition for heart disease. We find considerable heterogeneity that is robust to within-area as well as within-family analyses. Our findings show that the effects of one's early life environments mainly affect individuals with the highest genetic risk for developing heart disease. Put differently, in areas with the lowest infant mortality rates, the effect of one's genetic predisposition effectively vanishes. These findings suggest that advantageous environments can cushion one's genetic risk of developing heart disease."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181502.0036, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181486.6495, "finish": 1721181502.0036, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6a3a710f993045919e3520036cc22ded", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181502.0036, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181486.6495, "finish": 1721181502.0036, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4167df263e374dc0a3b25b3ef5c1cb0e", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181557.8368, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181545.6576, "finish": 1721181557.8368, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2e381c6b3559497eacd74a7b1ddba221", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture.", "output": [["I am searching for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture.", "Title: An Introduction to Transformers\n\nPassage: The transformer is a neural network component that can be used to learn useful representations of sequences or sets of data-points. The transformer has driven recent advances in natural language processing, computer vision, and spatio-temporal modelling. There are many introductions to transformers, but most do not contain precise mathematical descriptions of the architecture and the intuitions behind the design choices are often also missing. Moreover, as research takes a winding path, the explanations for the components of the transformer can be idiosyncratic. In this note we aim for a mathematically precise, intuitive, and clean description of the transformer architecture. We will not discuss training as this is rather standard. We assume that the reader is familiar with fundamental topics in machine learning including multi-layer perceptrons, linear transformations, softmax functions and basic probability."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181557.8368, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181545.6576, "finish": 1721181557.8368, "ip": "", "conv_id": "523af3bd250948ad9c0056db20a7b5cb", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture.", "output": [["I am searching for the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture.", "Title: Attention Is All You Need\n\nPassage: 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"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181661.0541, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181660.8746, "finish": 1721181661.0541, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3b9e5e65d1024d7ca63a95e42271eeef", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture that changed NLP.", "output": [["I am searching the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture that changed NLP.", "Title: An Introduction to Transformers\n\nPassage: The transformer is a neural network component that can be used to learn useful representations of sequences or sets of data-points. The transformer has driven recent advances in natural language processing, computer vision, and spatio-temporal modelling. There are many introductions to transformers, but most do not contain precise mathematical descriptions of the architecture and the intuitions behind the design choices are often also missing. Moreover, as research takes a winding path, the explanations for the components of the transformer can be idiosyncratic. In this note we aim for a mathematically precise, intuitive, and clean description of the transformer architecture. We will not discuss training as this is rather standard. We assume that the reader is familiar with fundamental topics in machine learning including multi-layer perceptrons, linear transformations, softmax functions and basic probability."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181661.0541, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181660.8746, "finish": 1721181661.0541, "ip": "", "conv_id": "140b8a434a604f14b2bddee8c33884c6", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture that changed NLP.", "output": [["I am searching the paper that introduced the Transformer architecture that changed NLP.", "Title: Attention Is All You Need\n\nPassage: 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"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181835.3623, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181835.0952, "finish": 1721181835.3623, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8f18534315974c33b5148a9e214d914a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Research paper that benchmarks state-of-the-art text embeddings on over 50 datasets in 100+ languages.", "output": [["Research paper that benchmarks state-of-the-art text embeddings on over 50 datasets in 100+ languages.", "Title: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a single task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is unclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity (STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking. This makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are constantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we introduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding tasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the benchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive benchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding method dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to converge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to provide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with open-source code and a public leaderboard at https://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721181835.3623, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721181835.0952, "finish": 1721181835.3623, "ip": "", "conv_id": "72fc0d5d9faa49399f2d5a82cf9d8c42", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Research paper that benchmarks state-of-the-art text embeddings on over 50 datasets in 100+ languages.", "output": [["Research paper that benchmarks state-of-the-art text embeddings on over 50 datasets in 100+ languages.", "Title: Multi-Task Contrastive Learning for 8192-Token Bilingual Text Embeddings\n\nPassage: We introduce a novel suite of state-of-the-art bilingual text embedding models that are designed to support English and another target language. These models are capable of processing lengthy text inputs with up to 8192 tokens, making them highly versatile for a range of natural language processing tasks such as text retrieval, clustering, and semantic textual similarity (STS) calculations. By focusing on bilingual models and introducing a unique multi-task learning objective, we have significantly improved the model performance on STS tasks, which outperforms the capabilities of existing multilingual models in both target language understanding and cross-lingual evaluation tasks. Moreover, our bilingual models are more efficient, requiring fewer parameters and less memory due to their smaller vocabulary needs. Furthermore, we have expanded the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB) to include benchmarks for German and Spanish embedding models. This integration aims to stimulate further research and advancement in text embedding technologies for these languages."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721208954.7876, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721208954.529, "finish": 1721208954.7876, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e4290e612d7d4f82a811b64224392b00", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what happened to gerrard's foot", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721208954.7876, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721208954.529, "finish": 1721208954.7876, "ip": "", "conv_id": "88e7393839c746068e760734065ecc56", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "what happened to gerrard's foot", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721235230.0554, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721235229.718, "finish": 1721235230.0554, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a3e38e03f8a643fea6ea1b7c9ef4efcb", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what is henry james the real thing about", "output": [["what is henry james the real thing about", "Title: The Real Thing (play)\n\nPassage: The Real Thing is a play by Tom Stoppard that was first performed in 1982. The play focuses on the relationship between Henry and Annie, an actress and member of a group fighting to free Brodie, a Scottish soldier imprisoned for burning a memorial wreath during a protest.\nThe Real Thing examines the nature of honesty and uses various constructs, including a play within a play, to explore the theme of reality versus appearance. It has been described as one of Stoppard's \"most popular, enduring and autobiographical plays.\"\nCharacters\nMax: \"40-ish\" male actor who begins the play married to Annie. Acts in Henry's new play, House of Cards.\nCharlotte: \"35-ish\" actress who begins the play married to Henry. Appears opposite Max in House of Cards.\nHenry: \"40-ish\" playwright who, at the beginning of the play, is married to Charlotte and conducting an affair with Annie. Both believe in love and yet approach it with cynicism.\nAnnie: \"30-ish\" actress who begins the play married to Max. She has been conducting an ongoing affair with Henry while also working as an activist for Brodie, a soldier who was arrested and imprisoned for setting fire to a wreath at the Cenotaph.\nBilly: \"22-ish\" young actor who plays Giovanni to Annie's Annabella in 'Tis Pity She's a Whore. Openly shows romantic interest in Annie.\nDebbie: \"17\" year old daughter of Charlotte and Henry who nevertheless spends very little time with them.\nBrodie: \"25\" year old soldier imprisoned for setting fire to the wreath at the Cenotaph. Annie takes him up as a cause.\nSynopsis\nSetting: London in 1982\nAct I\nIn the first scene, Max accuses his distant and travelling wife, Charlotte, of adultery. Upset, she leaves.\nIn the second scene, Charlotte's personality appears to have changed and she is now married to a playwright named Henry. The audience is gradually led to realize that Charlotte is an actress, and the first scene was her performance in a play that Henry, her husband, wrote. In the play, the character of Max is played by the husband of a married couple with whom Henry and Charlotte are friends, also named Max. The scene reveals that Charlotte is unhappy with the play. She believes that Henry gives limited development to the female lead in order to show off his wit through the male lead's lines."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721235230.0554, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721235229.718, "finish": 1721235230.0554, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a5cd2ecaf7524401a262b7f1f659fc40", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "what is henry james the real thing about", "output": [["what is henry james the real thing about", "Title: The Real Thing (play)\n\nPassage: The Real Thing is a play by Tom Stoppard that was first performed in 1982. The play focuses on the relationship between Henry and Annie, an actress and member of a group fighting to free Brodie, a Scottish soldier imprisoned for burning a memorial wreath during a protest.\nThe Real Thing examines the nature of honesty and uses various constructs, including a play within a play, to explore the theme of reality versus appearance. It has been described as one of Stoppard's \"most popular, enduring and autobiographical plays.\"\nCharacters\nMax: \"40-ish\" male actor who begins the play married to Annie. Acts in Henry's new play, House of Cards.\nCharlotte: \"35-ish\" actress who begins the play married to Henry. Appears opposite Max in House of Cards.\nHenry: \"40-ish\" playwright who, at the beginning of the play, is married to Charlotte and conducting an affair with Annie. Both believe in love and yet approach it with cynicism.\nAnnie: \"30-ish\" actress who begins the play married to Max. She has been conducting an ongoing affair with Henry while also working as an activist for Brodie, a soldier who was arrested and imprisoned for setting fire to a wreath at the Cenotaph.\nBilly: \"22-ish\" young actor who plays Giovanni to Annie's Annabella in 'Tis Pity She's a Whore. Openly shows romantic interest in Annie.\nDebbie: \"17\" year old daughter of Charlotte and Henry who nevertheless spends very little time with them.\nBrodie: \"25\" year old soldier imprisoned for setting fire to the wreath at the Cenotaph. Annie takes him up as a cause.\nSynopsis\nSetting: London in 1982\nAct I\nIn the first scene, Max accuses his distant and travelling wife, Charlotte, of adultery. Upset, she leaves.\nIn the second scene, Charlotte's personality appears to have changed and she is now married to a playwright named Henry. The audience is gradually led to realize that Charlotte is an actress, and the first scene was her performance in a play that Henry, her husband, wrote. In the play, the character of Max is played by the husband of a married couple with whom Henry and Charlotte are friends, also named Max. The scene reveals that Charlotte is unhappy with the play. She believes that Henry gives limited development to the female lead in order to show off his wit through the male lead's lines."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-89a737a2-614f-471a-a683-afe1c34f2a21.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-89a737a2-614f-471a-a683-afe1c34f2a21.jsonl
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@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720820845.8206, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720820815.9946, "finish": 1720820845.8206, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0a6d255087874d0a8604e696b37fb2d0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821020.3014, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720820953.1311, "finish": 1720821020.3014, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dcd577557ce84026a861e6a8b2f95f2a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where did the british empire control an entire continent", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821020.3014, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720820953.1311, "finish": 1720821020.3014, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5e23f8df05c145dda075c0c4bdc023a1", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "where did the british empire control an entire continent", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821487.3365, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821458.6307, "finish": 1720821487.3365, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ba82f2ab07e84ad0bc98be8c6109f079", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where does the term jack mormon come from", "output": [["where does the term jack mormon come from", "Title: Preacher Jack\n\nPassage: Preacher Jack was the stage name of John Lincoln Coughlin (born February 12, 1942), who is an American pianist. Coughlin taught himself piano growing up in Malden, Massachusetts, and became an underground success playing in Boston in the 1960s and 1970s. George Thorogood heard him play and had him signed to Rounder Records, for whom he would record two albums in the 1980s. He took an extended break from recording in the 1990s and continued touring, finally releasing new material, including another album on Rounder, late in the decade.\nDiscography\nRecords:\nRounder Records 1979 - \u201cRock n Roll Preacher\u201d - full length record\nRounder Records 1980 - \u201c3000 Barrooms Later\u201d - also a full length record\nSolo Art Records 1996 - \u201cPreacher Jack At The Piano Non-Stop Boogie - full length CD\nBlack Rose Records 1998 - \u201cCelebration of the Spirit\u201d - full length CD\nCow Island Music 2007 - \u201cPictures From Life\u2019s Other Side\u201d - full length CD\nSingles:\nRounder Records 1980 - \u201cAlmost Persuaded\u201d - 45 rpm single\nSonet Records 1980 - \u201cBreak Up/Preachers Boogie Woogie\u201d - 45 rpm import only single (Sonet was a subsidiary of Rounder)\nBaron Records 1983 (?) - \u201cCrazy Arms/You Win Again with It\u2019ll Be Me/Don\u2019t Be Cruel\u201d - 45 rpm red vinyl single\nCompilations:\nEagle Records - 1996 - \u201cRare Boston Rock A Billy Fifties Volume 2\u201d - 2 songs on this CD\nMake Some Noise Records - 2007 - \u201cMusic For The Great Boston Burlesque Exposition\u201d - 1 song on this CD\nRounder Records - 2000 - \u201cRoots Music: An American Journey CD\u201d - 1 song on this CD\nLap to Cry on Records - 1998 - \u201cJerry Lee\u2019s Nightmare\u201d from the CD \u201cprincecharlesmingusmansonbukowski\u201c by Jawn P (formerly of the Boston hip-hop act Top Choice Clique) - a tribute to Preacher Jack."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821487.3365, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821458.6307, "finish": 1720821487.3365, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a6cd33c27b7c4b07bcd9691cc0544396", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where does the term jack mormon come from", "output": [["where does the term jack mormon come from", "Title: Mormon (word)\n\nPassage: Origin of the term\nThe term Mormon is taken from the title of the Book of Mormon, a text adherents consider sacred and believe was translated from golden plates whose location was revealed by an angel to Joseph Smith and which was published in 1830. According to the text of the Book of Mormon, the word Mormon stems from the Land of Mormon, where the prophet Alma preached the gospel and baptized converts. Mormon\u2014who was named after the land\u2014was a 4th-century prophet\u2013historian who compiled and abridged many records of his ancestors into the Book of Mormon. The book is believed by Latter Day Saints to be a literal record of God's dealings with pre-Columbian civilizations in the Americas from approximately 2600 BC through AD 420, written by prophets and followers of Jesus Christ. The book records the teachings of Jesus Christ to the people in the Americas as well as Christ's personal ministry among the people of Nephi after his resurrection. The LDS Church teaches that the Book of Mormon is another witness of Jesus Christ, \"holy scripture comparable to the Bible\".\nThe terms Mormonismand Mormonite were originally descriptive terms invented in 1831 by newspaper editors or contributors in Ohio and New York to describe the growing movement of \"proselytes of the Golden Bible\". Historian Ardis Parshall quotes an 1831 news item, appearing within the first year of the LDS Church's founding, as reading, \"In the sixth number of your paper I saw a notice of a sect of people called Mormonites; and thinking that a fuller history of their founder, Joseph Smith, Jr., might be interesting to your community \u2026 I will take the trouble to make a few remarks on the character of that infamous imposter.\" The term Mormon developed as a shortened version of Mormonite a year or two later. By the 1840s the term was adopted by Mormon leaders to refer to themselves, though leaders occasionally used the term as early as 1833. The term also started to be used pejoratively sometime before 1844 with the coinage of the term Jack Mormon to describe non-Mormons sympathetic to the movement. Since that time the term Mormon has generally lost its pejorative status, as it became reappropriated. According to LDS Church historian Matthew Bowman, and by the end of the 1800s it was broadly used.\nPopular usage\nSeveral schisms in the Latter Day Saint movement have resulted in dozens of denominations, each with their own preferred terminology. Today, the term Mormon is often used to refer to members of the largest denomination, the LDS Church, which rejects \u201cMormon\u201d as a reference term as of 2018. The second-largest sect, the Community of Christ, also rejects the term \u201cMormon\u201d due to its association with the practice of polygamy among Brighamite sects. Smaller sects often adopted the term, including adherents of Mormon fundamentalism. Due to the size and influence of the LDS Church, it tends to dominate discussions of how Mormon is used."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821551.9603, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821511.0076, "finish": 1720821551.9603, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8a00e3ba77b94895810ea558764ddb9f", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "what is the share of agriculture in indian economy", "output": [["what is the share of agriculture in indian economy", "Title: History of agriculture in the Indian subcontinent\n\nPassage: By the 5th millennium BCE agricultural communities became widespread in Kashmir. Zaheer Baber (1996) writes that 'the first evidence of cultivation of cotton had already developed'. Cotton was cultivated by the 5th millennium BCE-4th millennium BCE. The Indus cotton industry was well developed and some methods used in cotton spinning and fabrication continued to be practiced till the modern Industrialisation of India.\nA variety of tropical fruits such as mango and melon are native to the Indian subcontinent. The Indians also domesticated hemp, which they used for a number of applications including making narcotics, fiber, and oil. The farmers of the Indus Valley, which thrived in modern-day Pakistan and North India, grew peas, sesame, and dates. Sugarcane was originally from tropical South Asia and Southeast Asia. Different species likely originated in different locations with S. barberi originating in India and S. edule and S. officinarum coming from New Guinea.\nWild rice cultivation appeared in the Belan and Ganges valley regions of northern India as early as 4530 BCE and 5440 BCE respectively. Rice was cultivated in the Indus Valley civilisation. Agricultural activity during the second millennium BC included rice cultivation in the Kashmir and Harrappan regions. Mixed farming was the basis of the Indus valley economy. Denis J. Murphy (2007) details the spread of cultivated rice from India into South-east Asia:\nIndus Valley Civilization\nIrrigation was developed in the Indus Valley civilisation by around 4500 BCE. The size and prosperity of the Indus civilisation grew as a result of this innovation, which eventually led to more planned settlements making use of drainage and sewers. Sophisticated irrigation and water storage systems were developed by the Indus Valley Civilisation, including artificial reservoirs at Girnar dated to 3000 BCE, and an early canal irrigation system from circa 2600 BCE. Archaeological evidence of an animal-drawn plough dates back to 2500 BC in the Indus Valley Civilisation.\nOutside the Indus Valley area of influence there are 2 regions with distinct agricultures dating back to around 2800-1500 BCE. These are the Deccan Plateau and an area within the modern states of Orissa and Bihar. Within the Deccan the ashmound tradition developed c.2800 BCE. This is characterised by large mounds of burned cattle dung and other materials. The people of the ashmound tradition grew millets and pulses, some of which were domesticated in this part of India, for example, Brachiaria ramosa, Setaria verticillata, Vigna radiata and Macrotyloma uniflorum. They also herded cattle, sheep and goat and were largely engaged in pastoralism (Fuller 2006, 'Dung mounds and Domesticators'). In the east of India Neolithic people grew rice and pulses, as well as keeping cattle, sheep and goat. By 1500 BCE a distinct agriculture focused on summer crops, including Vigna and Panicum milliaceum was developed.\nIron Age India (1500 BCE \u2013 200 CE)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821551.9603, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821511.0076, "finish": 1720821551.9603, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1176f828cbf94efd86c458efeb3d12dd", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "what is the share of agriculture in indian economy", "output": [["what is the share of agriculture in indian economy", "Title: Economy of Punjab, India\n\nPassage: Some argue that some of the slower growth might have been caused by high rates of corruption in the state government and mistreatment of the state by the central government. Low rates of investment and high rates of debt are some of the problems caused by the Green Revolution which also have helped keep growth lower in the state then elsewhere in India.\nThe slower growth of Punjab's economy, particularly the agricultural sector, is believed to have helped fuel the 2020\u20132021 Indian farmers' protest.\nThe economy of Punjab was severely effected by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.\nMacroeconomic trend\nThe state government agency for collecting macroeconomic statistics is the Economic and Statistical Organisation Punjab (ESO).\nAccording to the 2008 Global Hunger Index, Punjab has the lowest level of hunger in India. Less than one-fourth of children below the age of five are underweight. The state has also one of the lowest poverty rates in India at 8 percent in 2012. Punjab has also seen strong economic growth, but since 2005 the state's growth has fallen below India's national average.\nPunjab's debt was estimated at 39.8% of the state's GDP in 2020, down from 62% of its GDP in 2005.\nThe chart shows the trend of Punjab's gross state domestic product of Punjab at market prices, as estimated by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation.\nAgriculture\nPunjab's economy has been primarily agriculture-based since the Green Revolution due to the presence of abundant water sources and fertile soils; most of the state lies in a fertile alluvial plain with many rivers and an extensive irrigation canal system. Punjab makes up for about 17% of India's wheat production (second highest amongst Indian states and union territories after Uttar Pradesh, the latter producing more than 30% of the nation's supply), around 12% of its rice production, and around 5% of its milk production, being known as India's breadbasket.\nThe percentage of GDP produced by the agricultural sector was 25% in 2018\u201319. The growth rate of the agricultural sector was only 2.3% in 2018\u201319, compared to 6.0% for the state's economy as a whole.\nMost of the state lies in a fertile alluvial plain with many rivers and an extensive irrigation canal system, and the region is ideal for growing grains, fruits, and vegetables. Despite covering only 1.53% of its geographical area, Punjab makes up for about 15\u201320% of India's wheat production, around 12% of its rice production, and around 10% of its milk production, being known as India's breadbasket.\nAbout 80%-95% of Punjab's agricultural land is owned by its Jat Sikh community despite it only forming 21% of the state's population. About 10% of Punjab's population is made up of migrants from poorer states to the southeast such as Uttar Pradesh and Bihar who work as farm laborers."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821575.0747, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821555.7412, "finish": 1720821575.0747, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ea02dbf421c4943b83c2bcfe4a3bf16", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who sang the song you got a friend in me", "output": [["who sang the song you got a friend in me", "Title: You've Got a Friend (Sonia and Big Fun song)\n\nPassage: \"You've Got a Friend\" is a song written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman and performed by Sonia and Big Fun, and featuring Gary Barnacle on sax. The song, a midtempo pop ballad, was released as a charity single for the Childline foundation on June 11, 1990. Initially the artists recorded the well-known Carole King song of the same name, but for reasons unknown it was ultimately not used and SAW wrote an original song with the same name instead. The cover version was finally released in the 2010 re-issue of Big Fun's album, A Pocketful of Dreams. The single peaked at number 14 in the UK and number 12 in Ireland. It was later included on Big Fun's Japanese edition of their debut album A Pocketful of Dreams.\nTrack listings\nCD single\n\"You've Got a Friend\" - 3:33\n\"You've Got a Friend\" (Extended Mix) - 6:30\n\"You've Got a Friend\" (Extended Instrumental) - 6:30\n7-inch single\n\"You've Got a Friend\" - 3:33\n\"You've Got a Friend\" (Instrumental) - 3:33\n12-inch single\n\"You've Got a Friend\" (Extended Mix) - 6:30\n\"You've Got a Friend\" (Extended Instrumental) - 6:30\nCharts"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821575.0747, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821555.7412, "finish": 1720821575.0747, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eaba696435de4451b9513733003b235c", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who sang the song you got a friend in me", "output": [["who sang the song you got a friend in me", "Title: You Are My Friend\n\nPassage: Reception\nReleased in early 1978 as the second single from Patti LaBelle, the song was a relative failure on the R&B chart only peaking as high as number 61 and failing to even enter the Billboard Hot 100. The success of the song in its early years was due to LaBelle's live performances of the song. When she first performed the song in her first solo concert in London, LaBelle received a standing ovation, she received a similar one when she performed the song on TV the first time on Don Kirshner's Rock Concert as the last song she performed before leaving the stage.\nThe song received radio airplay on urban radio stations, which still continues today, and is regarded as one of LaBelle's signature songs.\nCovers\nOne of the covers of the song was from singer Sylvester, recorded in San Francisco for his live album Living Proof. During the song, Sylvester was joined by The Weather Girls, who started off as Sylvester's backup singers, Two Tons Of Fun. While he dedicated the song to LaBelle, it was clear that it was a love about him and The Weather Girls. That same year, disco group Kenny & Friends did a dance version of the song. In 2003 gospel singer Shirley Caesar recorded the song for her album Shirley Caesar & Friends which featured Patti LaBelle on the recording. Faith Evans did a live version paying tribute to LaBelle in 2001. LaBelle re-recorded the song for her album The Gospel According to Patti LaBelle, in 2006, as a tribute to her deceased collaborator, James Ellison.\nLive performances\nPatti LaBelle hardly leaves the stage without singing \"You Are My Friend\". In the early 1980s Labelle would include \"What A Friend We Have In Jesus\" which would lead her into \"You Are My Friend\".\nCredits\nLead vocals by Patti LaBelle\nBackground vocals by James Gadson, Norma Harris, Ray Parker Jr., Rosie Casals, Sherri Barman, Yvonne Fair, Cecil Womack, Curtis Womack, Friendly Womack, Julia Waters & Maxine Waters\nLyrics written by Patti LaBelle and Armstead Edwards\nMusic written and arranged by James \"Budd\" Ellison\nProduced by David Rubinson"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821582.8706, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821582.6675, "finish": 1720821582.8706, "ip": "", "conv_id": "83eed47c2166491896ac1e9c0847c9a1", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where do the sharks play in san jose", "output": [["where do the sharks play in san jose", "Title: List of San Jose Sharks seasons\n\nPassage: This is a list of seasons completed by the San Jose Sharks of the National Hockey League. This list documents the records of the regular season and playoff results for all seasons the Sharks have completed in the NHL since their inception in 1991.\nTable key\nYear by year\n1 Season was shortened due to the 1994\u201395 NHL lockout.\n2 As of the 2005\u201306 NHL season, all games will have a winner; the OTL column includes SOL (Shootout losses).\n3 Season was shortened due to the 2012\u201313 NHL lockout.\n4 The season was suspended on March 12, 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.\n5 Season was shortened due to the COVID-19 pandemic.\nAll-time records"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821582.8706, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821582.6675, "finish": 1720821582.8706, "ip": "", "conv_id": "90ac53540b93491b80c3ceb5f2df5d54", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where do the sharks play in san jose", "output": [["where do the sharks play in san jose", "Title: List of San Jose Sharks general managers\n\nPassage: The San Jose Sharks are a professional ice hockey team based in San Jose, California. The team is a member of the Pacific Division in the Western Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). Established for the 1991\u201392 NHL season, the Sharks initially played games at the Cow Palace before moving to SAP Center at San Jose in 1993. The team has had five general managers since their inception.\nKey\nGeneral managers"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821616.8458, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821586.4234, "finish": 1720821616.8458, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a151fc25e8d459ab6cbb92c457a054b", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "amorphous calcium phosphate and its application in dentistry", "output": [["amorphous calcium phosphate and its application in dentistry", "Title: Amorphous calcium phosphate\n\nPassage: Amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) is a glassy solid that is formed from the chemical decomposition of a mixture of dissolved phosphate and calcium salts (e.g. (NH4)2HPO4 + Ca(NO3)2). The resulting amorphous mixture consists mostly of calcium and phosphate, but also contains varying amounts of water and hydrogen and hydroxide ions, depending on the synthesis conditions. Such mixtures are also known as calcium phosphate cement.\nACP is generally categorized into either \"amorphous tricalcium phosphate\" (ATCP) or calcium-deficient hydroxyapatite (CDHA). CDHA is sometimes termed \"apatitic calcium triphosphate.\" The composition of amorphous calcium phosphate is CaxHy(PO4)z\u00b7nH2O, where n is between 3 and 4.5. CDHA has a general formula of Ca9(HPO4)(PO4)5(OH). Precipitation from a moderately supersaturated and basic solution of a magnesium salt produces amorphous magnesium calcium phosphate (AMCP), in which magnesium incorporated into the ACP structure.\nA commercial preparation of ACP is casein phosphopeptide-amorphous calcium phosphate (CPP-ACP), derived from cow milk. It is sold under various brand names including Recaldent and Tooth Mousse, intended to be applied directly to teeth. Its clinical usefulness is unproven.\nBiogenic ACP"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821616.8458, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821586.4234, "finish": 1720821616.8458, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c36db4e15bc74cb0a9215a46e69afea6", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "amorphous calcium phosphate and its application in dentistry", "output": [["amorphous calcium phosphate and its application in dentistry", "Title: Amorphous calcium phosphate\n\nPassage: Amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) is a glassy solid that is formed from the chemical decomposition of a mixture of dissolved phosphate and calcium salts (e.g. (NH4)2HPO4 + Ca(NO3)2). The resulting amorphous mixture consists mostly of calcium and phosphate, but also contains varying amounts of water and hydrogen and hydroxide ions, depending on the synthesis conditions. Such mixtures are also known as calcium phosphate cement.\nACP is generally categorized into either \"amorphous tricalcium phosphate\" (ATCP) or calcium-deficient hydroxyapatite (CDHA). CDHA is sometimes termed \"apatitic calcium triphosphate.\" The composition of amorphous calcium phosphate is CaxHy(PO4)z\u00b7nH2O, where n is between 3 and 4.5. CDHA has a general formula of Ca9(HPO4)(PO4)5(OH). Precipitation from a moderately supersaturated and basic solution of a magnesium salt produces amorphous magnesium calcium phosphate (AMCP), in which magnesium incorporated into the ACP structure.\nA commercial preparation of ACP is casein phosphopeptide-amorphous calcium phosphate (CPP-ACP), derived from cow milk. It is sold under various brand names including Recaldent and Tooth Mousse, intended to be applied directly to teeth. Its clinical usefulness is unproven.\nBiogenic ACP"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821621.2549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821621.1094, "finish": 1720821621.2549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2dfa7d5b851b42a5bb24e62bca7b3372", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "the function of the excretory system is to help maintain homeostasis by", "output": [["the function of the excretory system is to help maintain homeostasis by", "Title: Excretory system\n\nPassage: The excretory system is a passive biological system that removes excess, unnecessary materials from the body fluids of an organism, so as to help maintain internal chemical homeostasis and prevent damage to the body. The dual function of excretory systems is the elimination of the waste products of metabolism and to drain the body of used up and broken down components in a liquid and gaseous state. In humans and other amniotes (mammals, birds and reptiles), most of these substances leave the body as urine and to some degree exhalation, mammals also expel them through sweating."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821621.2549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821621.1094, "finish": 1720821621.2549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "28615fd28472410cba4315b56d9f46e8", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "the function of the excretory system is to help maintain homeostasis by", "output": [["the function of the excretory system is to help maintain homeostasis by", "Title: Excretory system\n\nPassage: The excretory system is a passive biological system that removes excess, unnecessary materials from the body fluids of an organism, so as to help maintain internal chemical homeostasis and prevent damage to the body. The dual function of excretory systems is the elimination of the waste products of metabolism and to drain the body of used up and broken down components in a liquid and gaseous state. In humans and other amniotes (mammals, birds and reptiles), most of these substances leave the body as urine and to some degree exhalation, mammals also expel them through sweating."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821699.6667, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821627.4707, "finish": 1720821699.6667, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d244fae7233c422f9c1629727c20a399", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who abolished the monarchy and declared france a republic", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821699.6667, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821627.4707, "finish": 1720821699.6667, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d1146b72e6ec4e38897f7ed5cc4e796b", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who abolished the monarchy and declared france a republic", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821724.6539, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821711.9194, "finish": 1720821724.6539, "ip": "", "conv_id": "050ec019c9204e3ea22ab456f1b0ec4b", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821724.6539, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821711.9194, "finish": 1720821724.6539, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ea0357298c84a1382984f6cd3ce60e6", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: ASCA Observations of Three Shakhbazyan's Compact Groups of Galaxies\n\nPassage: X-ray observations of three Shakhbazyan's Compact Groups of Galaxies, SCGG\n202, SCGG 205, and SCGG 223, are presented for the first time. Extended X-ray\nemission was detected from SCGG 202 and SCGG 223 with 0.5-2 keV luminosity of\n1E42 erg/s and 3E42 erg/s (for H_0 = 75 km/s/Mpc), respectively, while no\nsignificant emission was detected from SCGG 205 with an upper limit of 0.7E42\nerg/s. The X-ray spectra of SCGG 202 and SCGG 223 can be described with\nthin-thermal plasma emission with temperature about 1 keV. X-ray properties of\nSCGG 202 and SCGG 223 are in good agreement with those of other known groups of\ngalaxies, proving the physical nature of their grouping.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821769.3699, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821769.2258, "finish": 1720821769.3699, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b5c9f6e092184bec90e05caecedfe980", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where did the ashes from ash wednesday originate", "output": [["where did the ashes from ash wednesday originate", "Title: Ash Wednesday\n\nPassage: In the 1969 missal of the Roman Rite, an alternative formula (based on Mark 1:15) was introduced and given first place \"Repent, and believe in the Gospel\" and the older formula was translated as \"Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.\" The old formula, based on the words spoken to Adam and Eve after their sin, reminds worshippers of their sinfulness and mortality and thus, implicitly, of their need to repent in time.\nVarious manners of placing the ashes on worshippers' heads are in use within the Latin Church, the two most common being to use the ashes to make a cross on the forehead and sprinkle the ashes over the crown of the head. Originally, the ashes were strewn over men's heads, but, probably because women had their heads covered in church, were placed on the foreheads of women. In the Catholic Church the manner of imposing ashes depends largely on local custom since no fixed rule has been laid down.\nAlthough the account of \u00c6lfric of Eynsham shows that in about the year 1000 the ashes were \"strewn\" on the head, the marking of the forehead is the method that now prevails in English-speaking countries and is the only one envisaged in the Occasional Offices of the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea, a publication described as \"noticeably Anglo-Catholic in character\". In its ritual of \"Blessing of Ashes\", this states that \"the ashes are blessed at the beginning of the Eucharist. After they have been blessed they are placed on the forehead of the clergy and people.\"\nThe Ash Wednesday ritual of the Church of England, Mother Church of the Anglican Communion, contains \"The Imposition of Ashes\" in its Ash Wednesday liturgy. On Ash Wednesday, the Pope, the Bishop of Rome, traditionally takes part in a penitential procession from the Church of Saint Anselm to the Basilica of Santa Sabina, where, by the custom in Italy and many other countries, ashes are sprinkled on his head, not smudged on his forehead, and he places ashes on the heads of others in the same way.\nThe Anglican ritual, used in Papua New Guinea states that, after the blessing of the ashes, \"the priest marks his forehead and then the foreheads of the servers and congregation who come and kneel, or stand, where they normally receive the Blessed Sacrament.\" The corresponding Catholic ritual in the Roman Missal for celebration within Mass merely states: \"Then the Priest places ashes on the head of those present who come to him, and says to each one ...\" Pre-1970 editions had much more elaborate instructions about the order in which the participants were to receive the ashes, but again without any indication of the form of placing the ashes on the head."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720821769.3699, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720821769.2258, "finish": 1720821769.3699, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6f1b5ce5d00b46baba23247b466d9e3a", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where did the ashes from ash wednesday originate", "output": [["where did the ashes from ash wednesday originate", "Title: Ash Wednesday\n\nPassage: In the 1969 missal of the Roman Rite, an alternative formula (based on Mark 1:15) was introduced and given first place \"Repent, and believe in the Gospel\" and the older formula was translated as \"Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return.\" The old formula, based on the words spoken to Adam and Eve after their sin, reminds worshippers of their sinfulness and mortality and thus, implicitly, of their need to repent in time.\nVarious manners of placing the ashes on worshippers' heads are in use within the Latin Church, the two most common being to use the ashes to make a cross on the forehead and sprinkle the ashes over the crown of the head. Originally, the ashes were strewn over men's heads, but, probably because women had their heads covered in church, were placed on the foreheads of women. In the Catholic Church the manner of imposing ashes depends largely on local custom since no fixed rule has been laid down.\nAlthough the account of \u00c6lfric of Eynsham shows that in about the year 1000 the ashes were \"strewn\" on the head, the marking of the forehead is the method that now prevails in English-speaking countries and is the only one envisaged in the Occasional Offices of the Anglican Church of Papua New Guinea, a publication described as \"noticeably Anglo-Catholic in character\". In its ritual of \"Blessing of Ashes\", this states that \"the ashes are blessed at the beginning of the Eucharist. After they have been blessed they are placed on the forehead of the clergy and people.\"\nThe Ash Wednesday ritual of the Church of England, Mother Church of the Anglican Communion, contains \"The Imposition of Ashes\" in its Ash Wednesday liturgy. On Ash Wednesday, the Pope, the Bishop of Rome, traditionally takes part in a penitential procession from the Church of Saint Anselm to the Basilica of Santa Sabina, where, by the custom in Italy and many other countries, ashes are sprinkled on his head, not smudged on his forehead, and he places ashes on the heads of others in the same way.\nThe Anglican ritual, used in Papua New Guinea states that, after the blessing of the ashes, \"the priest marks his forehead and then the foreheads of the servers and congregation who come and kneel, or stand, where they normally receive the Blessed Sacrament.\" The corresponding Catholic ritual in the Roman Missal for celebration within Mass merely states: \"Then the Priest places ashes on the head of those present who come to him, and says to each one ...\" Pre-1970 editions had much more elaborate instructions about the order in which the participants were to receive the ashes, but again without any indication of the form of placing the ashes on the head."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720822083.1734, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822069.522, "finish": 1720822083.1734, "ip": "", "conv_id": "88cef9b736e14b068736cec843beca68", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who was ursula the sea witch based on", "output": [["who was ursula the sea witch based on", "Title: Velvet Worms (Onychophora) in Folklore and Art: Geographic Pattern,\n Types of Cultural Reference and Public Perception\n\nPassage: Aims: To document and preserve folkloric beliefs and art inspired by velvet\nworms (Onychophora), rare invertebrates that are considered \"living fossils\",\nhave full placental organs and capture prey with a rough \"net\" built in a\nfraction of a second. Study Design: This study is a combination of field\ninterviews, online surveys and automatic database search. Methods: We asked\nopen-ended questions to farmers who know the worms, consulted experts and\nsearched the Internet to document folkloric and artistic instances using all\nthe names that these animals receive in English, Spanish and Portuguese\n(languages of the countries where they occur) as well as other languages, and\nautomatic image search, in Web of Science, CrossRef, Google Scholar and Google.\nResults: We found more than 80 cases of direct references to velvet worms in\nfolklore and art, mostly from the USA, Australia, Brazil, Costa Rica and New\nZealand. Per capita the countries with more cases are New Zealand (24 cases per\nmillion inhabitants), Costa Rica (16 cases per million inhabitants) and\nAustralia (3 cases per million inhabitants). The most frequent expressions are\ncartoons, followed by tourism agencies using velvet worms in their ads,\nproducts with velvet worm representations, folkloric beliefs, and music bands\nor songs named after them. In almost all cases the animals are seen in a\nfavorable light, inspiring folklore and art that highlight their extraordinary\nnature. Conclusion: The unique prey capture mechanism of velvet worms seems to\nhave inspired an unexpected number of artistic and folkloric expressions,\npreserved for the future in the present article, which starts a totally new\nline of research: the effect of \"living fossils\" on human culture.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720822083.1734, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822069.522, "finish": 1720822083.1734, "ip": "", "conv_id": "46c6da693e7345b0afc6e314599f9dbd", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who was ursula the sea witch based on", "output": [["who was ursula the sea witch based on", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720822106.6626, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822093.4062, "finish": 1720822106.6626, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4199d3668fd345adaeb77515ac2199ff", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when did cable stayed bridges increase in popularity", "output": [["when did cable stayed bridges increase in popularity", "Title: withdrawn\n\nPassage: This paper has been withdrawn by the authors due to new experimental results.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720822106.6626, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822093.4062, "finish": 1720822106.6626, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0417b0de229a4460807bd73174c0dfd9", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "when did cable stayed bridges increase in popularity", "output": [["when did cable stayed bridges increase in popularity", "Title: Pion form factor from a contact interaction\n\nPassage: In a Poincare'-covariant vector-boson-exchange theory, the pion possesses\ncomponents of pseudovector origin, which materially influence its observable\nproperties. For a range of such quantities, we explore the consequences of a\nmomentum-independent interaction, regularised in a symmetry-preserving manner.\nThe contact interaction, whilst capable of describing pion static properties,\nproduces a form factor whose: evolution for Q^2>0.17GeV^2 disagrees markedly\nwith experiment; and asymptotic power-law behaviour conflicts strongly with\nperturbative-QCD.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720822132.4034, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822110.7121, "finish": 1720822132.4034, "ip": "", "conv_id": "457f4805700b466984b3c0257d7e2d55", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who is the actor that plays sneaky pete", "output": [["who is the actor that plays sneaky pete", "Title: Mechanisms of spatial current-density instabilities in $p^+ - p^- - n -\n p^+ -n^{++}$ structures\n\nPassage: Semiconductor $p^+ - p^- - n - p^+ - n^{++}$ structures with large junction\nand contact areas are treated as 1 \\times 2-dimensional active media, in which\nself-organized pattern formation can be expected. The local bistable behavior\nof the structures may emanate from two different mechanisms both governed by a\nnonlinear current feedback-loop between the electrons and holes injected from\nthe outer layers. By considering the device to be composed of an active\nsubsystem with negative differential resistance and a passive resistive layer\nwith positive differential resistance an analytical approach is suggested to\nunderstand and describe the corresponding physical mechanisms in a\nself-consistent way. Analytical solutions of the derived model equations allow\na description of homogeneous stationary states and yield explicit expressions\nof the current-density vs. voltage characteristics of the whole structure and\nits subsystems. A stability analysis of the homogeneous states with respect to\ntwo-dimensional transversal harmonic fluctuations is performed for the two\ncases under study. The resulting dispersion relations allow two different types\nof instability. While the first one is of Ridley's type which is characteristic\nfor any spatially extended electrical system with negative differential\nresistance, the second type can be considered as a solid-state analogue of\nTuring's instability known as a generic instability mechanism which may lead,\ne. g., to the formation of periodic patterns.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720822132.4034, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720822110.7121, "finish": 1720822132.4034, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e815c931131d455eb0e58e935ca1219c", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who is the actor that plays sneaky pete", "output": [["who is the actor that plays sneaky pete", "Title: What Makes Kevin Spacey Look Like Kevin Spacey\n\nPassage: We reconstruct a controllable model of a person from a large photo collection\nthat captures his or her {\\em persona}, i.e., physical appearance and behavior.\nThe ability to operate on unstructured photo collections enables modeling a\nhuge number of people, including celebrities and other well photographed people\nwithout requiring them to be scanned. Moreover, we show the ability to drive or\n{\\em puppeteer} the captured person B using any other video of a different\nperson A. In this scenario, B acts out the role of person A, but retains\nhis/her own personality and character. Our system is based on a novel\ncombination of 3D face reconstruction, tracking, alignment, and multi-texture\nmodeling, applied to the puppeteering problem. We demonstrate convincing\nresults on a large variety of celebrities derived from Internet imagery and\nvideo.\n"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-91a2012b-381f-4df2-b5a5-e4fd8e4dd315.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-91a2012b-381f-4df2-b5a5-e4fd8e4dd315.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 0cce82d78f53721a7b69fe9389427b3057bd629e..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-91a2012b-381f-4df2-b5a5-e4fd8e4dd315.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721161190.5233, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161155.0787, "finish": 1721161190.5233, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a36afc80385a448480d8dc3a276ade9c", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "output": [["who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "Title: Aaron Rodgers\n\nPassage: Aaron Charles Rodgers (born December 2, 1983) is an American football quarterback for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the California Golden Bears (where he set several career passing records, including lowest single-season and career interception rates), before being selected in the first round of the 2005 NFL draft by the Green Bay Packers, spending 18 seasons with the team. He is regarded among the greatest and most talented quarterbacks of all time."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161190.5233, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161155.0787, "finish": 1721161190.5233, "ip": "", "conv_id": "02a43c3bcca64ee09adaa79b75e39f57", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "output": [["who is the quarterback for the green bay packers", "Title: Aaron Rodgers\n\nPassage: Aaron Charles Rodgers (born December 2, 1983) is an American football quarterback for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the California Golden Bears (where he set several career passing records, including lowest single-season and career interception rates), before being selected in the first round of the 2005 NFL draft by the Green Bay Packers, spending 18 seasons with the team. He is regarded among the greatest and most talented quarterbacks of all time."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161242.2022, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161241.7508, "finish": 1721161242.2022, "ip": "", "conv_id": "75817bbd828544f1898480870508633c", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "where does the term the west come from", "output": [["where does the term the west come from", "Title: Western world\n\nPassage: The English word \"West\" initially referred solely to the cardinal direction. By the Middle Ages, Europeans began to use it to describe Europe. Since the eighteenth century, following European exploration, the word was used to indicate the regions of the world with European settlements. In contemporary times, countries that are considered to constitute the West vary according to perspective rather than their geographical location. Countries like Australia and New Zealand, located in the Eastern Hemisphere are included in modern definitions of the Western world, as these regions and others like them have been significantly influenced by the British\u2014derived from colonization, and immigration of Europeans\u2014factors that grounded such countries to the West. Despite being located in the Far East, a country like Japan, in some contexts, is considered a part of the West as it aligns with the ideals of Western-style democracy; while a country like Cuba, located in the Western Hemisphere, is argued as not being a part of the West as it aligns with the ideals of communism.\nDepending on the context and the historical period in question, Russia was sometimes seen as a part of the West, and at other times juxtaposed with it.\nRunning parallel to the rise of the United States as a great power and the development of communication\u2013transportation technologies \"shrinking\" the distance between both the Atlantic Ocean shores, the aforementioned country (United States) became more prominently featured in the conceptualizations of the West.\nBetween the eighteenth century to the mid-twentieth century, prominent countries in the West such as the United States, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Australia, and New Zealand have been once envisioned as ethnocracies for whites. Racism is cited as a contributing factor to Westerners' colonization of the New World, which today constitutes much of the \"geographical\" Western world. Starting from the late 1960s, certain parts of the Western World have become notable for their diversity due to immigration. The idea of \"the West\" over the course of time has evolved from a directional concept to a socio-political concept that had been temporalized and rendered as a concept of the future bestowed with notions of progress and modernity.\nIntroduction"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161242.2022, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161241.7508, "finish": 1721161242.2022, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0468e0bfbfb04818a8231779ebc37628", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "where does the term the west come from", "output": [["where does the term the west come from", "Title: Far West\n\nPassage: Far West may refer to:\nPlaces\nWestern Canada, or the West\nBritish Columbia Coast\nWestern United States, or Far West\nWest Coast of the United States\nAmerican frontier, or Far West, Old West, or Wild West\nFar West (Taixi), a term used in East Asia that refers to Europe\nFar West, Missouri\nFar West, Austin, Texas\nFar West (New South Wales)\nFar-Western Development Region, Nepal\nThe Palatine Barony of the Far West, a branch of the Society for Creative Anachronism, encompassing East Asia and the Pacific\nal-Maghrib al-\u02beAq\u1e63\u0101 (the Farthest West)"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161269.9594, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161269.5028, "finish": 1721161269.9594, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8445b8f2f32845d0bc59445a636ca590", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "what true story is the movie fargo based on", "output": [["what true story is the movie fargo based on", "Title: Fargo (1996 film)\n\nPassage: The soundtrack was released in 1996 on TVT Records, combined with selections from the score to Barton Fink.\nClaims of factual basis\nThe film opens with the following text:\nThe Coen brothers said that they based their script on an actual criminal event, but wrote a fictional story around it. \"We weren't interested in that kind of fidelity\", said Joel Coen. \"The basic events are the same as in the real case, but the characterizations are fully imagined\u00a0... If an audience believes that something's based on a real event, it gives you permission to do things they might otherwise not accept.\"\nThe brothers have modified their explanation more than once. In 1996, Joel Coen told a reporter that\u2014contrary to the opening graphic\u2014the actual murders were not committed in Minnesota. Many Minnesotans speculated that the story was inspired by T. Eugene Thompson, a St. Paul attorney who was convicted of hiring a man to murder his wife in 1963, near the Coens' hometown of St. Louis Park; but the Coens said that they had never heard of Thompson. After Thompson's death in 2015, Joel Coen changed the explanation again: \"[The story was] completely made up. Or, as we like to say, the only thing true about it is that it's a story.\"\nThe film's special edition DVD contains yet another account, that the film was inspired by the 1986 murder of Helle Crafts, a Danish\u2013American flight attendant from Connecticut at the hands of her husband, Richard, who disposed of her body through a wood chipper.\nIn a 1998 article on the film's \"true story\" claim, the fact-checking website Snopes concluded that it was a prank of the kind the Coen brothers often inserted in their films, without \"a word of truth to it.\" Snopes said that doubters should note that a fictitious persons disclaimer, used in works of fiction, is at the end of the film.\nAccent\nThe film's illustrations of \"Minnesota nice\" and distinctive regional accents and expressions made a lasting impression on audiences; years later, locals reported continuing to field tourist requests to say \"Yah, you betcha\", and other tag lines from the movie. Dialect coach Liz Himelstein said that \"the accent was another character\". She coached the cast using audiotapes and field trips. Another dialect coach, Larissa Kokernot (who also played one of the prostitutes), noted that the \"small-town, Minnesota accent is close to the sound of the Nords and the Swedes\", which is \"where the musicality comes from\". She taught McDormand \"Minnesota nice\" and the characteristic head-nodding to show agreement. The strong accent spoken by Macy's and McDormand's characters, which was exaggerated for effect, is less common in the Twin Cities area, where over 60% of the state's population lives. The Minneapolis and St. Paul dialect is characterized by the Northern Cities Vowel Shift, which is also found in other places in the Northern United States as far east as Rochester, New York.\nRelease"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161269.9594, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161269.5028, "finish": 1721161269.9594, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6dde886f13644a2085ae9743e5504c57", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what true story is the movie fargo based on", "output": [["what true story is the movie fargo based on", "Title: Fargo (1996 film)\n\nPassage: The soundtrack was released in 1996 on TVT Records, combined with selections from the score to Barton Fink.\nClaims of factual basis\nThe film opens with the following text:\nThe Coen brothers said that they based their script on an actual criminal event, but wrote a fictional story around it. \"We weren't interested in that kind of fidelity\", said Joel Coen. \"The basic events are the same as in the real case, but the characterizations are fully imagined\u00a0... If an audience believes that something's based on a real event, it gives you permission to do things they might otherwise not accept.\"\nThe brothers have modified their explanation more than once. In 1996, Joel Coen told a reporter that\u2014contrary to the opening graphic\u2014the actual murders were not committed in Minnesota. Many Minnesotans speculated that the story was inspired by T. Eugene Thompson, a St. Paul attorney who was convicted of hiring a man to murder his wife in 1963, near the Coens' hometown of St. Louis Park; but the Coens said that they had never heard of Thompson. After Thompson's death in 2015, Joel Coen changed the explanation again: \"[The story was] completely made up. Or, as we like to say, the only thing true about it is that it's a story.\"\nThe film's special edition DVD contains yet another account, that the film was inspired by the 1986 murder of Helle Crafts, a Danish\u2013American flight attendant from Connecticut at the hands of her husband, Richard, who disposed of her body through a wood chipper.\nIn a 1998 article on the film's \"true story\" claim, the fact-checking website Snopes concluded that it was a prank of the kind the Coen brothers often inserted in their films, without \"a word of truth to it.\" Snopes said that doubters should note that a fictitious persons disclaimer, used in works of fiction, is at the end of the film.\nAccent\nThe film's illustrations of \"Minnesota nice\" and distinctive regional accents and expressions made a lasting impression on audiences; years later, locals reported continuing to field tourist requests to say \"Yah, you betcha\", and other tag lines from the movie. Dialect coach Liz Himelstein said that \"the accent was another character\". She coached the cast using audiotapes and field trips. Another dialect coach, Larissa Kokernot (who also played one of the prostitutes), noted that the \"small-town, Minnesota accent is close to the sound of the Nords and the Swedes\", which is \"where the musicality comes from\". She taught McDormand \"Minnesota nice\" and the characteristic head-nodding to show agreement. The strong accent spoken by Macy's and McDormand's characters, which was exaggerated for effect, is less common in the Twin Cities area, where over 60% of the state's population lives. The Minneapolis and St. Paul dialect is characterized by the Northern Cities Vowel Shift, which is also found in other places in the Northern United States as far east as Rochester, New York.\nRelease"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161294.1863, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161293.6164, "finish": 1721161294.1863, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b381e416a202419bb0a4c9af7e067160", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "what channel is nbc sports northwest on directv", "output": [["what channel is nbc sports northwest on directv", "Title: NBC Sports Northwest\n\nPassage: The Consumer Protection Committee of the Oregon House of Representatives held a hearing on February 24, 2010 to attempt to arbitrate a carriage deal between the network, DirecTV, Dish Network and Charter Communications, which also had issues carrying the network. No representatives for DirecTV, Dish Network or the Trail Blazers attended the hearing. On June 21, the Trail Blazers asked the Federal Communications Commission to require Comcast to make the team's games available to competing multichannel video programming distributors such as DirecTV and Dish Network.\nOregon-based cable provider Canby Telcom objected to a non-negotiable subscribe fee increase that would have increased the network's annual subscriber rate to over $32 in 2012; as a result, Canby announced plans to stop carrying Comcast SportsNet Northwest. Keith Galitz, president of Canby Telcom, stated \"That's just too steep an increase for us, and it's not in line with inflation or normal escalation of prices in the industry.\" Canby Telcom has accused Comcast of raising rates way beyond the rate of inflation and industry-wide increases. Clear Creek Television, which carried the Trail Blazers for 15 years, was rebuffed in its attempts to negotiate the above-market rate Comcast was pushing for.\nComcast sent some of its senior staff members to Oregon after a member of the Sports Fan Coalition testified before the Oregon State Legislature on the provider's denial of access to the network on DirecTV, Dish and other cable providers. Brian Frederick, executive director of the advocacy group, stated that \"Comcast clearly sees the public perception of its treatment of sports fans as a potential Achilles heel in efforts to acquire NBCU\". In a November 7, 2010 article in The Oregonian, Blazers chief executive officer Larry Miller continued to express frustration about the lack of availability for the team's CSN-televised games.\nRelated services\nNBC Sports Northwest HD\nNBC Sports Northwest HD was a 1080i high-definition simulcast feed of NBC Sports Northwest. CSN Northwest broadcast 28 Portland Trail Blazers home games in HD in the 2007\u201308 season; that number of high-definition game telecasts shown on the network increased to 32 for the 2008\u201309 season. Former Blazers broadcaster Mike Barrett announced during the network's game telecast against the Los Angeles Clippers on April 13, 2009, that CSN Northwest would broadcast all Trail Blazers games in HD from then onward.\nNBC Sports Northwest HD was available on Comcast throughout Oregon and southwestern Washington; Comcast did not carry the high-definition feed in most of the remainder of Washington State (specifically its systems in the Seattle-Tacoma and Spokane markets) until early 2013, when it began to be carried on Channel 617. NBC Sports Northwest HD was only available on Comcast's digital preferred package in western and eastern Washington."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161294.1863, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161293.6164, "finish": 1721161294.1863, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4348d4af5f69407c8664171e5723cd4a", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what channel is nbc sports northwest on directv", "output": [["what channel is nbc sports northwest on directv", "Title: NBC Sports California\n\nPassage: NBC Sports California (sometimes abbreviated as NBCS California) is an American regional sports network owned by the NBC Sports Group unit of NBCUniversal, and operates as an affiliate of NBC Sports Regional Networks. The channel broadcasts regional coverage of professional and college sports events throughout Northern California, as well as original sports-related news, discussion and entertainment programming.\nNBC Sports California is available on cable and fiber optic television providers throughout northern and southern California, and portions of Oregon and western Nevada. It is also available nationwide on satellite via DirecTV. The network maintains main studios and offices headquartered with sister network NBC Sports Bay Area in San Francisco, California.\nHistory\nIn summer 2003, Comcast acquired the regional television rights to broadcast regular-season and early-round playoff games from the Sacramento Kings. Previously, the team's game broadcasts were only available either via pay-per-view sports packages and on an alternate feed of then Cablevision-owned SportsChannel Bay Area. As a result, Comcast created a new regional sports network to broadcast the team's games; the network launched as Comcast SportsNet West in October 2004, coinciding with the start of the Kings' regular season."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161318.2358, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161317.7727, "finish": 1721161318.2358, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c48b4eb28c2c4bfe8b8e4fb6a268738b", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "roman god of the underworld also called orcus or pluto", "output": [["roman god of the underworld also called orcus or pluto", "Title: Orcus (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: Orcus was a Roman god of the underworld.\nOrcus may also refer to:\nOrcus (dwarf planet), a trans-Neptunian dwarf planet\nOrcus (beetle), a genus of beetles in the family Coccinellidae\nOrcus Patera, a large elongated depression the planet Mars\nOrcus (Dungeons & Dragons), a demon prince in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game\nOrcus, a major villain in the science fiction/fantasy Empire of the East series by Fred Saberhagen"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161318.2358, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161317.7727, "finish": 1721161318.2358, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7d1a840e3f144c42b91badc9c0e5fb01", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "roman god of the underworld also called orcus or pluto", "output": [["roman god of the underworld also called orcus or pluto", "Title: Orcus (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: Orcus was a Roman god of the underworld.\nOrcus may also refer to:\nOrcus (dwarf planet), a trans-Neptunian dwarf planet\nOrcus (beetle), a genus of beetles in the family Coccinellidae\nOrcus Patera, a large elongated depression the planet Mars\nOrcus (Dungeons & Dragons), a demon prince in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game\nOrcus, a major villain in the science fiction/fantasy Empire of the East series by Fred Saberhagen"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161324.8267, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161324.3136, "finish": 1721161324.8267, "ip": "", "conv_id": "da564a3d01da413d956885d4307d8c63", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "who wrote antigone and what are the dates of his birth and death", "output": [["who wrote antigone and what are the dates of his birth and death", "Title: Antigone (Anouilh play)\n\nPassage: Jean Anouilh's play Antigone () is a tragedy inspired by the play of the same name by Sophocles.\nPerformance history\nOriginal production\nAntigone was first performed in Paris at the Th\u00e9\u00e2tre de l'Atelier on February 6, 1944, during the Nazi occupation. Produced under Nazi censorship, the play is purposefully ambiguous with regard to the rejection of authority (represented by Antigone) and the acceptance of it (represented by Creon). The parallels to the French Resistance and the Nazi occupation are clear, however. The original cast included Monelle Valentin (Antigone), Jean Davy (Cr\u00e9on), Suzanne Flon (Ism\u00e8ne), and Andr\u00e9 Le Gall (H\u00e9mon); the staging, decor and costumes were by Andr\u00e9 Barsacq.\nBritish premi\u00e8re\nAntigone received its British premi\u00e8re by the Old Vic Theatre Company at the New Theatre, London, on 10 February 1949. The production was produced by Laurence Olivier (who also played the role of Chorus) and had the following cast:\nChorus - Laurence Olivier\nAntigone - Vivien Leigh\nNurse - Eileen Beldon\nIsmene - Meg Maxwell\nHaemon - Dan Cunningham\nCreon - George Relph\nFirst Guard (Jonas) - Thomas Heathcote\nSecond Guard (a Corporal) - Hugh Stewart\nThird Guard - George Cooper\nMessenger - Terence Morgan\nPage - Michael Redington\nEurydice - Helen Beck\nProductions and adaptations\nActress Katharine Cornell produced and starred in a 1946 production at the National Theatre in Washington, D.C. Sir Cedric Hardwicke played the role of King Creon. Also performing were Bertha Belmore, Wesley Addy, Ruth Matteson, George Mathews, and Oliver Cliff, and Marlon Brando (as the Messenger), Michael Higgins (The Third Guard). The production was staged by Cornell's husband Guthrie McClintic. The translation was by Lewis Galanti\u00e8re. It has since been published many times. In 1959, it was staged at the East 74th Street Theater in Manhattan, New York City.\nThere was an English-language television production for the BBC in 1959 starring Dorothy Tutin.\nIn 1974, an American television production of the play, presented on PBS' Great Performances, starred Genevi\u00e8ve Bujold and Stacy Keach.\nThere are also English translations by Barbara Bray in 1987 and by Jeremy Sams in 2002. The Bray translation was adapted for BBC Radio 3 in 2024, with Rosy McEwen as Antigone and Sean Bean as Creon."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161324.8267, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161324.3136, "finish": 1721161324.8267, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7234a0c16f0c46889a53c043fd8c2a57", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "who wrote antigone and what are the dates of his birth and death", "output": [["who wrote antigone and what are the dates of his birth and death", "Title: Another Antigone\n\nPassage: Another Antigone is a play by A. R. Gurney. It was first produced in March 1987 at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego, California. The play opened at Playwrights Horizons in New York City in January, 1988. It is dedicated by the playwright to John Tillinger. It was published by the Dramatists Play Service in January 1988. The play is based on the Greek tragedy, Antigone by Sophocles, which is a classic tale of how unbending hubris destroys all who fall prey to its spell. Another Antigone is the same story, with some modern twists.\nSummary\nJudy Miller, a gifted Jewish college senior, presents a short play to her Greek Theater professor, Henry Harper. Judy submits an updated, anti-nuclear version of Antigone in place of the formal paper that Harper has assigned to her. Harper is adamant in his refusal to accept her paper and threatens to fail her (and hence keep her from graduating) if she doesn't provide a more traditional paper. A battle of wills ensues, as both of them refuse to budge from their convictions. She produces her play on campus, as tensions continue to mount. Judy also lodges a complaint with the university grievance committee, which elicits a visit from the dean not only to plead with Harper to soften his stand, but also to warn him that accusations of anti-Semitism (however unfounded) have arisen. The play ends with the Professor, like Creon of Sophocles' Antigone, cast out from his home and left to wander, while Judy's fate is unknown, except that her life's dreams and goals have been so challenged that its anyones guess if the \"old\" Judy even exists anymore."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161347.5098, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161346.8662, "finish": 1721161347.5098, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ced81cd7a38d43c881fb7b6be019af0f", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "output": [["how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "Title: Gaganyaan\n\nPassage: Gaganyaan (; from Sanskrit: , \"celestial\" and , \"craft, vehicle\") is an Indian crewed orbital spacecraft intended to be the formative spacecraft of the Indian Human Spaceflight Programme. The spacecraft is being designed to carry three people, and a planned upgraded version will be equipped with rendezvous and docking capabilities. In its maiden crewed mission, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)'s largely autonomous 5.3-metric ton capsule will orbit the Earth at 400\u00a0km altitude for up to seven days with a two- or three-person crew on board. The first crewed mission was originally planned to be launched on ISRO's HLVM3 rocket in December 2021. As of October 2023, it is expected to be launched by 2025.\nThe Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL)-manufactured crew module underwent its first uncrewed experimental flight on December 18, 2014. design of the crew module has been completed. Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) will provide support for critical human-centric systems and technologies such as space-grade food, crew healthcare, radiation measurement and protection, parachutes for the safe recovery of the crew module, and the fire suppression system.\nOn June 11, 2020, it was announced that the first uncrewed Gaganyaan launch would be delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India. The overall timeline for crewed launches was expected to remain unaffected. ISRO chairman S. Somanath announced in 2022 that the first crewed mission would not take place until 2024 at the earliest because of safety concerns.\nThe Gaganyaan Mission will be led by V. R. Lalithambika, the former Director of the Directorate of the Human Spaceflight Programme with ISRO Chairman S Somnath and S. Unnikrishnan Nair, Director of Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre. Imtiaz Ali Khan superseded V. R. Lalithambika as the Director of the Directorate of Human Spaceflight Programme.\nBackground\nIn 1984, Rakesh Sharma became the first Indian born citizen to enter space through a joint Interkosmos mission between ISRO and Soviet space program, when he flew aboard the Soviet rocket Soyuz T-11 launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic on 3 April 1984. The Soyuz T-11 spacecraft carrying cosmonauts including Sharma docked and transferred the three member Soviet-Indian international crew, consisting of the ship's commander, Yury Malyshev, and flight engineer, Gennadi Strekalov, to the Salyut 7 Orbital Station. Sharma spent 7days, 21hours, and 40minutes aboard the Salyut 7. He conducted an Earth observation program concentrating on India. He also did life sciences and materials processing experiments, including silicium fusing tests.\nTo commemorate the occasion special stamps and first day covers were released by the Government of India and Soviet Union.\nProgram history"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721161347.5098, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721161346.8662, "finish": 1721161347.5098, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a8d3fa5e851b4074b13fddd55a0b6c26", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "output": [["how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "Title: ISRO\n\nPassage: Decade-wise summary of LVM3 launches:\nSmall Satellite Launch Vehicle\nThe Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV) is a small-lift launch vehicle developed by the ISRO with payload capacity to deliver to low Earth orbit () or to Sun-synchronous orbit () for launching small satellites, with the capability to support multiple orbital drop-offs.\nDecade-wise summary of SSLV launches:\nHuman Spaceflight Programme\nThe first proposal to send humans into space was discussed by ISRO in 2006, leading to work on the required infrastructure and spacecraft. The trials for crewed space missions began in 2007 with the Space Capsule Recovery Experiment (SRE), launched using the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket, and safely returned to earth 12 days later.\nIn 2009, the Indian Space Research Organisation proposed a budget of for its human spaceflight programme. An unmanned demonstration flight was expected after seven years from the final approval and a crewed mission was to be launched after seven years of funding. A crewed mission initially was not a priority and left on the backburner for several years. A space capsule recovery experiment in 2014 and a pad abort test in 2018 were followed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's announcement in his 2018 Independence Day address that India will send astronauts into space by 2022 on the new Gaganyaan spacecraft. To date, ISRO has developed most of the technologies needed, such as the crew module and crew escape system, space food, and life support systems. The project would cost less than 100\u00a0billion (US$1.3 billion) and would include sending two or three Indians to space, at an altitude of , for at least seven days, using a GSLV Mk-III launch vehicle.\nAstronaut training and other facilities\nThe newly established Human Space Flight Centre (HSFC) will coordinate the IHSF campaign. ISRO will set up an astronaut training centre in Bengaluru to prepare personnel for flights in the crewed vehicle. It will use simulation facilities to train the selected astronauts in rescue and recovery operations and survival in microgravity, and will undertake studies of the radiation environment of space. ISRO had to build centrifuges to prepare astronauts for the acceleration phase of the launch. Existing launch facilities at Satish Dhawan Space Centre will have to be upgraded for the Indian human spaceflight campaign. Human Space Flight Centre and Glavcosmos signed an agreement on 1 July 2019 for the selection, support, medical examination and space training of Indian astronauts. An ISRO Technical Liaison Unit (ITLU) was to be set up in Moscow to facilitate the development of some key technologies and establishment of special facilities which are essential to support life in space. Four Indian Air Force personnel finished training at Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in March 2021.\nCrewed spacecraft"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720892744.5627, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720892699.716, "finish": 1720892744.5627, "ip": "", "conv_id": "62a56631c0964d309d2221cc0d7925a4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Leonardo da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo da Vinci", "Title: Leonardo da Vinci\n\nPassage: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, he has also become known for his notebooks, in which he made drawings and notes on a variety of subjects, including anatomy, astronomy, botany, cartography, painting, and palaeontology. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works comprise a contribution to later generations of artists matched only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.\nBorn out of wedlock to a successful notary and a lower-class woman in, or near, Vinci, he was educated in Florence by the Italian painter and sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio. He began his career in the city, but then spent much time in the service of Ludovico Sforza in Milan. Later, he worked in Florence and Milan again, as well as briefly in Rome, all while attracting a large following of imitators and students. Upon the invitation of Francis I, he spent his last three years in France, where he died in 1519. Since his death, there has not been a time where his achievements, diverse interests, personal life, and empirical thinking have failed to incite interest and admiration, making him a frequent namesake and subject in culture.\nLeonardo is identified as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western art and is often credited as the founder of the High Renaissance. Despite having many lost works and fewer than 25 attributed major works including numerous unfinished works he created some of the most influential paintings in the Western canon. His magnum opus, the Mona Lisa, is his best known work and is the world's most famous individual painting. The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time and his Vitruvian Man drawing is also regarded as a cultural icon. In 2017, Salvator Mundi, attributed in whole or part to Leonardo, was sold at auction for , setting a new record for the most expensive painting ever sold at public auction.\nRevered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualised flying machines, a type of armoured fighting vehicle, concentrated solar power, a ratio machine that could be used in an adding machine, and the double hull. Relatively few of his designs were constructed or were even feasible during his lifetime, as the modern scientific approaches to metallurgy and engineering were only in their infancy during the Renaissance. Some of his smaller inventions, however, entered the world of manufacturing unheralded, such as an automated bobbin winder and a machine for testing the tensile strength of wire. He made substantial discoveries in anatomy, civil engineering, hydrodynamics, geology, optics, and tribology, but he did not publish his findings and they had little to no direct influence on subsequent science.\nBiography\nEarly life (1452\u20131472)\nBirth and background"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720892769.1346, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720892768.9631, "finish": 1720892769.1346, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1fdd09dffc3241769324cc62b3254c28", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Leonardo Da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo Da Vinci", "Title: Leonardo da Vinci\n\nPassage: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, he has also become known for his notebooks, in which he made drawings and notes on a variety of subjects, including anatomy, astronomy, botany, cartography, painting, and palaeontology. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works comprise a contribution to later generations of artists matched only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.\nBorn out of wedlock to a successful notary and a lower-class woman in, or near, Vinci, he was educated in Florence by the Italian painter and sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio. He began his career in the city, but then spent much time in the service of Ludovico Sforza in Milan. Later, he worked in Florence and Milan again, as well as briefly in Rome, all while attracting a large following of imitators and students. Upon the invitation of Francis I, he spent his last three years in France, where he died in 1519. Since his death, there has not been a time where his achievements, diverse interests, personal life, and empirical thinking have failed to incite interest and admiration, making him a frequent namesake and subject in culture.\nLeonardo is identified as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western art and is often credited as the founder of the High Renaissance. Despite having many lost works and fewer than 25 attributed major works including numerous unfinished works he created some of the most influential paintings in the Western canon. His magnum opus, the Mona Lisa, is his best known work and is the world's most famous individual painting. The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time and his Vitruvian Man drawing is also regarded as a cultural icon. In 2017, Salvator Mundi, attributed in whole or part to Leonardo, was sold at auction for , setting a new record for the most expensive painting ever sold at public auction.\nRevered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualised flying machines, a type of armoured fighting vehicle, concentrated solar power, a ratio machine that could be used in an adding machine, and the double hull. Relatively few of his designs were constructed or were even feasible during his lifetime, as the modern scientific approaches to metallurgy and engineering were only in their infancy during the Renaissance. Some of his smaller inventions, however, entered the world of manufacturing unheralded, such as an automated bobbin winder and a machine for testing the tensile strength of wire. He made substantial discoveries in anatomy, civil engineering, hydrodynamics, geology, optics, and tribology, but he did not publish his findings and they had little to no direct influence on subsequent science.\nBiography\nEarly life (1452\u20131472)\nBirth and background"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720892782.8216, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720892782.5817, "finish": 1720892782.8216, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f478fc78cd734431a2eb09f2683cbd4a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I want to learn something about extraterrestrial life!", "output": [["I want to learn something about extraterrestrial life!", "Title: Extraterrestrials in fiction\n\nPassage: An extraterrestrial or alien is a lifeform that did not originate on Earth. The word extraterrestrial means \"outside Earth\". The first published use of extraterrestrial as a noun occurred in 1956, during the Golden Age of Science Fiction.\nExtraterrestrials are a common theme in modern science-fiction, and also appeared in much earlier works such as the second-century parody True History by Lucian of Samosata.\nHistory"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720892793.8778, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720892793.6519, "finish": 1720892793.8778, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df9811904c75468c96e026f04cc28ec4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Find me a planet that is likely to host life!", "output": [["Find me a planet that is likely to host life!", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e7f153db01dc5537a2d23a312a91db6093ee236c..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721157106.1745, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157085.8858, "finish": 1721157106.1745, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eec3f921d73a41a8b27e6fc0a7936ac2", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "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: 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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157152.2849, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157120.861, "finish": 1721157152.2849, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a51d9521893944acb8122f8c2c1247e6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "TRAPPIST planet", "output": [["TRAPPIST planet", "Title: Lupus-TR-3b\n\nPassage: Lupus-TR-3b is an extrasolar planet orbiting the star Lupus-TR-3 (a K-type main sequence star approximately 8,950 light-years away in the constellation Lupus). The planet was discovered in 2007 by personnel from the Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian observing at the Siding Spring Observatory in Australia, by the transit method.\nThe planet has four-fifths the mass of Jupiter, nine-tenths the radius, and has density of 1.4 g/cm3. This planet is a typical \u201cHot Jupiter\u201d as it orbits at 0.0464 AU distance from the star, taking 3.9 days to orbit. It is currently the faintest ground-based detection of a transiting planet."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157152.2849, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157120.861, "finish": 1721157152.2849, "ip": "", "conv_id": "990c5d51792149a69e3e7df3fff16f88", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "TRAPPIST planet", "output": [["TRAPPIST planet", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: With a radius estimated at 1.1 Earth, Kepler-186f, discovery announced in April 2014, is the closest yet size to Earth of an exoplanet confirmed by the transit method though its mass remains unknown and its parent star is not a Solar analog.\nKapteyn b, discovered in June 2014 is a possible rocky world of about 4.8 Earth masses and about 1.5 Earth radii were found orbiting the habitable zone of the red subdwarf Kapteyn's Star, 12.8 light-years away.\nOn 6 January 2015, NASA announced the 1000th confirmed exoplanet discovered by the Kepler Space Telescope. Three of the newly confirmed exoplanets were found to orbit within habitable zones of their related stars: two of the three, Kepler-438b and Kepler-442b, are near-Earth-size and likely rocky; the third, Kepler-440b, is a super-Earth. However, Kepler-438b is found to be a subject of powerful flares, so it is now considered uninhabitable. 16 January, K2-3d a planet of 1.5 Earth radii was found orbiting within the habitable zone of K2-3, receiving 1.4 times the intensity of visible light as Earth.\nKepler-452b, announced on 23 July 2015 is 50% bigger than Earth, likely rocky and takes approximately 385 Earth days to orbit the habitable zone of its G-class (solar analog) star Kepler-452.\nThe discovery of a system of three tidally-locked planets orbiting the habitable zone of an ultracool dwarf star, TRAPPIST-1, was announced in May 2016. The discovery is considered significant because it dramatically increases the possibility of smaller, cooler, more numerous and closer stars possessing habitable planets.\nTwo potentially habitable planets, discovered by the K2 mission in July 2016 orbiting around the M dwarf K2-72 around 227 light years from the Sun: K2-72c and K2-72e are both of similar size to Earth and receive similar amounts of stellar radiation.\nAnnounced on the 20 April 2017, LHS 1140b is a super-dense super-Earth 39 light years away, 6.6 times Earth's mass and 1.4 times radius, its star 15% the mass of the Sun but with much less observable stellar flare activity than most M dwarfs. The planet is one of few observable by both transit and radial velocity that's mass is confirmed with an atmosphere may be studied.\nDiscovered by radial velocity in June 2017, with approximately three times the mass of Earth, Luyten b orbits within the habitable zone of Luyten's Star just 12.2 light-years away.\nAt 11 light-years away, the second closest planet, Ross 128 b, was announced in November 2017 following a decade's radial velocity study of relatively \"quiet\" red dwarf star Ross 128. At 1.35 times Earth's mass, is it roughly Earth-sized and likely rocky in composition.\nDiscovered in March 2018, K2-155d is about 1.64 times the radius of Earth, is likely rocky and orbits in the habitable zone of its red dwarf star 203 light years away."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157187.1549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157186.86, "finish": 1721157187.1549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7d1c064f99d9404dad287af542d52952", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157187.1549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157186.86, "finish": 1721157187.1549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0fc31b605ea64cc195674c00c33c39ef", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "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: 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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157349.1465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157348.6418, "finish": 1721157349.1465, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ebe2ab358a0741f484aa844599d6f3d5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157349.1465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157348.6418, "finish": 1721157349.1465, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2cd18a06addb4cc49ca53e0a1e7f9834", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "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: 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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-a8a00b73-9704-41ce-89a1-66763bfb6ee2.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-a8a00b73-9704-41ce-89a1-66763bfb6ee2.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 98504f9334074e03650fd3405c4914159ab45781..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-a8a00b73-9704-41ce-89a1-66763bfb6ee2.jsonl
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@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721351337.1346, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351320.6498, "finish": 1721351337.1346, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef6a09fd9cb0451c88710a31b2b3421a", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "Which paper presents ViLBERT for task-agnostic visiolinguistic pretraining and achieves SoTA on multiple vision-and-language tasks?", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351337.1346, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351320.6498, "finish": 1721351337.1346, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7f4fbc0f798d4ebaa7159d4bd996adf6", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which paper presents ViLBERT for task-agnostic visiolinguistic pretraining and achieves SoTA on multiple vision-and-language tasks?", "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"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351393.6118, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351354.0736, "finish": 1721351393.6118, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bb28a4c90a6a46fc83c94f63db4435a2", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "A novel approach for knowledge-grounded dialogues by improving knowledge selection with a sequential latent variable model.", "output": [["A novel approach for knowledge-grounded dialogues by improving knowledge selection with a sequential latent variable model.", "Title: Sequential Latent Knowledge Selection for Knowledge-Grounded Dialogue\n\nAbstract: Knowledge-grounded dialogue is a task of generating an informative response based on both discourse context and external knowledge. As we focus on better modeling the knowledge selection in the multi-turn knowledge-grounded dialogue, we propose a sequential latent variable model as the first approach to this matter. The model named sequential knowledge transformer (SKT) can keep track of the prior and posterior distribution over knowledge; as a result, it can not only reduce the ambiguity caused from the diversity in knowledge selection of conversation but also better leverage the response information for proper choice of knowledge. Our experimental results show that the proposed model improves the knowledge selection accuracy and subsequently the performance of utterance generation. We achieve the new state-of-the-art performance on Wizard of Wikipedia (Dinan et al., 2019) as one of the most large-scale and challenging benchmarks. We further validate the effectiveness of our model over existing conversation methods in another knowledge-based dialogue Holl-E dataset (Moghe et al., 2018)."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351393.6118, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351354.0736, "finish": 1721351393.6118, "ip": "", "conv_id": "486c31448fdf4913908d51a26a9b27c9", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "A novel approach for knowledge-grounded dialogues by improving knowledge selection with a sequential latent variable model.", "output": [["A novel approach for knowledge-grounded dialogues by improving knowledge selection with a sequential latent variable model.", "Title: Sequential Latent Knowledge Selection for Knowledge-Grounded Dialogue\n\nAbstract: Knowledge-grounded dialogue is a task of generating an informative response based on both discourse context and external knowledge. As we focus on better modeling the knowledge selection in the multi-turn knowledge-grounded dialogue, we propose a sequential latent variable model as the first approach to this matter. The model named sequential knowledge transformer (SKT) can keep track of the prior and posterior distribution over knowledge; as a result, it can not only reduce the ambiguity caused from the diversity in knowledge selection of conversation but also better leverage the response information for proper choice of knowledge. Our experimental results show that the proposed model improves the knowledge selection accuracy and subsequently the performance of utterance generation. We achieve the new state-of-the-art performance on Wizard of Wikipedia (Dinan et al., 2019) as one of the most large-scale and challenging benchmarks. We further validate the effectiveness of our model over existing conversation methods in another knowledge-based dialogue Holl-E dataset (Moghe et al., 2018)."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351466.0485, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351435.5898, "finish": 1721351466.0485, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cf644415eeb54d0688d6aaf596f4b926", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "A paper introducing an actor-critic conditional GAN for text generation", "output": [["A paper introducing an actor-critic conditional GAN for text generation", "Title: MaskGAN: Better Text Generation via Filling in the______\n\nAbstract: Neural text generation models are often autoregressive language models or seq2seq models. These models generate text by sampling words sequentially, with each word conditioned on the previous word, and are state-of-the-art for several machine translation and summarization benchmarks. These benchmarks are often defined by validation perplexity even though this is not a direct measure of the quality of the generated text. Additionally, these models are typically trained via maxi- mum likelihood and teacher forcing. These methods are well-suited to optimizing perplexity but can result in poor sample quality since generating text requires conditioning on sequences of words that may have never been observed at training time. We propose to improve sample quality using Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs), which explicitly train the generator to produce high quality samples and have shown a lot of success in image generation. GANs were originally designed to output differentiable values, so discrete language generation is challenging for them. We claim that validation perplexity alone is not indicative of the quality of text generated by a model. We introduce an actor-critic conditional GAN that fills in missing text conditioned on the surrounding context. We show qualitatively and quantitatively, evidence that this produces more realistic conditional and unconditional text samples compared to a maximum likelihood trained model."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351466.0485, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351435.5898, "finish": 1721351466.0485, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8be308d53d0b4ddcab3b2d2cc6efb377", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "A paper introducing an actor-critic conditional GAN for text generation", "output": [["A paper introducing an actor-critic conditional GAN for text generation", "Title: MaskGAN: Better Text Generation via Filling in the______\n\nAbstract: Neural text generation models are often autoregressive language models or seq2seq models. These models generate text by sampling words sequentially, with each word conditioned on the previous word, and are state-of-the-art for several machine translation and summarization benchmarks. These benchmarks are often defined by validation perplexity even though this is not a direct measure of the quality of the generated text. Additionally, these models are typically trained via maxi- mum likelihood and teacher forcing. These methods are well-suited to optimizing perplexity but can result in poor sample quality since generating text requires conditioning on sequences of words that may have never been observed at training time. We propose to improve sample quality using Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs), which explicitly train the generator to produce high quality samples and have shown a lot of success in image generation. GANs were originally designed to output differentiable values, so discrete language generation is challenging for them. We claim that validation perplexity alone is not indicative of the quality of text generated by a model. We introduce an actor-critic conditional GAN that fills in missing text conditioned on the surrounding context. We show qualitatively and quantitatively, evidence that this produces more realistic conditional and unconditional text samples compared to a maximum likelihood trained model."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351538.2943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351505.1117, "finish": 1721351538.2943, "ip": "", "conv_id": "25324781d3fe4bb7b9e2309526613900", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "I'm looking for a paper that introduces a visual interface to refine and improve language model prompts interactively", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351538.2943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351505.1117, "finish": 1721351538.2943, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef1c6b7a74b647759eea3812b9400cb6", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "I'm looking for a paper that introduces a visual interface to refine and improve language model prompts interactively", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351562.5797, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351562.4363, "finish": 1721351562.5797, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ebd4563bbb548a9a6136aa56eb4d2a2", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Study that demonstrates a novel approach called GoT improving sorting tasks and reducing costs by leveraging graph structures in LLMs.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351562.5797, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351562.4363, "finish": 1721351562.5797, "ip": "", "conv_id": "86857c23abab45f99dfbe0da33a206ab", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "Study that demonstrates a novel approach called GoT improving sorting tasks and reducing costs by leveraging graph structures in LLMs.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351579.5529, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351579.1633, "finish": 1721351579.5529, "ip": "", "conv_id": "918927b6a8aa4b59a26d51c706242b0e", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "A paper demonstrating significant improvements in NLP tasks by integrating structured knowledge into pre-trained language models.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351579.5529, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351579.1633, "finish": 1721351579.5529, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a83f347b8af24e0c980c790d49309c4b", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "A paper demonstrating significant improvements in NLP tasks by integrating structured knowledge into pre-trained language models.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351640.8222, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351598.2197, "finish": 1721351640.8222, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dddf29f331e049ebbd7eb96df23cab54", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Research on fine-grained human feedback to enhance reinforcement learning in language models.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351640.8222, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351598.2197, "finish": 1721351640.8222, "ip": "", "conv_id": "86d214a4407b446d898cb6424249fc1d", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Research on fine-grained human feedback to enhance reinforcement learning in language models.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351675.6289, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351660.0279, "finish": 1721351675.6289, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f589800914034bdc994ec4caccf69a68", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "A novel method for document ranking using a sequence-to-sequence model instead of the typical encoder-only method.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351675.6289, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351660.0279, "finish": 1721351675.6289, "ip": "", "conv_id": "401dc9c610d241eba75803f05349f388", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "A novel method for document ranking using a sequence-to-sequence model instead of the typical encoder-only method.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351693.6161, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351693.4547, "finish": 1721351693.6161, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c9c36c95e67d4e658620ca218090a70d", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Research on joint learning of word and paragraph embeddings with Riemannian optimization for state-of-the-art text embeddings.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351693.6161, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351693.4547, "finish": 1721351693.6161, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b0fd1b77d5e3451687d008fd1ba3a40a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Research on joint learning of word and paragraph embeddings with Riemannian optimization for state-of-the-art text embeddings.", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351715.4837, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351715.2938, "finish": 1721351715.4837, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1174052ef6d445f9807aad0df907118b", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "Survey on the evolution of image captioning models using visual encoders and language models", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351715.4837, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351715.2938, "finish": 1721351715.4837, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b8a14f02c7724be98146785fb649f7bb", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Survey on the evolution of image captioning models using visual encoders and language models", "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."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351741.0815, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351727.5935, "finish": 1721351741.0815, "ip": "", "conv_id": "94cfa298a2bb480e825afe59ded1f269", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "Experiments enhancing Transformer for translation using document-level context.", "output": [["Experiments enhancing Transformer for translation using document-level context.", "Title: Following Weyl on Quantum Mechanics: the contribution of Ettore Majorana\n\nAbstract: After a quick historical account of the introduction of the group-theoretical description of Quantum Mechanics in terms of symmetries, as proposed by Weyl, we examine some unpublished papers by Ettore Majorana. Remarkable results achieved by him in frontier research topics as well as in physics teaching point out that the Italian physicist can be well considered as a follower of Weyl in his reformulation of Quantum Mechanics."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351741.0815, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351727.5935, "finish": 1721351741.0815, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4ad2c126ae904e3e8f783ad48e4b3408", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Experiments enhancing Transformer for translation using document-level context.", "output": [["Experiments enhancing Transformer for translation using document-level context.", "Title: Improving the Transformer Translation Model with Document-Level Context\n\nAbstract: Although the Transformer translation model (Vaswani et al., 2017) has achieved state-of-the-art performance in a variety of translation tasks, how to use document-level context to deal with discourse phenomena problematic for Transformer still remains a challenge. In this work, we extend the Transformer model with a new context encoder to represent document-level context, which is then incorporated into the original encoder and decoder. As large-scale document-level parallel corpora are usually not available, we introduce a two-step training method to take full advantage of abundant sentence-level parallel corpora and limited document-level parallel corpora. Experiments on the NIST Chinese-English datasets and the IWSLT French-English datasets show that our approach improves over Transformer significantly."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351757.869, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-004", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351757.108, "finish": 1721351757.869, "ip": "", "conv_id": "069236eeb77c433daffe4f28b5138afa", "model_name": "text-embedding-004", "prompt": "Looking for a study that evaluates the performance of language models on complex software engineering tasks using a diverse set of libraries.", "output": [["Looking for a study that evaluates the performance of language models on complex software engineering tasks using a diverse set of libraries.", "Title: Towards an Understanding of Large Language Models in Software Engineering Tasks\n\nAbstract: Large Language Models (LLMs) have drawn widespread attention and research due to their astounding performance in tasks such as text generation and reasoning. Derivative products, like ChatGPT, have been extensively deployed and highly sought after. Meanwhile, the evaluation and optimization of LLMs in software engineering tasks, such as code generation, have become a research focus. However, there is still a lack of systematic research on the application and evaluation of LLMs in the field of software engineering. Therefore, this paper is the first to comprehensively investigate and collate the research and products combining LLMs with software engineering, aiming to answer two questions: (1) What are the current integrations of LLMs with software engineering? (2) Can LLMs effectively handle software engineering tasks? To find the answers, we have collected related literature as extensively as possible from seven mainstream databases, and selected 123 papers for analysis. We have categorized these papers in detail and reviewed the current research status of LLMs from the perspective of seven major software engineering tasks, hoping this will help researchers better grasp the research trends and address the issues when applying LLMs. Meanwhile, we have also organized and presented papers with evaluation content to reveal the performance and effectiveness of LLMs in various software engineering tasks, providing guidance for researchers and developers to optimize."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351757.869, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351757.108, "finish": 1721351757.869, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6f1c6e632505442d87189e16ab67883d", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Looking for a study that evaluates the performance of language models on complex software engineering tasks using a diverse set of libraries.", "output": [["Looking for a study that evaluates the performance of language models on complex software engineering tasks using a diverse set of libraries.", "Title: Towards an Understanding of Large Language Models in Software Engineering Tasks\n\nAbstract: Large Language Models (LLMs) have drawn widespread attention and research due to their astounding performance in tasks such as text generation and reasoning. Derivative products, like ChatGPT, have been extensively deployed and highly sought after. Meanwhile, the evaluation and optimization of LLMs in software engineering tasks, such as code generation, have become a research focus. However, there is still a lack of systematic research on the application and evaluation of LLMs in the field of software engineering. Therefore, this paper is the first to comprehensively investigate and collate the research and products combining LLMs with software engineering, aiming to answer two questions: (1) What are the current integrations of LLMs with software engineering? (2) Can LLMs effectively handle software engineering tasks? To find the answers, we have collected related literature as extensively as possible from seven mainstream databases, and selected 123 papers for analysis. We have categorized these papers in detail and reviewed the current research status of LLMs from the perspective of seven major software engineering tasks, hoping this will help researchers better grasp the research trends and address the issues when applying LLMs. Meanwhile, we have also organized and presented papers with evaluation content to reveal the performance and effectiveness of LLMs in various software engineering tasks, providing guidance for researchers and developers to optimize."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351833.1615, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351832.7931, "finish": 1721351833.1615, "ip": "", "conv_id": "aec9a03242b049a38979c4cf38c97fe3", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "A new method utilizing a decoder transformer for sentence embeddings and semantic search.", "output": [["A new method utilizing a decoder transformer for sentence embeddings and semantic search.", "Title: A Bilingual Generative Transformer for Semantic Sentence Embedding\n\nAbstract: Semantic sentence embedding models encode natural language sentences into vectors, such that closeness in embedding space indicates closeness in the semantics between the sentences. Bilingual data offers a useful signal for learning such embeddings: properties shared by both sentences in a translation pair are likely semantic, while divergent properties are likely stylistic or language-specific. We propose a deep latent variable model that attempts to perform source separation on parallel sentences, isolating what they have in common in a latent semantic vector, and explaining what is left over with language-specific latent vectors. Our proposed approach differs from past work on semantic sentence encoding in two ways. First, by using a variational probabilistic framework, we introduce priors that encourage source separation, and can use our model's posterior to predict sentence embeddings for monolingual data at test time. Second, we use high-capacity transformers as both data generating distributions and inference networks -- contrasting with most past work on sentence embeddings. In experiments, our approach substantially outperforms the state-of-the-art on a standard suite of unsupervised semantic similarity evaluations. Further, we demonstrate that our approach yields the largest gains on more difficult subsets of these evaluations where simple word overlap is not a good indicator of similarity."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721351833.1615, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721351832.7931, "finish": 1721351833.1615, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cf9cee24b52e490894194760b983df12", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "A new method utilizing a decoder transformer for sentence embeddings and semantic search.", "output": [["A new method utilizing a decoder transformer for sentence embeddings and semantic search.", "Title: SGPT: GPT Sentence Embeddings for Semantic Search\n\nAbstract: Decoder transformers have continued increasing in scale reaching hundreds of billions of parameters. Due to their scale the same decoder sets state-of-the-art results on various language tasks via prompting or fine-tuning. Yet, these large foundation models remain unusable for the related fields of semantic search and sentence embeddings. This prevents possibly new state-of-the-art results and forces organizations to train and maintain separate models. To this end, we propose SGPT to use decoders for sentence embeddings and semantic search via prompting or fine-tuning. At 5.8 billion parameters SGPT improves on the previously best sentence embeddings by a margin of 7% and outperforms a concurrent method with 175 billion parameters as measured on the BEIR search benchmark. Code, models and result files are freely available at https://github.com/Muennighoff/sgpt."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-ac912a90-5ff1-4c09-bcd8-97b66948b31f.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-ac912a90-5ff1-4c09-bcd8-97b66948b31f.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index a26cc3cb41ffb675fa0244e86fe3be2c6aca6d80..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-ac912a90-5ff1-4c09-bcd8-97b66948b31f.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720594553.2947, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720594534.5576, "finish": 1720594553.2947, "ip": "", "conv_id": "17e937ec39884e84b9f003de672dbc22", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "when was the last time giants won superbowl", "output": [["when was the last time giants won superbowl", "Title: New York Giants\n\nPassage: After the 2019 season, the Giants' longtime quarterback, Eli Manning, retired after spending 16 seasons with the organization, while the team finished the season with a 4\u201312 record. At the start of the 2020 season, Daniel Jones took over as starting quarterback as the Giants finished 6\u201310, while tight end Evan Engram and cornerback James Bradberry were named to the 2021 Pro Bowl as reserves.\nIn the 2021 season the Giants failed to improve on their 2020 record by finishing 4\u201313. Then after the season, general manager Dave Gettleman retired and head coach Joe Judge was fired. During the season the squad's starting quarterback Daniel Jones sprained his neck and was temporarily replaced in the lineup by Mike Glennon and then Jake Fromm.\nOn January 21, 2022, the team hired Joe Schoen as the team's general manager, and on January 28, hired Brian Daboll as the team's new head coach. The 2022 season showed a much improved record, with the Giants finishing 9-7-1. On January 1, 2023, the Giants clinched a playoff berth for the first time since the 2016 season. On January 15, the Giants defeated the Minnesota Vikings 31-24 in the wild-card round, winning their first postseason game since their victory at Super Bowl XLVI in 2012. The Giants proceeded to lose the next game to the eventual NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles 38-7 in the divisional round.\nIn the 2023 season, the Giants regressed on their successful 2022 season, finishing 6-11. Daniel Jones was injured several times in the season and was placed on injured reserve after tearing his ACL in week 9. He was temporarily replaced in the lineup by Tyrod Taylor and Tommy DeVito.\nChampionships\nThe Giants have won a total of eight league championships: 1927, 1934, 1938, 1956, 1986, 1990, 2007 and 2011. The first four of those championships came in the pre-Super Bowl era. New York's eight championships put them third among all active and defunct NFL teams, trailing only the Green Bay Packers (13) and the Chicago Bears (9).\nNFL championships (pre-Super Bowl era)\nBefore the Super Bowl was instituted, the Giants won four officially recognized NFL championships.\nSuper Bowl championships\nThe Giants have won four Super Bowls, tied with Green Bay for the fifth most behind Dallas, San Francisco (both with 5), and New England and Pittsburgh (6 each).\nNFC championships\nThe Giants have won five NFC Championship Games, including two in overtime in 2007 and 2011.\nLogos and uniforms\nWith nearly 100 years of team history, the Giants have used numerous uniforms and logos, while maintaining a consistent identity. The Giants' logos include several incarnations of a giant quarterback preparing to throw a football, a lowercase \"ny\", and stylized versions of the team nickname."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-ad75419e-9600-4d5b-b20d-b8d353a9fb52.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-ad75419e-9600-4d5b-b20d-b8d353a9fb52.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8748c9b9423b7c05aba3621ce8f4e541bf4ecbc1..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-ad75419e-9600-4d5b-b20d-b8d353a9fb52.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720593811.3405, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720593771.117, "finish": 1720593811.3405, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cc0bcbfe9a164e5795cbc8c8fd18521c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "george jones who's gonna fill their shoes meaning", "output": [["george jones who's gonna fill their shoes meaning", "Title: List of awards and nominations received by George Jones\n\nPassage: List of country music artist George Jones' awards:\nAwards"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720594022.0564, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720593971.1388, "finish": 1720594022.0564, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ee2ad6cbff8647b2b08de47cfb3e78ac", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "george jones who's gonna fill their shoes meaning", "output": [["george jones who's gonna fill their shoes meaning", "Title: Troy Seals\n\nPassage: Troy Harold Seals (born November 16, 1938, in Bighill, Madison County, Kentucky, United States) is an American singer, songwriter, and guitarist.\nHe is a member of the prominent Seals family of pop musicians that includes Jim Seals (of Seals and Crofts), Dan Seals (of England Dan & John Ford Coley), Brady Seals (Little Texas and Hot Apple Pie), and Johnny Duncan. During the 1970s, Seals recorded with Lonnie Mack and Doug Kershaw and although he made two albums of his own, he is best known as a songwriter. His songs have been recorded by artists such as Joe Cocker, Eric Clapton, Nancy Sinatra, Randy Travis, Conway Twitty, Hank Williams Jr., Elvis Presley, Roy Orbison, Charlie Rich, Levon Helm, and Jerry Lee Lewis. George Jones' \"Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes,\" was co-written with Max D. Barnes.\nSeals has played guitar on numerous sessions for recording stars and has collaborated on songs with Waylon Jennings, Vince Gill, Will Jennings and others. He has had three co-written songs nominated for the Country Music Association \"Song of the Year\" award: \"Seven Spanish Angels\" (1985), \"Lost in the Fifties Tonight\" (1986), and \"If You Ever Have Forever In Mind\" (1999). He also co-wrote \"L.A. Lady\" for the New Riders of the Purple Sage, along with Will Jennings and Donald Clint Goodman. \"L.A. Lady\" was also recorded by Dobie Gray.\nIn recognition of his successful career, Seals was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame.\nSingles\nAB-side to \"Star of the Bar.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720594136.9932, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720594122.1372, "finish": 1720594136.9932, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9600740a87db4d2d8e5671e6c76da455", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "george jones who's gonna fill their shoes meaning", "output": [["george jones who's gonna fill their shoes meaning", "Title: George Jones\n\nPassage: Shortly after Jones's death, Andrew Mueller wrote about his influence in Uncut, \"He was one of the finest interpretive singers who ever lifted a microphone...There cannot be a single country songwriter of the last 50-odd years who has not wondered what it might be like to hear their words sung by that voice.\" In an article for The Texas Monthly in 1994, Nick Tosches eloquently described the singer's vocal style: \"While he and his idol, Hank Williams, have both affected generations with a plaintive veracity of voice that has set them apart, Jones has an additional gift\u2014a voice of exceptional range, natural elegance, and lucent tone. Gliding toward high tenor, plunging toward deep bass, the magisterial portamento of his onward-coursing baritone emits white-hot sparks and torrents of blue, investing his poison love songs with a tragic gravity and inflaming his celebrations of the honky-tonk ethos with the hellfire of abandon.\" In an essay printed in The New Republic, David Hajdu writes:\n\"Jones had a handsome and strange voice. His singing was always partly about the appeal of the tones he produced, regardless of the meaning of the words. In this sense, Jones had something in common with singers of formal music and opera, though his means of vocal production were radically different from theirs. He sang from the back of his throat, rather than from deep in his diaphragm. He tightened his larynx to squeeze sound out. He clenched his jaw, instead of wriggling it free. He forced wind through his teeth, and the notes sounded weirdly beautiful.\"\nDavid Cantwell recalled in 2013, \"His approach to singing, he told me once, was to call up those memories and feelings of his own that most closely corresponded to those being felt by the character in whatever song he was performing. He was a kind of singing method actor, creating an illusion of the real.\" In the liner notes to Essential George Jones: The Spirit of Country Rich Kienzle states, \"Jones sings of people and stories that are achingly human. He can turn a ballad into a catharsis by wringing every possible emotion from it, making it a primal, strangled cry of anguish\". In 1994, country music historian Colin Escott pronounced, \"Contemporary country music is virtually founded on reverence for George Jones. Walk through a room of country singers and conduct a quick poll, George nearly always tops it.\" Waylon Jennings expressed a similar opinion in his song \"It's Alright\": \"If we all could sound like we wanted to, we'd all sound like George Jones.\" In the wake of Jones's death, Merle Haggard pronounced in Rolling Stone, \"His voice was like a Stradivarius violin: one of the greatest instruments ever made.\" Emmylou Harris wrote, \"When you hear George Jones sing, you are hearing a man who takes a song and makes it a work of art\u2014always,\" a quote that appeared on the sleeve of Jones's 1976 album The Battle."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-b03f70e6-f067-4459-8309-457d40356686.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-b03f70e6-f067-4459-8309-457d40356686.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 537b2850654554ad4bbe52b1a2f38f38f9b21203..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-b03f70e6-f067-4459-8309-457d40356686.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720834187.3464, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720833704.9233, "finish": 1720834187.3464, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4ba50602fbc14dd9874818664bbad2b9", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-b6a16d57-1cd5-49ff-9d93-980413e76f61.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-b6a16d57-1cd5-49ff-9d93-980413e76f61.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 06423665e01e05178d9f6b05e6be761716480b71..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-b6a16d57-1cd5-49ff-9d93-980413e76f61.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722098233.015, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098231.7295, "finish": 1722098233.015, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b1c99ac959ab4fb598b566a11fbcef1a", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "why are my plums sour?", "output": [["why are my plums sour?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: \"Sour cream\" versus \"soured cream\" Does anyone besides my husband insist on adding an -ed to sour cream? Etymonline dates \"sour cream\" to 1855, but has no mention of \"soured\", so I don't think this is analogous to \"iced tea\" or \"ice cream\". Is this a regional thing? He grew up in New England, but English is not his parents' first language, so his accent is more Uncle Walter than This Old House.\n\nA: After a quick Google Ngram search, soured cream appears to be used very little. Personally, I have never heard it used. On the product itself, (in Canada), the label declares it to be sour cream. There are 39.8 million hits for sour cream on Google, and 0.6 million for soured cream. If we change the Google Ngram to British English, soured cream's popularity increases, so I assume that this is mainly a British expression. Changing it to American English shows almost no results for soured cream.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098240.4636, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098239.539, "finish": 1722098240.4636, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e9681079b8148a2876def216d3eb8e2", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Research on extending LXMERT to generate semantically meaningful imagery from text.", "output": [["Research on extending LXMERT to generate semantically meaningful imagery from text.", "Title: X-LXMERT: Paint, Caption and Answer Questions with Multi-Modal Transformers\n\nAbstract: Mirroring the success of masked language models, vision-and-language counterparts like ViLBERT, LXMERT and UNITER have achieved state of the art performance on a variety of multimodal discriminative tasks like visual question answering and visual grounding. Recent work has also successfully adapted such models towards the generative task of image captioning. This begs the question: Can these models go the other way and generate images from pieces of text? Our analysis of a popular representative from this model family - LXMERT - finds that it is unable to generate rich and semantically meaningful imagery with its current training setup. We introduce X-LXMERT, an extension to LXMERT with training refinements including: discretizing visual representations, using uniform masking with a large range of masking ratios and aligning the right pre-training datasets to the right objectives which enables it to paint. X-LXMERT's image generation capabilities rival state of the art generative models while its question answering and captioning abilities remains comparable to LXMERT. Finally, we demonstrate the generality of these training refinements by adding image generation capabilities into UNITER to produce X-UNITER."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098251.6978, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098250.1303, "finish": 1722098251.6978, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bf7d465e257e48afa58e600c82ea9d5d", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "output": [["what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "Hurricane Irma\n\nIn addition, Irma is only the second hurricane on record to make landfall in Cuba at Category\u00a05 intensity, with the other being a hurricane in 1924.Furthermore, when Irma made landfall on Barbuda, Saint Martin, Virgin Gorda, and Cuba as a Category 5\u00a0hurricane, it became one of only two recorded Atlantic storms to make landfall in multiple nations at this strength; the other was Hurricane Andrew in 1992, which struck both Eleuthera and the United States as a Category 5\u00a0hurricane. Irma made landfall in the Florida Keys with winds of and a pressure of , making it the strongest hurricane to strike Florida in terms of wind speed since Charley in 2004, and the most intense to strike the state in terms of barometric pressure since Andrew in 1992. In the span of two weeks, two Category\u00a04 hurricanes\u2014Harvey and Irma\u2014struck the continental United States, the first time on record two Atlantic tropical cyclones of such strength made landfall on the country in the same hurricane season. This also marked only the third occurrence of two consecutive Atlantic storms making landfall in the United States as major hurricanes. "]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-b9939755-3d0c-46d8-a9d8-d177ad4c351e.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-b9939755-3d0c-46d8-a9d8-d177ad4c351e.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index d4d44f1d41198dd975174eb8e827e4d16ebadf60..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-b9939755-3d0c-46d8-a9d8-d177ad4c351e.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722091170.8855, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091136.8859, "finish": 1722091170.8855, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b5445c2be2684338885ee56e180e0320", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "are alkali metals diatomic or monatomic?", "output": [["are alkali metals diatomic or monatomic?", "Physics Stackexchange\n\nQ: Does a metal evaporate as single atoms or as molecules? If I had a liquid metal, like Al, and I begin heating it so it evaporates, would the evaporating Al be in the form of atoms or as molecules?\n\nA: Aluminium does not form molecules. Thus, the basic entities of this liquid are aluminium atoms (again unlike in water), and they will evaporate as atoms.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091448.6284, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091441.1926, "finish": 1722091448.6284, "ip": "", "conv_id": "267de511993d4f3fa4e31478ddec3fab", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what does it mean when someone says sweet surrender?", "output": [["what does it mean when someone says sweet surrender?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: \"Give up\" versus \"give in\" Do give up and give in imply different meanings?\n\nA: give up is used for quitting a habit or withdrawing from something.But give in is letting something happen or give way for something.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091448.6284, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091441.1926, "finish": 1722091448.6284, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a2de0f30d52a4f38a5877f5b43dc8a02", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what does it mean when someone says sweet surrender?", "output": [["what does it mean when someone says sweet surrender?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: fatal error while compiling cuda program I'm implementing a program by using dynamic parallelism. Whenever I'm compiling the code, it is throwing fatal error as follows:\n\nptxas fatal : Unresolved extern function 'cudaGetParameterBuffer'\n\nCompiling as below:\n\nnvcc -o dyn_par dyn_par.cu -arch=sm_35\n\nHow to resolve it?\n\nA: The cudaGetParameterBuffer is part of the cudadevrt library which you need to specify in your compiler command and specify --relocatable-device-code as true\nnvcc -o dyn_par dyn_par.cu -arch=sm_35 -lcudadevrt --relocatable-device-code true\n\nHave a look at the CUDA Dynamic Parallelism Programming Guide from Nvidia (Page 21 describes the above) for more information\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091465.5103, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091465.3565, "finish": 1722091465.5103, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8f6b1ebc8f9b4db1a39d5aa5bde0e074", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the difference between rate and speed?", "output": [["what is the difference between rate and speed?", "Physics Stackexchange\n\nQ: Difference between Speed and Velocity What is the difference between Speed, Velocity and Acceleration? Could any one describe it pictorially?. I am more over confused even after investigating many times. I am unable to relate myself practically.\n\nA: Speed has no direction while velocity does. For example, if I say that I'm running at 10 mph, I have given you my speed. If I say that I'm running 10 mph north, then I have given you my velocity. Acceleration is the rate of change in velocity. Imagine this: I am in my car and you look at me before I even press the gas pedal. You close your eyes then open them (imagine the blinking only took a second). Now, I'm going 10 mph north. You blink again. Now I'm going 20 mph north. Every second my velocity increased 10 mph north. This means my acceleration is 10 mph every second or 10 mi/h/s.\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091465.5103, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091465.3565, "finish": 1722091465.5103, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f3d72e87f6c049688f3588683d90121f", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what is the difference between rate and speed?", "output": [["what is the difference between rate and speed?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: Using \u201chelp you with\u201d in a sentence If I'm not wrong, the sentence \n\"I want to help you with XYZ.\" \nmeans, you have a problem XYZ and I am willing to help you solve that problem of yours. Right? \nNow, when I have certain expertise and I want to help you solve your problem using my expertise, how do I put the whole thing in a sentence properly? \n\"I want to help you with my expertise.\" doesn't sound right.\n\nA: with can introduce the tool or implement (broadly understood) that you are using, or the thing or situation that requires help:\n\nI want to help you with that fallen tree with my chain saw.\nI want to help you with your startup company with my business acumen.\nThey helped the town with its recovery after the earthquake with portable shelters and tankers carrying fresh water.\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091499.5904, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091499.4104, "finish": 1722091499.5904, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8cd59ea5f7834d55a1e9eac442818ffb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "how much jerky does 1 kg of beef make?", "output": [["how much jerky does 1 kg of beef make?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: How much data can I store in a cookie Are there any limits in modern browsers regarding how much data I can store in one single cookie?\nI found an article stating it should hold a minimum of 4k, but no upper limit.\nhttp://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2965.html\n\nA: This can be also helpful here:\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091499.5904, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091499.4104, "finish": 1722091499.5904, "ip": "", "conv_id": "66ab362b9bd849f9bf851053a79edc05", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "how much jerky does 1 kg of beef make?", "output": [["how much jerky does 1 kg of beef make?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: How can I create parameterized Jenkins job? I want to use same job in different machine. But I don't want to change the configuration of the job each time. Can I pass the machine name label as parameter and run the job in different machine ? (Not simultaneously).\nI want to pass parameters while running a job to the script which I have written in th configuration (batch script). Can we do that ?\nCan I get a return value from a job and use it in next job?\n\nA: *\n\n*Yes, you can pass a node label parameter with NodeLabel Parameter Plugin.\n\n*Yes, you can define parameters, as described, in Parameterized Builds and then use it in your script as an environment variable:\n\nThe parameter is available as environment parameters. So e.g. a shell ($FOO, %FOO%) or Ant ( ${env.FOO} ) can access these values.\n\n\n\n*This is not exactly a return value, but you can pass any parameter (with its value) to the downstream job with Parameterized Trigger Plugin.\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091510.5142, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091510.3467, "finish": 1722091510.5142, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bc32ed24847240aabc87f179dcbfaa34", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "are the last airbender comics canon?", "output": [["are the last airbender comics canon?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: How do non airbenders determine who is the avatar? The airbenders would use toys to determine the next avatar . How do the other nations determine the avatar?\nFor example how was it determined Korra was the next avatar?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091510.5142, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091510.3467, "finish": 1722091510.5142, "ip": "", "conv_id": "846a5313635445f2b86042f386c91a0b", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "are the last airbender comics canon?", "output": [["are the last airbender comics canon?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: Is Presto Hive partition aware? How does Presto deal with Hive partitions? can it recognize the partitions during the query execution? We are running into a performance issue while dealing with hive tables using partitions.\n\nA: Presto fully supports and optimizes queries to take advantage of Hive partitions. (It also optimizes queries over bucketed tables.) We use Hive partitioning extensively at Facebook (almost every table is at least partitioned by date), so support for Hive partitions was one of the first features we added.\nIf you are having a problem and need help troubleshooting, please ask on the mailing list as StackOverflow does not work well for back-and-forth discourse: https://groups.google.com/group/presto-users\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091524.6192, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091523.17, "finish": 1722091524.6192, "ip": "", "conv_id": "be0848458ea84716b0d2431f336dc0a4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the difference between value and utility?", "output": [["what is the difference between value and utility?", "Math Stackexchange\n\nQ: Expected value versus mean value What is the difference between the expected value and mean value of a discrete random variable or discrete uniform distribution?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091524.6192, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091523.17, "finish": 1722091524.6192, "ip": "", "conv_id": "da27178119944806a2efdd5ea99df83b", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what is the difference between value and utility?", "output": [["what is the difference between value and utility?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the difference between java.util.Date and java.sql.Date? What is the difference between java.util.Date and java.sql.Date?\nWhy can't we use java.util.Date instead of java.sql.Date?\n\nA: Difference between java.util.Date and java.sql.Date in Java from site. It is well explained.\nHere are few differences on java.sql.Date and java.util.Date in Java in point format, if you any other difference between them which is worth noting then please post in comments :\n\n\n*\n\n*As per Javadoc java.sql.Date is a thin wrapper around millisecond value which is used by JDBC to identify an SQL DATE type.\n\n*java.sql.Date just represent DATE without time information while java.util.Date represent both Date and Time information. This is the major differences why java.util.Date can not directly map to java.sql.Date.\n\n*In order to suppress time information and to confirm with definition of ANSI SQL DATE type, the millisecond values used in java.sql.Date instance must be \"normalized by setting the hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds to zero in the timezone with with DATE instance is associated. In other words all time related information is removed from java.sql.Date class.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091560.5052, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091560.2204, "finish": 1722091560.5052, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1c379b66e781472b80caa98f937af857", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "how many grams is a cup of pancake mix?", "output": [["how many grams is a cup of pancake mix?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: get "]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091560.5052, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091560.2204, "finish": 1722091560.5052, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0e18f64d0dfa4edeae370202df54db04", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "how many grams is a cup of pancake mix?", "output": [["how many grams is a cup of pancake mix?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: How to set command line value via Ruby to see status via PS? I'd like to provide feedback for my pinger program via the command line and view it using ps ax.\nI found a SO q. But\n....\nARGV[0] = \"Hello!\" # does nothing\n\nI'm starting the script via ruby ./pinger\n\nA: Assign to $0 instead. For example, if I start irb and\n$ ps | egrep 'irb|pancakes'\n 3119 ttys000 0:01.02 irb \n 3131 ttys001 0:00.00 egrep irb|pancakes\n\nand then over in irb:\n>> $0 = 'pancakes'\n\nand back to the other terminal:\n$ ps | egrep 'irb|pancakes'\n 3119 ttys000 0:01.07 pancakes \n 3135 ttys001 0:00.00 egrep irb|pancakes\n\nYou can check with this tiny script as well:\n#!/usr/bin/env ruby\n$0 = 'pancakes'\nsleep 10\n\nRun that, jump to another terminal, do a ps | grep pancakes, and you should see a pancakes process.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091567.5513, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091567.3881, "finish": 1722091567.5513, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3f6c6b560b6c4c598b85e9452af52a51", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the difference between libreoffice and libreoffice vanilla?", "output": [["what is the difference between libreoffice and libreoffice vanilla?", "Askubuntu Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the difference between libre office and open office ? What are the advantages/disadvantages of each? \nPossible Duplicate:\nWhat is the difference between OpenOffice and the newly created LibreOffice? \n\nI am using openoffice before installing ubuntu\nbut libreoffice is default in Ubuntu\nWhat is the difference between libreoffice and openoffice ? What are the advantages/disadvantages of each?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091567.5513, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091567.3881, "finish": 1722091567.5513, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eb721abc6bda4bb4bb8d3edf86a1cf24", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what is the difference between libreoffice and libreoffice vanilla?", "output": [["what is the difference between libreoffice and libreoffice vanilla?", "Apple Stackexchange\n\nQ: LibreOffice vs. LibreOffice Vanilla What is the difference between LibreOffice, as available for download from the LibreOffice web site, and LibreOffice Vanilla, as available from the macOS AppStore? And how do current version numbers compare?\nI guess downloading an image from that web site is okay, but then macOS asks me to confirm the image as obtained from a mirror site with an unfamiliar name. This still makes sense on a technical level, but frankly I'd prefer to install via the AppStore, esp. since the admin password is involved.\n\nA: The Document Foundation Wiki has a page about LibreOffice Vanilla for Mac, which explains the differences.\nThere are some differences in functionality. LibreOffice Vanilla for Mac omits some Java-based features. The upshot is that Base cannot use the HSQLDB engine, and is lacking some reporting features. Java-based extensions won't work either.\nThe wiki page includes a detailed list of build flags used to compile the Collabora versions, which provide further detail. (Caveat: it's a wiki, so this may not be up to date.)\nNote that Collabora's post LibreOffice Vanilla: Fresh from the community to your Mac does not mention these functional differences.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091606.4767, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091584.828, "finish": 1722091606.4767, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b490fef0d3e94a3bb04e6718ca305851", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "chandra and bhaga river meets at the place", "output": [["chandra and bhaga river meets at the place", "Bara-lacha la\n\nThe two headwaters of the Chenab River, Chandra and Bhaga, originate near the Baralacha Pass. The Bhaga river originates from Surya taal lake, which is situated a few of kilometres from the pass towards Manali. The Chandra originates from a glacier in this region. The native name of Chenab, \"Chandrabhaga\", represents the union of Chandra and Bhaga rivers downstream.\nThe pass also acts as a water-divide between the Bhaga river and the Yunam river.\nLegend\nFolklore states that the two divine lovers, Chandramukhi, daughter of the Moon god, and Surya Bhaga, the son of the Sun god, decided to perform their eternal marriage atop the Bara-lacha-la. From there they ran in opposite directions. Chandra being active and smart, easily found her way and reached Tandi after covering the distance of .\nSoon Bhaga was found coming with great struggle through the narrow gorges to Tandi, where consequently, they both met and the celestial marriage was performed. Bhaga covered about distance, which was very difficult.\nGeography\nCross roads from Spiti, Ladakh, Zanskar and Lahaul meet at the Baralacha Pass. In ancient times it was part of a trade route. On the northwest originates the Bhaga River while the Chandra flows south-east. Below the Baralacha-la is an emerald lake, the Suraj tal (Sun lake), the source of the river Bhaga.\n\"Mr. Shaw thus describes the region:"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091606.4767, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091584.828, "finish": 1722091606.4767, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d7e9440065df41928bddd2b51a4790fc", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "chandra and bhaga river meets at the place", "output": [["chandra and bhaga river meets at the place", "Suraj Tal\n\nPhysical description\nTerrain\nThe glaciers and nullahs (streams) that from the Bara-lacha-la pass feed the lake. The pass is 8\u00a0km long and is also called the \"Pass with Crossroads on Summit\" since roads from Zanskar, Ladakh, Spiti, and Lahaul meet at this pass. In addition to the Bhaga River that originates from it and flows through Suraj Tal, Bara-lacha-la Pass is also the source of the Chandra and Yunan Rivers in the southeast and north, respectively.\nThe lake is situated in the Upper Himalayan Zone, or High Latitudinal Zone part of the Himalayas which has very sparse population with climatic conditions akin to polar conditions. Snowfall in this zone, though scanty, is reported to be spread throughout the year. Rainfall is rare in the region. Snow precipitation from snow storms is reported to be less than of snow in nearly 50% of the storms, even though one observatory in the region has reported of snowfall. The precipitation starts melting in May. Snow on slopes is generally slackly bonded, with the wind redistributing it. The average total snowfall recorded in a year is reported to be , with the highest temperature at , the mean highest temperature at , the mean minimum temperature at , and the lowest temperature at . The ground in the zone is covered with scree and boulders.\nGeology\nThe lake's geology is similar to thet of the nearby Bara-lacha-la Pass, which is reported to be an early rifting event on the northern Indian passive margin, and the Basalts which are emplaced along the trans\u2013tensional faults indicate that.\nBhaga Valley\nThe Bhaga River originates in Bara-Lacha La and flows north-west through Suraj Tal to Tandi, the confluence point with the Chandra River. The Bhaga Valley (Tod or Stod Valley) is long. The valley, which is a narrow gorge, is devoid of any vegetation up to Darcha, and thereafter it widens up to its confluence with the Chandra River at Tandi. There are terraces between Darcha and Tandi which are under cultivation in the lower slopes, with the middle slopes having grasslands. Plantations of trees and shrubs to meet fuel wood and fodder requirements have been done on the hill slopes.\nTourism\nLahaul-Spiti Valley is a common destination for Indian and foreign tourists on road trips, trekking, and motorcycling. The NH 21 route from Manali to Leh covers the Suraj Tal Lake and the Bara-lacha-la pass.\nTrekking\nTrekking tours are common. One trek route is the Zingzingbar\u2013Suraj Tal\u2013Bara-lacha-la. This involves trekking along the Bhaga River for , crossing a bridge to the north bank, then a further climb of from the bridge, followed by a steep foot trail up to Suraj Tal."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091793.3481, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091793.1824, "finish": 1722091793.3481, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e55c4487f39e419f811f46e601d0662f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where are xfce notes stored?", "output": [["where are xfce notes stored?", "Unix Stackexchange\n\nQ: Where does xfce4-notes store data? I have a lot of xfce-notes groups containing each a lot of text. I want to transfert them to a new machine without copying the whole home directory.\nWhere does xfce4-notes store its data and configation files?\n\nA: The notes are stored as text files in $XDG_DATA_HOME/notes/ (~/.local/share/notes by default).\nThe settings are in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xfce4 (~/.config/xfce4/xfce4-notes.*).\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091793.3481, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091793.1824, "finish": 1722091793.3481, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e27b247c38c14068bd4a2163688b7e04", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "where are xfce notes stored?", "output": [["where are xfce notes stored?", "Unix Stackexchange\n\nQ: Where does xfce4-notes store data? I have a lot of xfce-notes groups containing each a lot of text. I want to transfert them to a new machine without copying the whole home directory.\nWhere does xfce4-notes store its data and configation files?\n\nA: The notes are stored as text files in $XDG_DATA_HOME/notes/ (~/.local/share/notes by default).\nThe settings are in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xfce4 (~/.config/xfce4/xfce4-notes.*).\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091802.6675, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091802.4672, "finish": 1722091802.6675, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5dfd33c08c8747dea34231b98e216f88", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the difference between of and on?", "output": [["what is the difference between of and on?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: difference between progress ON and progress OF I'm still confused even after studying the prepositions on and of. Can you please help me and explain to me the difference of the ff:\n\n \n*\n \n*progress ON your project\n \n*progress OF your project\n\nWhen should I use on? of?\n\nA: This depends upon the wider context in which the sentence is used. The two examples you have given do not, on their own, make sense.\nIf the progress is the subject then of, if you are the subject then on.\nHave you made any progress on your project?\nWhat is the progress of your project?\nI have made progress on my project\nThere has been progress on the project\nThe progress of the project is satisfactory\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091802.6675, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722091802.4672, "finish": 1722091802.6675, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fe7dda067a73407682462cd19e38f2f4", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what is the difference between of and on?", "output": [["what is the difference between of and on?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: \"What a difference {it / there} is between him and her!\" \n*\n\n*What a difference it is between him and her!\n\n*What a difference there is between him and her! \nI think sentence 1 is wrong but I cannot explain why. We can say \"it is a difference between him and her\" so I thought it fine but when I read the first sentence again, it just sounds off. Can someone please explain?\n\nA: when you ask difference you can say it this way\nWhat is the difference between him and her?\nor\nIs there a difference bettwen him and her?\nThe answer can be like:\nThe difference between him and her is.... \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722094220.0164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722094206.2109, "finish": 1722094220.0164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "505d265c96da4078bf068faa922d735d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Overview of how ChatGPT and GPT-4 are transforming search engines and IR", "output": [["Overview of how ChatGPT and GPT-4 are transforming search engines and IR", "Title: Exploring ChatGPT for Next-generation Information Retrieval: Opportunities and Challenges\n\nAbstract: The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) has highlighted ChatGPT as a pivotal technology in the field of information retrieval (IR). Distinguished from its predecessors, ChatGPT offers significant benefits that have attracted the attention of both the industry and academic communities. While some view ChatGPT as a groundbreaking innovation, others attribute its success to the effective integration of product development and market strategies. The emergence of ChatGPT, alongside GPT-4, marks a new phase in Generative AI, generating content that is distinct from training examples and exceeding the capabilities of the prior GPT-3 model by OpenAI. Unlike the traditional supervised learning approach in IR tasks, ChatGPT challenges existing paradigms, bringing forth new challenges and opportunities regarding text quality assurance, model bias, and efficiency. This paper seeks to examine the impact of ChatGPT on IR tasks and offer insights into its potential future developments."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722094220.0164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722094206.2109, "finish": 1722094220.0164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "09cebc85f8d14bef941f9742c326f155", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Overview of how ChatGPT and GPT-4 are transforming search engines and IR", "output": [["Overview of how ChatGPT and GPT-4 are transforming search engines and IR", "Title: ChatGPT: A Study on its Utility for Ubiquitous Software Engineering\n Tasks\n\nAbstract: ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer) is a chatbot launched by\nOpenAI on November 30, 2022. OpenAI's GPT-3 family of large language models\nserve as the foundation for ChatGPT. ChatGPT is fine-tuned with both supervised\nand reinforcement learning techniques and has received widespread attention for\nits articulate responses across diverse domains of knowledge. In this study, we\nexplore how ChatGPT can be used to help with common software engineering tasks.\nMany of the ubiquitous tasks covering the breadth of software engineering such\nas ambiguity resolution in software requirements, method name suggestion, test\ncase prioritization, code review, log summarization can potentially be\nperformed using ChatGPT. In this study, we explore fifteen common software\nengineering tasks using ChatGPT. We juxtapose and analyze ChatGPT's answers\nwith the respective state of the art outputs (where available) and/or human\nexpert ground truth. Our experiments suggest that for many tasks, ChatGPT does\nperform credibly and the response from it is detailed and often better than the\nhuman expert output or the state of the art output. However, for a few other\ntasks, ChatGPT in its present form provides incorrect answers and hence is not\nsuited for such tasks.\n"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722094361.7227, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722094359.247, "finish": 1722094361.7227, "ip": "", "conv_id": "13f9d4f2416e4288905fab1fe11243be", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Research introducing a regularization to combat embedding degeneration in NLP models.", "output": [["Research introducing a regularization to combat embedding degeneration in NLP models.", "Title: Representation Degeneration Problem in Training Natural Language Generation Models\n\nAbstract: We study an interesting problem in training neural network-based models for natural language generation tasks, which we call the \\emph{representation degeneration problem}. We observe that when training a model for natural language generation tasks through likelihood maximization with the weight tying trick, especially with big training datasets, most of the learnt word embeddings tend to degenerate and be distributed into a narrow cone, which largely limits the representation power of word embeddings. We analyze the conditions and causes of this problem and propose a novel regularization method to address it. Experiments on language modeling and machine translation show that our method can largely mitigate the representation degeneration problem and achieve better performance than baseline algorithms."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722094361.7227, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722094359.247, "finish": 1722094361.7227, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f597dc1472aa44189174b670c59299af", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Research introducing a regularization to combat embedding degeneration in NLP models.", "output": [["Research introducing a regularization to combat embedding degeneration in NLP models.", "Title: A Material Lens on Coloniality in NLP\n\nAbstract: Coloniality, the continuation of colonial harms beyond \"official\"\ncolonization, has pervasive effects across society and scientific fields.\nNatural Language Processing (NLP) is no exception to this broad phenomenon. In\nthis work, we argue that coloniality is implicitly embedded in and amplified by\nNLP data, algorithms, and software. We formalize this analysis using\nActor-Network Theory (ANT): an approach to understanding social phenomena\nthrough the network of relationships between human stakeholders and technology.\nWe use our Actor-Network to guide a quantitative survey of the geography of\ndifferent phases of NLP research, providing evidence that inequality along\ncolonial boundaries increases as NLP builds on itself. Based on this, we argue\nthat combating coloniality in NLP requires not only changing current values but\nalso active work to remove the accumulation of colonial ideals in our\nfoundational data and algorithms.\n"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722094417.8131, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722094414.9292, "finish": 1722094417.8131, "ip": "", "conv_id": "15d8c25089b64317b31331a67239cd84", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Looking for a paper that integrates conversation history into BERT for improving multi-turn question answering ", "output": [["Looking for a paper that integrates conversation history into BERT for improving multi-turn question answering ", "Title: BERT with History Answer Embedding for Conversational Question Answering\n\nAbstract: Conversational search is an emerging topic in the information retrieval community. One of the major challenges to multi-turn conversational search is to model the conversation history to answer the current question. Existing methods either prepend history turns to the current question or use complicated attention mechanisms to model the history. We propose a conceptually simple yet highly effective approach referred to as history answer embedding. It enables seamless integration of conversation history into a conversational question answering (ConvQA) model built on BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers). We first explain our view that ConvQA is a simplified but concrete setting of conversational search, and then we provide a general framework to solve ConvQA. We further demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach under this framework. Finally, we analyze the impact of different numbers of history turns under different settings to provide new insights into conversation history modeling in ConvQA."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722094417.8131, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722094414.9292, "finish": 1722094417.8131, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e1009ac18357478aa93f79e6967b3946", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Looking for a paper that integrates conversation history into BERT for improving multi-turn question answering ", "output": [["Looking for a paper that integrates conversation history into BERT for improving multi-turn question answering ", "Title: BERT with History Answer Embedding for Conversational Question Answering\n\nAbstract: Conversational search is an emerging topic in the information retrieval\ncommunity. One of the major challenges to multi-turn conversational search is\nto model the conversation history to answer the current question. Existing\nmethods either prepend history turns to the current question or use complicated\nattention mechanisms to model the history. We propose a conceptually simple yet\nhighly effective approach referred to as history answer embedding. It enables\nseamless integration of conversation history into a conversational question\nanswering (ConvQA) model built on BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations\nfrom Transformers). We first explain our view that ConvQA is a simplified but\nconcrete setting of conversational search, and then we provide a general\nframework to solve ConvQA. We further demonstrate the effectiveness of our\napproach under this framework. Finally, we analyze the impact of different\nnumbers of history turns under different settings to provide new insights into\nconversation history modeling in ConvQA.\n"]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-bdb8523e-2422-40c2-82e0-97e5676d8449.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-bdb8523e-2422-40c2-82e0-97e5676d8449.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index f42be1ac1162477598007ee02f8880806f28049c..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-bdb8523e-2422-40c2-82e0-97e5676d8449.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720595101.7144, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595082.336, "finish": 1720595101.7144, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df53bceec47c464a885c37a1864a3fc8", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "when was kudzu introduced to the united states", "output": [["when was kudzu introduced to the united states", "Title: August 16\n\nPassage: Events\nPre-1600"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720595151.8781, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595125.5635, "finish": 1720595151.8781, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bcefdd0829e34d02a10f0afe7fc43f2f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when was kudzu introduced to the united states", "output": [["when was kudzu introduced to the united states", "Title: Arrowroot tea\n\nPassage: Arrowroot tea, also called kudzu tea, is a traditional East Asian tea made from East Asian arrowroot, a type of kudzu.\nNames"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720595225.2112, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720595187.4043, "finish": 1720595225.2112, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a449ff95a86e4f90ae493e719b6d56bf", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "when was kudzu introduced to the united states", "output": [["when was kudzu introduced to the united states", "Title: Ailanthus altissima\n\nPassage: In 1784, not long after Jussieu had sent seeds to England, some were forwarded to the United States by William Hamilton, a gardener in Philadelphia. In both Europe and America, it quickly became a favoured ornamental, especially as a street tree, and by 1840, it was available in most nurseries. The Tree of Heaven was brought to California by Chinese immigrants who came during the California Gold Rush of the 1850s.\nAilanthus has escaped cultivation in all areas where it was introduced, most extensively in the United States. It has naturalised across much of Europe, including Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, the Pannonian region (i.e. southeastern Central Europe around the Danube River basin from Austria, Slovakia, and Hungary south to the Balkan ranges) and most countries of the Mediterranean Basin. In Montenegro and Albania A. altissima is widespread in both rural and urban areas, and while in the first it was introduced as an ornamental plant, it very soon invaded native ecosystems with disastrous results and became an invasive species. Ailanthus has also been introduced to Argentina, Australia (where it is a declared weed in New South Wales and Victoria), New Zealand (where it is listed under the National Pest Plant Accord and is classed an \"unwanted organism\"), the Middle East, and in some countries in South Asia such as Pakistan. In South Africa, it is listed as an invasive species that must be controlled, or removed and destroyed.\nIn North America, A. altissima is present from Massachusetts in the east, west to southern Ontario, southwest to Iowa, south to Texas, and east to the north of Florida. In the west, it is found from New Mexico west to California and north to Washington. In the east of its range, it grows most extensively in disturbed areas of cities, where it was long ago present as a planted street tree. It also grows along roads and railways. For example, a 2003 study in North Carolina found the tree of heaven was present on 1.7% of all highway and railroad edges in the state, and had been expanding its range at the rate of 4.76% counties per year. Similarly, another study conducted in southwestern Virginia determined that the tree of heaven is thriving along roughly 30% of the state's interstate highway system length or mileage. It sometimes enters undisturbed areas as well, and competes with native plants. In western North America, it is most common in mountainous areas around old dwellings and abandoned mining operations. It is classified as a noxious or invasive plant on National Forest System lands and in many states because its prolific seed production, high germination rate, and capacity to regrow from roots and root fragments enable A. altissima to out-compete native species. For this reason, control measures on public lands and private property are advised where A. altissima has naturalised.\nEcology"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-cd2661c0-8d6e-4352-b80c-1e3ed1973214.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-cd2661c0-8d6e-4352-b80c-1e3ed1973214.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 9212590fa2b7bfe274bdcf6bea201483f99d4c2b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-cd2661c0-8d6e-4352-b80c-1e3ed1973214.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720587846.8891, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720587817.6257, "finish": 1720587846.8891, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2a3ca017e48045ac958f9ee7c274f921", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720587921.328, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720587892.8679, "finish": 1720587921.328, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e6b7c28b6cf54d05b9dc3b0c8b5bd000", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Search query\n\nPassage: Search query may refer to:\nDatabase query\nWeb search query"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720587932.0219, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720587931.7912, "finish": 1720587932.0219, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6e90a31426294e818b80c416a382d5a3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720587989.1241, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720587938.7588, "finish": 1720587989.1241, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ca86e0ec955c4a7fad544da3302d5413", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588036.2549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588035.9898, "finish": 1720588036.2549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d686b59a3f9456c899cda58476ae846", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Elon Musk", "output": [["Elon Musk", "Title: Lucas Johnson\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588053.2794, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588053.0759, "finish": 1720588053.2794, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ced03a40a22e4fe3b0d7777f3f15961e", "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: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588058.9278, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588058.6872, "finish": 1720588058.9278, "ip": "", "conv_id": "615c258aed964ce7b269369f6cde7ef0", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588066.4957, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588066.3018, "finish": 1720588066.4957, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3afb62184e3a4849a929a419606ce279", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: Luvianos\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720588101.218, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588101.0056, "finish": 1720588101.218, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c084eae78f643cd816723cde15a211c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Love", "output": [["Love", "Title: Love\n\nPassage: Comparison of scientific models\nBiological models of love tend to see it as a drive, similar to hunger or thirst. Psychology sees love as more of a social and cultural phenomenon. Love is influenced by hormones (such as oxytocin), neurotrophins (such as NGF), and pheromones, and how people think and behave in love is influenced by their conceptions of love. The conventional view in biology is that there are two major drives in love: sexual attraction and attachment. Attachment between adults is presumed to work on the same principles that lead an infant to become attached to its mother. The traditional psychological view sees love as being a combination of companionate love and passionate love. Passionate love is intense longing, and is often accompanied by physiological arousal (shortness of breath, rapid heart rate); companionate love is affection and a feeling of intimacy not accompanied by physiological arousal.\nHealth\nLove plays a role in human well-being and health. Engaging in activities associated with love, such as nurturing relationships, has been shown to activate key brain regions responsible for emotion, attention, motivation, and memory. These activities also contribute to the regulation of the autonomic nervous system, leading to stress reduction over time, although the initial stages of love may induce stress. Love's social bonds enhance both physical and mental health, fostering resilience, compassion, and closeness. It boosts immune function and promotes healing, while also encouraging positive motivations and behaviors for individual flourishing and survival. Breakups can evoke a range of emotional states, including distrust, rejection, and anger, leading to trauma and various psychological challenges such as anxiety, social withdrawal, and even love addiction. Individuals may become fixated on past relationships, perpetuating emotional distress akin to addiction. Health benefits grow bigger when married couples are older, this is because the partners play a crucial role in promoting each other's well-being. A loving relationship with God has significant impact on health.\nCultural views\nAncient Greek\nGreek distinguishes several different senses in which the word \"love\" is used. Ancient Greeks identified three main forms of love: friendship and/or platonic desire (), sexual and/or romantic desire (), and self-emptying or divine love (). Modern authors have distinguished further varieties of romantic love.\nAgape ( )\nAgape, often a Christian term, denotes a form of love that stands apart from the conventional understanding of affection. Rooted in theological discourse, agape represents a love that is characterized by its spontaneous nature and its independence from the inherent value of its object. Originating from the Greek term for \"love\", agape has been examined within theological scholarship, particularly in contrast to eros. In the Christian tradition, agape is often attributed to the love of God for humanity, as well as humanity's reciprocal love for God and for one another, often termed as brotherly love. Agape is considered to be unmerited and unmotivated by any inherent worthiness in its recipient. Instead, it is portrayed as an expression of the nature of God, exemplifying divine love that transcends human comprehension.\nEros ( )"]]}
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-{"tstamp": 1722221032.1065, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722220976.8909, "finish": 1722221032.1065, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3707f505938f47a085454d337e721c65", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221032.1065, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722220976.8909, "finish": 1722221032.1065, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c420a598509c4a9bb92f37a52a53b7c2", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\nThe 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)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221199.1374, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221163.0378, "finish": 1722221199.1374, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f2591bbc9eb84fec991b2648c582ccb7", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\nThe 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)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221199.1374, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221163.0378, "finish": 1722221199.1374, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ba45f5312c46445186b02cc9c08da4d5", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Artificial intelligence\n\nIn the late teens and early 2020s, AGI companies began to deliver programs that created enormous interest. In 2015, AlphaGo, developed by DeepMind, beat the world champion Go player. The program was taught only the rules of the game and developed strategy by itself. GPT-3 is a large language model that was released in 2020 by OpenAI and is capable of generating high-quality human-like text. These programs, and others, inspired an aggressive AI boom, where large companies began investing billions in AI research. According to AI Impacts, about $50 billion annually was invested in \"AI\" around 2022 in the U.S. alone and about 20% of the new U.S. Computer Science PhD graduates have specialized in \"AI\".\nAbout 800,000 \"AI\"-related U.S. job openings existed in 2022.\nPhilosophy\nDefining artificial intelligence\nAlan Turing wrote in 1950 \"I propose to consider the question 'can machines think'?\" He advised changing the question from whether a machine \"thinks\", to \"whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\". He devised the Turing test, which measures the ability of a machine to simulate human conversation. Since we can only observe the behavior of the machine, it does not matter if it is \"actually\" thinking or literally has a \"mind\". Turing notes that we can not determine these things about other people but \"it is usual to have a polite convention that everyone thinks.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221291.3695, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221242.3191, "finish": 1722221291.3695, "ip": "", "conv_id": "62319ba90fb743f6a9a187fb367b4677", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221291.3695, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221242.3191, "finish": 1722221291.3695, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b4af2ad45fc54401ac0c4b9b0f73156c", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\nThe 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)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221424.9918, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221376.9905, "finish": 1722221424.9918, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ed2baf64440a4fc09fe618c3d8f10030", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221424.9918, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221376.9905, "finish": 1722221424.9918, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a6033358b69f445faaf3dce77e47bbe7", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Cognitive test\n\nCognitive tests are assessments of the cognitive capabilities of humans and other animals. Tests administered to humans include various forms of IQ tests; those administered to animals include the mirror test (a test of visual self-awareness) and the T maze test (which tests learning ability). Such testing is used in psychology and psychometrics, as well as other fields studying human and animal intelligence."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221481.4575, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221440.1387, "finish": 1722221481.4575, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dd6ed2d27e4b48c786eda252a6509cec", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Progress in artificial intelligence\n\nSub-human Optical character recognition for printed text (nearing par-human for Latin-script typewritten text)\nObject recognition\nVarious robotics tasks that may require advances in robot hardware as well as AI, including:\nStable bipedal locomotion: Bipedal robots can walk, but are less stable than human walkers (as of 2017)\nHumanoid soccer\nSpeech recognition: \"nearly equal to human performance\" (2017)\nExplainability. Current medical systems can diagnose certain medical conditions well, but cannot explain to users why they made the diagnosis.\nMany tests of fluid intelligence (2020)\nBongard visual cognition problems, such as the Bongard-LOGO benchmark (2020)\nVisual Commonsense Reasoning (VCR) benchmark (as of 2020)\nStock market prediction: Financial data collection and processing using Machine Learning algorithms\nAngry Birds video game, as of 2020\nVarious tasks that are difficult to solve without contextual knowledge, including:\nTranslation\nWord-sense disambiguation\nProposed tests of artificial intelligence\nIn his famous Turing test, Alan Turing picked language, the defining feature of human beings, for its basis. The Turing test is now considered too exploitable to be a meaningful benchmark.\nThe Feigenbaum test, proposed by the inventor of expert systems, tests a machine's knowledge and expertise about a specific subject. A paper by Jim Gray of Microsoft in 2003 suggested extending the Turing test to speech understanding, speaking and recognizing objects and behavior."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221481.4575, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221440.1387, "finish": 1722221481.4575, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ed7ff83a20b04c2a91a800ec0af37d9a", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Thought experiment\n\nRetrodiction The activity of retrodiction (or postdiction) involves moving backward in time, step-by-step, in as many stages as are considered necessary, from the present into the speculated past to establish the ultimate cause of a specific event (e.g., reverse engineering and forensics).\nGiven that retrodiction is a process in which \"past observations, events, add and data are used as evidence to infer the process(es) that produced them\" and that diagnosis \"involve[s] going from visible effects such as symptoms, signs and the like to their prior causes\", the essential balance between prediction and retrodiction could be characterized as:\nregardless of whether the prognosis is of the course of the disease in the absence of treatment, or of the application of a specific treatment regimen to a specific disorder in a particular patient.\nBackcasting\nThe activity of backcasting \u2013 the term backcasting was coined by John Robinson in 1982 \u2013 involves establishing the description of a very definite and very specific future situation. It then involves an imaginary moving backward in time, step-by-step, in as many stages as are considered necessary, from the future to the present to reveal the mechanism through which that particular specified future could be attained from the present.\nBackcasting is not concerned with predicting the future:\nAccording to Jansen (1994, p.\u00a0503:"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221548.0378, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221496.5738, "finish": 1722221548.0378, "ip": "", "conv_id": "41229049f90e4c9aaa6b865d36082b92", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "History of robots\n\nIt features a female humanoid automaton standing by a basin filled with water.When the user pulls the lever, the water drains and the female automaton refills the basin. Furthermore, he created a robotic musical band. According to Mark Rosheim, unlike Greek designs Arab automata worked with dramatic illusion and manipulated the human perception for practical application. The segmental gears described in The Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices, published by Al-Jazari shortly before his death in 1206, appeared 100 years later in the most advanced European clocks. Al-Jazari also published instructions on the construction of humanoid automata. The first water clocks modeled on Arabic designs were constructed in Europe about 1000 CE, possibly on the basis of the information that was transmitted during Muslim-Christian contact in Sicily and Spain. Among the first recorded European water clocks is that of Gerbert of Aurillac, built in 985 CE. Hero's works on automata were translated into Latin amid the 12th century Renaissance. The early 13th-century artist-engineer Villard de Honnecourt sketched plans for several automata. "]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221548.0378, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221496.5738, "finish": 1722221548.0378, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6b4c1e07681b431b968fc390bba88396", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221585.2731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221564.4648, "finish": 1722221585.2731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bbbf8b2f7f35456b9f82149fcfeea3a9", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221585.2731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221564.4648, "finish": 1722221585.2731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "14dbe54c7c59414f8d11c26bc9d6e4f4", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Artificial intelligence\n\nIn the late teens and early 2020s, AGI companies began to deliver programs that created enormous interest. In 2015, AlphaGo, developed by DeepMind, beat the world champion Go player. The program was taught only the rules of the game and developed strategy by itself. GPT-3 is a large language model that was released in 2020 by OpenAI and is capable of generating high-quality human-like text. These programs, and others, inspired an aggressive AI boom, where large companies began investing billions in AI research. According to AI Impacts, about $50 billion annually was invested in \"AI\" around 2022 in the U.S. alone and about 20% of the new U.S. Computer Science PhD graduates have specialized in \"AI\".\nAbout 800,000 \"AI\"-related U.S. job openings existed in 2022.\nPhilosophy\nDefining artificial intelligence\nAlan Turing wrote in 1950 \"I propose to consider the question 'can machines think'?\" He advised changing the question from whether a machine \"thinks\", to \"whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\". He devised the Turing test, which measures the ability of a machine to simulate human conversation. Since we can only observe the behavior of the machine, it does not matter if it is \"actually\" thinking or literally has a \"mind\". Turing notes that we can not determine these things about other people but \"it is usual to have a polite convention that everyone thinks.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221726.7984, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221726.5114, "finish": 1722221726.7984, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a4eb9e3e5e51497a82838f001a1d6299", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "output": [["what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "List of mountains and hills of Japan by height\n\nThe following is a list of the mountains and hills of Japan, ordered by height.\nMountains over 1000 meters\nMountains under 1000 metres\nAs the generally accepted definition of a mountain (versus a hill) is 1000 m of height and 500 m of prominence, the following list is provided for convenience only."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221726.7984, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221726.5114, "finish": 1722221726.7984, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7b5cc8d69eb34eac96fca0c854664763", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "output": [["what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "Mount Haku\n\n, or Mount Hakusan (commonly referred to as simply Hakusan), is a dormant stratovolcano in Japan. It is located on the borders of Gifu and Ishikawa, on the island of Honshu. Mount Haku is thought to have first been active 300,000 to 400,000 years ago, with the most recent eruption occurring in 1659. Along with Mount Tate and Mount Fuji, it is one of Japan's .\nThe mountain's tallest peak, Gozenga-mine (\u5fa1\u524d\u5cf0), is the one that gives the mountain its height of . Along with Ken-ga-mine (\u5263\u30f6\u5cf0), which is , and \u014cnanji-mine (\u5927\u6c5d\u5cf0), which is , the three peaks are considered \"Mount Haku's Three Peaks\" (\u767d\u5c71\u4e09\u5cf0 Hakusan San-mine). Mount Bessan and Mount Sannomine are sometimes included and called \"Mount Haku's Five Peaks\" (\u767d\u5c71\u4e94\u5cf0 Hakusan go-mine).\nBecause it is very prominent and clearly visible from the nearby coast, even after the surrounding mountains have lost their snow, Mount Haku still appears white, which is one explanation for the mountain's name, which means \"white mountain.\" It is also the westernmost mountain in Japan that is over in height."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221744.5634, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221744.2756, "finish": 1722221744.5634, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c2b4f4f9b7b4fa1881a056729897c83", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "output": [["what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "Mount Fuji\n\nis an active stratovolcano located on the Japanese island of Honshu, with a summit elevation of . It is the tallest mountain in Japan, the second-highest volcano located on an island in Asia (after Mount Kerinci on the Indonesian island of Sumatra), and seventh-highest peak of an island on Earth. Mount Fuji last erupted from 1707 to 1708. The mountain is located about southwest of Tokyo and is visible from the Japanese capital on clear days. Mount Fuji's exceptionally symmetrical cone, which is covered in snow for about five months of the year, is commonly used as a cultural icon of Japan and is frequently depicted in art and photography, as well as visited by sightseers, hikers and mountain climbers.\nMount Fuji is one of Japan's along with Mount Tate and Mount Haku. It is a Special Place of Scenic Beauty and one of Japan's Historic Sites. It was added to the World Heritage List as a Cultural Site on June 22, 2013. According to UNESCO, Mount Fuji has \"inspired artists and poets and been the object of pilgrimage for centuries\". UNESCO recognizes 25 sites of cultural interest within the Mount Fuji locality. These 25 locations include the mountain and the Shinto shrine, Fujisan Hong\u016b Sengen Taisha.\nEtymology\nThe current kanji for Mount Fuji, and , mean \"wealth\" or \"abundant\" and \"man of status\" respectively. However, the origins of this spelling and of the name Fuji continue to be debated."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221744.5634, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221744.2756, "finish": 1722221744.5634, "ip": "", "conv_id": "808cee65a285462780df716e8a325f83", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "output": [["what's the highest mountain in Japan?", "Geography of Japan\n\nAround 15 million years ago, the volcanic shoreline of the Asian continent was pushed out into a series of volcanic island arcs. This created the \"back-arc basins\" known as the Sea of Japan and Sea of Okhotsk with the formal shaping of the Japanese archipelago. The archipelago also has summits on mountain ridges that were uplifted near the outer edge of the continental shelf. About 73 percent of Japan's area is mountainous, and scattered plains and intermontane basins (in which the population is concentrated) cover only about 27 percent. A long chain of mountains runs down the middle of the archipelago, dividing it into two halves: the \"face\", facing the Pacific Ocean, and the \"back\", toward the Sea of Japan. On the Pacific side are steep mountains 1,500 to 3,000 meters high, with deep valleys and gorges.\nCentral Japan is marked by the convergence of the three mountain chains\u2014the Hida, Kiso, and Akaishi mountains\u2014that form the Japanese Alps (Nihon Arupusu), several of whose peaks are higher than . The highest point in the Japanese Alps is Mount Kita at . The highest point in the country is Mount Fuji (Fujisan, also erroneously called Fujiyama), a volcano dormant since 1707 that rises to above sea level in Shizuoka Prefecture. On the Sea of Japan side are plateaus and low mountain districts, with altitudes of 500 to 1,500 meters."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221766.7958, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221766.6174, "finish": 1722221766.7958, "ip": "", "conv_id": "66c42eb583244074a679db48c5eff615", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "output": [["what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "List of mountains and hills of Japan by height\n\nThe following is a list of the mountains and hills of Japan, ordered by height.\nMountains over 1000 meters\nMountains under 1000 metres\nAs the generally accepted definition of a mountain (versus a hill) is 1000 m of height and 500 m of prominence, the following list is provided for convenience only."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221766.7958, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221766.6174, "finish": 1722221766.7958, "ip": "", "conv_id": "10d5c1e8752d4c5ea562fed2c861f75b", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "output": [["what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "Japanese Alps\n\nThe is a series of mountain ranges in Japan which bisect the main island of Honshu. The peaks that tower over central Honshu have long been the object of veneration and pilgrimage. These mountains had long been exploited by local people for raw materials, including timber, fuel, fertilizer, fodder, meat, minerals, and medicines. Most visitors came to the mountain for pilgrimage, especially to the Buddhist temple and the sacred peak of Mount Tate.\nThe name was coined by English archaeologist William Gowland, and later popularized by Reverend Walter Weston (1861\u20131940), an English missionary for whom a memorial plaque is located at Kamik\u014dchi, a tourist destination known for its alpine climate. When Gowland coined the phrase, he was only referring to the Hida Mountains, but it now also applies to the Kiso Mountains and Akaishi Mountains.\nHistory\nThe Japanese Alps has a long history before William Gowland established this name. The Japanese Alps have been used as a place of ascetic practice for Buddhists monks and Shugenja since ancient times. From the 1600s to the 1800s, samurai officers of the Kaga domain travelled deep into the Hida Mountains with local hunters and farmers as guides to preserve the timber of the mountains and continued to create maps recording ridges, valleys and vegetation. This survey is called Okuyama-mawari (\u5965\u5c71\u5efb\u308a)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221774.1444, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221773.9807, "finish": 1722221774.1444, "ip": "", "conv_id": "150ae0497ff5425ea7127f9917d91d7c", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "what is the capital of China?", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221774.1444, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221773.9807, "finish": 1722221774.1444, "ip": "", "conv_id": "da09b3bba82446cab28796c69760a401", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "what is the capital of China?", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221795.8497, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221793.6185, "finish": 1722221795.8497, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bd683f43d4614b259c453834be453baa", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the capital of China?", "output": [["what is the capital of China?", "Historical capitals of China\n\nThis is a list of historical capitals of China.\nFour Great Ancient Capitals\nThere are traditionally four major historical capitals of China referred to as the \"Four Great Ancient Capitals of China\" (). The four are Beijing, Nanjing, Luoyang and Xi'an (Chang'an).\nList of historical capitals of China\nSorted in alphabetical order\nAcheng District of the city of Harbin was the capital of the Jin dynasty from 1115 to 1153. It was called Shangjing () or Huining Prefecture at the time. It was destroyed in 1157 and reestablished as a secondary capital in 1173.\nAnyang was the capital of the Shang dynasty (1600 BC \u2013 1046 BC) at its peak. It was called Yin () by the Zhou.\nBalasagun in modern Kyrgyzstan was the capital of the Western Liao dynasty from 1134 to 1218.\nBeijing (also romanized Peking), literally meaning \"Northern Capital\", previously also known as Beiping, was the capital of various dynasties and regional regimes, including:\nThe state of Yan (11th century BC \u2013 222 BC) in the Zhou dynasty, when it was called Ji ()."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221795.8497, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221793.6185, "finish": 1722221795.8497, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ac76938bfbc44bcf8ba57650c6af2aa8", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what is the capital of China?", "output": [["what is the capital of China?", "Historical capitals of China\n\nThis is a list of historical capitals of China.\nFour Great Ancient Capitals\nThere are traditionally four major historical capitals of China referred to as the \"Four Great Ancient Capitals of China\" (). The four are Beijing, Nanjing, Luoyang and Xi'an (Chang'an).\nList of historical capitals of China\nSorted in alphabetical order\nAcheng District of the city of Harbin was the capital of the Jin dynasty from 1115 to 1153. It was called Shangjing () or Huining Prefecture at the time. It was destroyed in 1157 and reestablished as a secondary capital in 1173.\nAnyang was the capital of the Shang dynasty (1600 BC \u2013 1046 BC) at its peak. It was called Yin () by the Zhou.\nBalasagun in modern Kyrgyzstan was the capital of the Western Liao dynasty from 1134 to 1218.\nBeijing (also romanized Peking), literally meaning \"Northern Capital\", previously also known as Beiping, was the capital of various dynasties and regional regimes, including:\nThe state of Yan (11th century BC \u2013 222 BC) in the Zhou dynasty, when it was called Ji ()."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221874.0679, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221810.8513, "finish": 1722221874.0679, "ip": "", "conv_id": "56b0edd3820e477bb07e6a09a59db384", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "output": [["what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "Volcanic Seven Summits\n\nSome geologists, though, consider the Kuma-Manych depression as the geological border between Asia and Europe. Such definition would render Elbrus entirely in Asia, making it the highest volcano of that continent (see below) and making Mount Etna (a 3350-metre active stratovolcano in Sicily, Italy) the highest volcano in Europe. Mount Teide in the Canary Islands, while active, taller than Etna and within the territory of a European country, would not be considered because geologically the Canaries belong to the African continent.\nSouth America\nAlthough Aconcagua, the highest peak in South America and the highest peak in the western hemisphere, does have a volcanic origin, its current high point is due to geological processes rather than being strictly volcanic. Due to this, Aconcagua is not considered to be a volcano on its own, at least not as a member of Volcanic Seven Summits.\nTopographic maps of the Argentina and Chile border region which contains the highest peaks suffer from poor accuracy, with elevation errors exceeding in many cases. However, the current consensus based on the most recent measurements places Ojos del Salado as the 2nd highest peak and highest volcano in South America, significantly higher than Monte Pissis.\nAsia\nThe Mount Damavand is a very large isolated stratovolcano with over of topographic prominence."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221874.0679, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221810.8513, "finish": 1722221874.0679, "ip": "", "conv_id": "319b3d49b82944ac9568e52b9b9cd315", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "output": [["what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "List of mountains and hills of Japan by height\n\nThe following is a list of the mountains and hills of Japan, ordered by height.\nMountains over 1000 meters\nMountains under 1000 metres\nAs the generally accepted definition of a mountain (versus a hill) is 1000 m of height and 500 m of prominence, the following list is provided for convenience only."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221896.7289, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221896.3596, "finish": 1722221896.7289, "ip": "", "conv_id": "82a6f4b9b9fb4881b38d220689f9e93a", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "output": [["what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "List of mountains and hills of Japan by height\n\nThe following is a list of the mountains and hills of Japan, ordered by height.\nMountains over 1000 meters\nMountains under 1000 metres\nAs the generally accepted definition of a mountain (versus a hill) is 1000 m of height and 500 m of prominence, the following list is provided for convenience only."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221896.7289, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221896.3596, "finish": 1722221896.7289, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b8ae0ef788c946cdae6e43333b1e837c", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "output": [["what is the highest mountain of Japan?", "Geography of Japan\n\nAround 15 million years ago, the volcanic shoreline of the Asian continent was pushed out into a series of volcanic island arcs. This created the \"back-arc basins\" known as the Sea of Japan and Sea of Okhotsk with the formal shaping of the Japanese archipelago. The archipelago also has summits on mountain ridges that were uplifted near the outer edge of the continental shelf. About 73 percent of Japan's area is mountainous, and scattered plains and intermontane basins (in which the population is concentrated) cover only about 27 percent. A long chain of mountains runs down the middle of the archipelago, dividing it into two halves: the \"face\", facing the Pacific Ocean, and the \"back\", toward the Sea of Japan. On the Pacific side are steep mountains 1,500 to 3,000 meters high, with deep valleys and gorges.\nCentral Japan is marked by the convergence of the three mountain chains\u2014the Hida, Kiso, and Akaishi mountains\u2014that form the Japanese Alps (Nihon Arupusu), several of whose peaks are higher than . The highest point in the Japanese Alps is Mount Kita at . The highest point in the country is Mount Fuji (Fujisan, also erroneously called Fujiyama), a volcano dormant since 1707 that rises to above sea level in Shizuoka Prefecture. On the Sea of Japan side are plateaus and low mountain districts, with altitudes of 500 to 1,500 meters."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221931.42, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221931.0569, "finish": 1722221931.42, "ip": "", "conv_id": "66985eb3324148629426035fcd7f2305", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "what's the capital of Japan?", "output": [["what's the capital of Japan?", "Tokyo\n\nTokyo (; , , ), officially the Tokyo Metropolis (, ), is the capital of Japan and one of the most populous cities in the world, with a population of over 14 million residents as of 2023 and the second-most-populated capital in the world. The Greater Tokyo Area, which includes Tokyo and parts of six neighbouring prefectures, is the most-populous metropolitan area in the world, with 40.8 million residents .\nLocated at the head of Tokyo Bay, Tokyo is part of the Kant\u014d region on the central coast of Honshu, Japan's largest island. Tokyo serves as Japan's economic center and the seat of both the Japanese government and the Emperor of Japan. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government administers Tokyo's central 23 special wards (which formerly made up Tokyo City), various commuter towns and suburbs in its western area, and two outlying island chains known as the Tokyo Islands. Despite most of the world recognising Tokyo as a city, since 1943 its governing structure has been more akin to a prefecture, with an accompanying Governor and Assembly taking precedence over the smaller municipal governments which make up the metropolis. Notable special wards in Tokyo include Chiyoda, the site of the National Diet Building and the Tokyo Imperial Palace, Shinjuku, the city's administrative center, and Shibuya, a commercial, cultural, and business hub in the city."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722221931.42, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722221931.0569, "finish": 1722221931.42, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a3ae7922262947ad995b18efd5705cbf", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what's the capital of Japan?", "output": [["what's the capital of Japan?", "Sagami Province\n\nwas a province of Japan located in what is today the central and western Kanagawa Prefecture. Sagami Province bordered the provinces of Izu, Musashi, and Suruga. It had access to the Pacific Ocean through Sagami Bay. However, most of the present-day cities of Yokohama and Kawasaki, now part of Kanagawa Prefecture, were not in Sagami, but rather, in Musashi Province. Its abbreviated form name was .\nHistory\nSagami was one of the original provinces of Japan established in the Nara period under the Taih\u014d Code. The area has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Although remnants from the Japanese Paleolithic and Yayoi periods are scarce, remains from the J\u014dmon period are relatively plentiful. Kofun period remains are generally from the 1st to the 4th century AD. Whether or not Sagami was originally part of Musashi prior to the Nara period is still a topic of controversy.\nThe original capital of the province may have been located in what is now Hiratsuka, although other contenders include \u014ciso and Ebina. Of all the former provinces of Japan, Sagami is the only in which the ruins of the Nara period capital have yet to be found. The Kokubun-ji is located in what is now Ebina. Under the Engishiki classification system, Sagami was ranked as a \"major country\" (\u4e0a\u56fd, j\u014dkoku) in terms of importance and a \"faraway country\" (\u9060\u56fd, ongoku), in terms of distance from the capital. It was also included as one of the T\u014dkaid\u014d provinces and was governed by a Kuni no miyatsuko."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722222152.8431, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722222152.6381, "finish": 1722222152.8431, "ip": "", "conv_id": "73a364513b0d4418980e9c5664923ad9", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "what is the difference between drinking chocolate and cocoa powder?", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722222152.8431, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722222152.6381, "finish": 1722222152.8431, "ip": "", "conv_id": "87aec97fab664e188c93f1c55a0b7029", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what is the difference between drinking chocolate and cocoa powder?", "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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index df8327170eb8a469b3567e70b2a23c0acf08dcb4..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,83 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720641608.9659, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720641578.1206, "finish": 1720641608.9659, "ip": "", "conv_id": "28ab191d578f427d800c83f9f8f36f0e", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Spdfgh\n\nPassage: __NOTOC__"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720641854.2435, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720641854.0715, "finish": 1720641854.2435, "ip": "", "conv_id": "19fa48010b98436fa4330e76dee4fdad", "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: List of United Kingdom locations: Woof-Wy\n\nPassage: __TOC__\nWo (continued)\nWoof-Wool\nWoon-Woot\nWor-Wou\nWr\nWy"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720641886.4357, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720641869.3871, "finish": 1720641886.4357, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6151a1854a67431d9caf8981e36272f8", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720643602.9119, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720643573.2781, "finish": 1720643602.9119, "ip": "", "conv_id": "34b24e1b08f04d35ab71fd7af0346ffb", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720643602.9119, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720643573.2781, "finish": 1720643602.9119, "ip": "", "conv_id": "31122b1d0a2f4e41b6794e4e00fbc30c", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720647887.8333, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720647887.6321, "finish": 1720647887.8333, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f1f2a05b7e33433caf43a9e394443d5b", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720647893.0223, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720647892.8846, "finish": 1720647893.0223, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1adddde511ea467f97c61d7a6d90d053", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: MDLP\n\nPassage: MDLP is an acronym standing for:\nMiniDisc Long-Play, a method for doubling or quadrupling the amount of audio that a MiniDisc can hold, using ATRAC3 compression\nMesa Distance Learning Program, a distance learning program based in Mesa, Arizona.\nMinimum description length principle"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720647899.5494, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720647899.3459, "finish": 1720647899.5494, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3df6a7d212b74dc4b8614f2744a74d9f", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Spdfgh\n\nPassage: __NOTOC__"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720647921.3466, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720647905.3074, "finish": 1720647921.3466, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1a1898991be2495887407fe0040792c0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720647947.9333, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720647928.3086, "finish": 1720647947.9333, "ip": "", "conv_id": "44150a82843347579e74437ea767f9bc", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Memory-level parallelism\n\nPassage: In computer architecture, memory-level parallelism (MLP) is the ability to have pending multiple memory operations, in particular cache misses or translation lookaside buffer (TLB) misses, at the same time.\nIn a single processor, MLP may be considered a form of instruction-level parallelism (ILP). However, ILP is often conflated with superscalar, the ability to execute more than one instruction at the same time, e.g. a processor such as the Intel Pentium Pro is five-way superscalar, with the ability to start executing five different microinstructions in a given cycle, but it can handle four different cache misses for up to 20 different load microinstructions at any time.\nIt is possible to have a machine that is not superscalar but which nevertheless has high MLP.\nArguably a machine that has no ILP, which is not superscalar, which executes one instruction at a time in a non-pipelined manner, but which performs hardware prefetching (not software instruction-level prefetching) exhibits MLP (due to multiple prefetches outstanding) but not ILP. This is because there are multiple memory operations outstanding, but not instructions. Instructions are often conflated with operations.\nFurthermore, multiprocessor and multithreaded computer systems may be said to exhibit MLP and ILP due to parallelism\u2014but not intra-thread, single process, ILP and MLP. Often, however, we restrict the terms MLP and ILP to refer to extracting such parallelism from what appears to be non-parallel single threaded code."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648084.3738, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648083.9903, "finish": 1720648084.3738, "ip": "", "conv_id": "39c526c137484bc99f42c2306260d348", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648130.2253, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648090.749, "finish": 1720648130.2253, "ip": "", "conv_id": "206907aea7514fdf8fe69d8083dfcbe9", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (M)\n\nPassage: M"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648180.5299, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648153.2362, "finish": 1720648180.5299, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4c77fa1731c74237aa11bf3416fadb79", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648206.367, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648187.9089, "finish": 1720648206.367, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d9626b483c084fedb8f84d7cfaad5917", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648233.3039, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648233.1465, "finish": 1720648233.3039, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e5fbb499c4c1496bbfef86b642aa807d", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648239.7632, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648239.66, "finish": 1720648239.7632, "ip": "", "conv_id": "440ed777cb3e44d8addf666d8d10b503", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648245.4496, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648245.324, "finish": 1720648245.4496, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c93a5e2c72c943ce8dec69e6210805d4", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Memory-level parallelism\n\nPassage: In computer architecture, memory-level parallelism (MLP) is the ability to have pending multiple memory operations, in particular cache misses or translation lookaside buffer (TLB) misses, at the same time.\nIn a single processor, MLP may be considered a form of instruction-level parallelism (ILP). However, ILP is often conflated with superscalar, the ability to execute more than one instruction at the same time, e.g. a processor such as the Intel Pentium Pro is five-way superscalar, with the ability to start executing five different microinstructions in a given cycle, but it can handle four different cache misses for up to 20 different load microinstructions at any time.\nIt is possible to have a machine that is not superscalar but which nevertheless has high MLP.\nArguably a machine that has no ILP, which is not superscalar, which executes one instruction at a time in a non-pipelined manner, but which performs hardware prefetching (not software instruction-level prefetching) exhibits MLP (due to multiple prefetches outstanding) but not ILP. This is because there are multiple memory operations outstanding, but not instructions. Instructions are often conflated with operations.\nFurthermore, multiprocessor and multithreaded computer systems may be said to exhibit MLP and ILP due to parallelism\u2014but not intra-thread, single process, ILP and MLP. Often, however, we restrict the terms MLP and ILP to refer to extracting such parallelism from what appears to be non-parallel single threaded code."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648683.0327, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648682.8993, "finish": 1720648683.0327, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6cdb1ebef3c547e2b51a4aadd7cfbbe7", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "i only have eyes for you buffy episode", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648683.0327, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648682.8993, "finish": 1720648683.0327, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4cb4151fcac04a919e5511dcf131e5f4", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "i only have eyes for you buffy episode", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648695.0763, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648694.8197, "finish": 1720648695.0763, "ip": "", "conv_id": "89664e9145c24f5aa4ac9f5e480961d3", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648695.0763, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648694.8197, "finish": 1720648695.0763, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ec056f9ed1824b2db2436540f42446b0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648734.58, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648734.4364, "finish": 1720648734.58, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cec73c435dbe40809b33d15aec783cae", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world\n\n\n", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648734.58, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648734.4364, "finish": 1720648734.58, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7451322906c248149d46ba3fd369921e", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world\n\n\n", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648768.843, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648768.6865, "finish": 1720648768.843, "ip": "", "conv_id": "61aab677d5c24607ab7b146289afb912", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648768.843, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648768.6865, "finish": 1720648768.843, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ccb9e9e4f3d6457a8ff5c5f50edcdb51", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648789.5966, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648789.4659, "finish": 1720648789.5966, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d8e64ad36336498aa3586ae451fddf33", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648789.5966, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648789.4659, "finish": 1720648789.5966, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1b38dedb8f1d4d78b590121081f68fd7", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who shot first in the shot heard around the world", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648803.0887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648802.9391, "finish": 1720648803.0887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9b76707de9924c569e52d98ae1fdd143", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where did the indian myna bird come from", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648803.0887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648802.9391, "finish": 1720648803.0887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "abbc8fbbf19c41a591340227c53ec7ec", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where did the indian myna bird come from", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648819.7432, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648818.311, "finish": 1720648819.7432, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ea8ca71800884631b88ccbe03b1baaf5", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "output": [["who played bubba in the heat of the night", "Title: Charles Q. Williams\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648819.7432, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648818.311, "finish": 1720648819.7432, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c5de26b5bc4346dd8602107ed42461e8", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who played bubba in the heat of the night", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648991.3069, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648991.0857, "finish": 1720648991.3069, "ip": "", "conv_id": "483145c78ffb4dadbccfe2b2535c8b2c", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720648991.3069, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720648991.0857, "finish": 1720648991.3069, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b27ddfea90634dfa977da2b639c64781", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "output": [["where is the university of wisconsin madison located", "Title: Northwestern University\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649114.7476, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649090.0386, "finish": 1720649114.7476, "ip": "", "conv_id": "057f632d83574cc7be758da339f21d6b", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who said the only thing we have to fear is fear itself", "output": [["who said the only thing we have to fear is fear itself", "Title: Onset of Vortices in Thin Superconducting Strips and Wires\n\nPassage: Spontaneous nucleation and the consequent penetration of vortices into thin\nsuperconducting films and wires, subjected to a magnetic field, can be\nconsidered as a nonlinear stage of primary instability of the current-carrying\nsuperconducting state. The development of the instability leads to the\nformation of a chain of vortices in strips and helicoidal vortex lines in\nwires. The boundary of instability was obtained analytically. The nonlinear\nstage was investigated by simulations of the time-dependent generalized\nGinzburg-Landau equation.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649114.7476, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649090.0386, "finish": 1720649114.7476, "ip": "", "conv_id": "762704551b914a90a76f5922b4c676df", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "who said the only thing we have to fear is fear itself", "output": [["who said the only thing we have to fear is fear itself", "Title: Beyond Einstein ... Are we all afraid of the Truth?\n\nPassage: The power-point presentation \\cite{ppt} provided herein shows exactly why\nEinstein's field equations of his general relativity are based on an illogical\napproach to representing the observable world. Einstein had, in fact, discarded\nthese equations way back in 1928 when he had began his solitary search for a\nunified field theory. However, the rest of us learned, taught, and also put too\nmuch faith for too long (for more than seventy years) in an illogical approach\nto representing the observable world. Consequently, we have developed great\nreluctance, resulting from dogmatic perceptions, prestige, reputation, ...,\nthat is holding us back from orienting ourselves in the ``right'' direction to\nthe understanding of the observable phenomena. This raises the question\nmentioned in the title: Are we all afraid of the Truth? Rhetorically speaking,\nwe could then also ask: are we all afraid of Virginia Woolf? In the sequel, I\nalso illustrate my approach to going Beyond Einstein for developing an\nappropriate mathematical framework for the fundamental physical ideas behind\nthe General Principle of Relativity, for the unification of fundamental\nphysical interactions and, hence, for a theory of everything.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649234.8832, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649120.8344, "finish": 1720649234.8832, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e1260c515ac348fab52d201decf3bb00", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649234.8832, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649120.8344, "finish": 1720649234.8832, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6c7177fa93a743afb6f69e1d0f47eaf8", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649258.5953, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649246.4751, "finish": 1720649258.5953, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6f09e4ba52dd428ea235b282eadeeeb7", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649258.5953, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649246.4751, "finish": 1720649258.5953, "ip": "", "conv_id": "987cf7019123426997aba1c034be9a08", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "output": [["when does a wrinkle in time come out in canada", "Title: Not Available\n\nPassage: withdrawn by author\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649394.3298, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649271.8542, "finish": 1720649394.3298, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1038daef9c1841d4baa70694471fae5f", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "Scaling Data", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649394.3298, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649271.8542, "finish": 1720649394.3298, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6c43531646c54b7a86b3cd5f39f04745", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Scaling Data", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649501.809, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649488.9512, "finish": 1720649501.809, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d2d67379456b43e3b41a1eb004494b4d", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where did the name blue peter come from", "output": [["where did the name blue peter come from", "Title: Multi-class Regret Detection in Hindi Devanagari Script\n\nPassage: The number of Hindi speakers on social media has increased dramatically in\nrecent years. Regret is a common emotional experience in our everyday life.\nMany speakers on social media, share their regretful experiences and opinions\nregularly. It might cause a re-evaluation of one's choices and a desire to make\na different option if given the chance. As a result, knowing the source of\nregret is critical for investigating its impact on behavior and\ndecision-making. This study focuses on regret and how it is expressed,\nspecifically in Hindi, on various social media platforms. In our study, we\npresent a novel dataset from three different sources, where each sentence has\nbeen manually classified into one of three classes \"Regret by action\", \"Regret\nby inaction\", and \"No regret\". Next, we use this dataset to investigate the\nlinguistic expressions of regret in Hindi text and also identify the textual\ndomains that are most frequently associated with regret. Our findings indicate\nthat individuals on social media platforms frequently express regret for both\npast inactions and actions, particularly within the domain of interpersonal\nrelationships. We use a pre-trained BERT model to generate word embeddings for\nthe Hindi dataset and also compare deep learning models with conventional\nmachine learning models in order to demonstrate accuracy. Our results show that\nBERT embedding with CNN consistently surpassed other models. This described the\neffectiveness of BERT for conveying the context and meaning of words in the\nregret domain.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649501.809, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649488.9512, "finish": 1720649501.809, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e325e64444f941828548c8f4304a531c", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where did the name blue peter come from", "output": [["where did the name blue peter come from", "Title: Impact of colored scalars on $D^0-\\bar D^0$ mixing in diquark models\n\nPassage: Inspired by the recent observation of the $D^0-\\bar D^0$ mixing, we explore\nthe effects of colored scalars on the $\\Delta C=2$ process in diquark models.\nAs an illustration, we investigate the diquarks with the quantum numbers of (6,\n1, 1/3) and (6, 1, 4/3) under $SU(3)_C\\times SU(2)_L\\times U(1)_Y$ gauge\nsymmetries, which contribute to the process at one-loop and tree levels,\nrespectively. We show that $\\Delta m_D$ gives the strongest constraint on the\nfree parameters. In addition, we find that the small couplings can be naturally\ninterpreted by the suppressed flavor mixings if the diquark of (6, 1, 4/3) only\ncouples to the third generation.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649755.8301, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649755.514, "finish": 1720649755.8301, "ip": "", "conv_id": "68b1d16ef9a240d9ab2618e898b20c43", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where is the orinoco river located on a map", "output": [["where is the orinoco river located on a map", "Title: withdrawn\n\nPassage: This paper has been withdrawn by the authors due to new experimental results.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649755.8301, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649755.514, "finish": 1720649755.8301, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ba881acb66564abebcde70a60bb34239", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "where is the orinoco river located on a map", "output": [["where is the orinoco river located on a map", "Title: Amazon's 2023 Drought: Sentinel-1 Reveals Extreme Rio Negro River\n Contraction\n\nPassage: The Amazon, the world's largest rainforest, faces a severe historic drought.\nThe Rio Negro River, one of the major Amazon River tributaries, reaches its\nlowest level in a century in October 2023. Here, we used a U-net deep learning\nmodel to map water surfaces in the Rio Negro River basin every 12 days in 2022\nand 2023 using 10 m spatial resolution Sentinel-1 satellite radar images. The\naccuracy of the water surface model was high with an F1-score of 0.93. The 12\ndays mosaic time series of water surface was generated from the Sentinel-1\nprediction. The water surface mask demonstrated relatively consistent agreement\nwith the Global Surface Water (GSW) product from Joint Research Centre\n(F1-score: 0.708) and with the Brazilian Mapbiomas Water initiative (F1-score:\n0.686). The main errors of the map were omission errors in flooded woodland, in\nflooded shrub and because of clouds. Rio Negro water surfaces reached their\nlowest level around the 25th of November 2023 and were reduced to 68.1\\%\n(9,559.9 km$^2$) of the maximum water surfaces observed in the period 2022-2023\n(14,036.3 km$^2$). Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data, in conjunction with\ndeep learning techniques, can significantly improve near real-time mapping of\nwater surface in tropical regions.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649772.4543, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649759.9917, "finish": 1720649772.4543, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63dd06afb61c4205823d6fe129300193", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649772.4543, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649759.9917, "finish": 1720649772.4543, "ip": "", "conv_id": "52cc528dc08146e193c91874d5cccd19", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "output": [["who sings gimme some lovin in days of thunder", "Title: This is withdrown\n\nPassage: This paper is withdrown\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649813.1495, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649813.0013, "finish": 1720649813.1495, "ip": "", "conv_id": "61a167cf27ed4c1f9353966fce98a76f", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where does route 66 start on the west coast", "output": [["where does route 66 start on the west coast", "Title: withdrawn\n\nPassage: This paper has been withdrawn by the author.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649813.1495, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649813.0013, "finish": 1720649813.1495, "ip": "", "conv_id": "baa788e8a40b4bba8954e744ae9af8a9", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "where does route 66 start on the west coast", "output": [["where does route 66 start on the west coast", "Title: Proof of the fundamental gap conjecture\n\nPassage: We prove the Fundamental Gap Conjecture, which states that the difference\nbetween the first two Dirichlet eigenvalues (the spectral gap) of a\nSchr\\\"odinger operator with convex potential and Dirichlet boundary data on a\nconvex domain is bounded below by the spectral gap on an interval of the same\ndiameter with zero potential. More generally, for an arbitrary smooth potential\nin higher dimensions, our proof gives both a sharp lower bound for the spectral\ngap and a sharp modulus of concavity for the logarithm of the first\neigenfunction, in terms of the diameter of the domain and a modulus of\nconvexity for the potential.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649826.0557, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649825.933, "finish": 1720649826.0557, "ip": "", "conv_id": "720dcf82587344a095a86ceceea417d4", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "is it illegal to own a lockpick set in the uk", "output": [["is it illegal to own a lockpick set in the uk", "Title: Direct Scattering Processes and Signatures of Chaos in Quantum\n Waveguides\n\nPassage: The effect of direct processes on the statistical properties of deterministic\nscattering processes in a chaotic waveguide is examined. The single channel\nPoisson kernel describes well the distribution of S-matrix eigenphases when\nevaluated over an energy interval. When direct processes are transformed away,\nthe scattering processes exhibit universal random matrix behavior. The effect\nof chaos on scattering wavefunctions,eigenphases, and time delays is discussed.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649826.0557, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649825.933, "finish": 1720649826.0557, "ip": "", "conv_id": "da4879f6b7814bf89acb85f0c4fc6773", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "is it illegal to own a lockpick set in the uk", "output": [["is it illegal to own a lockpick set in the uk", "Title: Hypergraph Contextuality\n\nPassage: Quantum contextuality is a source of quantum computational power and a\ntheoretical delimiter between classical and quantum structures. It has been\nsubstantiated by numerous experiments and prompted generation of state\nindependent contextual sets, that is, sets of quantum observables capable of\nrevealing quantum contextuality for any quantum state of a given dimension.\nThere are two major classes of state-independent contextual sets - the\nKochen-Specker ones and the operator-based ones. In this paper, we present a\nthird, hypergraph-based class of contextual sets. Hypergraph inequalities serve\nas a measure of contextuality. We limit ourselves to qutrits and obtain\nthousands of 3-dim contextual sets. The simplest of them involves only 5\nquantum observables, thus enabling a straightforward implementation. They also\nenable establishing new entropic contextualities.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649828.565, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649828.3886, "finish": 1720649828.565, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f68bc889e05b4db39dae3934da5f3748", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "how many flights do ryanair have a day", "output": [["how many flights do ryanair have a day", "Title: Poisson Geometry of SL(3,C)-Character Varieties Relative to a Surface\n with Boundary\n\nPassage: The SL(3,C)-representation variety R of a free group F arises naturally by\nconsidering surface group representations for a surface with boundary. There is\na SL(3,C)-action on the coordinate ring of R by conjugation. The geometric\npoints of the subring of invariants of this action is an affine variety X. The\npoints of X parametrize isomorphism classes of completely reducible\nrepresentations. We show the coordinate ring C[X] is a complex Poisson algebra\nwith respect to a presentation of F imposed by the surface. Lastly, we work out\nthe bracket on all generators when the surface is a three-holed sphere or a\none-holed torus.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649828.565, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649828.3886, "finish": 1720649828.565, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2fb998a0ed5743dfbe5e71c478f31df0", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "how many flights do ryanair have a day", "output": [["how many flights do ryanair have a day", "Title: Modeling the Multi-layer Nature of the European Air Transport Network:\n Resilience and Passengers Re-scheduling under random failures\n\nPassage: We study the dynamics of the European Air Transport Network by using a\nmultiplex network formalism. We will consider the set of flights of each\nairline as an interdependent network and we analyze the resilience of the\nsystem against random flight failures in the passenger's rescheduling problem.\nA comparison between the single-plex approach and the corresponding multiplex\none is presented illustrating that the multiplexity strongly affects the\nrobustness of the European Air Network.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649846.6139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649831.6685, "finish": 1720649846.6139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b23142b4e47d4c8bb48da3b7841b5e09", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "marketing is the process of creating and delivering desired goods and services to customers", "output": [["marketing is the process of creating and delivering desired goods and services to customers", "Title: Marketing Analytics: Methods, Practice, Implementation, and Links to\n Other Fields\n\nPassage: Marketing analytics is a diverse field, with both academic researchers and\npractitioners coming from a range of backgrounds including marketing, expert\nsystems, statistics, and operations research. This paper provides an\nintegrative review at the boundary of these areas. The aim is to give\nresearchers in the intelligent and expert systems community the opportunity to\ngain a broad view of the marketing analytics area and provide a starting point\nfor future interdisciplinary collaboration. The topics of visualization,\nsegmentation, and class prediction are featured. Links between the disciplines\nare emphasized. For each of these topics, a historical overview is given,\nstarting with initial work in the 1960s and carrying through to the present\nday. Recent innovations for modern, large, and complex \"big data\" sets are\ndescribed. Practical implementation advice is given, along with a directory of\nopen source R routines for implementing marketing analytics techniques.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649846.6139, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649831.6685, "finish": 1720649846.6139, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c13c3f7aa2bd46c8819cb993637bfba0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "marketing is the process of creating and delivering desired goods and services to customers", "output": [["marketing is the process of creating and delivering desired goods and services to customers", "Title: Network Internet-communications as an instrument of marketing\n\nPassage: The article is about the features of application of network\nInternet-communications for advancement of the goods. Wide development of\nInternet technologies has transformed social communications into the\nindependent tool of marketing. Authors classify and analyze possibilities of\nuse of network Internet-communications in the marketing environment.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649858.7267, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649858.562, "finish": 1720649858.7267, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9d6199637a654f1cadefdf7f289a8be6", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "who is the first wife on sister wives", "output": [["who is the first wife on sister wives", "Title: Geometry of high-lying eigenfunctions in a plane billiard system having\n mixed type classical dynamics\n\nPassage: In this work we study the geometrical properties of the high-lying\neigenfunctions (200,000 and above) which are deep in the semiclassical regime.\nThe system we are analyzing is the billiard system inside the region defined by\nthe quadratic (complex) conformal map $w = z + \\lambda z^{2}$ of the unit disk\n$|z| \\le 1$ as introduced by Robnik (1983), with the shape parameter value\n$\\lambda = 0.15$, so that the billiard is still convex and has KAM-type\nclassical dynamics, where regular and irregular regions of classical motion\ncoexist in the classical phase space. By inspecting 100 and by showing 36\nconsecutive numerically calculated eigenfunctions we reach the following\nconclusions: (1) Percival's (1973) conjectured classification in regular and\nirregular states works well: the mixed type states \"living\" on regular {\\em\nand} irregular regions disappear in the semiclassical limit. (2) The irregular\n(chaotic) states can be strongly localized due to the slow classical diffusion,\nbut become fully extended in the semiclassical limit when the break time\nbecomes sufficiently large with respect to the classical diffusion time. (3)\nAlmost all states can be clearly associated with some relevant classical object\nlike invariant torus, cantorus or periodic orbits. This paper is largely\nqualitative but deep in the semiclassical limit and as such it is a prelude to\nour next paper which is quantitative and numerically massive but at about ten\ntimes lower energies.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649858.7267, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649858.562, "finish": 1720649858.7267, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c1a535fecbaa4444ab2e2341fd9699b1", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who is the first wife on sister wives", "output": [["who is the first wife on sister wives", "Title: So\\~nando con n\\'umeros, Mar\\'ia Andresa Casamayor (1720-1780)\n\nPassage: Mar\\'ia Andresa Casamayor de la Coma, born in Zaragoza, is known as the first\nwoman who published a scientific book in Spain. In this paper we provide\nanswers to several of the most important questions about her unknown biography\nsuch as her birth day, the origins of her family, the houses where she and her\nclose family lived, her job as a teacher and even her true name.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649862.9994, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649862.8216, "finish": 1720649862.9994, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3acc0665672d4cce8695828795d2a5f4", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "what is the approximate volume of blood in your body", "output": [["what is the approximate volume of blood in your body", "Title: Phenomenology of Non-Custodial Warped Models\n\nPassage: We study the effect of bulk fermions on electroweak precision observables in\na recently proposed model with warped extra dimensions and no custodial\nsymmetry. We find that the top-quark mass, together with the corrections to the\nZbb vertex and the one-loop contribution to the T parameter, which is finite,\nimpose important constraints that single out a well defined region of parameter\nspace. New massive vector bosons can be as light as 1.5 TeV and have large\ncouplings to the t_R quark, and suppressed couplings to the t_L, b_L and\nlighter quarks. We discuss the implications for searches of models with warped\nextra dimensions at the LHC.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649862.9994, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649862.8216, "finish": 1720649862.9994, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9768223b6c5b40f39d13b1d4abce3600", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the approximate volume of blood in your body", "output": [["what is the approximate volume of blood in your body", "Title: Realizing Infinity\n\nPassage: What happens when mathematics realizes infinity. When are mathematical\ndefinitions actually useful?\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649866.6367, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649866.4799, "finish": 1720649866.6367, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f38fbadc132248598643403f51ebad2b", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "when does the new back to the future movie come out", "output": [["when does the new back to the future movie come out", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649866.6367, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649866.4799, "finish": 1720649866.6367, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b8a7f1dadcb74fb2bc33ba731bd7cd7f", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "when does the new back to the future movie come out", "output": [["when does the new back to the future movie come out", "Title: Investigation of Skyscraper's Feat (original version with an addendum)\n\nPassage: Skyscraper is a Hollywood action film directed and written by Rawson M.\nThurber scheduled to be released on July 13, 2018. We present an exhaustive\nanalysis of the feat shown in the recently released teaser poster and trailer\nof the film. Although the feat appears to be unrealistic at first glance, after\nclose investigation using back-of-the-envelope calculations, it is seen to be\nwithin human capabilities.\n This article is the original version of an abridged article published in\nPhysics Education. It was written very soon after the poster and clip were\nreleased by Universal Pictures.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649934.9621, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649934.8583, "finish": 1720649934.9621, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c7900e602e234e3e951b44e0de1163c8", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "was star wars a book or a movie first", "output": [["was star wars a book or a movie first", "Title: Disentangling jet and disc emission from the 2005 outburst of XTE\n J1118+480\n\nPassage: The black hole X-ray transient, XTE J1118+480, has now twice been observed in\noutburst - 2000 and 2005 - and on both occasions remained in the low/hard X-ray\nspectral state. Here we present radio, infrared, optical, soft X-ray and hard\nX-ray observations of the more recent outburst. We find that the lightcurves\nhave very different morphologies compared with the 2000 event and the optical\ndecay is delayed relative to the X-ray/radio. We attribute this lesser degree\nof correlation to contributions of emission from multiple components, in\nparticular the jet and accretion disc. Whereas the jet seemed to dominate the\nbroadband spectrum in 2000, in 2005 the accretion disc seems to be more\nprominent and we use an analysis of the lightcurves and spectra to distinguish\nbetween the jet and disc emission. There also appears to be an optically thin\ncomponent to the radio emission in the 2005 data, possibly associated with\nmultiple ejection events and decaying as the outburst proceeds. These results\nadd to the discussion that the term \"low/hard state'\" covers a wider range of\nproperties than previously thought, if it is to account for XTE J1118+480\nduring these two outbursts.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649934.9621, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649934.8583, "finish": 1720649934.9621, "ip": "", "conv_id": "239e4e711fde43108eaaf675dd058cc8", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "was star wars a book or a movie first", "output": [["was star wars a book or a movie first", "Title: Caught in the Act?\n\nPassage: Which came first, the stars and gas that make up a galaxy, or the giant black\nhole at its centre? Observations of a distant galaxy, caught as it forms, could\nhelp solve this chicken-and-egg problem.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649937.8976, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649937.7664, "finish": 1720649937.8976, "ip": "", "conv_id": "096fe0f7828e4d65b0c32c78741bb3c9", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "the name given to a judge in scotland", "output": [["the name given to a judge in scotland", "Title: Women's participation in mathematics in Scotland, 1730-1850\n\nPassage: The eighteenth century saw a flourishing of scientific and philosophical\nthought throughout Scotland, known as the Scottish Enlightenment. The\naccomplishments of prominent male figures of this period have been well\ndocumented in all disciplines. However, studies of women's experiences are\nrelatively sparse. This paper partially corrects this oversight by drawing\ntogether evidence for women's participation in mathematics in Scotland between\n1730 and 1850. In considering women across all social classes, it argues for a\nbroad definition of 'mathematics' that includes arithmetic and astronomy, and\nassesses women's opportunities for engagement under three headings: education,\nfamily, and sociability. It concludes that certain elements of Scottish\nEnlightenment culture promoted wider participation by women in mathematical\nactivities than has previously been recognized, but that such participation\ncontinued to be circumscribed by societal views of the role of women within\nfamily formation.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649937.8976, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649937.7664, "finish": 1720649937.8976, "ip": "", "conv_id": "46760a5139f44abc97773c42ffdcfe9d", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "the name given to a judge in scotland", "output": [["the name given to a judge in scotland", "Title: A Chorus of Bells\n\nPassage: An account of some of the life and work of John Bell\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649940.4528, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649940.273, "finish": 1720649940.4528, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0a20483efc6a4abe9cf933fc31692242", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "what are the three fifty shades of grey books", "output": [["what are the three fifty shades of grey books", "Title: Not Available\n\nPassage: withdrawn by author\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649940.4528, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649940.273, "finish": 1720649940.4528, "ip": "", "conv_id": "543f7d00086746c2afcb0af96ae7e49e", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what are the three fifty shades of grey books", "output": [["what are the three fifty shades of grey books", "Title: The Many Worlds of Hugh Everett III\n\nPassage: A review of Peter Byrne's biography of Hugh Everett III, \"The Many Worlds of\nHugh Everett III: Multiple Universes, Mutual Assured Destruction, and the\nMeltdown of a Nuclear Family\", (Oxford University Press, 2010).\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649944.5397, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649944.3827, "finish": 1720649944.5397, "ip": "", "conv_id": "487555f739de4d14878f47c03a54f173", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "how many hoops are used in a game of croquet", "output": [["how many hoops are used in a game of croquet", "Title: Croquet Project\n\nPassage: The Croquet Project is a software project that was intended to promote the continued development of the Croquet open-source software development kit to create and deliver collaborative multi-user online applications. Croquet is implemented in Squeak Smalltalk.\nCroquet supports communication, collaboration, resource sharing, and synchronous computation among multiple users.\nApplications created with the Croquet software development kit can be used to support collaborative data visualization, virtual learning and problem solving environments, 3D wikis, online gaming environments (massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPGs)), and privately maintained or interconnected multiuser virtual environments.\nFurther development of the technology has also branched into the Open Cobalt and Open Croquet efforts.\nTechnical functions\nCroquet is a software development kit (SDK) for use in developing collaborative virtual world applications.\nApplications created using the Croquet SDK are automatically collaborative since application objects in Croquet share a common protocol allowing them to cooperate with each other by employing the principle of replicated computation (synchronization) together with a peer-based messaging protocol. The technology is designed to facilitate such replication between peers, to greatly reduce the overhead needed for widespread deployment of collaborative virtual worlds."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649944.5397, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649944.3827, "finish": 1720649944.5397, "ip": "", "conv_id": "159eb0e409724897958a504d8b2384df", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "how many hoops are used in a game of croquet", "output": [["how many hoops are used in a game of croquet", "Title: Triple Peel\n\nPassage: A triple peel can be performed either on the striker's partner ball, or on one of the opponent's balls; the latter case is referred to as a Triple Peel on Opponent (TPO).\nThe significance of a triple peel is the rule in advanced association croquet that defines penalties for a player who runs their ball through the 4-back hoop. The penalty is particularly severe when 4-back is run during the same break as 1-back, by the first of the player's two balls: in this case, at the end of the turn, the opponent is allowed to take the innings by selecting either of their balls and lifting it next to another ball on the lawn, as if the ball had been roqueted. Because conceding a contact in this way creates a good chance of losing the game, players will generally end a break before running 4-back. This means that it is common for a player to start an all-round break in a position where another ball on the lawn has 4-back as its next hoop.\nIn a triple peel on the partner ball, the objective is to get the striker's ball all the way round the lawn, and the partner through its last three hoops, and then peg both balls out, thus winning the game. In top level play this is sometimes achieved as early as the fifth turn of the game.\nIn a triple peel on the opponent, the objective is to peg out the opponent's ball. This is usually attempted when the opponent's other ball is still on its first hoop. On successful completion the striker has both balls on the lawn, while the opponent has only one ball, positioned at hoop 1. Although peeling scores points for the opponent, pegging one of the opponent's balls out puts them at a considerable disadvantage because it is much harder to make a break with one remaining ball when its partner has been eliminated from the game.\nSextuple peel\nIn recent years the best players have perfected the triple peel, to the extent that leaving a ball at 4-back is considered risky. Such players may well end a break at 1-back, hoping to complete the game with a sextuple peel (peeling the partner through its last six hoops). The sextuple peel is now considered one of the highest achievements in croquet, performed only by a handful of top international players. The triple peel, by contrast, is the highest aspiration of many good players at club level."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649946.7752, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649946.6373, "finish": 1720649946.7752, "ip": "", "conv_id": "595f90c51bfa403bb98682b7858098a9", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "how long did the menendez brothers get in prison for killing their parents", "output": [["how long did the menendez brothers get in prison for killing their parents", "Title: Francisco Men\u00e9ndez\n\nPassage: Francisco Men\u00e9ndez Valdivieso (3 December 1830 \u2013 22 June 1890) was Provisional President of El Salvador from 22 June 1885 to 1 March 1887, then President of El Salvador from 1 March 1887 until his death on 22 June 1890.\nGeneral Francisco Men\u00e9ndez was born in Ahuachap\u00e1n, 3 December 1830 and died in San Salvador, 22 June 1890. His parents were Jos\u00e9 Eustachian Men\u00e9ndez and Gabriela Valdivieso, independently wealthy landowners. In 1858, General Men\u00e9ndez wed Bonifacia Salazar in an arranged marriage. At age forty-one he took an active role in the revolution of 1871 that ousted Dr. Francisco Due\u00f1as, the mayor of Ahuachap\u00e1n. At the age of fifty-five General Men\u00e9ndez was named Provisional President of El Salvador 22 June 1885, receiving the supreme power of Jos\u00e9 Rosales.\nMen\u00e9ndez presided over the creation of the liberal Constitution of 1886, which served as El Salvador's constitution well into the 20th century. He was elected to a constitutional four-year term in 1887 and would be overthrown in a coup d'\u00e9tat in 1890. His son Jos\u00e9 Asensio Men\u00e9ndez and grandson Enrique Maga\u00f1a Men\u00e9ndez were active in politics in the 20th century."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649946.7752, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649946.6373, "finish": 1720649946.7752, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f1af7b9c1e3248cf937f06b621e39f69", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "how long did the menendez brothers get in prison for killing their parents", "output": [["how long did the menendez brothers get in prison for killing their parents", "Title: Jeremy Strohmeyer\n\nPassage: Plea bargain\nStrohmeyer's defense attorney was Leslie Abramson, who represented many high-profile clients, including the Men\u00e9ndez brothers. Strohmeyer claimed he was high on alcohol and drugs at the time and did not remember committing the crimes. It was even suggested that perhaps the witness, David Cash, had, in fact, been the one to murder Sherrice, as Strohmeyer claimed to have no recollection of his actions and the witness was the one to actually tell him what he had seen him doing in the bathroom that night. Abramson also noted that Strohmeyer's biological father is in prison and his biological mother is in a mental hospital.\nStrohmeyer's trial was scheduled to begin in September 1998. Strohmeyer was originally facing a possible death sentence for the murder (had the case gone to trial), but hours before his trial was to start, Abramson entered a plea bargain on his behalf. On September 8, 1998, Strohmeyer pleaded guilty to four charges: first-degree murder, first-degree kidnapping, sexual assault on a minor with substantial bodily harm and sexual assault on a minor. On October 14, 1998, he was sentenced to four life terms, one for each crime he pleaded guilty to, to be served consecutively without possibility of parole.\nAfter the trial\nImprisonment\nStrohmeyer was initially incarcerated at Ely State Prison, a maximum security prison located north of Ely, Nevada, where most prisoners in Nevada who are serving life without parole are imprisoned for at least the early portion of their sentences. He was placed in administrative segregation, meaning that he was not placed in the general inmate population, but rather in his own cell in a special secured section. His prison number is #059389. Strohmeyer was reportedly transferred to the Lovelock Correctional Center in Lovelock, Nevada, where he is classified as \"medium\" custody. Strohmeyer as of January 2023 is in High Desert State Prison which is a low/medium custody.\nAppeals\nJeremy Strohmeyer subsequently appealed his conviction.\nIn 2000, he was unsuccessfully defended by Camille Abate. Strohmeyer recanted his confession and accused Abramson of lying to him and bullying him into pleading not guilty in order to cover up her misunderstanding of Nevada law. Strohmeyer's new attorneys also suggested that Abramson wanted him to plead guilty because Strohmeyer's parents could not afford to pay her additional fees if the case went to trial. Abramson denied all the allegations. Ultimately, his appeal was rejected.\nIn 2001, the Nevada Supreme Court rejected an appeal by Strohmeyer to withdraw his guilty plea. In January 2006, Strohmeyer lost a federal court bid to review his case.\nOn May 31, 2018, a request for parole was made based on 2012 and 2016 Supreme Court decisions that juveniles should have a chance at parole.\nHis request was denied in July 2018.\nLawsuit by adoptive parents"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649949.4553, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649949.3419, "finish": 1720649949.4553, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1477a6e4932b4913ad9d8b481f39cd78", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "votes required to pass a bill in indian parliament", "output": [["votes required to pass a bill in indian parliament", "Title: Majority Act (India)\n\nPassage: The Majority Act of 1875 (Indian Majority Act, 1875 earlier) As per section 3(1) of the Indian Majority Act 1875 every person domiciled in India shall attain the age of majority on completion of 18 years and not before. Unless a particular personal law specifies otherwise, every person domiciled in India is deemed to have attained majority upon completion of 18 years of age. Section 3(2) states that in computing the age of any person, the day on which he was born is to be included as a whole day and he shall be deemed to have attained majority at the beginning of the eighteenth anniversary of that day. But if the child born is appointed a guardian or he/she is under court of wards then he/she attains majority after his completion of 21 years of age."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649949.4553, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649949.3419, "finish": 1720649949.4553, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fb56fb569eef4482a507fede685df04a", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "votes required to pass a bill in indian parliament", "output": [["votes required to pass a bill in indian parliament", "Title: Money bill\n\nPassage: Bangladesh\nA money bill is specifically defined by Article 81 of the Constitution of Bangladesh. The President of Bangladesh can send back all bills passed by the Parliament for a review except a money bill. However, a money bill can be introduced to the Parliament only at the President's recommendation. Additionally, tax can only be levied by the Parliament.\nCanada\nAlthough Parliament may pass money bills, under section 54 of the Constitution Act, 1867 funds can be appropriated only on the recommendation of the Governor-General. This has resulted in the convention that only ministers introduce money bills.\nIndia\nProcedure for a Money Bill:\nMoney Bills can be introduced only in Lok Sabha (lower House).\nMoney bills passed by the Lok Sabha are sent to the Rajya Sabha (upper house). The Rajya Sabha may not amend money bills but can recommend amendments. To make sure that Rajya Sabha does not amend the bill by adding some non-money matters (known as Financial Bill), the Speaker of the Lok Sabha certifies the bill as a money bill before sending it to the upper house, and the decision of the Speaker is binding on both the Houses. A money bill must be returned to the Lok Sabha within 14 days, or the bill is deemed to have passed both houses in the form it was originally passed by the Lok Sabha.\nWhen a Money Bill is returned to the Lok Sabha with the recommended amendments of the Rajya Sabha, it is open to the Lok Sabha to accept or reject any or all of the recommendations.\nA money bill is deemed to have passed both houses with any recommended amendments the Lok Sabha chooses to accept, and without any that it chooses to decline.\nThe definition of \"Money Bill\" is given in Article 110 of The Constitution of India. A financial bill is not a Money Bill unless it fulfills the requirements of Article 110.\nThe Speaker of the Lok Sabha certifies if a financial bill is a Money Bill or not.\nPolicy cut motion - disapproval of the given policy. Symbolically, the members demand that the amount of the demand be reduced to 1\u00a0INR. They may also suggest an alternative policy.\nEconomy cut motion - it is demanded that the amount of the policy be reduced by a specified amount.\nToken cut motion - used to show specific grievance against the government. Also states that the amount of the demand be reduced by Rs. 100.\nA money bill can only be introduced in parliament with prior permission of the President of India.\nFinance bill is supposed to be enacted within 75 days (including the Parliament voting and the President assenting).\nMoney bill cannot be returned by the President to the parliament for its reconsideration, as it is presented in the Lok Sabha with his permission."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649956.6967, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649956.6037, "finish": 1720649956.6967, "ip": "", "conv_id": "25675d7ba98244cd80ee2ecd16b9f0ec", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "how does metallic bonding result in useful properties of metals", "output": [["how does metallic bonding result in useful properties of metals", "Title: The Effect of Magnetic Variability on Stellar Angular Momentum Loss I:\n The Solar Wind Torque During Sunspot Cycles 23 & 24\n\nPassage: The rotational evolution of cool stars is governed by magnetised stellar\nwinds which slow the stellar rotation during their main sequence lifetimes.\nMagnetic variability is commonly observed in Sun-like stars, and the changing\nstrength and topology of the global field is expected to affect the torque\nexerted by the stellar wind. We present three different methods for computing\nthe angular momentum loss in the solar wind. Two are based on MHD simulations\nfrom Finley & Matt (2018), with one using the open flux measured in the solar\nwind, and the other using remotely-observed surface magnetograms. Both methods\nagree in the variation of the solar torque seen through the solar cycle and\nshow a 30-40% decrease from cycle 23 to 24. The two methods calculate different\naverage values, $2.9\\times10^{30}$erg (open flux) and $0.35\\times10^{30}$erg\n(surface field). This discrepancy results from the already well-known\ndifficulty with reconciling the magnetograms with observed open flux, which is\ncurrently not understood, leading to an inability to discriminate between these\ntwo calculated torques. The third method is based on the observed spin-rates of\nSun-like stars, which decrease with age, directly probing the average angular\nmomentum loss. This method gives $6.2\\times10^{30}$erg for the solar torque,\nlarger than the other methods. This may be indicative of further variability in\nthe solar torque on timescales much longer than the magnetic cycle. We discuss\nthe implications for applying the formula to other Sun-like stars, where only\nsurface field measurements are available, and where the magnetic variations are\nill-constrained.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649956.6967, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649956.6037, "finish": 1720649956.6967, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c23599bc4f840d39b92df29cb718af4", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "how does metallic bonding result in useful properties of metals", "output": [["how does metallic bonding result in useful properties of metals", "Title: Atomic bonding and electrical characteristics of metallic and\n semi-metallic elements\n\nPassage: In this paper, we use density functional theory to calculate the electronic\nstructure and properties of 46 metallic and semi-metallic elements. The binding\nenergy and bond charge model (BBC) model is combined with the tight binding and\ndensity functional tight binding approaches to obtain quantitative information\nabout atomic bonding at the atomic scale and to understand the contributions\nand effects of deformation energy density, energy shifts, and atomic bonding on\nthe Hamiltonian.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649960.0635, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649959.961, "finish": 1720649960.0635, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f41205c8beb347cb8e98f45469bbd305", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when does a building need a fire pump", "output": [["when does a building need a fire pump", "Title: Multi-Variant Scheduling of Critical Time-Triggered Communication in\n Incremental Development Process: Application to FlexRay\n\nPassage: The portfolio of models offered by car manufacturing groups often includes\nmany variants (i.e., different car models and their versions). With such\ndiversity in car models, variant management becomes a formidable task. Thus,\nthere is an effort to keep the variants as close as possible. This simple\nrequirement forms a big challenge in the area of communication protocols. When\nseveral vehicle variants use the same signal, it is often required to\nsimultaneously schedule such a signal in all vehicle variants. Furthermore, new\nvehicle variants are designed incrementally in such a way as to maintain\nbackward compatibility with the older vehicles. Backward compatibility of\ntime-triggered schedules reduces expenses relating to testing and fine-tuning\nof the components that interact with physical environment (e.g.,\nelectromagnetic compatibility issues). As this requirement provides for using\nthe same platform, it simplifies signal traceability and diagnostics, across\ndifferent vehicle variants, besides simplifying the reuse of components and\ntools.\n This paper proposes an efficient and robust heuristic algorithm, which\ncreates the schedules for internal communication of new vehicle variants. The\nalgorithm provides for variant management by ensuring compatibility among the\nnew variants, besides preserving backward compatibility with the preceding\nvehicle variants. Based on the results of the proposed algorithm, the impact of\nmaintaining compatibility among new variants and of preserving backward\ncompatibility with the preceding variants on the scheduling procedure is\nexamined and discussed. Thanks to the execution time of the algorithm, which is\nless than one second, the network parameters like the frame length and cycle\nduration are explored to find their best choice concerning the schedule\nfeasibility.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720649960.0635, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720649959.961, "finish": 1720649960.0635, "ip": "", "conv_id": "29747b2473c445fca2c5afe0a8455f60", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "when does a building need a fire pump", "output": [["when does a building need a fire pump", "Title: Managing Commercial HVAC Systems: What do Building Operators Really\n Need?\n\nPassage: Buildings form an essential part of modern life; people spend a significant\namount of their time in them, and they consume large amounts of energy. A\nvariety of systems provide services such as lighting, air conditioning and\nsecurity which are managed using Building Management Systems (BMS) by building\noperators. To better understand the capability of current BMS and characterize\ncommon practices of building operators, we investigated their use across five\ninstitutions in the US. We interviewed ten operators and discovered that BMS do\nnot address a number of key concerns for the management of buildings. Our\nanalysis is rooted in the everyday work of building operators and highlights a\nnumber of design suggestions to help improve the user experience and management\nof BMS, ultimately leading to improvements in productivity, as well as\nbuildings comfort and energy efficiency.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720651190.1752, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651189.8548, "finish": 1720651190.1752, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7a68fbdbd813469a927f2a0a873f9e7b", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "joined mexico and the united states to form nafta", "output": [["joined mexico and the united states to form nafta", "Title: Infinite-Dimensional Geometry of the Universal Deformation of the\n Complex Disk\n\nPassage: The universal deformation of the complex disk is studied from the viewpoint\nof infinite-dimensional geometry. The structure of a subsymmetric space on the\nuniversal deformation is described. The foliation of the universal deformation\nby subsymmetry mirrors is shown to determine a real polarization.\n The subject of the paper maybe of interest to specialists in algebraic\ngeometry and representation theory as well as to researchers dealing with\nmathematical problems of modern quantum field theory.\n Contents.\n I. The infinite-dimensional geometry of the flag manifold of the\nVirasoro-Bott group (the base of the universal deformation of the complex\ndisk).\n II. The infinite-dimensional geometry of the skeleton of the flag manifold of\nthe Virasoro-Bott group.\n III. The infinite-dimensional geometry of the universal deformation of the\ncomplex disk.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720651190.1752, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651189.8548, "finish": 1720651190.1752, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5a6ebc3109a943f0986a2c3fc2f536cd", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "joined mexico and the united states to form nafta", "output": [["joined mexico and the united states to form nafta", "Title: Economic effects of Chile FTAs and an eventual CTPP accession\n\nPassage: In this article, we show the benefits derived from the Chile-USA (in-force\nJan, 2004) and Chile-China (in-force Oct, 2006) FTA on GDP consumer and\nproducers to conclude that Chile improved its welfare improved after its\nsubscription. From that point, we extrapolate to show the direct and indirect\nbenefits of CTPP accession.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720651311.4134, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651311.0097, "finish": 1720651311.4134, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e2e57afa726845d183791e3f4b232e46", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when was the cello invented and by whom", "output": [["when was the cello invented and by whom", "Title: Cello concerto\n\nPassage: A cello concerto (sometimes called a violoncello concerto) is a concerto for solo cello with orchestra or, very occasionally, smaller groups of instruments."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720651311.4134, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651311.0097, "finish": 1720651311.4134, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4fde4aac28974ece9f3a73768b34acfa", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when was the cello invented and by whom", "output": [["when was the cello invented and by whom", "Title: 1930s in games\n\nPassage: Games released or invented in the 1930s"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720651319.0586, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651318.8398, "finish": 1720651319.0586, "ip": "", "conv_id": "31d1a3892b304e3ba5e13077d698dc2b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "conway twitty family guy i see the want to in your eyes", "output": [["conway twitty family guy i see the want to in your eyes", "Title: Do we have privacy in the digital world?\n\nPassage: Not really.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720651319.0586, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651318.8398, "finish": 1720651319.0586, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1d62643abab140d7bb7158556de9f0b7", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "conway twitty family guy i see the want to in your eyes", "output": [["conway twitty family guy i see the want to in your eyes", "Title: When to Laugh and How Hard? A Multimodal Approach to Detecting Humor and\n its Intensity\n\nPassage: Prerecorded laughter accompanying dialog in comedy TV shows encourages the\naudience to laugh by clearly marking humorous moments in the show. We present\nan approach for automatically detecting humor in the Friends TV show using\nmultimodal data. Our model is capable of recognizing whether an utterance is\nhumorous or not and assess the intensity of it. We use the prerecorded laughter\nin the show as annotation as it marks humor and the length of the audience's\nlaughter tells us how funny a given joke is. We evaluate the model on episodes\nthe model has not been exposed to during the training phase. Our results show\nthat the model is capable of correctly detecting whether an utterance is\nhumorous 78% of the time and how long the audience's laughter reaction should\nlast with a mean absolute error of 600 milliseconds.\n"]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-d6cb1a0a-df19-4803-9004-40699c5f1086.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-d6cb1a0a-df19-4803-9004-40699c5f1086.jsonl
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@@ -1,10 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720842649.0725, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720842592.4962, "finish": 1720842649.0725, "ip": "", "conv_id": "18e8d53735d24468b7a760326c6b5d49", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "who was elected senator of illinois in 1858", "output": [["who was elected senator of illinois in 1858", "Title: 1858 New York state election\n\nPassage: The 1858 New York state election was held on November 2, 1858, to elect the governor, the lieutenant governor, a Canal Commissioner, and an Inspector of State Prisons, as well as all members of the New York State Assembly and two members of the New York State Senate. Besides, the question was asked if a Constitutional Convention should be held, and answered in the negative: The vote was 135,266 for and 144,526 against.\nHistory\nThe \"Mass State Convention to nominate Gerrit Smith for Governor\" met on August 4 at Syracuse, New York, Isaac Parks, of Canastota, presided.\nThe Republican and the American state conventions met on September 8 at Syracuse, New York. At the Republican convention, Thurlow Weed was a delegate to a state convention for the first time after twenty years. There was some debate about the nomination of a joint ticket with the Americans. Ezra Graves was temporary chairman until the choice of Daniel T. Jones as president. A motion to nominate candidates for governor was voted down by 166 to 67, and the convention adjourned. At the American convention, Daniel Ullmann was chosen President, and after much debate they adjourned too. The Republican convention re-assembled on September 9, and Edwin D. Morgan was nominated for governor on the second ballot (first ballot: Morgan 116, Timothy Jenkins 51, James M. Cook 35, George W. Patterson 23, A. S. Diven 21, John Alsop King 4, Horace Greeley 3; second ballot: Morgan 165, Jenkins 52, Patterson 20, Diven 18). Between the two ballots an American delegation arrived. Robert Campbell was nominated for lieutenant governor by acclamation. Now the American delegation marched back to the American convention with a Republican delegation which announced the Republican nominations and offered the Americans to complete the joint ticket with the nominees for Canal Commissioner and Prison Inspector. The Americans decided against it and nominated Lorenzo Burrows for governor, and Nathaniel S. Benton for lieutenant governor by acclamation. James R. Thompson was nominated for Canal Commissioner on the first ballot (vote: Thompson 84, Jesse C. Dann 64, Benoni Thompson 15, Justus Deming 4, scattering 4). The incumbent William A. Russell was re-nominated for Prison Inspector on the first ballot.\nResult\nThe whole Republican ticket was elected. The incumbent Russell was defeated.\nOne Republican and one American were elected for the session of 1859 to the New York State Senate, which had then 16 Republicans, 12 Democrats, 3 Americans and one Independent Republican.\n99 Republicans and Americans, and 29 Democrats were elected for the session of 1859 to the New York State Assembly."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720842649.0725, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720842592.4962, "finish": 1720842649.0725, "ip": "", "conv_id": "70fc31a71cc74ca78795ee1c480368a3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who was elected senator of illinois in 1858", "output": [["who was elected senator of illinois in 1858", "Title: Electoral history of Abraham Lincoln\n\nPassage: This is the electoral history of Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln served one term in the United States House of Representatives from Illinois (1847\u20131849). He later served as the 16th president of the United States (1861\u20131865).\nIllinois House of Representatives\nUnited States House of Representatives\n1842: Despite aspirations for the congressional office, Lincoln did not actively run for the Whig Party nomination; as a delegate to the Whig nominating convention, Lincoln helped cut a deal that would give John J. Hardin the nomination in 1842, Edward Dickinson Baker the nomination in 1844 and Lincoln the nomination in 1846.\n1846 elections\nIllinois House of Representatives\n1854 - Wins seat in Illinois House of Representatives, declines seat to focus on future candidacy for United States Senate. The election was held in November 1854, for a term starting in March 1855.\n1855 US Senate election\nThe election was held on February 8, 1855, for a term starting in March 1855.\nNote: At this time, U.S. Senators were elected by the state legislatures, not by vote of the people\n51 votes needed for election\nCandidate won that Round of voting\nCandidate won Senate seat\nNote: Five \"anti-Nebraska\" Democrats (i.e. opposed to the Kansas\u2013Nebraska Act) voted for Trumbull rather than vote for Lincoln, a Whig. When pro-Nebraska Democrats were unable to reelect Shields, they switched their allegiance to Matteson, who had no stance on the Act. Lincoln then withdrew and threw his support to Trumbull, so that an anti-Nebraska candidate would be assured victory.\n1856 presidential election\nVice presidential nomination for the Republican Party\nWilliam Lewis Dayton: 523 (64.73%)\nAbraham Lincoln: 110 (13.61%)\nNathaniel Prentice Banks: 46 (5.69%)\nDavid Wilmot: 43 (5.32%)\nCharles Sumner: 35 (4.33%)\nJacob Collamer: 15 (1.86%)\nJohn Alsop King: 9 (1.11%)\nSamuel C. Pomeroy: 8 (0.99%)\nThomas Ford: 7 (0.87%)\nHenry Charles Carey: 3 (0.37%)\nCassius M. Clay: 3 (0.37%)\nJoshua R. Giddings: 2 (0.25%)\nWhitfield Johnson: 2 (0.25%)\nAaron Pennington: 1 (0.12%)\nHenry Wilson: 1 (0.12%)\nWyatt Gauger. 1(0.8%)\n1858 US Senate election\nNote: At this time, U.S. Senators were elected by the state legislatures, not by vote of the people\n1860 presidential election\nRepublican Party nomination\nUpon seeing how close Lincoln was to the 233 votes needed after the third ballot, a delegate from Ohio switched 4 votes from Chase to Lincoln. This triggered an avalanche towards Lincoln with a final count of 364 votes out of 466 cast.\nGeneral election\nSource (Popular Vote):\nSource (Electoral Vote):\n(a) The popular vote figures exclude South Carolina where the Electors were chosen by the state legislature rather than by popular vote.\n1864 presidential election\nRepublican Party nomination\nGeneral election\nSource (Popular Vote):\nSource (Electoral Vote):\n(a) The states in rebellion did not participate in the election of 1864.\n(b) One Elector from Nevada did not vote\n(c) Andrew Johnson had been a Democrat, and after 1869 was a Democrat. The Republican Party called itself the National Union Party to accommodate the War Democrats in this election."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720843199.9397, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720843199.593, "finish": 1720843199.9397, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e29d8a561d3f4255808925fe947584ba", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Leonardo Da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo Da Vinci", "Title: Leonardo da Vinci\n\nPassage: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, he has also become known for his notebooks, in which he made drawings and notes on a variety of subjects, including anatomy, astronomy, botany, cartography, painting, and palaeontology. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works comprise a contribution to later generations of artists matched only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.\nBorn out of wedlock to a successful notary and a lower-class woman in, or near, Vinci, he was educated in Florence by the Italian painter and sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio. He began his career in the city, but then spent much time in the service of Ludovico Sforza in Milan. Later, he worked in Florence and Milan again, as well as briefly in Rome, all while attracting a large following of imitators and students. Upon the invitation of Francis I, he spent his last three years in France, where he died in 1519. Since his death, there has not been a time where his achievements, diverse interests, personal life, and empirical thinking have failed to incite interest and admiration, making him a frequent namesake and subject in culture.\nLeonardo is identified as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western art and is often credited as the founder of the High Renaissance. Despite having many lost works and fewer than 25 attributed major works including numerous unfinished works he created some of the most influential paintings in the Western canon. His magnum opus, the Mona Lisa, is his best known work and is the world's most famous individual painting. The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time and his Vitruvian Man drawing is also regarded as a cultural icon. In 2017, Salvator Mundi, attributed in whole or part to Leonardo, was sold at auction for , setting a new record for the most expensive painting ever sold at public auction.\nRevered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualised flying machines, a type of armoured fighting vehicle, concentrated solar power, a ratio machine that could be used in an adding machine, and the double hull. Relatively few of his designs were constructed or were even feasible during his lifetime, as the modern scientific approaches to metallurgy and engineering were only in their infancy during the Renaissance. Some of his smaller inventions, however, entered the world of manufacturing unheralded, such as an automated bobbin winder and a machine for testing the tensile strength of wire. He made substantial discoveries in anatomy, civil engineering, hydrodynamics, geology, optics, and tribology, but he did not publish his findings and they had little to no direct influence on subsequent science.\nBiography\nEarly life (1452\u20131472)\nBirth and background"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720843199.9397, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720843199.593, "finish": 1720843199.9397, "ip": "", "conv_id": "147c33bfaadd4cdd8827dc7675b6cb19", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Leonardo Da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo Da Vinci", "Title: Bartolomeo Caravoglia\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720843601.034, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720843570.2472, "finish": 1720843601.034, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1f17caabb84149299454abad21be12ea", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where does summer of the monkeys take place", "output": [["where does summer of the monkeys take place", "Title: In the Summertime\n\nPassage: \"In the Summertime\" is the debut single by British rock band Mungo Jerry, released in 1970. It reached number one in charts around the world, including seven weeks on the UK Singles Chart, two weeks on one of the Canadian charts, and number three on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in the US. It became one of the best-selling singles of all-time, eventually selling 30 million copies. Written and composed by the band's lead singer, Ray Dorset, while working in a lab for Timex, the lyrics of the song celebrate the carefree days of summer. The track was included on the second album by the band, Electronically Tested, issued in March 1971.\nComposition and recording\nDorset has said that the song only took 10 minutes to write, which he did using a second-hand Fender Stratocaster, while he was taking time off from his regular job, working in a lab for Timex.\nThe song was recorded in Pye Studio 1 with Barry Murray producing. Initially it was only two minutes long; to make it longer, Murray played the recording twice, slightly remixing the second half, and put the sound of a motorcycle in the middle. In an interview with Gary James, Dorset explained that they couldn't find a recording of a motorcycle, but that \"Howard Barrow, the engineer had an old, well, it wasn't old then, a Triumph sports car, which he drove past the studio while Barry Marrit [sic] was holding the microphone. So, he got the stereo effects from left to right or right to left, whatever. And that was it.\"\nRelease\nThe initial UK release was on Dawn Records, a new label launched by Pye. It was unusual in that it was a maxi single, playing at 33 rpm, whereas singles generally played at 45 rpm. It included an additional song also written and composed by Dorset, \"Mighty Man,\" on the A-side, and a much longer track, the Woody Guthrie song \"Dust Pneumonia Blues,\" on the B-side. As the record was sold in a picture sleeve, also not standard at the time, and sold at only a few pence more than the normal 45 rpm two-track single, it was considered value for money. A small quantity of 45 rpm discs on the Pye record label, with \"Mighty Man\" on the B-side, and without a picture sleeve, were pressed for use in jukeboxes. These are now rare collector's items.\nIn 2012, Dorset sued his former management company Associated Music International, run by his former friend and business manager Eliot Cohen, claiming over \u00a32 million in royalties from the song that he believed had been withheld from him.\nPersonnel\nCredits adapted from the single liner notes for \"In the Summertime\".\nRay Dorset \u2013 vocals, electric guitar, 6 string acoustic, cabasa, stomp"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720843601.034, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720843570.2472, "finish": 1720843601.034, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9192528cafeb4062a37ac6013e726a85", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where does summer of the monkeys take place", "output": [["where does summer of the monkeys take place", "Title: Planet of the Apes (1968 film)\n\nPassage: Michael Wilson's rewrite kept the basic structure of Serling's screenplay but rewrote all the dialogue and set the script in a more primitive society. According to associate producer Mort Abrahams an additional uncredited writer (his only recollection was that the writer's last name was Kelly) polished the script, rewrote some of the dialogue and included some of the more heavy-handed tongue-in-cheek dialogue (\"I never met an ape I didn't like\") which wasn't in either Serling or Wilson's drafts. According to Abrahams, some scenes, such as the one where the judges imitate the \"see no evil, speak no evil and hear no evil\" monkeys, were improvised on the set by director Franklin J. Schaffner and kept in the final film because of the audience reaction during test screenings prior to release. During filming John Chambers, who designed prosthetic make-up in the film, held training sessions at 20th Century-Fox studios, where he mentored other make-up artists of the film.\nFilming\nFilming began on May 21, 1967, and wrapped on August 10. Most of the early scenes of a desert-like terrain were shot in northern Arizona near the Grand Canyon, the Colorado River, Lake Powell, Glen Canyon and other locations near Page, Arizona Most scenes of the ape village, interiors and exteriors, were filmed on the Fox Ranch in Malibu Creek State Park, northwest of Los Angeles, essentially the backlot of 20th Century-Fox. The concluding beach scenes were filmed on a stretch of California seacoast between Malibu and Oxnard with cliffs that towered above the shore. Reaching the beach on foot was virtually impossible, so cast, crew, film equipment, and even horses had to be lowered in by helicopter.\nThe remains of the Statue of Liberty were shot in a secluded cove on the far eastern end of Westward Beach, between Zuma Beach and Point Dume in Malibu. As noted in the documentary Behind the Planet of the Apes, the special effect shot of the half-buried statue was achieved by seamlessly blending a matte painting with existing cliffs. The shot looking down at Taylor was done from a scaffold, angled over a -scale papier-mache model of the Statue. The actors in Planet of the Apes were so affected by their roles and wardrobe that, when not shooting, they automatically segregated themselves with the species they were portraying. Lou Wanger said that the makeup was particularly heavy in the area of the mouth and made it difficult to drink anything."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720846002.7894, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720845956.8161, "finish": 1720846002.7894, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cd4332ddf63a420ea6152fd7ee7fb3e2", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where does the movie mothers day take place", "output": [["where does the movie mothers day take place", "Title: I am the cat who walks by himself\n\nPassage: The city of lions. Beaulieu-sur-Dordogne. The war starts. Drole de guerre.\nGoing to work. Going to school. Fleeing from village to village. Playing cat\nand mouse. The second landing. Return to Beaulieu. Return to Paris. Joining the\nboyscouts. Learning languages. Israel becomes independent. Arrival in Haifa.\nKalay high school. Military training. The Hebrew Technion in Haifa. Relativity.\nAsher Peres. Metallurgy. Return to France. Escape from jail. Aviva.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720846002.7894, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720845956.8161, "finish": 1720846002.7894, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9e6a842f9c6a4b8b9c54fd2112adf89d", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "where does the movie mothers day take place", "output": [["where does the movie mothers day take place", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720889448.2562, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720889447.7509, "finish": 1720889448.2562, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cbbf60f3c85946bfa1fe310ecee9fac5", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Leonardo da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo da Vinci", "Title: Leonardo da Vinci\n\nPassage: Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on his achievements as a painter, he has also become known for his notebooks, in which he made drawings and notes on a variety of subjects, including anatomy, astronomy, botany, cartography, painting, and palaeontology. Leonardo is widely regarded to have been a genius who epitomised the Renaissance humanist ideal, and his collective works comprise a contribution to later generations of artists matched only by that of his younger contemporary Michelangelo.\nBorn out of wedlock to a successful notary and a lower-class woman in, or near, Vinci, he was educated in Florence by the Italian painter and sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio. He began his career in the city, but then spent much time in the service of Ludovico Sforza in Milan. Later, he worked in Florence and Milan again, as well as briefly in Rome, all while attracting a large following of imitators and students. Upon the invitation of Francis I, he spent his last three years in France, where he died in 1519. Since his death, there has not been a time where his achievements, diverse interests, personal life, and empirical thinking have failed to incite interest and admiration, making him a frequent namesake and subject in culture.\nLeonardo is identified as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western art and is often credited as the founder of the High Renaissance. Despite having many lost works and fewer than 25 attributed major works including numerous unfinished works he created some of the most influential paintings in the Western canon. His magnum opus, the Mona Lisa, is his best known work and is the world's most famous individual painting. The Last Supper is the most reproduced religious painting of all time and his Vitruvian Man drawing is also regarded as a cultural icon. In 2017, Salvator Mundi, attributed in whole or part to Leonardo, was sold at auction for , setting a new record for the most expensive painting ever sold at public auction.\nRevered for his technological ingenuity, he conceptualised flying machines, a type of armoured fighting vehicle, concentrated solar power, a ratio machine that could be used in an adding machine, and the double hull. Relatively few of his designs were constructed or were even feasible during his lifetime, as the modern scientific approaches to metallurgy and engineering were only in their infancy during the Renaissance. Some of his smaller inventions, however, entered the world of manufacturing unheralded, such as an automated bobbin winder and a machine for testing the tensile strength of wire. He made substantial discoveries in anatomy, civil engineering, hydrodynamics, geology, optics, and tribology, but he did not publish his findings and they had little to no direct influence on subsequent science.\nBiography\nEarly life (1452\u20131472)\nBirth and background"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720889448.2562, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720889447.7509, "finish": 1720889448.2562, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f99358cde13542eb847a55d68755d6a0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Leonardo da Vinci", "output": [["Leonardo da Vinci", "Title: Bartolomeo Caravoglia\n\nPassage: "]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 38f5fa0d57e640b2d5bb5f94299c0ebad8a69f4a..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-d8ce5ac9-9e0c-4e99-b12a-b2e1b5a13d26.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720758274.0345, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758133.1252, "finish": 1720758274.0345, "ip": "", "conv_id": "95e3ab2d5d4145ea8d96c6ac4f325493", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758395.6066, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758395.3922, "finish": 1720758395.6066, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0aaf856ff0ad4313931d9f362dc40893", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758441.9586, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758441.7609, "finish": 1720758441.9586, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c121c83be4564f02a642a91513bfef4c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "output": [["I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "Title: Diogo Rodrigues\n\nPassage: Rodrigues Island"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758450.7051, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758450.5763, "finish": 1720758450.7051, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d4c4999d6da460f9254842a192f01de", "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: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758475.7027, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758475.4651, "finish": 1720758475.7027, "ip": "", "conv_id": "54850cde65944fd0bae0b92a001077a0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when did goku first go super saiyan 4", "output": [["when did goku first go super saiyan 4", "Title: Mewtwo\n\nPassage: In anime and related media"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758495.1607, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758494.95, "finish": 1720758495.1607, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c98732caf45e4614973d158d088de1ce", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what was an economic effect of world war ii", "output": [["what was an economic effect of world war ii", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758505.8035, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758505.6171, "finish": 1720758505.8035, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e6dc97822a844212ba6f86eb2ac97dc9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who played john coffey in the movie the green mile", "output": [["who played john coffey in the movie the green mile", "Title: The Green Mile\n\nPassage: The Green Mile may refer to:\nThe Green Mile (novel), a 1996 serial novel by Stephen King\nThe Green Mile (film), a 1999 film based on the Stephen King novel, starring Tom Hanks and Michael Clarke Duncan"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758532.7362, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758532.5591, "finish": 1720758532.7362, "ip": "", "conv_id": "92112cb143cf4263a71d36d8b550a671", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who is the girl that played darlene in roseanne", "output": [["who is the girl that played darlene in roseanne", "Title: List of Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996 TV series) characters\n\nPassage: Zelda Spellman"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758544.5169, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758544.3283, "finish": 1720758544.5169, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0039e3a0af9e464e828fb4fb7b2d3a40", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who is the current defence against the dark arts teacher", "output": [["who is the current defence against the dark arts teacher", "Title: Outsider (comics)\n\nPassage: The New 52"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758746.3348, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758576.5901, "finish": 1720758746.3348, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1184838205af442ebe2570302c992d95", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758746.3348, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758576.5901, "finish": 1720758746.3348, "ip": "", "conv_id": "69c5acf1edb547d8b6ab9fd024868384", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: T\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd\n\nPassage: T\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd is the Vietnamese version of Chinese Duanwu festival (literally: T\u1ebft: festival, \u0110oan: the start/straight/middle/righteousness/just, Ng\u1ecd: at noon (from 11 am to 1 pm). \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd is the moment that the sun is the most near the earth and this day often is \"The middle day of summer\" (H\u1ea1 ch\u00ed). In Vietnam, this day is also the death anniversary of National Mother \u00c2u C\u01a1.\nCompared to Cantonese Chinese term \"dyun eng\" (which is duan wu in Mandarin Chinese) ngo/eng/wu all refer to the ancient Chinese calendar term: the seventh of the twelve Earthly Branches, which was a component for determining time based on a series of 60 years (just as today we refer to 100 year periods as centuries).) Ngo/eng/wu refers to the sun at noon.\nT\u1ebft \u0110oan D\u01b0\u01a1ng (D\u01b0\u01a1ng: yang) - yang being sun\nT\u1ebft Tr\u00f9ng Ng\u0169 (Tr\u00f9ng: double, Ng\u0169: the fifth),\nT\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u0169, T\u1ebft Tr\u00f9ng Nh\u0129 or T\u1ebft N\u1eeda N\u0103m (N\u1eeda N\u0103m: a half of a year) is a festival celebrated at noon on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month. This day is the day around the time when the tail of the Great Bear points directly to the south, that is, around the time of the summer solstice. At this time, the universe brings the greatest amount of yang or maleness in the entire year. Therefore, creatures and people must become stronger in both their health and their souls to overcome this.\nTraditions\nR\u01b0\u1ee3u n\u1ebfp, a sticky rice wine, is traditionally eaten on this holiday. B\u00e1nh tro, a kind of b\u00e1nh l\u00e1, is used during this holiday with hard-boiled eggs. B\u00e1nh tro is considered as \"cool\", symbolized yin because it includes vegetable ash water as an ingredient. B\u00e1nh tro is a perfect match with extreme hot day like May 5 in the lunar year.\nModern festival\nOn the occasion of T\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd, there is Festival of Delicious Fruit celebrated in Ch\u1ee3 L\u00e1ch, B\u1ebfn Tre Province with activities: fruit competition, fruit arrangement competition and fruit crop competition.\nAt this time, there is also Festival of Southern Fruit celebrated in Su\u1ed1i Ti\u00ean amusement park, Ho Chi Minh city."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814158.4753, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814055.4078, "finish": 1720814158.4753, "ip": "", "conv_id": "40b2d108265a4b708328e2e181599ed6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "motion of earth is a combination of motion", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814158.4753, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814055.4078, "finish": 1720814158.4753, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5b4a15582c6f4cc8a538e9849215667b", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "motion of earth is a combination of motion", "output": [["motion of earth is a combination of motion", "Title: Citizen science\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814307.7853, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814307.4331, "finish": 1720814307.7853, "ip": "", "conv_id": "80169178995645699c64e3e3de9199e9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where is connective tissue found in the body", "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.)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814307.7853, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814307.4331, "finish": 1720814307.7853, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4cb9c81ee9aa4ee194b88dee45408c8a", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "where is connective tissue found in the body", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814342.7932, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814342.506, "finish": 1720814342.7932, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6ed9c958678442678eec2704edb59385", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who sang gonna sit right down and write myself a letter", "output": [["who sang gonna sit right down and write myself a letter", "Title: List of Grammy Hall of Fame Award recipients (Q\u2013Z)\n\nPassage: List"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814342.7932, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814342.506, "finish": 1720814342.7932, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a7d9f60e4564b05b13956207f02955d", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who sang gonna sit right down and write myself a letter", "output": [["who sang gonna sit right down and write myself a letter", "Title: Dennis Brown\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814437.8307, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814437.5791, "finish": 1720814437.8307, "ip": "", "conv_id": "18d8de230370402cb4cee9b95ab78cdf", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Nicki Minaj\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814437.8307, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814437.5791, "finish": 1720814437.8307, "ip": "", "conv_id": "90b22182e91f4a10a0b8f1c9792ef23d", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Dennis Brown\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814568.2905, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814567.9571, "finish": 1720814568.2905, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6a6012a49ec34c8398d4cf218f4d931c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who grows the most coffee in the world", "output": [["who grows the most coffee in the world", "Title: List of coffee companies\n\nPassage: This is a worldwide list of notable coffee companies that roast or distribute coffee.\nList"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814568.2905, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814567.9571, "finish": 1720814568.2905, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0bc209e178314590859c230e12a035e3", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who grows the most coffee in the world", "output": [["who grows the most coffee in the world", "Title: List of coffee companies\n\nPassage: This is a worldwide list of notable coffee companies that roast or distribute coffee.\nList"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814596.479, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814596.2116, "finish": 1720814596.479, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9b83a9c9a7b14068bf81f4b51e8372b1", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is final season of game of thrones", "output": [["what is final season of game of thrones", "Title: Game of Thrones\n\nPassage: Game of Thrones is an American fantasy drama television series created by David Benioff and for HBO. It is an adaptation of A Song of Ice and Fire, a series of fantasy novels by , the first of which is A Game of Thrones. The show premiered on HBO in the United States on April 17, 2011, and concluded on May 19, 2019, with 73 episodes broadcast over eight seasons.\nSet on the fictional continents of Westeros and Essos, Game of Thrones has a large ensemble cast and follows several story arcs throughout the course of the show. The first major arc concerns the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros through a web of political conflicts among the noble families either vying to claim the throne or fighting for independence from whomever sits on it. The second major arc focuses on the last descendant of the realm's deposed ruling dynasty, who has been exiled to Essos and is plotting to return and reclaim the throne. The third follows the Night's Watch, a military order defending the realm against threats from beyond Westeros's northern border."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814596.479, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814596.2116, "finish": 1720814596.479, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ea70405fd5dc48f79529eb1ee6c2030e", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "what is final season of game of thrones", "output": [["what is final season of game of thrones", "Title: Game of Thrones\n\nPassage: Directing\nEach ten-episode season of Game of Thrones had four to six directors, who usually directed back-to-back episodes. Alan Taylor directed seven episodes, the most of any director. Alex Graves, David Nutter, Mark Mylod, and Jeremy Podeswa directed six episodes each. Daniel Minahan directed five episodes, and Michelle MacLaren, Alik Sakharov, and Miguel Sapochnik directed four each; MacLaren is the only female director of the entire series's run. Brian Kirk directed three episodes during the first season, and Tim Van Patten directed the series's first two episodes. Neil Marshall directed two episodes, both with large battle scenes: \"Blackwater\" and \"The Watchers on the Wall\". Other directors include Jack Bender, David Petrarca, Daniel Sackheim, Michael Slovis and Matt Shakman. David Benioff and have directed two episodes together but were credited with only one each, which was determined after a coin toss. For season eight, David Nutter and Miguel Sapochnik, who worked on previous episodes, directed the first five episodes. Benioff and Weiss were credited as both the writers and directors of the show finale \"The Iron Throne\".\nProduction design\nMichele Clapton was the costume designer for Game of Thrones first five seasons before she was replaced by April Ferry. Clapton returned to the series as its costume designer for the seventh season. For the first three seasons, Paul Engelen was Game of Thrones main makeup designer and prosthetic makeup artist with Melissa Lackersteen, Conor O'Sullivan, and Rob Trenton. At the beginning of the fourth season, Engelen's team was replaced by Jane Walker and her crew, composed of Ann McEwan and Barrie and Sarah Gower. Over 130 makeup artists and prosthetic designers worked on the show.\nThe designs for the series's costumes were inspired by several sources, such as Japanese and Persian armor. Dothraki dress resembles that of the Bedouin (one was made of fish skins to resemble dragon scales), and the Wildlings wear animal skins like the Inuit. Wildling bone armor is made from molds of actual bones and is assembled with string and latex resembling catgut. Although the extras who played Wildlings and the Night's Watch often wore hats (normal in a cold climate), members of the principal cast usually did not so viewers could recognize them. Bj\u00f6rk's Alexander McQueen high-neckline dresses inspired Margaery Tyrell's funnel-neck outfit, and prostitutes' dresses were designed for easy removal. All the clothing used during the production was aged for two weeks, so it had a realistic appearance on high-definition television."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720816452.0086, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720816406.3348, "finish": 1720816452.0086, "ip": "", "conv_id": "41e14d282ff8450b8722f3a9e2975b0a", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "where do you find the adjusted gross income", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720816452.0086, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720816406.3348, "finish": 1720816452.0086, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8016bb46d154864a1aabf030fa7f9ed", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "where do you find the adjusted gross income", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-d974e52e-3b2d-424c-830c-fee49b38b5c3.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-d974e52e-3b2d-424c-830c-fee49b38b5c3.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index f628cdd1188a9e6cb606b8abaf32d619e16fd73f..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-d974e52e-3b2d-424c-830c-fee49b38b5c3.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722052622.8567, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722052547.3464, "finish": 1722052622.8567, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3eb63d19e8543bfbd78de6a735f1fb0", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "wgwg", "output": [["wgwg", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: how to return the data attribute of an option element in select? Im trying to log out the data attribute i've attached to each option in my select box but with no success, am I correct using .on('change'... or what should I be doing to achieve this?\nJS\n$('select').children().on('change', function(e){\n console.log( $(this).data('id') );\n e.preventDefault();\n});\n\nHTML\n\u200b\n\n\nA: You can it with Vanilla Javascript:\nconsole.log(this.querySelector(':checked').getAttribute('data-id'))\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722052713.3252, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722052713.0709, "finish": 1722052713.3252, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d27dcf054b74ffeb3fa08a362eb1066", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "linearly independent eigenvectors are orthogonal?", "output": [["linearly independent eigenvectors are orthogonal?", "Math Stackexchange\n\nQ: Do Real Symmetric Matrices have 'n' linearly independent eigenvectors? I know that Real Symmetric Matrices have real eigenvalues and the vectors corresponding to each distinct eigenvalue is orthogonal from this answer. But what if the matrix has repeated eigenvalues? Does it have linearly independent (and orthogonal) eigenvectors? How to prove that?\nPS: In the answer I referred to has another answer which might have answered this question. I'm not sure if it answered my question since I didn't understand it. If it did answer my question, can anyone please explain it?\nThanks!\n\nA: Real Symmetric Matrices have $n$ linearly independent and orthogonal eigenvectors. \nThere are two parts here. \n1. The eigenvectors corresponding to distinct eigenvalues are orthogonal which is proved here. \n2. If some of the eigenvalues are repeated, since the matrix is Real Symmetric, there will exist so many independent eigenvectors. (Proof here and here.) As John Ma pointed out, in this case we can use Gram\u2013Schmidt orthogonalization to get orthogonal vectors. \nSo, all $n$ eigenvectors of a Real Symmetric matrix are linearly independent and orthogonal\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722052957.7441, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722052957.5936, "finish": 1722052957.7441, "ip": "", "conv_id": "00ece65537eb49789f64430f48f07f16", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "what is the difference between service and services?", "output": [["what is the difference between service and services?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: Microservices - What is the exact difference between service discovery and Service Gateway? I read the articles like : What is the difference between an API-Gateway and an Edge Service?, but still not clear on what's the exact difference between the service discovery (say Eureka) and Service Gateway (Zuul) ? Any pointers?\n\n\nA: The differences is more understandable if you focus in responsabilities of both Zuul and Eureka. As you can see below each one has specific tasks. Thats the main differences.\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-dc155615-7f78-4b9e-abbb-302fdfa2c4b8.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-dc155615-7f78-4b9e-abbb-302fdfa2c4b8.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index d91c8f40c8d0a458ad265c2d18f86b5d7a639a2c..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-dc155615-7f78-4b9e-abbb-302fdfa2c4b8.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720990930.9301, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720990903.2176, "finish": 1720990930.9301, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5c211302695f4a37b710c5e80cae8fe2", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nPassage: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1720990944.3859, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720990944.2675, "finish": 1720990944.3859, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c2c6fe1382dd417d831e4f3c44d262ba", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a single task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is unclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity (STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking. This makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are constantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we introduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding tasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the benchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive benchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding method dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to converge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to provide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with open-source code and a public leaderboard at https://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1720990948.838, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720990948.7206, "finish": 1720990948.838, "ip": "", "conv_id": "de75442e0d044b85be0574798ee7bb9e", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "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 performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-dfbdafeb-75c0-4027-92dc-61099713b266.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-dfbdafeb-75c0-4027-92dc-61099713b266.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8eeebb484c4344979769db7f90e88119207e82f8..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-dfbdafeb-75c0-4027-92dc-61099713b266.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720832103.319, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720832101.7596, "finish": 1720832103.319, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b774a587f1c3476dad2d23fe9eacfc15", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-e1b27f6b-5f9b-4f16-ad5b-95e14349d625.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-e1b27f6b-5f9b-4f16-ad5b-95e14349d625.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e54f82e91fde487294990b13dc7ae0a0e391c24c..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-e1b27f6b-5f9b-4f16-ad5b-95e14349d625.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,50 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722046477.436, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046429.7808, "finish": 1722046477.436, "ip": "", "conv_id": "26e4048363c54621b8e8e7f82161f63b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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?", "Planetary habitability in the Solar System\n\nPlanetary habitability in the Solar System is the study that searches the possible existence of past or present extraterrestrial life in those celestial bodies. As exoplanets are too far away and can only be studied by indirect means, the celestial bodies in the Solar System allow for a much more detailed study: direct telescope observation, space probes, rovers and even human spaceflight."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046477.436, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046429.7808, "finish": 1722046477.436, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dcfc15963eb64c7ea4633d7910d846f7", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "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?", "Planetary habitability in the Solar System\n\nTitan Titan, the largest moon of Saturn, is the only known moon in the Solar System with a significant atmosphere. Data from the Cassini\u2013Huygens mission refuted the hypothesis of a global hydrocarbon ocean, but later demonstrated the existence of liquid hydrocarbon lakes in the polar regions\u2014the first stable bodies of surface liquid discovered outside Earth. Analysis of data from the mission has uncovered aspects of atmospheric chemistry near the surface that are consistent with\u2014but do not prove\u2014the hypothesis that organisms there, if present, could be consuming hydrogen, acetylene and ethane, and producing methane. NASA's Dragonfly mission is slated to land on Titan in the mid-2030s with a VTOL-capable rotorcraft with a launch date set for 2027.\nUranus\nThe planet Uranus, an ice giant, is unlikely to be habitable. The local temperatures and pressures may be too extreme, and the materials too volatile.\nNeptune\nThe planet Neptune, another ice giant, is also unlikely to be habitable. The local temperatures and pressures may be too extreme, and the materials too volatile.\nPluto\nThe dwarf planet Pluto is too cold to sustain life on the surface. It has an average of -232\u00a0\u00b0C, and surface water only exists in a rocky state. The interior of Pluto may be warmer and perhaps contain a subsurface ocean. Also, the possibility of geothermal activity comes into play. That combined with the fact that Pluto has an eccentric orbit, making it sometimes closer to the sun, means that there is a slight chance that the dwarf planet could contain life.\nKuiper belt\nThe dwarf planet Makemake is not habitable, due to its extremely low temperatures. The same thing goes for Haumea and Eris."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046643.6469, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046643.3424, "finish": 1722046643.6469, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6146921e35bc448691034e7fdbee1724", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "output": [["is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "Better Call Saul\n\nGilligan, who created and developed Breaking Bad, and Gould, who wrote the Breaking Bad episode \"Better Call Saul\", began considering a Saul Goodman spin-off in 2009. Because Saul's role in Breaking Bad had expanded beyond the writing staff's plans, Gilligan felt he could be explored further. He and Gould considered making a half-hour legal comedy featuring Saul and his various clients, but settled on an hour-long tragedy showing how he develops into the character seen in Breaking Bad. Better Call Saul development began during the production of Breaking Bad final season in 2013, with Gilligan and Gould serving as co-showrunners and numerous production staff returning. Odenkirk, Banks, and Esposito reprise their roles from Breaking Bad, as do many others in guest appearances. Gilligan left Better Call Saul early in the third season\u2014making Gould the sole showrunner for the remainder of its run\u2014though he returned to help write the final season.\nBetter Call Saul received critical acclaim, with praise for its acting, characters, writing, direction, and cinematography. Many reviewers have considered it a worthy successor to Breaking Bad\u2014some deeming it superior to its predecessor\u2014and one of the greatest television series of all time. It has garnered many awards and nominations, including two Peabody Awards, 53 Primetime and Creative Arts Emmy Awards, 19 Writers Guild of America Awards, 20 Critics' Choice Television Awards, nine Screen Actors Guild Awards, and six Golden Globe Awards nominations. At the time of its airing, the series premiere held the record for the highest-rated scripted series premiere in basic cable history.\nPremise\nBetter Call Saul is a spin-off of Breaking Bad, a popular crime drama television series that ran from 2008 to 2013. It is primarily a prequel that focuses on Jimmy McGill, a former con artist aiming to gain respectability as a public defender, and chronicles his gradual transformation into his eventual Breaking Bad persona of Saul Goodman, the flamboyant criminal lawyer with ties to the drug cartel. Most of the show takes place over the six-year period before the events of Breaking Bad, spanning approximately 2002 to 2008."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046643.6469, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046643.3424, "finish": 1722046643.6469, "ip": "", "conv_id": "04749276100748bd9fa96ab3664c1ec3", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "output": [["is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "Better Call Saul\n\nGilligan, who created and developed Breaking Bad, and Gould, who wrote the Breaking Bad episode \"Better Call Saul\", began considering a Saul Goodman spin-off in 2009. Because Saul's role in Breaking Bad had expanded beyond the writing staff's plans, Gilligan felt he could be explored further. He and Gould considered making a half-hour legal comedy featuring Saul and his various clients, but settled on an hour-long tragedy showing how he develops into the character seen in Breaking Bad. Better Call Saul development began during the production of Breaking Bad final season in 2013, with Gilligan and Gould serving as co-showrunners and numerous production staff returning. Odenkirk, Banks, and Esposito reprise their roles from Breaking Bad, as do many others in guest appearances. Gilligan left Better Call Saul early in the third season\u2014making Gould the sole showrunner for the remainder of its run\u2014though he returned to help write the final season.\nBetter Call Saul received critical acclaim, with praise for its acting, characters, writing, direction, and cinematography. Many reviewers have considered it a worthy successor to Breaking Bad\u2014some deeming it superior to its predecessor\u2014and one of the greatest television series of all time. It has garnered many awards and nominations, including two Peabody Awards, 53 Primetime and Creative Arts Emmy Awards, 19 Writers Guild of America Awards, 20 Critics' Choice Television Awards, nine Screen Actors Guild Awards, and six Golden Globe Awards nominations. At the time of its airing, the series premiere held the record for the highest-rated scripted series premiere in basic cable history.\nPremise\nBetter Call Saul is a spin-off of Breaking Bad, a popular crime drama television series that ran from 2008 to 2013. It is primarily a prequel that focuses on Jimmy McGill, a former con artist aiming to gain respectability as a public defender, and chronicles his gradual transformation into his eventual Breaking Bad persona of Saul Goodman, the flamboyant criminal lawyer with ties to the drug cartel. Most of the show takes place over the six-year period before the events of Breaking Bad, spanning approximately 2002 to 2008."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046661.645, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046661.4218, "finish": 1722046661.645, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cd550ef472024f72a4c7947b255f533c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what does sip stand for in the ngn / ims context", "output": [["what does sip stand for in the ngn / ims context", "Next-generation network\n\nInitially H.323 was the most popular protocol, though its popularity decreased due to its original poor traversal of network address translation (NAT) and firewalls. For this reason as domestic VoIP services have been developed, SIP has been more widely adopted. However, in voice networks where everything is under the control of the network operator or telco, many of the largest carriers use H.323 as the protocol of choice in their core backbones. With the most recent changes introduced for H.323, it is now possible for H.323 devices to easily and consistently traverse NAT and firewall devices, opening up the possibility that H.323 may again be looked upon more favorably in cases where such devices encumbered its use previously. Nonetheless, most of the telcos are extensively researching and supporting IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS), which gives SIP a major chance of being the most widely adopted protocol.\nFor voice applications one of the most important devices in NGN is a Softswitch \u2013 a programmable device that controls Voice over IP (VoIP) calls. It enables correct integration of different protocols within NGN. The most important function of the Softswitch is creating the interface to the existing telephone network, PSTN, through Signalling Gateways and Media Gateways. However, the Softswitch as a term may be defined differently by the different equipment manufacturers and have somewhat different functions.\nThe term Gatekeeper sometimes appears in NGN literature. This was originally a VoIP device, which converted voice and data from their analog or digital switched-circuit form (PSTN, SS7) to the packet-based one (IP) using gateways. It controlled one or more gateways. As soon as this kind of device started using the Media Gateway Control Protocol, the name was changed to Media Gateway Controller (MGC).\nA Call Agent is a general name for devices/systems controlling calls.\nThe IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is a standardised NGN architecture for an Internet media-services capability defined by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046661.645, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046661.4218, "finish": 1722046661.645, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f56e5990121e4fa9a2a43a1da2c37d73", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "what does sip stand for in the ngn / ims context", "output": [["what does sip stand for in the ngn / ims context", "Next-generation network\n\nInitially H.323 was the most popular protocol, though its popularity decreased due to its original poor traversal of network address translation (NAT) and firewalls. For this reason as domestic VoIP services have been developed, SIP has been more widely adopted. However, in voice networks where everything is under the control of the network operator or telco, many of the largest carriers use H.323 as the protocol of choice in their core backbones. With the most recent changes introduced for H.323, it is now possible for H.323 devices to easily and consistently traverse NAT and firewall devices, opening up the possibility that H.323 may again be looked upon more favorably in cases where such devices encumbered its use previously. Nonetheless, most of the telcos are extensively researching and supporting IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS), which gives SIP a major chance of being the most widely adopted protocol.\nFor voice applications one of the most important devices in NGN is a Softswitch \u2013 a programmable device that controls Voice over IP (VoIP) calls. It enables correct integration of different protocols within NGN. The most important function of the Softswitch is creating the interface to the existing telephone network, PSTN, through Signalling Gateways and Media Gateways. However, the Softswitch as a term may be defined differently by the different equipment manufacturers and have somewhat different functions.\nThe term Gatekeeper sometimes appears in NGN literature. This was originally a VoIP device, which converted voice and data from their analog or digital switched-circuit form (PSTN, SS7) to the packet-based one (IP) using gateways. It controlled one or more gateways. As soon as this kind of device started using the Media Gateway Control Protocol, the name was changed to Media Gateway Controller (MGC).\nA Call Agent is a general name for devices/systems controlling calls.\nThe IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is a standardised NGN architecture for an Internet media-services capability defined by the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) and the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046678.9552, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046678.7513, "finish": 1722046678.9552, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fddd0c504d5d44f0a02dec7161eae417", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "output": [["who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "Battles of Saratoga\n\nThe Battles of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) marked the climax of the Saratoga campaign, giving a decisive victory to the Americans over the British in the American Revolutionary War. British General John Burgoyne led an invasion army of 7,200\u20138,000 men southward from Canada in the Champlain Valley, hoping to meet a similar British force marching northward from New York City and another British force marching eastward from Lake Ontario; the goal was to take Albany, New York. The southern and western forces never arrived, and Burgoyne was surrounded by American forces in upstate New York short of his goal. He fought two battles which took place 18 days apart on the same ground south of Saratoga, New York. He gained a victory in the first battle despite being outnumbered, but lost the second battle after the Americans returned with an even larger force.\nBurgoyne found himself trapped by much larger American forces with no relief, so he retreated to Saratoga (now Schuylerville) and surrendered his entire army there on October 17. His surrender, says historian Edmund Morgan, \"was a great turning point of the war because it won for Americans the foreign assistance which was the last element needed for victory.\"\nBurgoyne's strategy to divide New England from the southern colonies had started well but slowed due to logistical problems. He won a small tactical victory over American General Horatio Gates and the Continental Army in the September 19 Battle of Freeman's Farm at the cost of significant casualties. His gains were erased when he again attacked the Americans in the October 7 Battle of Bemis Heights and the Americans captured a portion of the British defenses. Burgoyne was therefore compelled to retreat, and his army was surrounded by the much larger American force at Saratoga, forcing him to surrender on October 17. News of Burgoyne's surrender was instrumental in formally bringing France into the war as an American ally, although it had previously given supplies, ammunition, and guns, notably the de Valliere cannon which played an important role in Saratoga."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046678.9552, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046678.7513, "finish": 1722046678.9552, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d8612e4ba68f4a6f9266d4e48fcba107", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "output": [["who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "Battles of Saratoga\n\nThe Battles of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) marked the climax of the Saratoga campaign, giving a decisive victory to the Americans over the British in the American Revolutionary War. British General John Burgoyne led an invasion army of 7,200\u20138,000 men southward from Canada in the Champlain Valley, hoping to meet a similar British force marching northward from New York City and another British force marching eastward from Lake Ontario; the goal was to take Albany, New York. The southern and western forces never arrived, and Burgoyne was surrounded by American forces in upstate New York short of his goal. He fought two battles which took place 18 days apart on the same ground south of Saratoga, New York. He gained a victory in the first battle despite being outnumbered, but lost the second battle after the Americans returned with an even larger force.\nBurgoyne found himself trapped by much larger American forces with no relief, so he retreated to Saratoga (now Schuylerville) and surrendered his entire army there on October 17. His surrender, says historian Edmund Morgan, \"was a great turning point of the war because it won for Americans the foreign assistance which was the last element needed for victory.\"\nBurgoyne's strategy to divide New England from the southern colonies had started well but slowed due to logistical problems. He won a small tactical victory over American General Horatio Gates and the Continental Army in the September 19 Battle of Freeman's Farm at the cost of significant casualties. His gains were erased when he again attacked the Americans in the October 7 Battle of Bemis Heights and the Americans captured a portion of the British defenses. Burgoyne was therefore compelled to retreat, and his army was surrounded by the much larger American force at Saratoga, forcing him to surrender on October 17. News of Burgoyne's surrender was instrumental in formally bringing France into the war as an American ally, although it had previously given supplies, ammunition, and guns, notably the de Valliere cannon which played an important role in Saratoga."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046689.6239, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046689.4191, "finish": 1722046689.6239, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ea8067445fb4e708214313868606974", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "output": [["where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "The Dukes of Hazzard\n\nIn 1977, Waldron was approached by Warner Bros. with the idea of developing Moonrunners into a television series. Waldron reworked various elements from Moonrunners, ultimately devising what became The Dukes of Hazzard. Production began in October 1978 with the original intention of only nine episodes for a mid-season filler. The first five episodes were filmed in Covington and Conyers, Georgia and surrounding areas, including some location work in nearby Atlanta. After completing production on the fifth episode, \"High Octane\", the cast and crew broke for Christmas break, expecting to return in several weeks to complete the ordered run of episodes. In the meantime, executives at Warner Bros. were impressed by the rough preview cuts of the completed episodes and saw potential in developing the show into a full-running series. Part of this plan was to move production from Georgia to the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, to simplify production as well as develop a larger workshop to service the large number of automobiles needed for the series.\nRushing appeared as shady used car dealer Ace Parker in the third episode, \"Repo Men\" (the fourth to be broadcast). Rushing believed this to be the start of a recurring role, in return for which he would supply creative ideas from his experiences: many of the Dukes (and thus Moonrunners) characters and situations were derived from Rushing's experiences as a youth, and much of the character of Bo Duke, he states to be based on him. However, \"Repo Men\" would turn out to be the character's only appearance in the show's run, leading to a legal dispute in the following years over the rights to characters and concepts. Despite this, Rushing remained on good terms with cast and crew and in recent years has made appearances at several fan conventions."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046689.6239, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046689.4191, "finish": 1722046689.6239, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cd499b495d8c407d80ea2a08dc195b2f", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "output": [["where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "The Dukes of Hazzard (film)\n\nLocations Principal photography for the film began on November 15, 2004, before wrapping up the following February. The majority of the film was shot in and around Clinton & French Settlement, Louisiana. The Boar's nest was Moonlight Inn located in French Settlement, LA. The street scenes are set in Atlanta, but filmed in the New Orleans Central Business District, and the university scenes were shot on the campus of Louisiana State University.\nReception\nBox office\nThe film was number one at the box office its opening weekend and grossed $30.7 million on 3,785 screens. It also had an adjusted-dollar rank of number 24 all-time for August releases. The film eventually collected $109.8 million worldwide, although it was much less successful financially outside the United States.\nCritical reception\nOn Rotten Tomatoes, 14% of 168 reviews were positive. The website's consensus called the film \"A dumb, goofy, and vacuous adaptation of a TV show where plot is simply an excuse to string together the car chases.\" On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 33% based on 36 reviews, indicating \"Generally unfavorable reviews\". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a grade \"B+\" on scale of A to F. Longtime fans of the original Dukes of Hazzard series were generally disappointed by the film."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046751.7795, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046751.2648, "finish": 1722046751.7795, "ip": "", "conv_id": "701d7d0d935d4057bcb5ef8161901962", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where was the outlaw of josey wales filmed", "output": [["where was the outlaw of josey wales filmed", "The Outlaw Josey Wales\n\nProduction The Outlaw Josey Wales was inspired by a 1972 novel by supposedly-Cherokee writer Forrest Carter, alias of former KKK Leader and segregationist speech writer of George Wallace, Asa Earl Carter, an identity that would be exposed in part due to the success of the film, and was originally titled The Rebel Outlaw: Josey Wales and later retitled Gone to Texas. The script was worked on by Sonia Chernus and producer Robert Daley at Malpaso, and Eastwood himself paid some of the money to obtain the screen rights. Michael Cimino and Philip Kaufman later oversaw the writing of the script, aiding Chernus. Kaufman wanted the film to stay as close to the novel as possible in style and retained many of the mannerisms in Wales's character which Eastwood would display on screen, such as his distinctive diction with words like \"reckon\", \"hoss\" (instead of \"horse\"), and \"ye\" (instead of \"you\") and spitting tobacco juice on animals and victims. The characters of Wales, the Cherokee chief, Navajo woman, and the old settler woman and her daughter all appeared in the novel. On the other hand, Kaufman was less happy with the novel's political stance; he felt that it had been \"written by a crude fascist\" and that \"the man's hatred of government was insane\". He also felt that element of the script needed to be severely toned down, but he later said, \"Clint didn't, and it was his film\". Kaufman was later fired by Eastwood, who took over the film's direction himself.\nCinematographer Bruce Surtees, James Fargo, and Fritz Manes scouted for locations and eventually found sites in Utah, Arizona, Wyoming, and Oroville, California even before they saw the final script. The movie was shot in DeLuxe Color and Panavision. Kaufman cast Chief Dan George, who had been nominated for an Academy Award for Supporting Actor in Little Big Man, as the old Cherokee Lone Watie. Sondra Locke, also a previous Academy Award nominee, was cast by Eastwood against Kaufman's wishes as Laura Lee, the granddaughter of the old settler woman; at 32 she was a decade older than the character. This marked the beginning of a professional and domestic relationship between Eastwood and Locke that would span six films and last into the late 1980s. Ferris Webster was hired as the film's editor and Jerry Fielding as composer."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046751.7795, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046751.2648, "finish": 1722046751.7795, "ip": "", "conv_id": "404e215590dc47dc97131dab1f843bad", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "where was the outlaw of josey wales filmed", "output": [["where was the outlaw of josey wales filmed", "The Outlaw Josey Wales\n\nIn June 1975, it was announced that Eastwood would star in the film with a scheduled Bicentennial Celebration release. Principal photography began on October 6 in Lake Powell and nearby Paria, Utah. A rift between Eastwood and Kaufman developed during the filming. Kaufman insisted on filming with a meticulous attention to detail, which caused disagreements with Eastwood, not to mention the attraction the two shared towards Locke and apparent jealousy on Kaufman's part in regard to their emerging relationship. One evening, Kaufman insisted on finding a beer can as a prop to be used in a scene, but while he was absent, Eastwood ordered Surtees to quickly shoot the scene as light was fading and then drove away, leaving before Kaufman had returned. Soon after, filming moved to Kanab, Utah. On October 24, 1975, Kaufman was fired at Eastwood's command by producer Bob Daley. The sacking caused an outrage amongst the Directors Guild of America and other important Hollywood executives, since the director had already worked hard on the film, including completing all of the pre-production. Pressure mounted on Warner Bros. and Eastwood to back down, and their refusal to do so resulted in a fine, reported to be around $60,000, for the violation. This resulted in the Director's Guild passing a new rule, known as \"the Eastwood Rule\", which prohibits an actor or producer from firing the director and then personally taking on the director's role. From then on, the film was directed by Eastwood himself with Daley as the second-in-command. With Kaufman's planning already in place, the team was able to finish making the film efficiently.\nReception"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046782.8956, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046775.7069, "finish": 1722046782.8956, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9b5312e94aa14298aa140a7dbafd70a9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Computing Machinery and Intelligence\n\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" is a seminal paper written by Alan Turing on the topic of artificial intelligence. The paper, published in 1950 in Mind, was the first to introduce his concept of what is now known as the Turing test to the general public.\nTuring's paper considers the question \"Can machines think?\" Turing says that since the words \"think\" and \"machine\" cannot be clearly defined we should \"replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" To do this, he must first find a simple and unambiguous idea to replace the word \"think\", second he must explain exactly which \"machines\" he is considering, and finally, armed with these tools, he formulates a new question, related to the first, that he believes he can answer in the affirmative."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046782.8956, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046775.7069, "finish": 1722046782.8956, "ip": "", "conv_id": "16daa0e2cb924beab12d733d57a718ec", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question whether machines can think?", "Turing test\n\nAlan Turing and the Imitation Game\nResearchers in the United Kingdom had been exploring \"machine intelligence\" for up to ten years prior to the founding of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) research in 1956. It was a common topic among the members of the Ratio Club, an informal group of British cybernetics and electronics researchers that included Alan Turing.\nTuring, in particular, had been running the notion of machine intelligence since at least 1941 and one of the earliest-known mentions of \"computer intelligence\" was made by him in 1947. In Turing's report, \"Intelligent Machinery,\" he investigated \"the question of whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\" and, as part of that investigation, proposed what may be considered the forerunner to his later tests:\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\"\nTo demonstrate this approach Turing proposes a test inspired by a party game, known as the \"imitation game\", in which a man and a woman go into separate rooms and guests try to tell them apart by writing a series of questions and reading the typewritten answers sent back. In this game, both the man and the woman aim to convince the guests that they are the other. (Huma Shah argues that this two-human version of the game was presented by Turing only to introduce the reader to the machine-human question-answer test.) Turing described his new version of the game as follows:"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046849.8482, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046849.6565, "finish": 1722046849.8482, "ip": "", "conv_id": "539cfbba9f4d4328a370fba1f95ca1eb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question if machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question if machines can think?", "Computing Machinery and Intelligence\n\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" is a seminal paper written by Alan Turing on the topic of artificial intelligence. The paper, published in 1950 in Mind, was the first to introduce his concept of what is now known as the Turing test to the general public.\nTuring's paper considers the question \"Can machines think?\" Turing says that since the words \"think\" and \"machine\" cannot be clearly defined we should \"replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" To do this, he must first find a simple and unambiguous idea to replace the word \"think\", second he must explain exactly which \"machines\" he is considering, and finally, armed with these tools, he formulates a new question, related to the first, that he believes he can answer in the affirmative."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046849.8482, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046849.6565, "finish": 1722046849.8482, "ip": "", "conv_id": "923adf52139c450ead6813459cd31bec", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test seeks to answer the question if machines can think?", "output": [["Which test seeks to answer the question if machines can think?", "Turing test\n\nThe 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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046869.7367, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046868.7927, "finish": 1722046869.7367, "ip": "", "conv_id": "48dcae5b011b47ff845edc3a3be10610", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "Turing test\n\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046869.7367, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046868.7927, "finish": 1722046869.7367, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1162f22adefe4da9bafae727a5f406ed", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "Artificial intelligence\n\nIn 2016, issues of fairness and the misuse of technology were catapulted into center stage at machine learning conferences, publications vastly increased, funding became available, and many researchers re-focussed their careers on these issues. The alignment problem became a serious field of academic study.\nIn the late teens and early 2020s, AGI companies began to deliver programs that created enormous interest. In 2015, AlphaGo, developed by DeepMind, beat the world champion Go player. The program was taught only the rules of the game and developed strategy by itself. GPT-3 is a large language model that was released in 2020 by OpenAI and is capable of generating high-quality human-like text. These programs, and others, inspired an aggressive AI boom, where large companies began investing billions in AI research. According to AI Impacts, about $50 billion annually was invested in \"AI\" around 2022 in the U.S. alone and about 20% of the new U.S. Computer Science PhD graduates have specialized in \"AI\".\nAbout 800,000 \"AI\"-related U.S. job openings existed in 2022.\nPhilosophy\nDefining artificial intelligence\nAlan Turing wrote in 1950 \"I propose to consider the question 'can machines think'?\" He advised changing the question from whether a machine \"thinks\", to \"whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\". He devised the Turing test, which measures the ability of a machine to simulate human conversation. Since we can only observe the behavior of the machine, it does not matter if it is \"actually\" thinking or literally has a \"mind\". Turing notes that we can not determine these things about other people but \"it is usual to have a polite convention that everyone thinks.\"\nRussell and Norvig agree with Turing that intelligence must be defined in terms of external behavior, not internal structure. However, they are critical that the test requires the machine to imitate humans. \"Aeronautical engineering texts,\" they wrote, \"do not define the goal of their field as making 'machines that fly so exactly like pigeons that they can fool other pigeons. AI founder John McCarthy agreed, writing that \"Artificial intelligence is not, by definition, simulation of human intelligence\".\nMcCarthy defines intelligence as \"the computational part of the ability to achieve goals in the world\". Another AI founder, Marvin Minsky similarly describes it as \"the ability to solve hard problems\". The leading AI textbook defines it as the study of agents that perceive their environment and take actions that maximize their chances of achieving defined goals. These definitions view intelligence in terms of well-defined problems with well-defined solutions, where both the difficulty of the problem and the performance of the program are direct measures of the \"intelligence\" of the machine\u2014and no other philosophical discussion is required, or may not even be possible.\nAnother definition has been adopted by Google, a major practitioner in the field of AI. This definition stipulates the ability of systems to synthesize information as the manifestation of intelligence, similar to the way it is defined in biological intelligence.\nEvaluating approaches to AI"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046905.5445, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046905.3437, "finish": 1722046905.5445, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e0700dec87f7420785544aca7dc731ac", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "Turing test\n\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046905.5445, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046905.3437, "finish": 1722046905.5445, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7154e3db845548f19055c3fb9fcb5bd4", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether machines can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046916.0406, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046915.8646, "finish": 1722046916.0406, "ip": "", "conv_id": "27bd9d6fb4774d9d8e9375965cb7d009", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether machines are able to think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether machines are able to think?", "Turing test\n\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046916.0406, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046915.8646, "finish": 1722046916.0406, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fe13894c189843efa8fb8b8b5687161c", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether machines are able to think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether machines are able to think?", "Turing test\n\nNevertheless, the Turing test has been proposed as a measure of a machine's \"ability to think\" or its \"intelligence\". This proposal has received criticism from both philosophers and computer scientists. The interpretation makes the assumption that an interrogator can determine if a machine is \"thinking\" by comparing its behaviour with human behaviour. Every element of this assumption has been questioned: the reliability of the interrogator's judgement, the value of comparing the machine with a human, and the value of comparing only behaviour. Because of these and other considerations, some AI researchers have questioned the relevance of the test to their field.\nNa\u00efvet\u00e9 of interrogators\nIn practice, the test's results can easily be dominated not by the computer's intelligence, but by the attitudes, skill, or na\u00efvet\u00e9 of the questioner. Numerous experts in the field, including cognitive scientist Gary Marcus, insist that the Turing test only shows how easy it is to fool humans and is not an indication of machine intelligence.\nTuring doesn't specify the precise skills and knowledge required by the interrogator in his description of the test, but he did use the term \"average interrogator\": \"[the] average interrogator would not have more than 70 per cent chance of making the right identification after five minutes of questioning.\""]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046934.2865, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046934.0971, "finish": 1722046934.2865, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4fbcdfdb3a2f4befb9c2bac90313f8ce", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046934.2865, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046934.0971, "finish": 1722046934.2865, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3bf50c83f65f463cb3cba9658c352810", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046948.6745, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046948.1688, "finish": 1722046948.6745, "ip": "", "conv_id": "93fdb06f60d349a0a5f84a3edd877de1", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046948.6745, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046948.1688, "finish": 1722046948.6745, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c84fa813df534a5a8cb11b21735ba7a5", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Hilbert's tenth problem\n\nHilbert's tenth problem is the tenth on the list of mathematical problems that the German mathematician David Hilbert posed in 1900. It is the challenge to provide a general algorithm that, for any given Diophantine equation (a polynomial equation with integer coefficients and a finite number of unknowns), can decide whether the equation has a solution with all unknowns taking integer values.\nFor example, the Diophantine equation has an integer solution: . By contrast, the Diophantine equation has no such solution.\nHilbert's tenth problem has been solved, and it has a negative answer: such a general algorithm cannot exist. This is the result of combined work of Martin Davis, Yuri Matiyasevich, Hilary Putnam and Julia Robinson that spans 21 years, with Matiyasevich completing the theorem in 1970. The theorem is now known as Matiyasevich's theorem or the MRDP theorem (an initialism for the surnames of the four principal contributors to its solution).\nWhen all coefficients and variables are restricted to be positive integers, the related problem of polynomial identity testing becomes a decidable (exponentiation-free) variation of Tarski's high school algebra problem, sometimes denoted\nBackground\nOriginal formulation\nHilbert formulated the problem as follows:\nGiven a Diophantine equation with any number of unknown quantities and with rational integral numerical coefficients: To devise a process according to which it can be determined in a finite number of operations whether the equation is solvable in rational integers.\nThe words \"process\" and \"finite number of operations\" have been taken to mean that Hilbert was asking for an algorithm. The term \"rational integral\" simply refers to the integers, positive, negative or zero: 0, \u00b11, \u00b12, ... . So Hilbert was asking for a general algorithm to decide whether a given polynomial Diophantine equation with integer coefficients has a solution in integers.\nHilbert's problem is not concerned with finding the solutions. It only asks whether, in general, we can decide whether one or more solutions exist. The answer to this question is negative, in the sense that no \"process can be devised\" for answering that question. In modern terms, Hilbert's 10th problem is an undecidable problem.\nDiophantine sets\nIn a Diophantine equation, there are two kinds of variables: the parameters and the unknowns. The Diophantine set consists of the parameter assignments for which the Diophantine equation is solvable. A typical example is the linear Diophantine equation in two unknowns,\n,\nwhere the equation is solvable if and only if the greatest common divisor evenly divides . The set of all ordered triples satisfying this restriction is called the Diophantine set defined by .\nIn these terms, Hilbert's tenth problem asks whether there is an algorithm to determine if the Diophantine set corresponding to an arbitrary polynomial is non-empty."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046996.8046, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046957.6878, "finish": 1722046996.8046, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c93db0ca02ff4134a5448a8b8a7a74b0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046996.8046, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722046957.6878, "finish": 1722046996.8046, "ip": "", "conv_id": "60953efb8829437db1c7554e00bd6c04", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\nThe 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)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047155.059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047152.4944, "finish": 1722047155.059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "59781cbc419849a89d9add4995e8f573", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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?", "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (fictional)\n\nThe Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a fictional electronic guide book in the multimedia scifi/comedy series of the same name by Douglas Adams. The Guide serves as \"the standard repository for all knowledge and wisdom\" for many members of the series' galaxy-spanning civilization. Entries from the guidebook are used as comic narration to bridge events and provide background information in every version of the story. The guide is published by \"Megadodo Publications\", a publishing company on Ursa Minor Beta, and it is written and edited by many characters throughout the series."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047155.059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047152.4944, "finish": 1722047155.059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "15b53dcd34374c6db4566db7d977677f", "model_name": "BM25", "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?", "Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nLater 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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047251.6537, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047188.5587, "finish": 1722047251.6537, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6b013d43e5d645c6936ca0723d0a0e97", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047251.6537, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047188.5587, "finish": 1722047251.6537, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d3a2b0b22a0c43018a96e35be9e53960", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Chinese room\n\nSearle does not disagree that AI research can create machines that are capable of highly intelligent behavior. The Chinese room argument leaves open the possibility that a digital machine could be built that acts more intelligently than a person, but does not have a mind or intentionality in the same way that brains do.\nSearle's \"strong AI hypothesis\" should not be confused with \"strong AI\" as defined by Ray Kurzweil and other futurists, who use the term to describe machine intelligence that rivals or exceeds human intelligence -- that is, artificial general intelligence, human level AI or superintelligence. Kurzweil is referring primarily to the amount of intelligence displayed by the machine, whereas Searle's argument sets no limit on this. Searle argues that a superintelligent machine would not necessarily have a mind and consciousness.\nTuring test\nThe Chinese room implements a version of the Turing test. Alan Turing introduced the test in 1950 to help answer the question \"can machines think?\" In the standard version, a human judge engages in a natural language conversation with a human and a machine designed to generate performance indistinguishable from that of a human being. All participants are separated from one another. If the judge cannot reliably tell the machine from the human, the machine is said to have passed the test."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047251.8643, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047251.6784, "finish": 1722047251.8643, "ip": "", "conv_id": "80eea93e256d483c9bac8351da80b102", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "output": [["Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nLater instances in fiction Various 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)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047251.8643, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047251.6784, "finish": 1722047251.8643, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2f3e0044b78e417aaddd7da6e64e2eb0", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "output": [["Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nLater 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."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047335.1758, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047334.9646, "finish": 1722047335.1758, "ip": "", "conv_id": "24081adb44174629aa0cc36c2a9821dc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "output": [["Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Encyclopedia Galactica\n\nLater instances in fiction Various 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)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047335.1758, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047334.9646, "finish": 1722047335.1758, "ip": "", "conv_id": "90811074a9b3432680a87cb50fa59d15", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "output": [["Who wrote about a guide more popular than the Encyclopedia Galactica?", "Fictional book\n\nBill Watterson placed fictional children's books in his comic strip Calvin and Hobbes, saying that he could never reveal their contents for they were surely more outrageous in the reader's imagination. For several years, Calvin (perpetually six years old) demands that his father read him Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie as a bedtime story. Occasionally, his father's patience snaps and he introduces new variations, which at least reveal what the original story is not: \"Do you think the townsfolk will ever find Hamster Huey's head?\" An \"actual\" Hamster Huey book was written by Mabel Barr in 2004, years after the strip's conclusion.\n\"Travels With My Cats,\" a Hugo-nominated short story by Mike Resnick first appearing in Asimov's Science Fiction magazine, features a fictional travelogue of the same name.\nPaul Levinson's novel The Plot To Save Socrates features a fictional ancient Platonic Dialogue, without title, that begins \"PERSONS OF THE DIALOGUE: Socrates; Andros, a visitor. SCENE: The Prison of Socrates\".\nThe Encyclopedia Galactica in Isaac Asimov's Foundation series was created in Terminus at the beginning of the Foundation Era. It serves primarily as an introduction to a character, a place or a circumstance to be developed in each chapter. Each quotation contains a copyright disclaimer and cites Terminus as the place of publication. The Encyclopedia also makes an appearance in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047375.0326, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047374.7722, "finish": 1722047375.0326, "ip": "", "conv_id": "963edb53b4f041b987bc436c5ec03d27", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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?", "Planetary habitability in the Solar System\n\nPlanetary habitability in the Solar System is the study that searches the possible existence of past or present extraterrestrial life in those celestial bodies. As exoplanets are too far away and can only be studied by indirect means, the celestial bodies in the Solar System allow for a much more detailed study: direct telescope observation, space probes, rovers and even human spaceflight."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047375.0326, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047374.7722, "finish": 1722047375.0326, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fcc7ea18dfa0486fb393e9b79577df45", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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?", "Exoplanet\n\nSurface temperature Measuring the intensity of the light it receives from its parent star can estimate the temperature of an exoplanet. For example, the planet OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb is estimated to have a surface temperature of roughly \u2212220\u00a0\u00b0C (50 K). However, such estimates may be substantially in error because they depend on the planet's usually unknown albedo, and because factors such as the greenhouse effect may introduce unknown complications. A few planets have had their temperature measured by observing the variation in infrared radiation as the planet moves around in its orbit and is eclipsed by its parent star. For example, the planet HD 189733b has been estimated to have an average temperature of 1,205 K (932\u00a0\u00b0C) on its dayside and 973 K (700\u00a0\u00b0C) on its nightside.\nHabitability\nAs more planets are discovered, the field of exoplanetology continues to grow into a deeper study of extrasolar worlds, and will ultimately tackle the prospect of life on planets beyond the Solar System. At cosmic distances, life can only be detected if it is developed at a planetary scale and strongly modified the planetary environment, in such a way that the modifications cannot be explained by classical physico-chemical processes (out of equilibrium processes). For example, molecular oxygen () in the atmosphere of Earth is a result of photosynthesis by living plants and many kinds of microorganisms, so it can be used as an indication of life on exoplanets, although small amounts of oxygen could also be produced by non-biological means. Furthermore, a potentially habitable planet must orbit a stable star at a distance within which planetary-mass objects with sufficient atmospheric pressure can support liquid water at their surfaces."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047384.9181, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047384.7477, "finish": 1722047384.9181, "ip": "", "conv_id": "71a73219a9f14c44b591944d82c38925", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Habitability of natural satellites\n\nTidal-locking Earth-sized exoplanets in the habitable zone around red dwarfs are often tidally locked to the host star. This has the effect that one hemisphere always faces the star, while the other remains in darkness. Like an exoplanet, an exomoon can potentially become tidally locked to its primary. However, since the exomoon's primary is an exoplanet, it would continue to rotate relative to its star after becoming tidally locked, and thus would still experience a day-night cycle indefinitely.\nScientists consider tidal heating as a threat for the habitability of exomoons.\nIn the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047384.9181, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047384.7477, "finish": 1722047384.9181, "ip": "", "conv_id": "871c13d46d9c411683d054ff48464bf5", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets/moons in the solar system are most likely to be habitable?", "Ocean world\n\nSolar System planetary bodies Ocean worlds are of extreme interest to astrobiologists for their potential to develop life and sustain biological activity over geological timescales. Major moons and dwarf planets in the Solar System thought to harbor subsurface oceans are of substantial interest because they can realistically be reached and studied by space probes, in contrast to exoplanets, which are tens if not hundreds or thousands of light-years away, far beyond the reach of current human technology. The best-established water worlds in the Solar System, other than the Earth, are Callisto, Enceladus, Europa, Ganymede, and Titan. Europa and Enceladus are considered among the most compelling targets for exploration due to their comparatively thin outer crusts and observations of cryovolcanism.\nA host of other bodies in the Solar System are considered candidates to host subsurface oceans based upon a single type of observation or by theoretical modeling, including Ariel, Titania, Umbriel, Ceres, Dione, Mimas, Miranda, Oberon, Pluto, Triton, Eris, and Makemake.\nExoplanets\nOutside the Solar System, exoplanets that have been described as candidate ocean worlds include GJ 1214 b, Kepler-22b, Kepler-62e, Kepler-62f, and the planets of Kepler-11 and TRAPPIST-1.\nMore recently, the exoplanets TOI-1452 b, Kepler-138c, and Kepler-138d have been found to have densities consistent with large fractions of their mass being composed of water. Additionally, models of the massive rocky planet LHS 1140 b suggest its surface may be covered in a deep ocean."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047403.4834, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047403.2763, "finish": 1722047403.4834, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a8e9c9ac80b440a2afe9bbcdb6d0f39f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "List of potentially habitable exoplanets\n\nThe following list include some of the potentially habitable exoplanets discovered so far. It is mostly based on estimates of habitability by the Habitable Worlds Catalog (HWC), and data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive. The HWC is maintained by the Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo. There is also a speculative list being developed of superhabitable planets.\nSurface planetary habitability is thought to require an orbit at the right distance from the host star for liquid surface water to be present, in addition to various geophysical and geodynamical aspects, atmospheric density, radiation type and intensity, and the host star's plasma environment.\nList\nThis is a list of exoplanets within the circumstellar habitable zone that are under 10 Earth masses and smaller than 2.5 Earth radii, and thus have a chance of being rocky. Note that inclusion on this list does not guarantee habitability, and in particular the larger planets are unlikely to have a rocky composition. Earth is included for comparison.\nNote that mass and radius values prefixed with \"~\" have not been measured, but are estimated from a mass-radius relationship.\nEarth and Venus were included for reference.\nPrevious candidates\nSome exoplanet candidates detected by radial velocity that were originally thought to be potentially habitable were later found to most likely be artifacts of stellar activity. These include Gliese 581 d & g, Gliese 667 Ce & f, Gliese 682 b & c, Kapteyn b, and Gliese 832 c."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047403.4834, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047403.2763, "finish": 1722047403.4834, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3985fd07d54744b38081cf5279a04b03", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "output": [["Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "Eyeball planet\n\nAn eyeball planet is a hypothetical type of tidally locked planet, for which tidal locking induces spatial features (for example in the geography or composition of the planet) resembling an eyeball. They are terrestrial planets where liquids may be present, in which tidal locking will induce a spatially dependent temperature gradient (the planet will be hotter on the side facing the star and colder on the other side). This temperature gradient may therefore limit the places in which liquid may exist on the surface of the planet to ring-or disk-shaped areas.\nSuch planets are further divided into \"hot\" and \"cold\" eyeball planets, depending on which side of the planet the liquid is present. A \"hot\" eyeball planet is usually closer to its host star, and the centre of the \"eye\", facing the star (day side), is made of rock while liquid is present on the opposite side (night side). A \"cold\" eyeball planet, usually farther from the star, will have liquid on the side facing the host star while the rest of its surface is made of ice and rocks.\nBecause most planetary bodies have a natural tendency toward becoming tidally locked to their host body on a long enough timeline, eyeball planets may be common and could host life, particularly in planetary systems orbiting red and brown dwarf stars which have lifespans much longer than other main sequence stars.\nPotential candidates\nKepler-1652b is potentially an eyeball planet. The TRAPPIST-1 system may contain several such planets."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047887.2631, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047887.0191, "finish": 1722047887.2631, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a1297b120ec444fb880043ed382863b7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Kepler-62f\n\nKepler-62f (also known by its Kepler Object of Interest designation KOI-701.04) is a super-Earth exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of the star Kepler-62, the outermost of five such planets discovered around the star by NASA's Kepler spacecraft. It is located about from Earth in the constellation of Lyra."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047887.2631, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047887.0191, "finish": 1722047887.2631, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2a0092dd74eb4a90be5cf0c696b84934", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Eyeball planet\n\nAn eyeball planet is a hypothetical type of tidally locked planet, for which tidal locking induces spatial features (for example in the geography or composition of the planet) resembling an eyeball. They are terrestrial planets where liquids may be present, in which tidal locking will induce a spatially dependent temperature gradient (the planet will be hotter on the side facing the star and colder on the other side). This temperature gradient may therefore limit the places in which liquid may exist on the surface of the planet to ring-or disk-shaped areas.\nSuch planets are further divided into \"hot\" and \"cold\" eyeball planets, depending on which side of the planet the liquid is present. A \"hot\" eyeball planet is usually closer to its host star, and the centre of the \"eye\", facing the star (day side), is made of rock while liquid is present on the opposite side (night side). A \"cold\" eyeball planet, usually farther from the star, will have liquid on the side facing the host star while the rest of its surface is made of ice and rocks.\nBecause most planetary bodies have a natural tendency toward becoming tidally locked to their host body on a long enough timeline, eyeball planets may be common and could host life, particularly in planetary systems orbiting red and brown dwarf stars which have lifespans much longer than other main sequence stars.\nPotential candidates\nKepler-1652b is potentially an eyeball planet. The TRAPPIST-1 system may contain several such planets."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047922.8819, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047919.632, "finish": 1722047922.8819, "ip": "", "conv_id": "16fd7aaf3f9245888da1904e381d6f5d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Kepler-62f\n\nKepler-62f (also known by its Kepler Object of Interest designation KOI-701.04) is a super-Earth exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of the star Kepler-62, the outermost of five such planets discovered around the star by NASA's Kepler spacecraft. It is located about from Earth in the constellation of Lyra."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047922.8819, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047919.632, "finish": 1722047922.8819, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a18c067e9a2540e8b6ad62488f5163a6", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Max Martin production discography\n\nThis is a list of Swedish record producer Max Martin's songwriting and production credits.\nWritten and co-written songs\nindicates a song that reached the number-one position on the Billboard Hot 100.\nindicates a song that reached top ten on the Billboard Hot 100.\nMaratone/MXM/Wolf Cousins\nProductions and co-productions\nMaratone/MXM/Wolf Cousins\nTop ten singles\nThe following singles peaked inside the top ten on the Billboard Hot 100 and Hot 100 Airplay.\nNumber-one singles (Peak date)\n\"...Baby One More Time\" (1999-01-30)\n\"It's Gonna Be Me\" (2000-07-29)\n\"I Kissed a Girl\" (2008-07-05)\n\"So What\" (2008-09-27)\n\"My Life Would Suck Without You\" (2009-02-07)\n\"3\" (2009-10-24)\n\"California Gurls\" (2010-06-19)\n\"Teenage Dream\" (2010-09-18)\n\"Raise Your Glass\" (2010-12-11)\n\"Hold It Against Me\" (2011-01-29)\n\"E.T.\" (2011-04-09)\n\"Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)\" (2011-08-27)\n\"Part of Me\" (2012-03-03)\n\"We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together\" (2012-09-01)\n\"One More Night\" (2012-09-29)\n\"Roar\" (2013-09-14)\n\"Dark Horse\" (2014-02-08)\n\"Shake It Off\" (2014-09-06)\n\"Blank Space\" (2014-11-29)\n\"Bad Blood\" (2015-06-06)\n\"Can't Feel My Face\" (2015-08-22)\n\"Can't Stop the Feeling!\" (2016-05-28)\n\"Blinding Lights\" (2020-04-04)\n\"Save Your Tears\" (2021-05-08)\n\"My Universe\" (2021-10-09)\n\"Yes, And?\" (2024-01-27)\n\"We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)\" (2024-03-23)\nOther Top 10 hits (Peak date) Peak\n\"Do You Know (What It Takes)\" (1997-08-02) #7\n\"Quit Playing Games (with My Heart)\" (1997-09-06) #2\n\"Show Me Love\" (1997-11-29) #7\n\"Everybody (Backstreet's Back)\" (1998-05-09) #4\n\"I Want It That Way\" (1999-06-26) #6\n\"(You Drive Me) Crazy\" (1999-11-13) #10\n\"That's the Way It Is\" (2000-03-04) #6\n\"Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely\" (2000-03-18) #6\n\"Oops!... I Did It Again\" (2000-06-10) #9\n\"Shape of My Heart\" (2000-12-02) #9\n\"Since U Been Gone\" (2005-04-09) #2\n\"Behind These Hazel Eyes\" (2005-06-11) #6\n\"U + Ur Hand\" (2007-05-05) #9\n\"Who Knew\" (2007-09-29) #9\n\"Hot n Cold\" (2008-11-22) #3\n\"Whataya Want from Me\" (2010-05-01) #10\n\"Dynamite\" (2010-08-21) #2\n\"DJ Got Us Fallin' in Love\" (2010-10-09) #4\n\"Fuckin' Perfect\" (2011-02-12) #2\n\"Blow\" (2011-03-19) #7\n\"Loser Like Me\" (2011-04-02) #6\n\"Till the World Ends\" (2011-05-14) #3\n\"I Wanna Go\" (2011-08-20) #7\n\"The One That Got Away\" (2012-01-07) #3\n\"Domino\" (2012-02-18) #6\n\"Scream\" (2012-08-04) #9\n\"Wide Awake\" (2012-08-11) #2\n\"Beauty and a Beat\" (2013-01-05) #5\n\"I Knew You Were Trouble\" (2013-01-12) #2\n\"Daylight\" (2013-02-23) #7\n\"Problem\" (2014-06-07) #2\n\"Break Free\" (2014-08-30 #4\n\"Bang Bang\" (2014-10-04) #3\n\"Love Me Harder\" (2014-11-22) #7\n\"Love Me Like You Do\" (2015-03-07) #3\n\"Style\" (2015-03-21) #6\n\"Wildest Dreams\" (2015-11-07) #5\n\"Focus\" (2015-11-21) #7\n\"Hands to Myself\" (2016-02-13) #7\n\"Dangerous Woman\" (2016-06-11) #8\n\"Just Like Fire\" (2016-06-18) #10\n\"Send My Love (To Your New Lover)\" (2016-09-24) #8\n\"Side to Side\" (2016-12-03) #4\n\"Chained to the Rhythm\" (2017-03-04) #4\n\"...Ready for It?\" (2017-09-23) #4\n\"No Tears Left to Cry\" (2018-05-05) #3\n\"God Is A Woman\" (2018-09-01) #8\n\"Break Up with Your Girlfriend, I'm Bored\" (2019-02-23) #2\n\"I Don't Care\" (2019-05-25) #2\n\"Stupid Love\" (2020-03-14) #5\n\"Take My Breath\" (2021-08-21) #6\n\"Bad Blood (Taylor's Version)\" (2023-11-11) #7\n\"Style (Taylor's Version)\" (2023-11-11) #9"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047993.4237, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047991.0878, "finish": 1722047993.4237, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9bee3b3f627248d2867e828febf62291", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Kepler-62f\n\nKepler-62f (also known by its Kepler Object of Interest designation KOI-701.04) is a super-Earth exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of the star Kepler-62, the outermost of five such planets discovered around the star by NASA's Kepler spacecraft. It is located about from Earth in the constellation of Lyra."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047993.4237, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722047991.0878, "finish": 1722047993.4237, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fc3d7970a74d406fb7f178eac945e193", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "List of nearest exoplanets\n\nMost known nearby exoplanets orbit close to their stars. A majority are significantly larger than Earth, but a few have similar masses, including planets around YZ Ceti, Gliese 367, and Proxima Centauri which may be less massive than Earth. Several confirmed exoplanets are hypothesized to be potentially habitable, with Proxima Centauri b and GJ 1002 b (15.8 ly) considered among the most likely candidates. The International Astronomical Union has assigned proper names to some known extrasolar bodies, including nearby exoplanets, through the NameExoWorlds project. Planets named in the 2015 event include the planets around Epsilon Eridani (10.5 ly) and Fomalhaut, while planets named in the 2022 event include those around Gliese 436, Gliese 486, and Gliese 367.\nExoplanets within 10 parsecs\nExcluded objects\nUnlike for bodies within the Solar System, there is no clearly established method for officially recognizing an exoplanet. According to the International Astronomical Union, an exoplanet should be considered confirmed if it has not been disputed for five years after its discovery. There have been examples where the existence of exoplanets has been proposed, but even after follow-up studies their existence is still considered doubtful by some astronomers. Such cases include Wolf 359 (7.9 ly, in 2019), LHS 288 (15.8 ly, in 2007),\nand Gliese 682 (16.3 ly, in 2014).\nThere are also several instances where proposed exoplanets were later disproved by subsequent studies, including candidates around Alpha Centauri B (4.36 ly),\nBarnard's Star (5.96 ly),\nKapteyn's Star (12.8 ly),\nVan Maanen 2 (14.1 ly),\nGroombridge 1618 (15.9 ly),\nAD Leonis (16.2 ly),\n40 Eridani A (16.3 ly),\nVB 10 (19.3 ly), and Fomalhaut (25.1 ly)."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722048070.6517, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722048049.2818, "finish": 1722048070.6517, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d788163772c5441d895cdfe4fd7a722e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Kepler-62f\n\nKepler-62f (also known by its Kepler Object of Interest designation KOI-701.04) is a super-Earth exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of the star Kepler-62, the outermost of five such planets discovered around the star by NASA's Kepler spacecraft. It is located about from Earth in the constellation of Lyra."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722048070.6517, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722048049.2818, "finish": 1722048070.6517, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e732133c89384010a5b6c51a56fc78c6", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Habitable zone\n\nK2-18b is an exoplanet 124 light-years away, orbiting in the habitable zone of the K2-18, a red dwarf. This planet is significant for water vapor found in its atmosphere; this was announced on September 17, 2019.\nIn September 2020, astronomers identified 24 superhabitable planet (planets better than Earth) contenders, from among more than 4000 confirmed exoplanets at present, based on astrophysical parameters, as well as the natural history of known life forms on the Earth.\nHabitability outside the HZ\nLiquid-water environments have been found to exist in the absence of atmospheric pressure and at temperatures outside the HZ temperature range. For example, Saturn's moons Titan and Enceladus and Jupiter's moons Europa and Ganymede, all of which are outside the habitable zone, may hold large volumes of liquid water in subsurface oceans.\nOutside the HZ, tidal heating and radioactive decay are two possible heat sources that could contribute to the existence of liquid water. Abbot and Switzer (2011) put forward the possibility that subsurface water could exist on rogue planets as a result of radioactive decay-based heating and insulation by a thick surface layer of ice.\nWith some theorising that life on Earth may have actually originated in stable, subsurface habitats, it has been suggested that it may be common for wet subsurface extraterrestrial habitats such as these to 'teem with life'. On Earth itself, living organisms may be found more than below the surface."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 937132ff597396c503553bf061e09d967d5e1d09..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-e23bd217-d6cb-4091-8ffe-b09f0502276f.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720596937.7497, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596912.033, "finish": 1720596937.7497, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2d0dc8e105c04f1f8fc26d1a5600b71d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720596990.7406, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596974.8242, "finish": 1720596990.7406, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e50d4e4744ab48a5bcdc4948f6bf6e80", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "output": [["when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "Title: February 10\n\nPassage: Events\nPre-1600"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720596990.7406, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720596974.8242, "finish": 1720596990.7406, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f72f65953948488db55f613d8289fea8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when were birth certificates first issued in the united states", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 9da71d32487d700037e72f450d470b16c2224b1b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-e2713b26-552d-442d-a6bc-727983c0b148.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,210 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720823055.9265, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823025.9243, "finish": 1720823055.9265, "ip": "", "conv_id": "341308e50b504a0f96d30b6b2e6226d5", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who stole the mona lisa from the louvre in 1911", "output": [["who stole the mona lisa from the louvre in 1911", "Title: Chronos (character)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823097.9353, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823071.9331, "finish": 1720823097.9353, "ip": "", "conv_id": "45c3d8ca1174440a8f5bb8ac5b8d409e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "a country having an island location and a country having continental location", "output": [["a country having an island location and a country having continental location", "Title: List of transcontinental countries\n\nPassage: This is a list of countries with territory that straddles more than one continent, known as transcontinental states or intercontinental states."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823153.0688, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823104.6891, "finish": 1720823153.0688, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8474724315bb4160826a4960c8f10097", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "where is cellulose used in a plant cell", "output": [["where is cellulose used in a plant cell", "Title: Cellulose synthase (UDP-forming)\n\nPassage: The UDP-forming form of cellulose synthase () is the main enzyme that produces cellulose. Systematically, it is known as UDP-glucose:(1\u21924)-\u03b2-D-glucan 4-\u03b2-D-glucosyltransferase in enzymology. It catalyzes the chemical reaction:\nUDP-glucose + [(1\u21924)-\u03b2-D-glucosyl]n = UDP + [(1\u21924)-\u03b2-D-glucosyl]n+1\nA similar enzyme utilizes GDP-glucose, cellulose synthase (GDP-forming) (EC 2.4.1.29).\nThis family of enzymes is found in bacteria and plants alike. Plant members are usually known as CesA (cellulose synthase) or the tentative CslA (cellulose synthase-like), while bacterial members may additionally be known as BcsA (bacterial cellulose synthase) or CelA (simply \"cellulose\"). Plants acquired CesA from the endosymbiosis event that produced the chloroplast. This family belongs to glucosyltransferase family 2 (GT2). Glycosyltransferases are involved in the biosynthesis and hydrolysis of the bulk of earth's biomass. There are known to be about seven subfamilies in the plant CesA superfamily, or ten in the combined plant-algal superfamily. Urochordates are the only group of animals possessing this enzyme, having acquired them by horizontal gene transfer more than 530 million years ago.\nCellulose\nCellulose is an aggregation of unbranched polymer chains made of \u03b2-(1\u21924)-linked glucose residues that makes up a large portion of primary and secondary cell walls. Although important for plants, it is also synthesized by most algae, some bacteria, and some animals. Worldwide, 2 \u00d7 1011 tons of cellulose microfibrils are produced, which serves as a critical source of renewable biofuels and other biological-based products, such as lumber, fuel, fodder, paper and cotton.\nPurpose of cellulose"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823265.0649, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823224.3034, "finish": 1720823265.0649, "ip": "", "conv_id": "92876908e90449f38203ea8badbf27ef", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "what is the meaning of the dragon boat festival", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823265.0649, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823224.3034, "finish": 1720823265.0649, "ip": "", "conv_id": "75b49da866fb4da6bc08b6704c33e5bb", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "what is the meaning of the dragon boat festival", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823305.6509, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823305.2601, "finish": 1720823305.6509, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8234c2480a6a4ec0b226383c455d9f9b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "state with highest population growth rate in india 2011", "output": [["state with highest population growth rate in india 2011", "Title: States of India by Telugu speakers\n\nPassage: This is a list of states and union territories of India by speakers of Telugu as of census 2011."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823305.6509, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823305.2601, "finish": 1720823305.6509, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a247731a83d84e569be43aaf363431df", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "state with highest population growth rate in india 2011", "output": [["state with highest population growth rate in india 2011", "Title: States of India by Bengali speakers\n\nPassage: This is a list of States and Union Territories of India by Bengali speakers at the time of the 2011 Census.\nAccording to 2011 census of India, Bengali is the fourth fastest growing language in India, following Hindi in the first place, Kashmiri in the second place, and Meitei (Manipuri), along with Gujarati, in the third place.\n2011 Census\n2001 Census\nBengali majority states of India\nWest Bengal\nAccording to the provisional results of the 2011 national census, West Bengal is the fourth-most-populous state in India with a population of 91,347,736 (7.55% of India's population). Bengalis, consisting of Bengali Hindus, Bengali Muslims, Bengali Christians and a few Bengali Buddhists, numbering around 78,698,852 comprise about 86.22% of the state population. West Bengal was created as a homeland of Bengali speaking people in 1947 specially for Hindus of Bengal region.\nTripura"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823323.1026, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823291.9055, "finish": 1720823323.1026, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cfda67241da14335bdc6f0d748b4e15f", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "when does season 18 of law and order svu start", "output": [["when does season 18 of law and order svu start", "Title: List of programs broadcast by MyNetworkTV\n\nPassage: This is a list of programming which has been or will be carried on the American broadcast programming service MyNetworkTV.\nCurrent programming\nAcquired programming\nDramas\nLaw & Order: Special Victims Unit (2011\u201318; 2019\u2013present)\nChicago P.D. (2018\u2013present)\nChicago Fire (2021\u2013present)\nReality/non-scripted\nDateline (2017\u2013present)\nUpcoming programming\nAcquired programming\nDramas\nSuits (Fall 2024)\nFormer programming\nOriginal programming\nDramas\nDesire (2006)\nFashion House (2006)\nWatch Over Me (2006\u201307)\nWicked Wicked Games (2006\u201307)\nAmerican Heiress (2007)\nSaints & Sinners (2007)\nComedies\nUnder One Roof (2008\u201309)\nReality/non-scripted\nCelebrity Expos\u00e9 (2007\u201309)\nControl Room Presents (2007\u201308)\nDecision House (2007\u201308)\nIFL Battleground (2007\u201308)\nParadise Hotel (2008)\nStreet Patrol (2008\u201309)\nThe Tony Rock Project (2008\u201309)\nWWE SmackDown (2008\u201310)\nMasters of Illusion (2009)\nAcquired programming\nDramas\nThe Twilight Zone (2008\u201309)\nLaw & Order: Criminal Intent (2009\u201311; 2013\u201315; 2017\u201321)\nThe Unit (2009\u201310)\nBurn Notice (2010\u201312)\nWithout a Trace (2010\u201312)\nMonk (2010\u201314)\nCold Case (2011\u201312)\nHouse (2012\u201314)\nNumb3rs (2012\u201313)\nWhite Collar (2012\u201313)\nBones (2013\u201317)\nThe Mentalist (2014\u201316)\nThe Walking Dead (2014\u201316)\nThe Closer (2015\u201316)\nAgents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2016\u201317)\nThe X-Files (2016\u201318)\nCSI: Miami (2018\u201320)\nThe Good Wife (2018\u201319)\nReality/non-scripted\nThe Academy (2007)\nAmerica's Funniest Home Videos (some affiliates + O&Os) (2006\u201313)\nAmerican Ninja Warrior (2016\u201318)\nAre You Smarter than a 5th Grader? (2009\u201311)\nBreaking the Magician's Code (2007\u201309)\nComics Unleashed (2008\u201309)\nDeal or No Deal (2009\u201310)\nDon't Forget the Lyrics! (2010\u201311)\nThe Best of In Living Color (2007\u201308)\nJail (2007\u201309)\nMeet My Folks (2007\u201308)\nNFL Total Access (2007\u201308)\nWhacked Out Videos (2008\u201309)\nWorld's Funniest Moments (2008\u201309)\nVice Squad (2009)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720823323.1026, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720823291.9055, "finish": 1720823323.1026, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b3516dd010944529ab3b3b39357ca4cd", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "when does season 18 of law and order svu start", "output": [["when does season 18 of law and order svu start", "Title: Law & Order: Special Victims Unit\n\nPassage: From season 21, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit airs on Sky Witness in the United Kingdom. Beginning from season 23, it moved from CTV to CityTV in Canada, simulcasting with NBC. Law & Order: Special Victims Unit airs on Rock Entertainment in Southeast Asia.\nStreaming\nPeacock and Hulu currently have all seasons (1\u201324) available. The latest 5 episodes can be watched for free on NBC.com and the NBC app. Outside of SVOD and NBC platforms, most episodes (outside of seasons 2\u20134 in the United States for unknown reasons) can be found on electronic sell-through platforms such as iTunes and Amazon Prime Video. The series is available for streaming on Peacock along with Chicago Fire, Chicago P.D., Chicago Med, Law & Order and Law & Order: Criminal Intent. Seasons 1\u201322 are available for streaming in Australia on Amazon Prime Video. In Brazil, seasons 11 to 13 are available on Amazon Prime Video, and seasons 1\u201322 are available on Globoplay, although seasons 15\u201322 require a subscription expansion or cable access to UniversalTV. In 2024, selected seasons returned to Netflix in certain regions including the UK, Europe, Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and Latin America.\nSyndication\nAs of January 2024, the series is rerun on fellow NBCUniversal network USA, as well as local stations Ion Television and MyNetworkTV. The series also briefly ran on Syfy in 2006. In 2008, Fox obtained rights to air Law & Order: SVU on Fox-owned TV stations, and began doing so in the fall of 2009.\nReception\nRatings\nIn 2016, a New York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the most Facebook likes found that SVUs popularity was \"atypical: generally slightly more popular in rural areas and the South, but largely restricted to the eastern half of the country. It is most popular in Albany, N.Y.; least in Colorado and Utah\".\nAwards and honors\nLaw & Order: Special Victims Unit has received many awards and award nominations. Mariska Hargitay has twice been nominated for a Golden Globe Award and won once in 2005."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825519.2944, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825519.0198, "finish": 1720825519.2944, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6dc7a5a38e8b476188350a40a2c5249a", "model_name": "intfloat/e5-mistral-7b-instruct", "prompt": "who sang the song one of these nights", "output": [["who sang the song one of these nights", "Title: Kid Rock\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825524.9571, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825524.7658, "finish": 1720825524.9571, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6622b6b2e155406984fcaa0288cce8c5", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "do all eu countries have to use the euro", "output": [["do all eu countries have to use the euro", "Title: International status and usage of the euro\n\nPassage: The international status and usage of the euro has grown since its launch in 1999. When the euro formally replaced 12\u00a0currencies on 1 January 2002, it inherited their use in territories such as Montenegro and replaced minor currencies tied to pre-euro currencies, such as in Monaco. Four small states have been given a formal right to use the euro, and to mint their own coins, but all other usage outside the eurozone (the EU states who have adopted the euro) has been unofficial. With or without an agreement, these countries, unlike those in the eurozone, do not participate in the European Central Bank or the Eurogroup.\nIts growing use in this regard has led to its becoming the only significant challenger to the U.S. dollar as the world's main reserve currency.\nInternational adoption\nSovereign states"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825530.7518, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825530.425, "finish": 1720825530.7518, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b163d769407e4cb690b3f4bc11eabde7", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "is isle of man part of united kingdom", "output": [["is isle of man part of united kingdom", "Title: List of United Kingdom locations: Si-Sm\n\nPassage: This list includes several locations on the Isle of Man, which is not part of the United Kingdom.\nSi\nSk\nSl\nSm"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825536.4152, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825536.2843, "finish": 1720825536.4152, "ip": "", "conv_id": "339ac76902a64235a68b3b90005eb6f8", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "how did the constellation bootes get its name", "output": [["how did the constellation bootes get its name", "Title: Lambda Bo\u00f6tis star\n\nPassage: A Lambda Bo\u00f6tis star is a type of chemically peculiar star which has an unusually low abundance of iron peak elements in its surface layers. One possible explanation for this is that it is the result of accretion of metal-poor gas from a circumstellar disc, and a second possibility is the accretion of material from a hot Jupiter suffering from mass loss. The prototype is Lambda Bo\u00f6tis."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825560.039, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825541.2931, "finish": 1720825560.039, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dd8d659eed684ed498486fcd1d690ffd", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "how tall was the tsunami that hit japan", "output": [["how tall was the tsunami that hit japan", "Title: Tsunami Disaster\n\nPassage: Tsunami Disaster can refer to:\n2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami\n2011 T\u014dhoku earthquake and tsunami"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826358.3262, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826339.5285, "finish": 1720826358.3262, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e0fa02ed49f04729a82736749066f171", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "output": [["I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826358.3262, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826339.5285, "finish": 1720826358.3262, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cf19dca9224e40e49483ae887b7fff9a", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "output": [["I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "Title: Lost Planet 2\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826380.2775, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826380.0222, "finish": 1720826380.2775, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4abf08369fb64370967fae65292ff324", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "output": [["I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826380.2775, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826380.0222, "finish": 1720826380.2775, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1752d6c2782042ae8e0e53edc275c216", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "output": [["I am looking for a planet that is likely to harbor intelligent life.", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826405.2557, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826405.019, "finish": 1720826405.2557, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f340f8c80d56436692785323c7198a8c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life.", "output": [["I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life.", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826405.2557, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826405.019, "finish": 1720826405.2557, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f90b1e5b8cc24fd39218d12eeb231b05", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life.", "output": [["I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life.", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826418.6047, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826418.3876, "finish": 1720826418.6047, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d8a996abcf964f93b636fd15d2cbc1c6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life. Could you help me find such a planet?", "output": [["I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life. Could you help me find such a planet?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826418.6047, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826418.3876, "finish": 1720826418.6047, "ip": "", "conv_id": "22f3db2e79c14f4ead0c14c3cffd8574", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life. Could you help me find such a planet?", "output": [["I am looking for planets that support the conditions for intelligent life. Could you help me find such a planet?", "Title: Habitable zone\n\nPassage: Species, including humans, known to possess animal cognition require large amounts of energy, and have adapted to specific conditions, including an abundance of atmospheric oxygen and the availability of large quantities of chemical energy synthesized from radiant energy. If humans are to colonize other planets, true Earth analogs in the HZ are most likely to provide the closest natural habitat; this concept was the basis of Stephen H. Dole's 1964 study. With suitable temperature, gravity, atmospheric pressure and the presence of water, the necessity of spacesuits or space habitat analogs on the surface may be eliminated, and complex Earth life can thrive.\nPlanets in the HZ remain of paramount interest to researchers looking for intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. The Drake equation, sometimes used to estimate the number of intelligent civilizations in our galaxy, contains the factor or parameter , which is the average number of planetary-mass objects orbiting within the HZ of each star. A low value lends support to the Rare Earth hypothesis, which posits that intelligent life is a rarity in the Universe, whereas a high value provides evidence for the Copernican mediocrity principle, the view that habitability\u2014and therefore life\u2014is common throughout the Universe. A 1971 NASA report by Drake and Bernard Oliver proposed the \"water hole\", based on the spectral absorption lines of the hydrogen and hydroxyl components of water, as a good, obvious band for communication with extraterrestrial intelligence that has since been widely adopted by astronomers involved in the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. According to Jill Tarter, Margaret Turnbull and many others, HZ candidates are the priority targets to narrow waterhole searches and the Allen Telescope Array now extends Project Phoenix to such candidates.\nBecause the HZ is considered the most likely habitat for intelligent life, METI efforts have also been focused on systems likely to have planets there. The 2001 Teen Age Message and 2003 Cosmic Call 2, for example, were sent to the 47 Ursae Majoris system, known to contain three Jupiter-mass planets and possibly with a terrestrial planet in the HZ. The Teen Age Message was also directed to the 55 Cancri system, which has a gas giant in its HZ. A Message from Earth in 2008, and Hello From Earth in 2009, were directed to the Gliese 581 system, containing three planets in the HZ\u2014Gliese 581 c, d, and the unconfirmed g."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826446.796, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826446.5385, "finish": 1720826446.796, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e1572d2c8c704acdb1a1f1cf22987606", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am trying to find information about Coruscant.", "output": [["I am trying to find information about Coruscant.", "Title: City of Golden Shadow\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826446.796, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826446.5385, "finish": 1720826446.796, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b8e9abeaf2b84c13a84bacaa6fffc7bb", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am trying to find information about Coruscant.", "output": [["I am trying to find information about Coruscant.", "Title: Ecumenopolis\n\nPassage: Doxiadis also created a scenario based on the traditions and trends of urban development of his time, predicting at first a European eperopolis (\"continent city\") which would be based on the area between London, Paris, Rhine-Ruhr and Amsterdam. In 2008, Time magazine coined Nylonkong to link New York City, London, and Hong Kong as the eperopolis of the Americas, Euro-Africa and Asia-Pacific respectively.\nIn popular culture\nBefore the term had been created, the concept had been previously discussed. The American religious leader Thomas Lake Harris (1823\u20131906) mentioned city-planets in his verses, and science fiction author Isaac Asimov used the city-planet Trantor as the setting of some of his Foundation novels.\nIn science fiction, the ecumenopolis has become a frequent topic and popularized in 1999 by the fictional city planet Coruscant in the Star Wars franchise, which is the capital of the Galactic Republic (later Empire) and home to the Jedi Order. In addition to Coruscant, Star Wars: The Force Awakens features the planet Hosnian Prime, the capital world of the New Republic. Star Wars Legends also features Nar Shaddaa, a moon ecumenopolis known for being almost entirely ruled by crime lords, and Taris, a former ecumenopolis wiped out in the course of a devastating civil war, eventually becoming a vast swampland of ruins.\nIn Dune, the Harkonnens' home world of Giedi Prime is a heavily polluted ecumenopolis infamous for its gladiator arenas.\nThe concept is depicted in the video game Stellaris, where players are given the option of transforming planets into ecumenopolises, which provides a great deal of housing and space for industrial production through the construction of arcologies, at the cost of making the planet's natural resources inaccessible.\nThe video game Star Citizen currently features an ecumenopolis called ArcCorp which is owned by a fictional in-game company of the same name. As of March 2024, its current implementation in the game is a de facto ecumenopolis. However, as development continues, it is expected to feature oceans and small parts of undeveloped land.\nA central setting in the tabletop wargame Warhammer 40,000 is a portrayal of Earth in the far future, where it is known as \"Holy Terra\" and is described as having been transformed into a vast, Gothic-style ecumenopolis sometime during the 30th millennium AD after its establishment as the \"Throneworld\", or capital, of an interstellar superpower known as the Imperium of Man.\nIn Magic: the Gathering, the plane of Ravnica is an ecumenopolis.\nDC Comics continuity features Darkseid's extra-dimensional home planet of Apokolips, often depicted as a hellish world covered entirely in industrial sprawl to feed Darkseid's brutal empire.\nThe manga and film of Blame! by Tsutomu Nihei is set in a far future in which Earth has become the ruins of planet-covering city, which is suggested to be so large that it has consumed most of the Solar System as well, it may also be along the lines of a hollow-world or dyson shell. Some of his other works also take place in this same setting."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826482.8732, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826482.663, "finish": 1720826482.8732, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e4928a47b6f842e5bf03ee6a5d3e5e7d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What are some key ideas from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "output": [["What are some key ideas from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826482.8732, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826482.663, "finish": 1720826482.8732, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6ef6d61bc8034f1c8d883dcebd2ee536", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What are some key ideas from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "output": [["What are some key ideas from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826506.3175, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826506.1171, "finish": 1720826506.3175, "ip": "", "conv_id": "708637c2ea4b4c3cb06de6d821165f08", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "In what context does 42 appear in Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "output": [["In what context does 42 appear in Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826506.3175, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826506.1171, "finish": 1720826506.3175, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ed0aaec842b945b59132aced23a3b583", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "In what context does 42 appear in Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "output": [["In what context does 42 appear in Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826536.2455, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826535.9634, "finish": 1720826536.2455, "ip": "", "conv_id": "eeaf56c78cb54c87a57397e0bd477430", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826536.2455, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826535.9634, "finish": 1720826536.2455, "ip": "", "conv_id": "895badd5ff3c439a85437c0d9d97c444", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: 42 (number)\n\nPassage: The fourth book in the series, , contains 42 chapters.\nAccording to , 42 is the street address of Stavromula Beta.\nIn 1994, Adams created the 42 Puzzle, a game based on the number 42. Adams says he picked the number simply as a joke, with no deeper meaning.\nGoogle also has a calculator easter egg when one searches \"the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything.\" Once typed (all in lowercase), the calculator answers with the number 42.\nWorks of Lewis Carroll\nLewis Carroll, who was a mathematician, made repeated use of this number in his writings.\nExamples of Carroll's use of 42:\nAlice's Adventures in Wonderland has 42 illustrations.\nAlice's attempts at multiplication (chapter two of Alice in Wonderland) work if one uses base 18 to write the first answer, and increases the base by threes to 21, 24, etc. (the answers working up to 4 \u00d7 12 = \"19\" in base 39), but \"breaks\" precisely when one attempts the answer to 4 \u00d7 13 in base 42, leading Alice to declare \"oh dear! I shall never get to twenty at that rate!\"\nRule Forty-two in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (\"All persons more than a mile high to leave the court\").\nRule 42 of the Code in the preface to The Hunting of the Snark (\"No one shall speak to the Man at the Helm\").\nIn \"fit the first\" of The Hunting of the Snark the Baker had \"forty-two boxes, all carefully packed, With his name painted clearly on each.\"\nThe White Queen announces her age as \"one hundred and one, five months and a day\", which\u2014if the best possible date is assumed for the action of Through the Looking-Glass (e.g., a date is chosen such that the rollover from February to March is excluded from what would otherwise be an imprecise measurement of \"five months and a day\")\u2014gives a total of 37,044 days. If the Red Queen, as part of the same chess set, is regarded as the same age, their combined age is 74,088 days, or 42 \u00d7 42 \u00d7 42.\nMusic\n42 Dugg is an American rapper.\n\"Forty-two\" (\"42\") is a work (dedicated to Elvis Presley, Joe Dassin and Vladimir Vysotsky) for oboe and symphony orchestra by Estonian composer Peeter V\u00e4hi.\nLevel 42 is an English pop/rock/funk music band.\n\"42\" is one of the tracks on Coldplay\u2032s 2008 album Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends.\n\"Channel 42\" is an electronic music song by deadmau5 featuring Wolfgang Gartner; it appears on the 2012 deadmau5 album Album Title Goes Here."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826559.7445, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826559.5695, "finish": 1720826559.7445, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2b6e7be48d6447718cdd1c4846633bb8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826559.7445, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826559.5695, "finish": 1720826559.7445, "ip": "", "conv_id": "71372ff8509548d8af8df60347c391dc", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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.\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826571.1988, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826570.8407, "finish": 1720826571.1988, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b9353a72e7494173a007db755b32ffe0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826571.1988, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826570.8407, "finish": 1720826571.1988, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1cd9ab782fee4ae1a1b82b80b731e8a5", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: Lacking a real question, the mice (pan-dimensional beings) decide not to go through the whole process again and instead settle for the out-of-thin-air suggestion \"How many roads must a man walk down?\", a lyric from Bob Dylan's song \"Blowin' in the Wind\".\nAt the end of the radio series, the television series and , Arthur Dent, having escaped the Earth's destruction, potentially has some of the computational matrix in his brain. He attempts to discover The Ultimate Question by extracting it from his brainwave patterns, as abusively suggested by Ford Prefect, when a Scrabble-playing caveman spells out \"forty two\". Arthur pulls random letters from a bag, but only gets the sentence \"What do you get if you multiply six by ?\"\nSix times nine is actually fifty-four; the answer is deliberately wrong for that question because the question was miscomputed. The program on the \"Earth computer\" should have run correctly, but the unexpected arrival of the Golgafrinchans on prehistoric Earth caused input errors into the system\u2014computing the wrong question (because of the garbage in, garbage out rule). Therefore, the question in Arthur's subconscious was invalid all along.\nQuoting Fit the Seventh of the radio series, on Christmas Eve, 1978:\nSome readers who were trying to find a deeper meaning in the passage soon noticed a certain veracity when using base-13; 610 \u00d7 910 = 5410, which can be expressed as 4213 (i.e. the decimal expression 54 is encoded as 42 in base-13). When confronted with this, the author claimed that it was a mere coincidence, stating that \"I may be a sorry case, but I don't write jokes in base 13.\"\nIn Life, the Universe and Everything, a character named \"Prak\", who \"knows all that is true,\" confirms that 42 is indeed The Answer, and that it is impossible for both The Answer and The Question to be known in the same universe, as they will cancel each other out and take the Universe with them\u2014to be replaced by something even more bizarre (as described in the first theory) and that it may have already happened (as described in the second). Though the question is never found, 42 is the table number at which Arthur and his friends sit when they arrive at Milliways at the end of the radio series. Likewise, Mostly Harmless ends when Arthur stops at a street address identified by his cry of, \"There, number 42!\" and enters the club Beta, owned by Stavro Mueller (Stavromula Beta). Shortly after, the Earth is destroyed in all existing incarnations.\nReasoning\nDouglas Adams was asked many times why he chose the number 42. Many theories were proposed, including that 42 is 101010 in base 2, that light refracts through a water surface by 42 degrees to create a rainbow, or that light requires 10\u221242 seconds to cross the diameter of a proton. Adams rejected them all. On 3 November 1993, he gave this answer on alt.fan.douglas-adams:"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826743.4044, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826719.8021, "finish": 1720826743.4044, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a8fb771fd464442dad17e96e0bdcd2d7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I read this recent paper about how to deal with data constraints in training large language models. It investigated repetitions as one possible solution and the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "output": [["I read this recent paper about how to deal with data constraints in training large language models. It investigated repetitions as one possible solution and 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826743.4044, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826719.8021, "finish": 1720826743.4044, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0d78ca67586d459daf08ac4bd00bba47", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "I read this recent paper about how to deal with data constraints in training large language models. It investigated repetitions as one possible solution and the name starts with Scaling. Could you help me find it?", "output": [["I read this recent paper about how to deal with data constraints in training large language models. It investigated repetitions as one possible solution and 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826807.4248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826807.2359, "finish": 1720826807.4248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "61e1c078264e4d178fc78f3262e86e90", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826807.4248, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826807.2359, "finish": 1720826807.4248, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5e2f83f2c06b43f5b0ea88fdc32265d2", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826828.3956, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826815.5584, "finish": 1720826828.3956, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1ec2043c88c84a95b443e7ba25abf8f7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826828.3956, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826815.5584, "finish": 1720826828.3956, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2a6ce77d50e844a2958d2ea4f80a0f39", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826847.8872, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826835.6993, "finish": 1720826847.8872, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1d059c315f724d1497cb66d37cc9fb12", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826847.8872, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826835.6993, "finish": 1720826847.8872, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5ba4b4a559e94b7aa0efd4117521e02c", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "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: DeepIaC: Deep Learning-Based Linguistic Anti-pattern Detection in IaC\n\nPassage: Linguistic anti-patterns are recurring poor practices concerning\ninconsistencies among the naming, documentation, and implementation of an\nentity. They impede readability, understandability, and maintainability of\nsource code. This paper attempts to detect linguistic anti-patterns in\ninfrastructure as code (IaC) scripts used to provision and manage computing\nenvironments. In particular, we consider inconsistencies between the logic/body\nof IaC code units and their names. To this end, we propose a novel automated\napproach that employs word embeddings and deep learning techniques. We build\nand use the abstract syntax tree of IaC code units to create their code\nembedments. Our experiments with a dataset systematically extracted from open\nsource repositories show that our approach yields an accuracy\nbetween0.785and0.915in detecting inconsistencies\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826899.6597, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826899.4864, "finish": 1720826899.6597, "ip": "", "conv_id": "85b16b381be94af6875395ec40c5c5b2", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a\nsingle task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is\nunclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity\n(STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking.\nThis makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are\nconstantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we\nintroduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding\ntasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the\nbenchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive\nbenchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding\nmethod dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to\nconverge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to\nprovide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with\nopen-source code and a public leaderboard at\nhttps://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826899.6597, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826899.4864, "finish": 1720826899.6597, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e95e8dbeada5448c8816819474785098", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "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: Gauge fixing, BRS invariance and Ward identities for randomly stirred\n flows\n\nPassage: The Galilean invariance of the Navier-Stokes equation is shown to be akin to\na global gauge symmetry familiar from quantum field theory. This symmetry leads\nto a multiple counting of infinitely many inertial reference frames in the path\nintegral approach to randomly stirred fluids. This problem is solved by fixing\nthe gauge, i.e., singling out one reference frame. The gauge fixed theory has\nan underlying Becchi-Rouet-Stora (BRS) symmetry which leads to the Ward\nidentity relating the exact inverse response and vertex functions. This\nidentification of Galilean invariance as a gauge symmetry is explored in\ndetail, for different gauge choices and by performing a rigorous examination of\na discretized version of the theory. The Navier-Stokes equation is also\ninvariant under arbitrary rectilinear frame accelerations, known as extended\nGalilean invariance (EGI). We gauge fix this extended symmetry and derive the\ngeneralized Ward identity that follows from the BRS invariance of the\ngauge-fixed theory. This new Ward identity reduces to the standard one in the\nlimit of zero acceleration. This gauge-fixing approach unambiguously shows that\nGalilean invariance and EGI constrain only the zero mode of the vertex but none\nof the higher wavenumber modes.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826934.9852, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826921.5141, "finish": 1720826934.9852, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6c5265d6613e4add85a31836e478c3f6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a\nsingle task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is\nunclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity\n(STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking.\nThis makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are\nconstantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we\nintroduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding\ntasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the\nbenchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive\nbenchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding\nmethod dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to\nconverge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to\nprovide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with\nopen-source code and a public leaderboard at\nhttps://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826934.9852, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826921.5141, "finish": 1720826934.9852, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a6f2b9bc73154b949b10dd9607116cac", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a\nsingle task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is\nunclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity\n(STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking.\nThis makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are\nconstantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we\nintroduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding\ntasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the\nbenchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive\nbenchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding\nmethod dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to\nconverge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to\nprovide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with\nopen-source code and a public leaderboard at\nhttps://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826965.4726, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826965.135, "finish": 1720826965.4726, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bbd316cf386a4ba3af074ec5e0bf7699", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is cryonics?", "output": [["What is cryonics?", "Title: Cryostasis\n\nPassage: Cryostasis may refer to:\nCryostasis (clathrate hydrates), the reversible cryopreservation of live biological objects\nCryopreservation, process of cooling to low sub-zero temperatures\nCryonics, experimental process of freezing a person for later resuscitation\nSuspended animation in fiction, a common theme in science fiction\nCryostasis: Sleep of Reason, a video game"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826965.4726, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826965.135, "finish": 1720826965.4726, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2ef18b4411e14801aa1ef038bdc7f022", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is cryonics?", "output": [["What is cryonics?", "Title: Cryostasis\n\nPassage: Cryostasis may refer to:\nCryostasis (clathrate hydrates), the reversible cryopreservation of live biological objects\nCryopreservation, process of cooling to low sub-zero temperatures\nCryonics, experimental process of freezing a person for later resuscitation\nSuspended animation in fiction, a common theme in science fiction\nCryostasis: Sleep of Reason, a video game"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826983.9276, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826983.6696, "finish": 1720826983.9276, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e3a8c9d98ce34a44b6c56f31d7e8cb40", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Looking for detailed information on cryonics.", "output": [["Looking for detailed information on cryonics.", "Title: Cryostasis\n\nPassage: Cryostasis may refer to:\nCryostasis (clathrate hydrates), the reversible cryopreservation of live biological objects\nCryopreservation, process of cooling to low sub-zero temperatures\nCryonics, experimental process of freezing a person for later resuscitation\nSuspended animation in fiction, a common theme in science fiction\nCryostasis: Sleep of Reason, a video game"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826983.9276, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826983.6696, "finish": 1720826983.9276, "ip": "", "conv_id": "828faa7709094788931f66834bbf76cd", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Looking for detailed information on cryonics.", "output": [["Looking for detailed information on cryonics.", "Title: Cryopreservation\n\nPassage: Cryopreservation or cryoconservation is a process where biological material - cells, tissues, or organs - are frozen to preserve the material for an extended period of time. At low temperatures (typically or using liquid nitrogen) any cell metabolism which might cause damage to the biological material in question is effectively stopped. Cryopreservation is an effective way to transport biological samples over long distances, store samples for prolonged periods of time, and create a bank of samples for users. Molecules, referred to as cryoprotective agents (CPAs), are added to reduce the osmotic shock and physical stresses cells undergo in the freezing process. Some cryoprotective agents used in research are inspired by plants and animals in nature that have unique cold tolerance to survive harsh winters, including: trees, wood frogs, and tardigrades.The first human corpse to be frozen with the hope of future resurrection was James Bedford's, a few hours after his cancer-caused death in 1967.[15] Bedford's is the only cryonics corpse frozen before 1974 still frozen today.\nNatural cryopreservation"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826995.9066, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826995.702, "finish": 1720826995.9066, "ip": "", "conv_id": "87115352884744acb575823dd01cbbc0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Does cryonics work?", "output": [["Does cryonics work?", "Title: Cryostasis\n\nPassage: Cryostasis may refer to:\nCryostasis (clathrate hydrates), the reversible cryopreservation of live biological objects\nCryopreservation, process of cooling to low sub-zero temperatures\nCryonics, experimental process of freezing a person for later resuscitation\nSuspended animation in fiction, a common theme in science fiction\nCryostasis: Sleep of Reason, a video game"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720826995.9066, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720826995.702, "finish": 1720826995.9066, "ip": "", "conv_id": "07b2171e9e32447388466e6e85a3df21", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Does cryonics work?", "output": [["Does cryonics work?", "Title: Immortality\n\nPassage: Technological immortality, biological machines, and \"swallowing the doctor\"\nTechnological immortality is the prospect for much longer life spans made possible by scientific advances in a variety of fields: nanotechnology, emergency room procedures, genetics, biological engineering, regenerative medicine, microbiology, and others. Contemporary life spans in the advanced industrial societies are already markedly longer than those of the past because of better nutrition, availability of health care, standard of living and bio-medical scientific advances. Technological immortality predicts further progress for the same reasons over the near term. An important aspect of current scientific thinking about immortality is that some combination of human cloning, cryonics or nanotechnology will play an essential role in extreme life extension. Robert Freitas, a nanorobotics theorist, suggests tiny medical nanorobots could be created to go through human bloodstreams, find dangerous things like cancer cells and bacteria, and destroy them. Freitas anticipates that gene-therapies and nanotechnology will eventually make the human body effectively self-sustainable and capable of living indefinitely in empty space, short of severe brain trauma. This supports the theory that we will be able to continually create biological or synthetic replacement parts to replace damaged or dying ones. Future advances in nanomedicine could give rise to life extension through the repair of many processes thought to be responsible for aging. K. Eric Drexler, one of the founders of nanotechnology, postulated cell repair devices, including ones operating within cells and using as yet hypothetical biological machines, in his 1986 book Engines of Creation. Raymond Kurzweil, a futurist and transhumanist, stated in his book The Singularity Is Near that he believes that advanced medical nanorobotics could completely remedy the effects of aging by 2030. According to Richard Feynman, it was his former graduate student and collaborator Albert Hibbs who originally suggested to him (circa 1959) the idea of a medical use for Feynman's theoretical micromachines (see biological machine). Hibbs suggested that certain repair machines might one day be reduced in size to the point that it would, in theory, be possible to (as Feynman put it) \"swallow the doctor\". The idea was incorporated into Feynman's 1959 essay There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom.\nCryonics\nCryonics, the practice of preserving organisms (either intact specimens or only their brains) for possible future revival by storing them at cryogenic temperatures where metabolism and decay are almost completely stopped, can be used to 'pause' for those who believe that life extension technologies will not develop sufficiently within their lifetime. Ideally, cryonics would allow clinically dead people to be brought back in the future after cures to the patients' diseases have been discovered and aging is reversible. Modern cryonics procedures use a process called vitrification which creates a glass-like state rather than freezing as the body is brought to low temperatures. This process reduces the risk of ice crystals damaging the cell-structure, which would be especially detrimental to cell structures in the brain, as their minute adjustment evokes the individual's mind.\nMind-to-computer uploading"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827014.0094, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827013.7412, "finish": 1720827014.0094, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9a727191a02f4f54b9568e7724f90f89", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is human aging preventable?", "output": [["Is human aging preventable?", "Title: Hayflick limit\n\nPassage: The Hayflick limit, or Hayflick phenomenon, is the number of times a normal somatic, differentiated human cell population will divide before cell division stops. However, this limit does not apply to stem cells."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827014.0094, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827013.7412, "finish": 1720827014.0094, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3e6681bea2794f4b81eefbcfa34a019a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Is human aging preventable?", "output": [["Is human aging preventable?", "Title: Life extension\n\nPassage: Life extension is the concept of extending the human lifespan, either modestly through improvements in medicine or dramatically by increasing the maximum lifespan beyond its generally-settled biological limit of around 125 years. Several researchers in the area, along with \"life extensionists\", \"immortalists\", or \"longevists\" (those who wish to achieve longer lives themselves), postulate that future breakthroughs in tissue rejuvenation, stem cells, regenerative medicine, molecular repair, gene therapy, pharmaceuticals, and organ replacement (such as with artificial organs or xenotransplantations) will eventually enable humans to have indefinite lifespans through complete rejuvenation to a healthy youthful condition (agerasia). The ethical ramifications, if life extension becomes a possibility, are debated by bioethicists.\nThe sale of purported anti-aging products such as supplements and hormone replacement is a lucrative global industry. For example, the industry that promotes the use of hormones as a treatment for consumers to slow or reverse the aging process in the US market generated about $50\u00a0billion of revenue a year in 2009. The use of such hormone products has not been proven to be effective or safe.\nAverage life expectancy and lifespan\nDuring the process of aging, an organism accumulates damage to its macromolecules, cells, tissues, and organs. Specifically, aging is characterized as and thought to be caused by \"genomic instability, telomere attrition, epigenetic alterations, loss of proteostasis, deregulated nutrient sensing, mitochondrial dysfunction, cellular senescence, stem cell exhaustion, and altered intercellular communication.\" Oxidation damage to cellular contents caused by free radicals is believed to contribute to aging as well.\nThe longest documented human lifespan is 122 years 164 days, the case of Jeanne Calment, who according to records was born in 1875 and died in 1997, whereas the maximum lifespan of a wildtype mouse, commonly used as a model in research on aging, is about three years. Genetic differences between humans and mice that may account for these different aging rates include differences in efficiency of DNA repair, antioxidant defenses, energy metabolism, proteostasis maintenance, and recycling mechanisms such as autophagy.\nThe average life expectancy in a population is lowered by infant and child mortality, which are frequently linked to infectious diseases or nutrition problems. Later in life, vulnerability to accidents and age-related chronic disease such as cancer or cardiovascular disease play an increasing role in mortality. Extension of life expectancy and lifespan can often be achieved by access to improved medical care, vaccinations, good diet, exercise, and avoidance of hazards such as smoking."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827041.6131, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827041.4204, "finish": 1720827041.6131, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a3191360e5c842bca0eaa6bbd819b4eb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'd like information on the field of cryonics & how it works.", "output": [["I'd like information on the field of cryonics & how it works.", "Title: Cryobiology\n\nPassage: Cryobiology is the branch of biology that studies the effects of low temperatures on living things within Earth's cryosphere or in science. The word cryobiology is derived from the Greek words \u03ba\u03c1\u1fe7\u03bf\u03c2 [kryos], \"cold\", \u03b2\u03af\u03bf\u03c2 [bios], \"life\", and \u03bb\u03cc\u03b3\u03bf\u03c2 [logos], \"word\". In practice, cryobiology is the study of biological material or systems at temperatures below normal. Materials or systems studied may include proteins, cells, tissues, organs, or whole organisms. Temperatures may range from moderately hypothermic conditions to cryogenic temperatures.\nAreas of study"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827041.6131, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827041.4204, "finish": 1720827041.6131, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e5b76994322d476697f58dc7704cdf76", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I'd like information on the field of cryonics & how it works.", "output": [["I'd like information on the field of cryonics & how it works.", "Title: Cryopreservation\n\nPassage: Freeze tolerance, in which organisms survive the winter by freezing solid and ceasing life functions, is known in a few vertebrates: five species of frogs (Rana sylvatica, Pseudacris triseriata, Hyla crucifer, Hyla versicolor, Hyla chrysoscelis), one of salamanders (Salamandrella keyserlingii), one of snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis) and three of turtles (Chrysemys picta, Terrapene carolina, Terrapene ornata). Snapping turtles Chelydra serpentina and wall lizards Podarcis muralis also survive nominal freezing but it has not been established to be adaptive for overwintering. In the case of Rana sylvatica one cryopreservant is ordinary glucose, which increases in concentration by approximately 19\u00a0mmol/L when the frogs are cooled slowly.\nHistory\nOne early theoretician of cryopreservation was James Lovelock. In 1953, he suggested that damage to red blood cells during freezing was due to osmotic stress, and that increasing the salt concentration in a dehydrating cell might damage it. In the mid-1950s, he experimented with the cryopreservation of rodents, determining that hamsters could be frozen with 60% of the water in the brain crystallized into ice with no adverse effects; other organs were shown to be susceptible to damage.\nCryopreservation was applied to human materials beginning in 1954 with three pregnancies resulting from the insemination of previously frozen sperm. Fowl sperm was cryopreserved in 1957 by a team of scientists in the UK directed by Christopher Polge. During 1963, Peter Mazur, at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the U.S., demonstrated that lethal intracellular freezing could be avoided if cooling was slow enough to permit sufficient water to leave the cell during progressive freezing of the extracellular fluid. That rate differs between cells of differing size and water permeability: a typical cooling rate around 1\u00a0\u00b0C/minute is appropriate for many mammalian cells after treatment with cryoprotectants such as glycerol or dimethyl sulphoxide, but the rate is not a universal optimum.\nOn April 22, 1966, the first human cadaver was frozen\u2014it had been embalmed for two months\u2014by being placed in liquid nitrogen and stored at just above freezing. The cadaver was that of an elderly woman from Los Angeles, whose name is unknown, and was soon thawed out and buried by relatives.\nThe first human corpse to be frozen with the hope of future resurrection was James Bedford's, a few hours after his cancer-caused death in 1967. Bedford's is the only cryonics corpse frozen before 1974 still frozen today.\nRisks\nPhenomena which can cause damage to cells during cryopreservation mainly occur during the freezing stage, and include solution effects, extracellular ice formation, dehydration, and intracellular ice formation. Many of these effects can be reduced by cryoprotectants."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827094.9676, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827094.7676, "finish": 1720827094.9676, "ip": "", "conv_id": "12c33c38c4f94c2093b62a8579cb59d8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 as embedding models.", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 as embedding models.", "Title: Can Large Language Models design a Robot?\n\nPassage: Large Language Models can lead researchers in the design of robots.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827094.9676, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827094.7676, "finish": 1720827094.9676, "ip": "", "conv_id": "308709b2426c419789544227a08f358b", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 as embedding models.", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 as embedding models.", "Title: Demystifying Embedding Spaces using Large Language Models\n\nPassage: Embeddings have become a pivotal means to represent complex, multi-faceted\ninformation about entities, concepts, and relationships in a condensed and\nuseful format. Nevertheless, they often preclude direct interpretation. While\ndownstream tasks make use of these compressed representations, meaningful\ninterpretation usually requires visualization using dimensionality reduction or\nspecialized machine learning interpretability methods. This paper addresses the\nchallenge of making such embeddings more interpretable and broadly useful, by\nemploying Large Language Models (LLMs) to directly interact with embeddings --\ntransforming abstract vectors into understandable narratives. By injecting\nembeddings into LLMs, we enable querying and exploration of complex embedding\ndata. We demonstrate our approach on a variety of diverse tasks, including:\nenhancing concept activation vectors (CAVs), communicating novel embedded\nentities, and decoding user preferences in recommender systems. Our work\ncouples the immense information potential of embeddings with the interpretative\npower of LLMs.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827111.4983, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827111.345, "finish": 1720827111.4983, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3e373c3562fd4a9bb5b74a6e2ea52c22", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 for text embedding.", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 for text embedding.", "Title: Neural Embeddings for Text\n\nPassage: We propose a new kind of embedding for natural language text that deeply\nrepresents semantic meaning. Standard text embeddings use the outputs from\nhidden layers of a pretrained language model. In our method, we let a language\nmodel learn from the text and then literally pick its brain, taking the actual\nweights of the model's neurons to generate a vector. We call this\nrepresentation of the text a neural embedding. We confirm the ability of this\nrepresentation to reflect semantics of the text by an analysis of its behavior\non several datasets, and by a comparison of neural embedding with state of the\nart sentence embeddings.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827111.4983, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827111.345, "finish": 1720827111.4983, "ip": "", "conv_id": "908a82f097b04d6aa1e6e1240ca3d2f3", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 for text embedding.", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced the notion of using large language models like GPT-3 for text embedding.", "Title: Repurposing Language Models into Embedding Models: Finding the\n Compute-Optimal Recipe\n\nPassage: Text embeddings are essential for many tasks, such as document retrieval,\nclustering, and semantic similarity assessment. In this paper, we study how to\ncontrastively train text embedding models in a compute-optimal fashion, given a\nsuite of pre-trained decoder-only language models. Our innovation is an\nalgorithm that produces optimal configurations of model sizes, data quantities,\nand fine-tuning methods for text-embedding models at different computational\nbudget levels. The resulting recipe, which we obtain through extensive\nexperiments, can be used by practitioners to make informed design choices for\ntheir embedding models. Specifically, our findings suggest that full\nfine-tuning and low-rank adaptation fine-tuning produce optimal models at lower\nand higher computational budgets respectively.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827145.5943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827145.3522, "finish": 1720827145.5943, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5559498f69f04e8ca5b1b192ebd79d64", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "BLOOMZ and mT0", "output": [["BLOOMZ and mT0", "Title: There are Infinitely Many Pairs of Twin Prime\n\nPassage: We proved that there are infinitely many pairs of twin prime.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827145.5943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827145.3522, "finish": 1720827145.5943, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a9b46243342a48d18308c1e7df41cf7e", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "BLOOMZ and mT0", "output": [["BLOOMZ and mT0", "Title: BLOX: Macro Neural Architecture Search Benchmark and Algorithms\n\nPassage: Neural architecture search (NAS) has been successfully used to design\nnumerous high-performance neural networks. However, NAS is typically\ncompute-intensive, so most existing approaches restrict the search to decide\nthe operations and topological structure of a single block only, then the same\nblock is stacked repeatedly to form an end-to-end model. Although such an\napproach reduces the size of search space, recent studies show that a macro\nsearch space, which allows blocks in a model to be different, can lead to\nbetter performance. To provide a systematic study of the performance of NAS\nalgorithms on a macro search space, we release Blox - a benchmark that consists\nof 91k unique models trained on the CIFAR-100 dataset. The dataset also\nincludes runtime measurements of all the models on a diverse set of hardware\nplatforms. We perform extensive experiments to compare existing algorithms that\nare well studied on cell-based search spaces, with the emerging blockwise\napproaches that aim to make NAS scalable to much larger macro search spaces.\nThe benchmark and code are available at https://github.com/SamsungLabs/blox.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827164.9602, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827164.7937, "finish": 1720827164.9602, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cc963d0c7ae44f61a26292c082e26878", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "a paper on large language models called BLOOMZ and mT0", "output": [["a paper on large language models called BLOOMZ and mT0", "Title: What Language Model to Train if You Have One Million GPU Hours?\n\nPassage: The crystallization of modeling methods around the Transformer architecture\nhas been a boon for practitioners. Simple, well-motivated architectural\nvariations can transfer across tasks and scale, increasing the impact of\nmodeling research. However, with the emergence of state-of-the-art 100B+\nparameters models, large language models are increasingly expensive to\naccurately design and train. Notably, it can be difficult to evaluate how\nmodeling decisions may impact emergent capabilities, given that these\ncapabilities arise mainly from sheer scale alone. In the process of building\nBLOOM--the Big Science Large Open-science Open-access Multilingual language\nmodel--our goal is to identify an architecture and training setup that makes\nthe best use of our 1,000,000 A100-GPU-hours budget. Specifically, we perform\nan ablation study at the billion-parameter scale comparing different modeling\npractices and their impact on zero-shot generalization. In addition, we study\nthe impact of various popular pre-training corpora on zero-shot generalization.\nWe also study the performance of a multilingual model and how it compares to\nthe English-only one. Finally, we consider the scaling behaviour of\nTransformers to choose the target model size, shape, and training setup. All\nour models and code are open-sourced at https://huggingface.co/bigscience .\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827164.9602, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827164.7937, "finish": 1720827164.9602, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7c867ef0396b435699e251340c7d11f5", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "a paper on large language models called BLOOMZ and mT0", "output": [["a paper on large language models called BLOOMZ and mT0", "Title: BLOOM: A 176B-Parameter Open-Access Multilingual Language Model\n\nPassage: Large language models (LLMs) have been shown to be able to perform new tasks\nbased on a few demonstrations or natural language instructions. While these\ncapabilities have led to widespread adoption, most LLMs are developed by\nresource-rich organizations and are frequently kept from the public. As a step\ntowards democratizing this powerful technology, we present BLOOM, a\n176B-parameter open-access language model designed and built thanks to a\ncollaboration of hundreds of researchers. BLOOM is a decoder-only Transformer\nlanguage model that was trained on the ROOTS corpus, a dataset comprising\nhundreds of sources in 46 natural and 13 programming languages (59 in total).\nWe find that BLOOM achieves competitive performance on a wide variety of\nbenchmarks, with stronger results after undergoing multitask prompted\nfinetuning. To facilitate future research and applications using LLMs, we\npublicly release our models and code under the Responsible AI License.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827202.7535, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827202.5568, "finish": 1720827202.7535, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c80e2049b1224653935e4d756402b3cf", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I instruction a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I instruction a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Can Large Language Models design a Robot?\n\nPassage: Large Language Models can lead researchers in the design of robots.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827202.7535, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827202.5568, "finish": 1720827202.7535, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d4adb37f8ac44281bd22134a6a22b4a7", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I instruction a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I instruction a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827215.0079, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827214.8407, "finish": 1720827215.0079, "ip": "", "conv_id": "dcebd88c7f1a450ca7c3711736c0e312", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I instruction tune a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I instruction tune a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827215.0079, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827214.8407, "finish": 1720827215.0079, "ip": "", "conv_id": "77006f9dd35a4338862b744d69ebfb36", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I instruction tune a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I instruction tune a language model in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827236.9416, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827236.7838, "finish": 1720827236.9416, "ip": "", "conv_id": "015786483981405584a8180a7550f5ea", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Can Large Language Models design a Robot?\n\nPassage: Large Language Models can lead researchers in the design of robots.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827236.9416, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827236.7838, "finish": 1720827236.9416, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7f773a7ccdb6449abd24362a815e63bc", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, will it be able to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827247.8584, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827247.7006, "finish": 1720827247.8584, "ip": "", "conv_id": "acd0f4ebbf5240a89f563ed6fb5bf084", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Can Large Language Models design a Robot?\n\nPassage: Large Language Models can lead researchers in the design of robots.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827247.8584, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827247.7006, "finish": 1720827247.8584, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3abffa6fdf404877bdc071b12e638e38", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827258.8479, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827258.6763, "finish": 1720827258.8479, "ip": "", "conv_id": "18c275c06e2e41ba9ee8e066805d8ebc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Can Large Language Models design a Robot?\n\nPassage: Large Language Models can lead researchers in the design of robots.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827258.8479, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827258.6763, "finish": 1720827258.8479, "ip": "", "conv_id": "837e149c178142418dba15dfdf89d950", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this?", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827265.5986, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827265.4471, "finish": 1720827265.5986, "ip": "", "conv_id": "de62db197a884ac99cda5f5f07388cc9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827265.5986, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827265.4471, "finish": 1720827265.5986, "ip": "", "conv_id": "47d92b3841ae4f639b72485e23a83c91", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827273.6601, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827273.514, "finish": 1720827273.6601, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e9a7c5c7c12e4e9f92af66345ed8eaa6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual generalization", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual generalization", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827273.6601, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827273.514, "finish": 1720827273.6601, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e7d43165e7234204b6157735e60ab7cb", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual generalization", "output": [["If I multitask fine a language model with instructions in one language, can it generalize to follow instructions in another language? Is there some paper on this? Crosslingual generalization", "Title: Multilingual Instruction Tuning With Just a Pinch of Multilinguality\n\nPassage: As instruction-tuned large language models (LLMs) gain global adoption, their\nability to follow instructions in multiple languages becomes increasingly\ncrucial. In this work, we investigate how multilinguality during instruction\ntuning of a multilingual LLM affects instruction-following across languages\nfrom the pre-training corpus. We first show that many languages transfer some\ninstruction-following capabilities to other languages from even monolingual\ntuning. Furthermore, we find that only 40 multilingual examples integrated in\nan English tuning set substantially improve multilingual instruction-following,\nboth in seen and unseen languages during tuning. In general, we observe that\nmodels tuned on multilingual mixtures exhibit comparable or superior\nperformance in multiple languages compared to monolingually tuned models,\ndespite training on 10x fewer examples in those languages. Finally, we find\nthat diversifying the instruction tuning set with even just 2-4 languages\nsignificantly improves cross-lingual generalization. Our results suggest that\nbuilding massively multilingual instruction-tuned models can be done with only\na very small set of multilingual instruction-responses.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827310.5996, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827310.3714, "finish": 1720827310.5996, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df4289b5a86049ff826879dd1e2c6a57", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced bitcoin", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced bitcoin", "Title: Bitcoin and Decentralized Trust Protocols\n\nPassage: Bitcoin is the first decentralized peer-to-peer (P2P) electronic currency. It\nwas created in November 2008 by Satoshi Nakamoto. Nakamoto released the first\nimplementation of the protocol in an open source client software and the\ngenesis of bitcoins began on January 9th 2009. The Bitcoin protocol is based on\nclever ideas which solve a form of the Byzantine Generals Problem and sets the\nfoundation for Decentralized Trust Protocols. Still in its infancy, the\ncurrency and the protocol have the potential to disrupt the international\nfinancial system and other sectors where business is based on trusted third\nparties. The security of the bitcoin protocol relies on strong cryptography and\none way hashing algorithms.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827310.5996, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827310.3714, "finish": 1720827310.5996, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b34fa1b94b8d41baacc9166699582eff", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for the paper that introduced bitcoin", "output": [["I am looking for the paper that introduced bitcoin", "Title: A bibliometric analysis of Bitcoin scientific production\n\nPassage: Blockchain technology, and more specifically Bitcoin (one of its foremost\napplications), have been receiving increasing attention in the scientific\ncommunity. The first publications with Bitcoin as a topic, can be traced back\nto 2012. In spite of this short time span, the production magnitude (1162\npapers) makes it necessary to make a bibliometric study in order to observe\nresearch clusters, emerging topics, and leading scholars. Our paper is aimed at\nstudying the scientific production only around bitcoin, excluding other\nblockchain applications. Thus, we restricted our search to papers indexed in\nthe Web of Science Core Collection, whose topic is \"bitcoin\". This database is\nsuitable for such diverse disciplines such as economics, engineering,\nmathematics, and computer science. This bibliometric study draws the landscape\nof the current state and trends of Bitcoin-related research in different\nscientific disciplines.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827315.8065, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827315.6278, "finish": 1720827315.8065, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b58e8d32fc0d4ca38609bbe5f1860ea0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Bitcoin", "output": [["Bitcoin", "Title: Structural Change Analysis of Active Cryptocurrency Market\n\nPassage: Structural Change Analysis of Active Cryptocurrency Market\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827315.8065, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827315.6278, "finish": 1720827315.8065, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5d8cd8ecfc354d129e8de6d346237b21", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Bitcoin", "output": [["Bitcoin", "Title: Elementary Bitcoin economics: from production and transaction demand to\n values\n\nPassage: In this paper we give an elementary analysis of economics of Bitcoin that\ncombines the transaction demand by the consumers and the supply of hashrate by\nminers. We argue that the decreasing block reward will have no significant\neffect on the exchange rate (price) of Bitcoin and thus the network will be\ntransitioning to a regime where transaction fees will play a bigger part of\nminers' revenue. We consider a simple model where consumers demand bitcoins for\ntransactions, but not for hoarding bitcoins, and we analyze market equilibrium\nwhere the demand is matched with the hashrate supplied by miners. Our main\nconclusion is that the exchange rate of Bitcoin cannot be determined from the\nmarket equilibrium and so our arguments support the hypothesis that Bitcoin\nprice has no economic fundamentals and is free to fluctuate according to the\npresent demand for hoarding and speculation. We point out that increasing fees\nbear the risk of Bitcoin being outcompeted by its main rival Ethereum, and that\ndecreasing revenues to miners depreciate the perception of Bitcoin as a medium\nfor store value (hoarding demand) which will have effect its exchange rate.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827357.4138, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827357.2552, "finish": 1720827357.4138, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a77342d0c6ad44ceb4501e3e141e50bc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for an internet currency", "output": [["I am looking for an internet currency", "Title: Do we have privacy in the digital world?\n\nPassage: Not really.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827357.4138, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827357.2552, "finish": 1720827357.4138, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f84a9e1faa854806943584818bd126f7", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for an internet currency", "output": [["I am looking for an internet currency", "Title: Trends in crypto-currencies and blockchain technologies: A monetary\n theory and regulation perspective\n\nPassage: The internet era has generated a requirement for low cost, anonymous and\nrapidly verifiable transactions to be used for online barter, and fast settling\nmoney have emerged as a consequence. For the most part, e-money has fulfilled\nthis role, but the last few years have seen two new types of money emerge.\nCentralised virtual currencies, usually for the purpose of transacting in\nsocial and gaming economies, and crypto-currencies, which aim to eliminate the\nneed for financial intermediaries by offering direct peer-to-peer online\npayments.\n We describe the historical context which led to the development of these\ncurrencies and some modern and recent trends in their uptake, in terms of both\nusage in the real economy and as investment products. As these currencies are\npurely digital constructs, with no government or local authority backing, we\nthen discuss them in the context of monetary theory, in order to determine how\nthey may be have value under each. Finally, we provide an overview of the state\nof regulatory readiness in terms of dealing with transactions in these\ncurrencies in various regions of the world.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827371.633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827371.4813, "finish": 1720827371.633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "85267da6485e4ad28b04827206f41144", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for an internet currency. I think it is called botcoin or something", "output": [["I am looking for an internet currency. I think it is called botcoin or something", "Title: Do we have privacy in the digital world?\n\nPassage: Not really.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827371.633, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827371.4813, "finish": 1720827371.633, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3c7ffbce6e7c4254a2cf7c30da21fef8", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for an internet currency. I think it is called botcoin or something", "output": [["I am looking for an internet currency. I think it is called botcoin or something", "Title: Trends in crypto-currencies and blockchain technologies: A monetary\n theory and regulation perspective\n\nPassage: The internet era has generated a requirement for low cost, anonymous and\nrapidly verifiable transactions to be used for online barter, and fast settling\nmoney have emerged as a consequence. For the most part, e-money has fulfilled\nthis role, but the last few years have seen two new types of money emerge.\nCentralised virtual currencies, usually for the purpose of transacting in\nsocial and gaming economies, and crypto-currencies, which aim to eliminate the\nneed for financial intermediaries by offering direct peer-to-peer online\npayments.\n We describe the historical context which led to the development of these\ncurrencies and some modern and recent trends in their uptake, in terms of both\nusage in the real economy and as investment products. As these currencies are\npurely digital constructs, with no government or local authority backing, we\nthen discuss them in the context of monetary theory, in order to determine how\nthey may be have value under each. Finally, we provide an overview of the state\nof regulatory readiness in terms of dealing with transactions in these\ncurrencies in various regions of the world.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827402.8118, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827402.4791, "finish": 1720827402.8118, "ip": "", "conv_id": "16049884a7ab4df593f4bdd29543e523", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is there intelligent life in the TRAPPIST system?", "output": [["Is there intelligent life in the TRAPPIST system?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827402.8118, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827402.4791, "finish": 1720827402.8118, "ip": "", "conv_id": "db1d5170b43f4d48a006bb965357d888", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Is there intelligent life in the TRAPPIST system?", "output": [["Is there intelligent life in the TRAPPIST system?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827409.9906, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827409.7931, "finish": 1720827409.9906, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c14d20db67074f30ba7c5e924525506e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is there life in the TRAPPIST system?", "output": [["Is there life in the TRAPPIST system?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827409.9906, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827409.7931, "finish": 1720827409.9906, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6cb45129c7264d0bb16b0c14d1bb2298", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Is there life in the TRAPPIST system?", "output": [["Is there life in the TRAPPIST system?", "Title: Didier Queloz\n\nPassage: His most recent research highlights are related to the search for transiting Earth-like planets on low mass stars and Universal life. This program, carried out in collaboration with M. Gillon from the University of Li\u00e8ge, is at the origins of the detection of TRAPPIST-1, a planetary system potentially interesting to further search for atmosphere and life signature. Another successful avenue of research is the characterization of the rocky surface or atmosphere of hot small planets with the work on 55 Cancri e. The recent extension of this program towards \u201cLife in the Universe\u201d is carried out in the context of an international research initiative supported by the Simons Foundation. The highlight result of this collaboration is the definition \u2013 combining chemistry and astrophysical constraints \u2013 of minimum conditions for the origins of RNA precursors on exoplanets (\u201cabiogenesis zone\u201d).\nDiscoveries of exoplanets attract a lot of attention from the public and media. In parallel to his research and teaching activities, Didier Queloz has participated in numerous documentaries, movies, articles, and TV and radio interviews to share the excitement, and to explain results and promote interest in science in general.\nHe was also a visiting scientist at the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research in 2019.\nIn October 2019, related to his work in astronomy and exoplanet discoveries, Queloz predicted humans will discover extraterrestrial life in the next 30 years, stating, \"I can't believe we are the only living entity in the universe. There are just way [too] many planets, way too many stars, and the chemistry is universal. The chemistry that led to life has to happen elsewhere. So I am a strong believer that there must be life elsewhere.\"\nIn December 2019, Queloz took issue with those who are not supportive of helping to limit climate change, stating, \u201cI think this is just irresponsible, because the stars are so far away I think we should not have any serious hope to escape the Earth [...] Also keep in mind that we are a species that has evolved and developed for this planet. We\u2019re not built to survive on any other planet than this one [...] We\u2019d better spend our time and energy trying to fix it.\u201d\nHighlights and publications\nDidier Queloz has over 400 scientific publications, attracting over 50,000 citations. His H-index is 115.\nAwards\n2011: BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award of Basic Sciences (co-winner with Michel Mayor)\n2013: Clarivate Citation Laureates\n2017: Wolf Prize in Physics\n2019: Nobel Prize in Physics\n2020: Elected Fellow of the Royal Society\nNamed after him\nAsteroid 177415 Queloz was named in his honor."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827434.5575, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827434.3404, "finish": 1720827434.5575, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b03193b950314ebd9c0299b4dafcd143", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827434.5575, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827434.3404, "finish": 1720827434.5575, "ip": "", "conv_id": "10d8fde236cf40c28ac929383ec63a34", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: T\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd\n\nPassage: T\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd is the Vietnamese version of Chinese Duanwu festival (literally: T\u1ebft: festival, \u0110oan: the start/straight/middle/righteousness/just, Ng\u1ecd: at noon (from 11 am to 1 pm). \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd is the moment that the sun is the most near the earth and this day often is \"The middle day of summer\" (H\u1ea1 ch\u00ed). In Vietnam, this day is also the death anniversary of National Mother \u00c2u C\u01a1.\nCompared to Cantonese Chinese term \"dyun eng\" (which is duan wu in Mandarin Chinese) ngo/eng/wu all refer to the ancient Chinese calendar term: the seventh of the twelve Earthly Branches, which was a component for determining time based on a series of 60 years (just as today we refer to 100 year periods as centuries).) Ngo/eng/wu refers to the sun at noon.\nT\u1ebft \u0110oan D\u01b0\u01a1ng (D\u01b0\u01a1ng: yang) - yang being sun\nT\u1ebft Tr\u00f9ng Ng\u0169 (Tr\u00f9ng: double, Ng\u0169: the fifth),\nT\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u0169, T\u1ebft Tr\u00f9ng Nh\u0129 or T\u1ebft N\u1eeda N\u0103m (N\u1eeda N\u0103m: a half of a year) is a festival celebrated at noon on the fifth day of the fifth lunar month. This day is the day around the time when the tail of the Great Bear points directly to the south, that is, around the time of the summer solstice. At this time, the universe brings the greatest amount of yang or maleness in the entire year. Therefore, creatures and people must become stronger in both their health and their souls to overcome this.\nTraditions\nR\u01b0\u1ee3u n\u1ebfp, a sticky rice wine, is traditionally eaten on this holiday. B\u00e1nh tro, a kind of b\u00e1nh l\u00e1, is used during this holiday with hard-boiled eggs. B\u00e1nh tro is considered as \"cool\", symbolized yin because it includes vegetable ash water as an ingredient. B\u00e1nh tro is a perfect match with extreme hot day like May 5 in the lunar year.\nModern festival\nOn the occasion of T\u1ebft \u0110oan Ng\u1ecd, there is Festival of Delicious Fruit celebrated in Ch\u1ee3 L\u00e1ch, B\u1ebfn Tre Province with activities: fruit competition, fruit arrangement competition and fruit crop competition.\nAt this time, there is also Festival of Southern Fruit celebrated in Su\u1ed1i Ti\u00ean amusement park, Ho Chi Minh city."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827473.7418, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827473.5218, "finish": 1720827473.7418, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0aad4f13429a4ffa97dabe3e5a4076ff", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40\uff1f", "output": [["What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40\uff1f", "Title: Golden\n\nPassage: Golden means made of, or relating to gold."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827473.7418, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827473.5218, "finish": 1720827473.7418, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cd03fec3adfa4c5ebf39fa4865331b43", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40\uff1f", "output": [["What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40\uff1f", "Title: Japanese proverbs\n\nPassage: \u77e5\u3089\u306c\u304c\u4ecf\u3002\nShiranu ga hotoke\nLiterally: Not knowing is Buddha.\nMeaning: Ignorance is bliss. / What you don't know can't hurt you.\n\u898b\u306c\u304c\u82b1\u3002\nMinu ga hana\nLiterally: Not seeing is a flower.\nMeaning: Reality can't compete with imagination.\n\u82b1\u306f\u685c\u6728\u4eba\u306f\u6b66\u58eb\nHana wa sakuragi, hito wa bushi\nLiterally: Of flowers, the cherry blossom; of men, the warrior.\nMeaning: As the cherry blossom is considered foremost among flowers, so the warrior is foremost among men.\n\u4e95\u306e\u4e2d\u306e\u86d9\u5927\u6d77\u3092\u77e5\u3089\u305a\nI no naka no kawazu taikai wo shirazu\nLiterally: The frog in the well knows nothing of the ocean.\nMeaning: People who experience very little have a narrow world view. / He that stays in the valley shall never get over the hill.\n\u304b\u308f\u3044\u3044\u5b50\u306b\u306f\u65c5\u3092\u3055\u305b\u3088\nKawaii ko ni wa tabi wo saseyo\nLiterally: Let your darling child travel.\nMeaning: If you don't discipline your child, they will not learn obedience. / Spare the rod and spoil the child.\n\u6848\u305a\u308b\u3088\u308a\u7523\u3080\u304c\u6613\u3057\u3044\u3002\nAnzuru yori umu ga yasashii\nLiterally: Giving birth to a baby is easier than worrying about it.\nMeaning: Fear is greater than the danger. / An attempt is sometimes easier than expected.\n\u8239\u982d\u591a\u304f\u3057\u3066\u8239\u5c71\u306b\u767b\u308b\nSendou ooku shite fune yama ni noboru\nLiterally: Too many captains will steer the ship up a mountain.\nMeaning: Something may not be successful if too many people work on it at the same time. / Too many cooks spoil the broth.\n\u86d9\u306e\u5b50\u306f\u86d9\nKaeru no ko wa kaeru\nLiterally: The child of a frog is frog.\nMeaning: A child grows up similar to their parents. / Like father, like son. / The apple doesn't fall too far from the tree.\nIdiomatic phrases\n\u732b\u306b\u5c0f\u5224\nNeko ni koban\nLiterally: Gold coins to a cat.\nMeaning: Casting pearls before swine / Giving something of value to a recipient that does not value it.\n\u4e03\u8ee2\u3073\u516b\u8d77\u304d\nNanakorobi yaoki\nLiterally: Fall seven times and stand up eight\nMeaning: When life knocks you down, stand back up; What matters is not the bad that happened, but what one does after.\n\u733f\u3082\u6728\u304b\u3089\u843d\u3061\u308b\nSaru mo ki kara ochiru\nLiterally: Even monkeys fall from trees\nMeaning: Anyone can make a mistake.\n\u82b1\u3088\u308a\u56e3\u5b50\nHana yori dango\nLiterally: Dumplings rather than flowers\nMeaning: To prefer substance over form, as in to prefer to be given functional, useful items (such as dumplings) instead of merely decorative items (such as flowers).\n\u99ac\u306e\u8033\u306b\u5ff5\u4ecf\nUma no mimi ni nenbutsu\nLiterally: Chanting nenbutsu to a horse.\nMeaning: Attempting to make an argument to a party that will not listen. / Preaching to the deaf.\n\u6c34\u3068\u6cb9\nMizu to abura\nLiterally: Water and oil.\nMeaning: Totally incompatible. / [Go together like] oil and water.\nFour-character idioms\n\u5341\u4eba\u5341\u8272\nj\u016bnin toiro\nLiterally: ten persons, ten colors\nMeaning: To each his own. / Different strokes for different folks.\n\u56e0\u679c\u5fdc\u5831\ninga \u014dh\u014d\nLiterally: Cause bring result / bad causes bring bad results\nMeaning: what goes around comes around\nNote: this is a Buddhist sentiment that emphasizes the idea of karmic retribution.\n\u5f31\u8089\u5f37\u98df\njaku niku ky\u014d shoku\nLiterally: The weak are meat; the strong eat.\nMeaning: Survival of the fittest."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827488.6731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827488.4969, "finish": 1720827488.6731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "86ae35037d3842168cebd22232b505d5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40?", "output": [["What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40?", "Title: Golden\n\nPassage: Golden means made of, or relating to gold."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827488.6731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827488.4969, "finish": 1720827488.6731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f8a328e60b7e4518a287644522e49fb0", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40?", "output": [["What is the meaning of `\u5584\u306f\u6025\u3052\uff40?", "Title: Japanese proverbs\n\nPassage: \u77e5\u3089\u306c\u304c\u4ecf\u3002\nShiranu ga hotoke\nLiterally: Not knowing is Buddha.\nMeaning: Ignorance is bliss. / What you don't know can't hurt you.\n\u898b\u306c\u304c\u82b1\u3002\nMinu ga hana\nLiterally: Not seeing is a flower.\nMeaning: Reality can't compete with imagination.\n\u82b1\u306f\u685c\u6728\u4eba\u306f\u6b66\u58eb\nHana wa sakuragi, hito wa bushi\nLiterally: Of flowers, the cherry blossom; of men, the warrior.\nMeaning: As the cherry blossom is considered foremost among flowers, so the warrior is foremost among men.\n\u4e95\u306e\u4e2d\u306e\u86d9\u5927\u6d77\u3092\u77e5\u3089\u305a\nI no naka no kawazu taikai wo shirazu\nLiterally: The frog in the well knows nothing of the ocean.\nMeaning: People who experience very little have a narrow world view. / He that stays in the valley shall never get over the hill.\n\u304b\u308f\u3044\u3044\u5b50\u306b\u306f\u65c5\u3092\u3055\u305b\u3088\nKawaii ko ni wa tabi wo saseyo\nLiterally: Let your darling child travel.\nMeaning: If you don't discipline your child, they will not learn obedience. / Spare the rod and spoil the child.\n\u6848\u305a\u308b\u3088\u308a\u7523\u3080\u304c\u6613\u3057\u3044\u3002\nAnzuru yori umu ga yasashii\nLiterally: Giving birth to a baby is easier than worrying about it.\nMeaning: Fear is greater than the danger. / An attempt is sometimes easier than expected.\n\u8239\u982d\u591a\u304f\u3057\u3066\u8239\u5c71\u306b\u767b\u308b\nSendou ooku shite fune yama ni noboru\nLiterally: Too many captains will steer the ship up a mountain.\nMeaning: Something may not be successful if too many people work on it at the same time. / Too many cooks spoil the broth.\n\u86d9\u306e\u5b50\u306f\u86d9\nKaeru no ko wa kaeru\nLiterally: The child of a frog is frog.\nMeaning: A child grows up similar to their parents. / Like father, like son. / The apple doesn't fall too far from the tree.\nIdiomatic phrases\n\u732b\u306b\u5c0f\u5224\nNeko ni koban\nLiterally: Gold coins to a cat.\nMeaning: Casting pearls before swine / Giving something of value to a recipient that does not value it.\n\u4e03\u8ee2\u3073\u516b\u8d77\u304d\nNanakorobi yaoki\nLiterally: Fall seven times and stand up eight\nMeaning: When life knocks you down, stand back up; What matters is not the bad that happened, but what one does after.\n\u733f\u3082\u6728\u304b\u3089\u843d\u3061\u308b\nSaru mo ki kara ochiru\nLiterally: Even monkeys fall from trees\nMeaning: Anyone can make a mistake.\n\u82b1\u3088\u308a\u56e3\u5b50\nHana yori dango\nLiterally: Dumplings rather than flowers\nMeaning: To prefer substance over form, as in to prefer to be given functional, useful items (such as dumplings) instead of merely decorative items (such as flowers).\n\u99ac\u306e\u8033\u306b\u5ff5\u4ecf\nUma no mimi ni nenbutsu\nLiterally: Chanting nenbutsu to a horse.\nMeaning: Attempting to make an argument to a party that will not listen. / Preaching to the deaf.\n\u6c34\u3068\u6cb9\nMizu to abura\nLiterally: Water and oil.\nMeaning: Totally incompatible. / [Go together like] oil and water.\nFour-character idioms\n\u5341\u4eba\u5341\u8272\nj\u016bnin toiro\nLiterally: ten persons, ten colors\nMeaning: To each his own. / Different strokes for different folks.\n\u56e0\u679c\u5fdc\u5831\ninga \u014dh\u014d\nLiterally: Cause bring result / bad causes bring bad results\nMeaning: what goes around comes around\nNote: this is a Buddhist sentiment that emphasizes the idea of karmic retribution.\n\u5f31\u8089\u5f37\u98df\njaku niku ky\u014d shoku\nLiterally: The weak are meat; the strong eat.\nMeaning: Survival of the fittest."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827526.8731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827526.6569, "finish": 1720827526.8731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "51b96b03b6c747a68b62de07cc73c63b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is text embedding?", "output": [["What is text embedding?", "Title: Names for the number 0\n\nPassage: There are several names for the number 0 in different languages."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827526.8731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827526.6569, "finish": 1720827526.8731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1db71938c2524550986a83ab980ba5c5", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is text embedding?", "output": [["What is text embedding?", "Title: Text\n\nPassage: Text may refer to:\nWritten word\nText (literary theory), any object that can be read, including:\nReligious text, a writing that a religious tradition considers to be sacred\nText, a verse or passage from scripture used in expository preaching\nTextbook, a book of instruction in any branch of study\nComputing and telecommunications\nPlain text, unformatted text\nText file, a type of computer file opened by most text software\nText string, a sequence of characters manipulated by software\nText message, a short electronic message designed for communication between mobile phone users\nText (Chrome app), a text editor for the Google Chrome web browser\ntEXt, an ancillary chunk in the PNG image file format\nText, the former name of Apple's Messages instant messenger\nText (company), an AI and customer service software company\nArts and media\nTEXT, a Swedish band\nText & Talk (formerly Text), an academic journal\n\"Text\", a 2010 song produced by J.R. Rotem, featuring Mann and Jason Derulo\nTxT (film), a 2006 Filipino horror film\nText (film), a 2019 Russian film\nText (2008 film) (film), a 2008 American horror film"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827554.7502, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827554.5072, "finish": 1720827554.7502, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d12689a3094f4f2e8a644db10fb4ea8d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who wrote the french declaration of the rights of man and of the citizen", "output": [["who wrote the french declaration of the rights of man and of the citizen", "Title: French Revolution\n\nPassage: The French Revolution was a period of political and societal change in France that began with the Estates General of 1789, and ended with the coup of 18 Brumaire in November 1799 and the formation of the French Consulate. Many of its ideas are considered fundamental principles of liberal democracy, while its values and institutions remain central to modern French political discourse."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827554.7502, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827554.5072, "finish": 1720827554.7502, "ip": "", "conv_id": "52ff71be66c94aacb3669c627aff476d", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who wrote the french declaration of the rights of man and of the citizen", "output": [["who wrote the french declaration of the rights of man and of the citizen", "Title: Declaration of the Rights of the Man and of the Citizen of 1793\n\nPassage: The Declaration of the Rights of the Man and of the Citizen of 1793 (French: D\u00e9claration des droits de l'Homme et du citoyen de 1793) is a French political document that preceded that country's first republican constitution. The Declaration and Constitution were ratified by popular vote in July 1793, and officially adopted on 10 August; however, they never went into effect, and the constitution was officially suspended on 10 October. It is unclear whether this suspension was thought to affect the Declaration as well. The Declaration was written by the commission that included Louis Antoine L\u00e9on de Saint-Just and Marie-Jean H\u00e9rault de S\u00e9chelles during the period of the French Revolution. The main distinction between the Declaration of 1793 and the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789 is its egalitarian tendency: equality is the prevailing right in this declaration. The 1793 version included new rights, and revisions to prior ones: to work, to public assistance, to education, and to resist oppression.\nThe text was mainly written by H\u00e9rault de S\u00e9chelles, whose style and writing can be found on most of the documents of the commission that also wrote the French Constitution of 1793 (\"Constitution of the Year I\") that was never implemented.\nThe first project of the Constitution of the French Fourth Republic also referred to the 1793 version of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen. The 1793 document was written by Jacobins after they had expelled the Girondists. It was a compromise designed as a propaganda weapon and did not fully reflect the radicalism of the Jacobin leaders. It was never put in force.\nEquality as the first natural right of man\nEquality is the most important aspect of the Declaration of 1793.\nIn its second article, equality is the first right mentioned (followed by liberty, security, and property). In Article 3 states \"All men are equal by nature and before the law\". As such, for the authors of this declaration equality is not only before the law but it is also a natural right, that is to say, a fact of nature."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827576.8128, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827576.6044, "finish": 1720827576.8128, "ip": "", "conv_id": "76db2188688a46e99179e8913521eb1f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who proposed evolution in 1859 as the basis of biological development", "output": [["who proposed evolution in 1859 as the basis of biological development", "Title: Timeline of the evolutionary history of life\n\nPassage: The timeline of the evolutionary history of life represents the current scientific theory outlining the major events during the development of life on planet Earth. Dates in this article are consensus estimates based on scientific evidence, mainly fossils."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827576.8128, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827576.6044, "finish": 1720827576.8128, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0cd969fc2f6a4d618b3deef28822890c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who proposed evolution in 1859 as the basis of biological development", "output": [["who proposed evolution in 1859 as the basis of biological development", "Title: History of evolutionary thought\n\nPassage: Evolutionary thought, the recognition that species change over time and the perceived understanding of how such processes work, has roots in antiquity\u2014in the ideas of the ancient Greeks, Romans, Chinese, Church Fathers as well as in medieval Islamic science. With the beginnings of modern biological taxonomy in the late 17th century, two opposed ideas influenced Western biological thinking: essentialism, the belief that every species has essential characteristics that are unalterable, a concept which had developed from medieval Aristotelian metaphysics, and that fit well with natural theology; and the development of the new anti-Aristotelian approach to modern science: as the Enlightenment progressed, evolutionary cosmology and the mechanical philosophy spread from the physical sciences to natural history. Naturalists began to focus on the variability of species; the emergence of palaeontology with the concept of extinction further undermined static views of nature. In the early 19th century prior to Darwinism, Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744\u20131829) proposed his theory of the transmutation of species, the first fully formed theory of evolution.\nIn 1858 Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace published a new evolutionary theory, explained in detail in Darwin's On the Origin of Species (1859). Darwin's theory, originally called descent with modification is known contemporarily as Darwinism or Darwinian theory. Unlike Lamarck, Darwin proposed common descent and a branching tree of life, meaning that two very different species could share a common ancestor. Darwin based his theory on the idea of natural selection: it synthesized a broad range of evidence from animal husbandry, biogeography, geology, morphology, and embryology. Debate over Darwin's work led to the rapid acceptance of the general concept of evolution, but the specific mechanism he proposed, natural selection, was not widely accepted until it was revived by developments in biology that occurred during the 1920s through the 1940s. Before that time most biologists regarded other factors as responsible for evolution. Alternatives to natural selection suggested during \"the eclipse of Darwinism\" (c. 1880 to 1920) included inheritance of acquired characteristics (neo-Lamarckism), an innate drive for change (orthogenesis), and sudden large mutations (saltationism). Mendelian genetics, a series of 19th-century experiments with pea plant variations rediscovered in 1900, was integrated with natural selection by Ronald Fisher, J. B. S. Haldane, and Sewall Wright during the 1910s to 1930s, and resulted in the founding of the new discipline of population genetics. During the 1930s and 1940s population genetics became integrated with other biological fields, resulting in a widely applicable theory of evolution that encompassed much of biology\u2014the modern synthesis."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827636.1303, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827635.8939, "finish": 1720827636.1303, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2bd65163114b4ebeba93bd9f87268945", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827636.1303, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827635.8939, "finish": 1720827636.1303, "ip": "", "conv_id": "92608718e9ee468b8405bb4bbf959af1", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "Title: Turing test\n\nPassage: Alan Turing and the Imitation Game\nResearchers in the United Kingdom had been exploring \"machine intelligence\" for up to ten years prior to the founding of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) research in 1956. It was a common topic among the members of the Ratio Club, an informal group of British cybernetics and electronics researchers that included Alan Turing.\nTuring, in particular, had been running the notion of machine intelligence since at least 1941 and one of the earliest-known mentions of \"computer intelligence\" was made by him in 1947. In Turing's report, \"Intelligent Machinery,\" he investigated \"the question of whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\" and, as part of that investigation, proposed what may be considered the forerunner to his later tests:\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\"\nTo demonstrate this approach Turing proposes a test inspired by a party game, known as the \"imitation game\", in which a man and a woman go into separate rooms and guests try to tell them apart by writing a series of questions and reading the typewritten answers sent back. In this game, both the man and the woman aim to convince the guests that they are the other. (Huma Shah argues that this two-human version of the game was presented by Turing only to introduce the reader to the machine-human question-answer test.) Turing described his new version of the game as follows:"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827658.8831, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827658.6973, "finish": 1720827658.8831, "ip": "", "conv_id": "48f2646e21cf4d47b6aa9e0881905281", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827658.8831, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827658.6973, "finish": 1720827658.8831, "ip": "", "conv_id": "52fb999bcf29489286cf16a6be312a4d", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "Title: Artificial brain\n\nPassage: An artificial brain (or artificial mind) is software and hardware with cognitive abilities similar to those of the animal or human brain.\nResearch investigating \"artificial brains\" and brain emulation plays three important roles in science:\nAn ongoing attempt by neuroscientists to understand how the human brain works, known as cognitive neuroscience.\nA thought experiment in the philosophy of artificial intelligence, demonstrating that it is possible, at least in theory, to create a machine that has all the capabilities of a human being.\nA long-term project to create machines exhibiting behavior comparable to those of animals with complex central nervous system such as mammals and most particularly humans. The ultimate goal of creating a machine exhibiting human-like behavior or intelligence is sometimes called strong AI.\nAn example of the first objective is the project reported by Aston University in Birmingham, England where researchers are using biological cells to create \"neurospheres\" (small clusters of neurons) in order to develop new treatments for diseases including Alzheimer's, motor neurone and Parkinson's disease.\nThe second objective is a reply to arguments such as John Searle's Chinese room argument, Hubert Dreyfus's critique of AI or Roger Penrose's argument in The Emperor's New Mind. These critics argued that there are aspects of human consciousness or expertise that can not be simulated by machines. One reply to their arguments is that the biological processes inside the brain can be simulated to any degree of accuracy. This reply was made as early as 1950, by Alan Turing in his classic paper \"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\"."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827670.7021, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827670.5202, "finish": 1720827670.7021, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7b2fffa81c814dd28dbb3f59d7b839ce", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827670.7021, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827670.5202, "finish": 1720827670.7021, "ip": "", "conv_id": "434a5629fd1d4a56a2fd16e4926d20ae", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "Title: Turing test\n\nPassage: Alan Turing and the Imitation Game\nResearchers in the United Kingdom had been exploring \"machine intelligence\" for up to ten years prior to the founding of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) research in 1956. It was a common topic among the members of the Ratio Club, an informal group of British cybernetics and electronics researchers that included Alan Turing.\nTuring, in particular, had been running the notion of machine intelligence since at least 1941 and one of the earliest-known mentions of \"computer intelligence\" was made by him in 1947. In Turing's report, \"Intelligent Machinery,\" he investigated \"the question of whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\" and, as part of that investigation, proposed what may be considered the forerunner to his later tests:\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\"\nTo demonstrate this approach Turing proposes a test inspired by a party game, known as the \"imitation game\", in which a man and a woman go into separate rooms and guests try to tell them apart by writing a series of questions and reading the typewritten answers sent back. In this game, both the man and the woman aim to convince the guests that they are the other. (Huma Shah argues that this two-human version of the game was presented by Turing only to introduce the reader to the machine-human question-answer test.) Turing described his new version of the game as follows:"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827676.3567, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827676.1831, "finish": 1720827676.3567, "ip": "", "conv_id": "634481ad2c2f46f69f66ecb8c4d86618", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827676.3567, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827676.1831, "finish": 1720827676.3567, "ip": "", "conv_id": "22ac581ffd2a4bb1bb9ad763a72d03b5", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "output": [["Who famously asked 'Can machines think?' in 1950?", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827732.0277, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827731.8341, "finish": 1720827732.0277, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b017eb2f5ef44c7eba5116b798f513c6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "output": [["Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827732.0277, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827731.8341, "finish": 1720827732.0277, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae8a4ff56d284f95b11f4fca31862969", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "output": [["Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827736.5345, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827736.3916, "finish": 1720827736.5345, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5ab6331aafc046daaf89b21b45a241fc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "output": [["Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827736.5345, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827736.3916, "finish": 1720827736.5345, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a0501de1a74a4c2f9e8bb1f416478cf8", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "output": [["Which planet besides earth is most likely to be inhabited by an intelligent species?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827748.6453, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827748.4638, "finish": 1720827748.6453, "ip": "", "conv_id": "153a847486214c79a1b42ed3c2488df3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Information about a planet that may harbor life.", "output": [["Information about a planet that may harbor life.", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827748.6453, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827748.4638, "finish": 1720827748.6453, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4b148be72ef84fb08ae68519d482145d", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Information about a planet that may harbor life.", "output": [["Information about a planet that may harbor life.", "Title: Living Planet Report\n\nPassage: The Living Planet Report is published every two years by the World Wide Fund for Nature since 1998. It is based on the Living Planet Index and ecological footprint calculations.\nThe Living Planet Report is the world's leading, science-based analysis, on the health of our planet and the impact of human activity. Humanity's demands exceed the Earth's capacity to sustain us.\nThe 2018 report found a \"decline of 60% in population sizes\" of vertebrate species overall from 1970 to 2014. The tropics of South and Central America had an 89% loss compared to 1970. These claims have been criticized by some studies such as the research group led by Brian Leung and including Maria Dornelas.\nThe 2018 report calls for new goals post-2020 alongside those of the Convention on Biological Diversity, the Paris Climate Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals. The 2020 report says systemic changes are necessary to stop the destruction of global wildlife populations, including a complete overhaul of food production and consumption industries, along with making global trade more sustainable and removing deforestation completely from global supply chains.\nThe 2022 report found that vertebrate wildlife popular species.\nEditions\nThe first version of the Living Planet Report was published on 1998. Following versions in 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2020."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827769.6721, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827769.4989, "finish": 1720827769.6721, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0b1a998e020346cda9db434302fc0e96", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life.", "output": [["I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life.", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827769.6721, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827769.4989, "finish": 1720827769.6721, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1b2a4d785bcd4326aca896f1b568fa05", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life.", "output": [["I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life.", "Title: The Living Planet\n\nPassage: 4. \"Jungle\"\nBroadcast 9 February 1984, this episode is devoted to the jungles of the tropics. Attenborough ascends a Ceiba pentandra (kapok) in the South American tropical rainforest to observe \"the greatest proliferation of life that you can find anywhere on the surface of the Earth.\" There are two main causes for this: warmth and wetness. As this climate is constant, there are no seasons, so trees vary greatly in their flowering cycles. However, each species does so at the same time and, because of the lack of wind, relies on birds and insects for pollination. Bromeliads have their own population of visitors, largely due to their chalice-like rosettes of leaves that hold water. This is used by some for drinking, or, as in the case of the poison dart frog, for depositing tadpoles. Attenborough also highlights those species that have perfected the art of camouflage, including phasmids. The most densely populated part of the jungle is in its uppermost reaches. Around halfway down, there is little life, apart from those that inhabit nest holes, such as macaws, or use the trunks and lianas to aid movement. The jungle floor is not very fertile as the rain washes away any nutriment from the soil. Tree roots therefore rely on a kind of compost formed from decaying leaves \u2014 a process that is greatly accelerated in the natural humidity. After a tropical storm, an aged kapok tree comes crashing to the ground, leaving a gap in the canopy above. The process of renewal then begins as saplings race to fill the space created.\n5. \"Seas of Grass\""]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827782.3529, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827782.2177, "finish": 1720827782.3529, "ip": "", "conv_id": "07941837d68b4264819a15136ab7ddc7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life somewhere in our galaxy.", "output": [["I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life somewhere in our galaxy.", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827782.3529, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827782.2177, "finish": 1720827782.3529, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6ae0e2b4fdb743bdb1b1136c4215c2fc", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life somewhere in our galaxy.", "output": [["I'm searching an Earth-like planet that may harbor life somewhere in our galaxy.", "Title: Extraterrestrial Live\n\nPassage: Extraterrestrial Live is the third live album by American rock band Blue \u00d6yster Cult, released in 1982 by Columbia Records. It primarily documents the band's 1981 tour in support of Fire of Unknown Origin, but also includes two tracks recorded in 1980 during the Mirrors Tour and the North American leg of Black Sabbath's Heaven & Hell Tour (dubbed The Black and Blue Tour). Midway through the 1981 Fire of Unknown Origin tour, the band fired drummer and founding member Albert Bouchard, replacing him with roadie Rick Downey.\nTrack listing\nPersonnel\nBand members\nEric Bloom \u2013 lead vocals on tracks 1-5, 7-8, 10-12, stun guitar, keyboards\nDonald \"Buck Dharma\" Roeser \u2013 lead guitar, lead vocals on tracks 6, 13\nAllen Lanier \u2013 keyboards, guitar\nJoe Bouchard \u2013 bass, lead vocals on track 9\nRick Downey \u2013 drums on tracks 2-7, 9-13\nAlbert Bouchard \u2013 drums on \"Dominance and Submission\" and \"Black Blade\"\nAdditional musicians\nRobby Krieger \u2013 guitar on \"Roadhouse Blues\"\nProduction\nSandy Pearlman \u2013 producer, management\nGeorge Geranios \u2013 producer, live sound, engineer, mixing\nPaul Mandl \u2013 assistant engineer, editor\nRod O'Brien, Deve Hewitt \u2013 live recording engineers\nPaul Stubblebine \u2013 mastering\nCharts"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827791.0455, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827790.8812, "finish": 1720827791.0455, "ip": "", "conv_id": "54a2e3c75ca642e9a9a5f14407043328", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "TRAPPIST system", "output": [["TRAPPIST system", "Title: HD 41162\n\nPassage: HD 41162 is a star in a double system."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827791.0455, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827790.8812, "finish": 1720827791.0455, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d2041f38a0924938af5de9060b23c9c7", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "TRAPPIST system", "output": [["TRAPPIST system", "Title: Trapster\n\nPassage: Later on, during the Identity Crisis story, Trapster would be hired by Norman Osborn to kill a man and make it seem like Spider-Man did it, and, in order to cover this up, Osborn put a price on Trapster's head, attracting assassins like the Hand and his previous ally Shocker. Trapster unknowingly teamed up with Spider-Man \u2014 now using the Dusk alias, reasoning that the currently-lone Trapster would need an ally and someone to talk to in his currently vulnerable state \u2014 in an attempt to get back at Osborn, and would eventually confess his murder to the police in order to remove Osborn's reason for wanting him dead (although he kept the identity of his employer secret in case he needed it later).\nDuring his tenure with a later Frightful Four incarnation (including Hydro-Man and the mysterious Salamandra), Wizard, tired of Trapster's failures and his general sniveling, callously sealed the villain in a repeating time-loop, a trap from which he can \"never escape.\" However, Petruski did indeed escape.\nDuring the Secret War storyline, Trapster was enlisted by Lucia von Bardas, the former prime minister of Latveria, and placed in her secret army of technology-based villains. She sent the army against Wolverine, Spider-Man, Luke Cage, Daredevil, and Captain America, the five heroes Nick Fury had sent to Latveria to stop Lucia\u2019s secret criminal funding. When the battle started to turn in favor of the heroes, Lucia turned all the armor of her technological army into a bomb. Nick\u2019s unknown agent Daisy defeated her and the armor army\u2019s lives were saved. Trapster escaped the heroes in the resulting battle between Fury and Wolverine.\nDuring the \"Civil War\" storyline, Trapster was seen as a member of the Sinister Six. He was later among an army of supervillains organized by Hammerhead that was captured by Iron Man and S.H.I.E.L.D.\nAfter the Civil War, Trapster appeared as a member of a new 'Frightful Five', along with Wizard, Hydro-Man, Titania, and Klaw.\nHe appeared in Brand New Day as one of the villains in the bar, and later fighting Spider-Man in the Brand New Day Extra one-shot.\nDuring the Dark Reign storyline, Trapster later showed up in an alliance with the criminal Zodiac.\nTrapster was with the Frightful Four when they were sent by Intelligencia to attack the Baxter Building and capture Mister Fantastic.\nAfter MODOK Superior had revived the other Intelligencia members following the fight with the Sinister Six, he makes room for Trapster to join up with them. Their meeting was interrupted by Deadpool (who tried to sink the ship they were on) only for Trapster to defeat Deadpool."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827798.7492, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827798.5943, "finish": 1720827798.7492, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d4fcf48de50d4d969908211869a737e5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "TRAPPIST system planets life", "output": [["TRAPPIST system planets life", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827798.7492, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827798.5943, "finish": 1720827798.7492, "ip": "", "conv_id": "257a8ee4e4cb4159b8b3d1a318362377", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "TRAPPIST system planets life", "output": [["TRAPPIST system planets life", "Title: Living Planet Report\n\nPassage: The Living Planet Report is published every two years by the World Wide Fund for Nature since 1998. It is based on the Living Planet Index and ecological footprint calculations.\nThe Living Planet Report is the world's leading, science-based analysis, on the health of our planet and the impact of human activity. Humanity's demands exceed the Earth's capacity to sustain us.\nThe 2018 report found a \"decline of 60% in population sizes\" of vertebrate species overall from 1970 to 2014. The tropics of South and Central America had an 89% loss compared to 1970. These claims have been criticized by some studies such as the research group led by Brian Leung and including Maria Dornelas.\nThe 2018 report calls for new goals post-2020 alongside those of the Convention on Biological Diversity, the Paris Climate Agreement and the Sustainable Development Goals. The 2020 report says systemic changes are necessary to stop the destruction of global wildlife populations, including a complete overhaul of food production and consumption industries, along with making global trade more sustainable and removing deforestation completely from global supply chains.\nThe 2022 report found that vertebrate wildlife popular species.\nEditions\nThe first version of the Living Planet Report was published on 1998. Following versions in 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2020."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827804.6662, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827804.5564, "finish": 1720827804.6662, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6e569abd4f6841c98bed0e4a421f1c70", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "TRAPPIST-1b", "output": [["TRAPPIST-1b", "Title: HD 205739 b\n\nPassage: HD 205739 b is an extrasolar planet located approximately 350 light-years away."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827804.6662, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827804.5564, "finish": 1720827804.6662, "ip": "", "conv_id": "210e3d3c4454458fafbc7ce3e1f256cb", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "TRAPPIST-1b", "output": [["TRAPPIST-1b", "Title: TRAP1\n\nPassage: Heat shock protein 75 kDa, mitochondrial is a protein that in humans is encoded by the TRAP1 gene.\nInteractions\nTRAP1 has been shown to interact with EXT2, EXT1 and Retinoblastoma protein."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827818.9777, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827818.7832, "finish": 1720827818.9777, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6a912d4387b44f1ea5ac33ac0683a64f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "TRAPPIST-1b is a mainly rocky exoplanet orbiting around the ultra-cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, located", "output": [["TRAPPIST-1b is a mainly rocky exoplanet orbiting around the ultra-cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, located", "Title: HD 4308 b\n\nPassage: HD 4308 b is a low-mass exoplanet orbiting around HD 4308. It is believed to have almost no orbital eccentricity."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827818.9777, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827818.7832, "finish": 1720827818.9777, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2d44e41819b34e5f85bb60b98684088d", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "TRAPPIST-1b is a mainly rocky exoplanet orbiting around the ultra-cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, located", "output": [["TRAPPIST-1b is a mainly rocky exoplanet orbiting around the ultra-cool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, located", "Title: Cold trap (astronomy)\n\nPassage: A cold trap is a concept in planetary sciences that describes an area cold enough to freeze (trap) volatiles. Cold-traps can exist on the surfaces of airless bodies or in the upper layers of an adiabatic atmosphere. On airless bodies, the ices trapped inside cold-traps can potentially remain there for geologic time periods, allowing us a glimpse into the primordial solar system. In adiabatic atmospheres, cold-traps prevent volatiles (such as water) from escaping the atmosphere into space.\nCold-traps on airless planetary bodies\nThe obliquity (axial tilt) of some airless planetary bodies in the Solar System such as Mercury, the Moon and Ceres is very close to zero. Harold Urey first noted that depressions or craters located near the poles of these bodies will cast persistent shadows that can survive for geologic time periods (millions\u2013billions of years). The absence of an atmosphere prevents mixing by convection, rendering these shadows extremely cold. If molecules of volatiles such as water ice travel into these permanent shadows, they will become trapped for geologic time periods.\nStudying cold-traps on airless bodies\nAs these shadows receive no insolation, most of the heat they receive is scattered and emitted radiation from the surrounding topography. Usually, horizontal heat conduction from adjacent warmer areas can be neglected due to the high porosity and therefore low thermal conductivity of the uppermost layers of airless bodies. Consequently, the temperatures of these permanent shadows can be modeled using ray casting or ray tracing algorithms coupled with 1D vertical heat conduction models. In some cases, such as bowl-shaped craters, it is possible to obtain an expression for the equilibrium temperature of these shadows.\nAdditionally, the temperatures (and therefore the stability) of cold-traps can be remotely sensed by an orbiter. The temperatures of lunar cold-traps have been extensively studied by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Diviner radiometer. On Mercury, evidence for ice deposits inside cold-traps has been obtained through radar, reflectance and visible imagery. On Ceres, cold-traps have been detected by the Dawn spacecraft.\nAtmospheric cold-traps\nIn atmospheric science, a cold-trap is a layer of the atmosphere that is substantially colder than both the deeper and higher layers. For example, for Earth's troposphere, the temperature of the air drops with increasing height reaching a low point (at about 20 kilometers height). This region is called a cold-trap, because it traps ascending gases with high boiling points, forcing them to drop back into Earth.\nFor biological life-forms on Earth, the most important gas to be kept in that way is water vapor. Without the presence of a cold-trap in the atmosphere, the water content would gradually escape into space, making life impossible. The cold trap retains one-tenth of a percent of the water in the atmosphere in the form of a vapor at high altitudes. Earth's cold-trap is also a layer above which ultraviolet intensity is strong, since higher up the amount of water vapor is negligible. Oxygen screens out ultraviolet intensity."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827832.9065, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827832.7561, "finish": 1720827832.9065, "ip": "", "conv_id": "de4d6ddeca184fd1a925415adde594a2", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "The planet is about 37% more massive than Earth and about 39% larger in volume; thus its density is very similar. ", "output": [["The planet is about 37% more massive than Earth and about 39% larger in volume; thus its density is very similar. ", "Title: Earth-like planet\n\nPassage: Earth-like planet may refer to:\nEarth analog, denoting another planet that is very similar to Earth\nHabitable exoplanet, a planet that can support liquid water and thus hypothetically life.\nTerrestrial planet, denoting a planet that is composed of the same materials as Earth, i.e., primarily of silicate rocks or metals"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827832.9065, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827832.7561, "finish": 1720827832.9065, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b36cde4eea0841bba6e64e5e09d742e1", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "The planet is about 37% more massive than Earth and about 39% larger in volume; thus its density is very similar. ", "output": [["The planet is about 37% more massive than Earth and about 39% larger in volume; thus its density is very similar. ", "Title: Planet Earth (disambiguation)\n\nPassage: The planet Earth is the third planet from the Sun.\nPlanet Earth may also refer to:\nFilm and television\nPlanet Earth (film), a 1974 science fiction television film\nPlanet Earth (1986 TV series), a PBS television documentary series about the geosciences\nPlanet Earth franchise of nature documentaries produced by BBC:\nPlanet Earth (2006 TV series), a BBC nature television documentary series\nPlanet Earth II, a 2016 BBC nature television documentary series (sequel to Planet Earth)\nPlanet Earth III, a 2023 BBC nature television documentary series (third installment in the series)\nPlanet Earth Live, a 2010 BBC nature documentary film\nMusic\n\"Planet Earth\", a song by Devo on the 1980 album Freedom of Choice\n\"Planet Earth\" (Duran Duran song), a 1981 single by Duran Duran\nPlanet Earth, a 1997 album by Mother's Army\n\"Planet Earth\" (Eskimo Joe song), a 2001 single by Eskimo Joe\nPlanet Earth (soundtrack), the soundtrack album for the 2006 BBC nature documentary series Planet Earth\nPlanet Earth (Prince album), a 2007 album by Prince and the title track of the album\n\"Planet Earth\", a 2009 spoken word poem by Michael Jackson included on the album This Is It"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827838.8501, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827838.6667, "finish": 1720827838.8501, "ip": "", "conv_id": "996cb757f1f64589a96c3c15581c60b9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Muennighoff", "output": [["Muennighoff", "Title: Adenbach\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827838.8501, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827838.6667, "finish": 1720827838.8501, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5bdc79a77f284bc9840e59f57a885083", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Muennighoff", "output": [["Muennighoff", "Title: Muniguda\n\nPassage: Muniguda, located 60\u00a0km from Rayagada, is a town in the Rayagada district in the Indian state of Odisha\nMuniguda was once rich with natural greenery, hills and peaceful tribal people. The population of Muniguda is approximately sixty-six thousand as per census India report 2011.\nMajor industries\nVedanta Alumina Ltd., is the recent major industrial project nearby Muniguda catering to all the latest developments in commercial domain."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827860.8443, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827860.6527, "finish": 1720827860.8443, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0651455227834ab5be77ca001632246e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How many parameters does GPT-4 have?", "output": [["How many parameters does GPT-4 have?", "Title: List of airline codes (G)\n\nPassage: Codes"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827860.8443, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827860.6527, "finish": 1720827860.8443, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3322087aee5e4142830c2e2cd89bf595", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "How many parameters does GPT-4 have?", "output": [["How many parameters does GPT-4 have?", "Title: GPT\n\nPassage: GPT may refer to:\nComputing\nGenerative pre-trained transformer, a type of artificial intelligence language model\nChatGPT, a chatbot developed by OpenAI, based on generative pre-trained transformer technology\nGUID Partition Table, a computer storage disk partitioning standard\nBiology\nAlanine transaminase or glutamate pyruvate transaminase\nGoniopora toxin\nUDP-N-acetylglucosamine\u2014undecaprenyl-phosphate N-acetylglucosaminephosphotransferase\nCompanies\nGEC Plessey Telecommunications, a defunct British telecommunications manufacturer\nGPT Group, an Australian property investment company\nGPT, subsidiary of Airbus SE\nOther uses\nGulfport\u2013Biloxi International Airport, in Mississippi\nGeneral-purpose technology, in economics\nGeneralized probabilistic theory, a framework to describe the features of physical theories\nGrounded practical theory, a social science theory"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827869.1062, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827868.9153, "finish": 1720827869.1062, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0c78fcc719aa4016ad26c1ac9388c69b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "output": [["I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "Title: Diogo Rodrigues\n\nPassage: Rodrigues Island"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827869.1062, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827868.9153, "finish": 1720827869.1062, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3f70b624902747c686252d1ae4e10178", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "output": [["I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "Title: Outlying islands\n\nPassage: Outlying islands may refer to:\nIn geography\nHong Kong\nIslands District, a Hong Kong district\nOutlying Islands, Hong Kong, islands outside mainland New Territories, Kowloon and Hong Kong Island in Hong Kong\nOthers\nList of outlying islands of Indonesia\nNew Zealand outlying islands\nList of outlying islands of Scotland\nIslands of the Republic of China (Taiwan) other than Taiwan Island\nUnited States Minor Outlying Islands\nIn theatre\nOutlying Islands (play) (2002), a play by David Greig"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827905.0652, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827904.8761, "finish": 1720827905.0652, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d74700da74f0425693281b73a06a3a9a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I want to know all cities that have ever been capitals of Japan.", "output": [["I want to know all cities that have ever been capitals of Japan.", "Title: List of capitals in Japan\n\nPassage: A prefectural capital is a city where a prefectural government and assembly is located.\nJapan\nIn Japan, a prefectural capital is officially called , but the term is also used ().\nList of Japanese prefectural capitals\nNotes: \u00b9\nNon-capitals which share a name with their prefecture\nIn most cases, a city that shares a name with its prefecture is a prefectural capital. However, there are some municipalities that are not capitals.\nIwate, Iwate Prefecture\nIbaraki, Ibaraki Prefecture\nOkinawa, Okinawa Prefecture\nTochigi, Tochigi Prefecture\nYamanashi, Yamanashi Prefecture\nCapitals that are not the largest city/metropolitan area in their prefecture\nThose in italics are prefectural capitals, or metropolitan areas of them.\nNotes:\nCity populations are as of July 2008.\nMetropolitan area populations are as of 2000. (Urban Employment Areas)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827905.0652, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827904.8761, "finish": 1720827905.0652, "ip": "", "conv_id": "717cced9da314cab96533023e1f11a64", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I want to know all cities that have ever been capitals of Japan.", "output": [["I want to know all cities that have ever been capitals of Japan.", "Title: List of capitals in Japan\n\nPassage: A prefectural capital is a city where a prefectural government and assembly is located.\nJapan\nIn Japan, a prefectural capital is officially called , but the term is also used ().\nList of Japanese prefectural capitals\nNotes: \u00b9\nNon-capitals which share a name with their prefecture\nIn most cases, a city that shares a name with its prefecture is a prefectural capital. However, there are some municipalities that are not capitals.\nIwate, Iwate Prefecture\nIbaraki, Ibaraki Prefecture\nOkinawa, Okinawa Prefecture\nTochigi, Tochigi Prefecture\nYamanashi, Yamanashi Prefecture\nCapitals that are not the largest city/metropolitan area in their prefecture\nThose in italics are prefectural capitals, or metropolitan areas of them.\nNotes:\nCity populations are as of July 2008.\nMetropolitan area populations are as of 2000. (Urban Employment Areas)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827930.9915, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827930.8172, "finish": 1720827930.9915, "ip": "", "conv_id": "df459058059d4f6b9f91798d2c29a864", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I know the current capital of Japan is Tokyo, but which cities have been its capital in the past?", "output": [["I know the current capital of Japan is Tokyo, but which cities have been its capital in the past?", "Title: Monorails in Japan\n\nPassage: Here is a list of monorails in Japan.\nCurrently operational"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827930.9915, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827930.8172, "finish": 1720827930.9915, "ip": "", "conv_id": "336a02dcb1c244c6b0b2c73ac793fa7e", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "I know the current capital of Japan is Tokyo, but which cities have been its capital in the past?", "output": [["I know the current capital of Japan is Tokyo, but which cities have been its capital in the past?", "Title: List of capitals in Japan\n\nPassage: A prefectural capital is a city where a prefectural government and assembly is located.\nJapan\nIn Japan, a prefectural capital is officially called , but the term is also used ().\nList of Japanese prefectural capitals\nNotes: \u00b9\nNon-capitals which share a name with their prefecture\nIn most cases, a city that shares a name with its prefecture is a prefectural capital. However, there are some municipalities that are not capitals.\nIwate, Iwate Prefecture\nIbaraki, Ibaraki Prefecture\nOkinawa, Okinawa Prefecture\nTochigi, Tochigi Prefecture\nYamanashi, Yamanashi Prefecture\nCapitals that are not the largest city/metropolitan area in their prefecture\nThose in italics are prefectural capitals, or metropolitan areas of them.\nNotes:\nCity populations are as of July 2008.\nMetropolitan area populations are as of 2000. (Urban Employment Areas)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827942.9186, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827942.736, "finish": 1720827942.9186, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c68fea6c71c34adbbfceb64e4d90a0df", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is it true that Nara used to be Japan's capital?", "output": [["Is it true that Nara used to be Japan's capital?", "Title: Monorails in Japan\n\nPassage: Here is a list of monorails in Japan.\nCurrently operational"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827942.9186, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827942.736, "finish": 1720827942.9186, "ip": "", "conv_id": "281e7c98eb9e4879b04e4b85eb911732", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Is it true that Nara used to be Japan's capital?", "output": [["Is it true that Nara used to be Japan's capital?", "Title: Nara Prefecture\n\nPassage: The economic dependency to Osaka even characterizes today's Nara Prefecture, for many inhabitants commute to Osaka to work or study there.\nGeography\nNara Prefecture is part of the Kansai, or Kinki, region of Japan, and is located in the middle of the Kii Peninsula on the western half of Honshu. Nara Prefecture is landlocked. It is bordered to the west by Wakayama Prefecture and Osaka Prefecture; on the north by Kyoto Prefecture and on the east by Mie Prefecture.\nNara Prefecture is from east to west and from north to south.\nMost of the prefecture is covered by mountains and forests, leaving an inhabitable area of only . The ratio of inhabitable area to total area is 23%, ranked 43rd among the 47 prefectures in Japan.\nNara Prefecture is bisected by the Japan Median Tectonic Line (MTL) running through its territory east to west, along the Yoshino River. On the northern side of the MTL is the so-called Inner Zone, where active faults running north to south are still shaping the landscape. The Ikoma Mountains in the northwest form the border with Osaka Prefecture. The Nara Basin, which lies to the east of these mountains, contains the highest concentration of population in Nara Prefecture. Further east are the Kasagi Mountains, which separate the Basin from the Yamato Highlands.\nSouth of the MTL is the Outer Zone, comprising the Kii Mountains, which occupy about 60% of the land area of the prefecture. The \u014cmine Range is in the center of the Kii Mountains, running north to south, with steep valleys on both sides. The tallest mountain in Nara Prefecture, and indeed in the Kansai region, is Mount Hakky\u014d. To the west, separating Nara Prefecture from Wakayama Prefecture, is the Obako Range, with peaks around . To the east, bordering Mie Prefecture, is the Daik\u014d Range, including Mount \u014cdaigahara. This mountainous region is also home to a World Heritage Site, the Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range\".\nAbout 17% of the total land area of the prefecture is designated as National Park land, comprising the Yoshino-Kumano National Park, Kong\u014d-Ikoma-Kisen, K\u014dya-Ry\u016bjin, Mur\u014d-Akame-Aoyama, and Yamato-Aogaki Quasi-National Parks; and the Tsukigase-K\u014dnoyama, Yata, and Yoshinogawa-Tsuboro Prefectural Natural Parks.\nClimate\nIn the Nara Basin, the climate has inland characteristics, as represented in the bigger temperature variance within the same day, and the difference of summer and winter temperatures. Winter temperatures average about , and in the summer with highest reaching close to . There is not a single year over the last decade (since 1990, up to 2007) with more than 10 days of snowfall recorded by Nara Local Meteorological Observatory."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827976.6069, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827976.4384, "finish": 1720827976.6069, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d0e36f3fcbf54c5c88df432c194e6b2f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Where is the planet Coruscant?", "output": [["Where is the planet Coruscant?", "Title: City of Golden Shadow\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720827976.6069, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827976.4384, "finish": 1720827976.6069, "ip": "", "conv_id": "28434d90e5134242b019b62fc676e9a4", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "Where is the planet Coruscant?", "output": [["Where is the planet Coruscant?", "Title: Circumbinary planet\n\nPassage: Observations and discoveries\nConfirmed planets\nPSR B1620-26\nThe first confirmed circumbinary planet was found orbiting the system PSR B1620-26, which contains a millisecond pulsar and a white dwarf and is located in the globular cluster M4. The existence of the third body was first reported in 1993, and was suggested to be a planet based on 5 years of observational data. In 2003 the planet was characterised as being 2.5 times the mass of Jupiter in a low eccentricity orbit with a semimajor axis of 23 AU.\nHD 202206\nThe first circumbinary planet around a main sequence star was found in 2005 in the system HD 202206: a Jupiter-size planet orbiting a system composed of a Sun-like star and a brown dwarf.\nHD 202206 is a Sun-like star orbited by two objects, one of 17\u00a0MJ and one of 2.4\u00a0MJ. The classification of HD 202206 b as a brown dwarf or \"superplanet\" is now clear. HD 202206 b is actually a red dwarf with 0.089 solar masses. The two objects could have both formed in a protoplanetary disk with the inner one becoming a superplanet, or the outer planet could have formed in a circumbinary disk.\nA dynamical analysis of the system further shows a 5:1 mean motion resonance between the planet and the brown dwarf.\nThese observations raise the question of how this system was formed, but numerical simulations show that a planet formed in a circumbinary disk can migrate inward until it is captured in resonance.\nKepler-16\nOn 15 September 2011, astronomers, using data from NASA's Kepler space telescope, announced the first partial-eclipse-based discovery of a circumbinary planet. The planet, called Kepler-16b, is about 200 light years from Earth, in the constellation Cygnus, and is believed to be a frozen world of rock and gas, about the mass of Saturn. It orbits two stars that are also circling each other, one about two-thirds the size of the Sun, the other about a fifth the size of the Sun. Each orbit of the stars by the planet takes 229 days, while the planet orbits the system's center of mass every 225 days; the stars eclipse each other every three weeks or so.\nPH1 (Kepler-64)\nIn 2012 volunteers of the Planet Hunters project discovered PH1b (Planet Hunters 1 b), a circumbinary planet in a quadruple star system.\nKepler-453\nIn 2015, astronomers confirmed the existence of Kepler-453b, a circumbinary planet with orbital period of 240.5 days.\nKepler-1647"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828000.336, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827999.9869, "finish": 1720828000.336, "ip": "", "conv_id": "048245bff36e449882dea048efb6ee27", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Where is the planet Coruscant?", "output": [["Where is the planet Coruscant?", "Title: City of Golden Shadow\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828000.336, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720827999.9869, "finish": 1720828000.336, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d65dde20c90a43dfa4d4f01f789f4fc5", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Where is the planet Coruscant?", "output": [["Where is the planet Coruscant?", "Title: List of Star Wars planets and moons\n\nPassage: The galaxy has at least two companion-satellite dwarf galaxies, one of which is known as the Rishi Maze, but they are very lightly settled or explored.\nThe canon map depicts a top-down view of the galactic disk, with \"north\" as the side of the galactic center that Coruscant is located on. As the capital planet of the Republic and later the Empire, Coruscant is used as the reference point for galactic astronomy, set at XYZ coordinates 0-0-0. Standardized galactic time measurements are also based on Coruscant's local solar day and year.\nAccording to the updated Visual Dictionary series made by Pablo Hidalgo for the Sequel Trilogy, these are the general regions of the galaxy spreading outward from the Core:\nDeep Core \u2013 the innermost brightly lit region of space, with a supermassive black hole at the center which binds the galaxy together. Densely-packed with stars, nebulae, and other anomalies, it is therefore thinly settled due to the resulting high radiation levels and lack of stable hyperspace routes.\nCore Worlds \u2013 powerful and wealthy planets with millennia-long histories, many of them founding members of the Galactic Republic. On-screen examples include Coruscant, Corellia, Alderaan, and Hosnian Prime.\nThe Colonies \u2013 the first colonies founded by the nascent Galactic Republic in ancient times. The name is somewhat anachronistic, as they have grown nearly as powerful as the \"Core Worlds\" themselves, though their histories aren't quite as long or prestigious (i.e. comparable to how the United States or Canada could be called \"the colonies\" of Great Britain). Mentioned by name in The Rise of Skywalker.\nInner Rim \u2013 the original edge of the Galactic Republic, where expansion waves stopped for many generations.\nExpansion Region \u2013 nestled between the \"Inner Rim\" and the \"Mid Rim\", anachronistically named due to a new colonization wave starting again.\nMid-Rim \u2013 Generally industrialized though not very important planets, but more developed than the true \"frontier\" in the Outer Rim. On-screen examples include Naboo and Kashyyyk.\nOuter Rim \u2013 a vast region including all of the last major star systems up to the galaxy's edge. As the last region that the Republic expanded into, it is relatively the least developed, a frontier more often than not exploited by the central galactic government for its resources. On-screen examples include Tatooine, Yavin, Hoth, Bespin, Endor, Geonosis, Utapau, Mustafar, and Kessel."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828038.5006, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828038.3037, "finish": 1720828038.5006, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6006eabbb4234a488de3643d371385e4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for a movie that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "output": [["I am looking for a movie that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "Title: List of science fiction comedy films\n\nPassage: This is a list of science fiction comedy films."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828038.5006, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828038.3037, "finish": 1720828038.5006, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c40a8e4679ab43b6a7e6ab637d4972b4", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "I am looking for a movie that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "output": [["I am looking for a movie that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "Title: List of science fiction comedy films\n\nPassage: This is a list of science fiction comedy films."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828047.2265, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828047.0213, "finish": 1720828047.2265, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0db71cda79cb499b871ac00876d463f4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for movies that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "output": [["I am looking for movies that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "Title: List of films set in the future\n\nPassage: This is a list of films with settings beyond the date they were released or made, even if that setting is now in the past, and films with a futuristic setting despite having an unspecified (unspec.) date. It also includes films that are only partially set in the future.\nFilms"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828047.2265, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828047.0213, "finish": 1720828047.2265, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7afab4700a8241d58b803f1100dd8723", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "I am looking for movies that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "output": [["I am looking for movies that is technologically inspiring and features space travel and different intelligent species.", "Title: List of science fiction comedy films\n\nPassage: This is a list of science fiction comedy films."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828126.3788, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828126.0418, "finish": 1720828126.3788, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3d8bfa9a509b463e99d5a2e200096b3e", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Is life extension possible? Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "output": [["Is life extension possible? Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828126.3788, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828126.0418, "finish": 1720828126.3788, "ip": "", "conv_id": "db8bbb62bf374ead972b2a57bc537091", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Is life extension possible? Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "output": [["Is life extension possible? Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "Title: Immortality\n\nPassage: Modern theories on the evolution of aging include the following:\nMutation accumulation is a theory formulated by Peter Medawar in 1952 to explain how evolution would select for aging. Essentially, aging is never selected against, as organisms have offspring before the mortal mutations surface in an individual.\nAntagonistic pleiotropy is a theory proposed as an alternative by George C. Williams, a critic of Medawar, in 1957. In antagonistic pleiotropy, genes carry effects that are both beneficial and detrimental. In essence this refers to genes that offer benefits early in life, but exact a cost later on, i.e. decline and death.\nThe disposable soma theory was proposed in 1977 by Thomas Kirkwood, which states that an individual body must allocate energy for metabolism, reproduction, and maintenance, and must compromise when there is food scarcity. Compromise in allocating energy to the repair function is what causes the body gradually to deteriorate with age, according to Kirkwood.\nImmortality of the germline\nIndividual organisms ordinarily age and die, while the germlines which connect successive generations are potentially immortal. The basis for this difference is a fundamental problem in biology. The Russian biologist and historian Zhores A. Medvedev considered that the accuracy of genome replicative and other synthetic systems alone cannot explain the immortality of germlines. Rather Medvedev thought that known features of the biochemistry and genetics of sexual reproduction indicate the presence of unique information maintenance and restoration processes at the different stages of gametogenesis. In particular, Medvedev considered that the most important opportunities for information maintenance of germ cells are created by recombination during meiosis and DNA repair; he saw these as processes within the germ cells that were capable of restoring the integrity of DNA and chromosomes from the types of damage that cause irreversible aging in somatic cells.\nProspects for human biological immortality\nLife-extending substances\nSome scientists believe that boosting the amount or proportion of telomerase in the body, a naturally forming enzyme that helps maintain the protective caps at the ends of chromosomes, could prevent cells from dying and so may ultimately lead to extended, healthier lifespans. A team of researchers at the Spanish National Cancer Centre (Madrid) tested the hypothesis on mice. It was found that those mice which were \"genetically engineered to produce 10 times the normal levels of telomerase lived 50% longer than normal mice\".\nIn normal circumstances, without the presence of telomerase, if a cell divides repeatedly, at some point all the progeny will reach their Hayflick limit. With the presence of telomerase, each dividing cell can replace the lost bit of DNA, and any single cell can then divide unbounded. While this unbounded growth property has excited many researchers, caution is warranted in exploiting this property, as exactly this same unbounded growth is a crucial step in enabling cancerous growth. If an organism can replicate its body cells faster, then it would theoretically stop aging."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828137.8885, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828137.6638, "finish": 1720828137.8885, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4b199876dcdd49e2ba1ae7b6f5343c6b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "output": [["Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828137.8885, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828137.6638, "finish": 1720828137.8885, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4b8a821149db49968ad43b663273b951", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "output": [["Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828144.408, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828144.1789, "finish": 1720828144.408, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7166da30faae495db5de61c48ceca157", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "output": [["Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828144.408, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828144.1789, "finish": 1720828144.408, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d019e0dc0dbf4a948bea26a8b1f60b01", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "output": [["Can we one day decide when to die? What prevents us from achieving this?", "Title: Immortality\n\nPassage: Causes of death\nThere are three main causes of death: natural aging, disease, and injury. Such issues can be resolved with the solutions provided in research to any end providing such alternate theories at present that require unification.\nAging\nAubrey de Grey, a leading researcher in the field, defines aging as \"a collection of cumulative changes to the molecular and cellular structure of an adult organism, which result in essential metabolic processes, but which also, once they progress far enough, increasingly disrupt metabolism, resulting in pathology and death.\" The current causes of aging in humans are cell loss (without replacement), DNA damage, oncogenic nuclear mutations and epimutations, cell senescence, mitochondrial mutations, lysosomal aggregates, extracellular aggregates, random extracellular cross-linking, immune system decline, and endocrine changes. Eliminating aging would require finding a solution to each of these causes, a program de Grey calls engineered negligible senescence. There is also a huge body of knowledge indicating that change is characterized by the loss of molecular fidelity.\nDisease\nDisease is theoretically surmountable by technology. In short, it is an abnormal condition affecting the body of an organism, something the body should not typically have to deal with its natural make up. Human understanding of genetics is leading to cures and treatments for a myriad of previously incurable diseases. The mechanisms by which other diseases do damage are becoming better understood. Sophisticated methods of detecting diseases early are being developed. Preventative medicine is becoming better understood. Neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's and Alzheimer's may soon be curable with the use of stem cells. Breakthroughs in cell biology and telomere research are leading to treatments for cancer. Vaccines are being researched for AIDS and tuberculosis. Genes associated with type 1 diabetes and certain types of cancer have been discovered, allowing for new therapies to be developed. Artificial devices attached directly to the nervous system may restore sight to the blind. Drugs are being developed to treat a myriad of other diseases and ailments.\nTrauma\nPhysical trauma would remain as a threat to perpetual physical life, as an otherwise immortal person would still be subject to unforeseen accidents or catastrophes. The speed and quality of paramedic response remains a determining factor in surviving severe trauma. A body that could automatically repair itself from severe trauma, such as speculated uses for nanotechnology, would mitigate this factor. The brain cannot be risked to trauma if a continuous physical life is to be maintained. This aversion to trauma risk to the brain would naturally result in significant behavioral changes that would render physical immortality undesirable for some people.\nEnvironmental change\nOrganisms otherwise unaffected by these causes of death would still face the problem of obtaining sustenance (whether from currently available agricultural processes or from hypothetical future technological processes) in the face of changing availability of suitable resources as environmental conditions change. After avoiding aging, disease, and trauma, death through resource limitation is still possible, such as hypoxia or starvation."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828171.8059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828171.5788, "finish": 1720828171.8059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c2723c5f67bf41f19b384e5f38d73a55", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Please provide me a lot of information about longevity and death.", "output": [["Please provide me a lot of information about longevity and death.", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828171.8059, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828171.5788, "finish": 1720828171.8059, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ee5d0eef70104ebe90135c2cf3faebff", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Please provide me a lot of information about longevity and death.", "output": [["Please provide me a lot of information about longevity and death.", "Title: Longevity\n\nPassage: In July 2020 scientists, using public biological data on 1.75 m people with known lifespans overall, identify 10 genomic loci which appear to intrinsically influence healthspan, lifespan, and longevity \u2013 of which half have not been reported previously at genome-wide significance and most being associated with cardiovascular disease \u2013 and identify haem metabolism as a promising candidate for further research within the field. Their study suggests that high levels of iron in the blood likely reduce, and genes involved in metabolising iron likely increase healthy years of life in humans.\nLifestyle\nLongevity is a highly plastic trait, and traits that influence its components respond to physical (static) environments and to wide-ranging life-style changes: physical exercise, dietary habits, living conditions, and pharmaceutical as well as nutritional interventions. A 2012 study found that even modest amounts of leisure time physical exercise can extend life expectancy by as much as 4.5 years.\nDiet\nAs of 2021, there is no clinical evidence that any dietary practice contributes to human longevity.\nBiological pathways\nFour well-studied biological pathways that are known to regulate aging, and whose modulation has been shown to influence longevity are Insulin/IGF-1, mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR), AMP-activating protein kinase (AMPK), and Sirtuin pathways.\nAutophagy\nAutophagy plays a pivotal role in healthspan and lifespan extension.\nChange over time\nIn preindustrial times, deaths at young and middle age were more common than they are today. This is not due to genetics, but because of environmental factors such as disease, accidents, and malnutrition, especially since the former were not generally treatable with pre-20th-century medicine. Deaths from childbirth were common for women, and many children did not live past infancy. In addition, most people who did attain old age were likely to die quickly from the above-mentioned untreatable health problems. Despite this, there are several examples of pre-20th-century individuals attaining lifespans of 85 years or greater, including John Adams, Cato the Elder, Thomas Hobbes, Christopher Polhem, and Michelangelo. This was also true for poorer people like peasants or laborers. Genealogists will almost certainly find ancestors living to their 70s, 80s and even 90s several hundred years ago.\nFor example, an 1871 census in the UK (the first of its kind, but personal data from other censuses dates back to 1841 and numerical data back to 1801) found the average male life expectancy as being 44, but if infant mortality is subtracted, males who lived to adulthood averaged 75 years. The present life expectancy in the UK is 77 years for males and 81 for females, while the United States averages 74 for males and 80 for females.\nStudies have shown that black American males have the shortest lifespans of any group of people in the US, averaging only 69 years (Asian-American females average the longest). This reflects overall poorer health and greater prevalence of heart disease, obesity, diabetes, and cancer among black American men."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828190.2056, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828190.0188, "finish": 1720828190.2056, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e352e3cf44c749ffb6da5f87af5c536d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for a long article that talks about longevity and immortality.", "output": [["I am looking for a long article that talks about longevity and immortality.", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828190.2056, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828190.0188, "finish": 1720828190.2056, "ip": "", "conv_id": "15ea538639694f6c847290f9a05987c4", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for a long article that talks about longevity and immortality.", "output": [["I am looking for a long article that talks about longevity and immortality.", "Title: Immortality\n\nPassage: Undesirability\nPhysical immortality has also been imagined as a form of eternal torment, as in the myth of Tithonus, or in Mary Shelley's short story The Mortal Immortal, where the protagonist lives to witness everyone he cares about die around him. For additional examples in fiction, see Immortality in fiction.\nKagan (2012) argues that any form of human immortality would be undesirable. Kagan's argument takes the form of a dilemma. Either our characters remain essentially the same in an immortal afterlife, or they do not:\nIf our characters remain basically the same \u2013 that is, if we retain more or less the desires, interests, and goals that we have now \u2013 then eventually, over an infinite stretch of time, we will get bored and find eternal life unbearably tedious.\nIf, on the other hand, our characters are radically changed \u2013 e.g., by God periodically erasing our memories or giving us rat-like brains that never tire of certain simple pleasures \u2013 then such a person would be too different from our current self for us to care much what happens to them.\nEither way, Kagan argues, immortality is unattractive. The best outcome, Kagan argues, would be for humans to live as long as they desired and then to accept death gratefully as rescuing us from the unbearable tedium of immortality.\nSociology\nIf human beings were to achieve immortality, there would most likely be a change in the world's social structures. Sociologists argue that human beings' awareness of their own mortality shapes their behavior. With the advancements in medical technology in extending human life, there may need to be serious considerations made about future social structures. The world is already experiencing a global demographic shift of increasingly ageing populations with lower replacement rates. The social changes that are made to accommodate this new population shift may be able to offer insight on the possibility of an immortal society.\nSociology has a growing body of literature on the sociology of immortality, which details the different attempts at reaching immortality (whether actual or symbolic) and their prominence in the 21st century. These attempts include renewed attention to the dead in the West, practices of online memorialization, and biomedical attempts to increase longevity. These attempts at reaching immortality and their effects in societal structures have led some to argue that we are becoming a \"Postmortal Society\". Foreseen changes to societies derived from the pursuit of immortality would encompass societal paradigms and worldviews, as well as the institutional landscape. Similarly, different forms of reaching immortality might entail a significant reconfiguration of societies, from becoming more technologically oriented to becoming more aligned with nature.\nImmortality would increase population growth, bringing with it many consequences as for example the impact of population growth on the environment and planetary boundaries.\nPolitics"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828205.2296, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828204.9925, "finish": 1720828205.2296, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6269c94b610e4f3aa59bc07e0f89213d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How to prevent aging?", "output": [["How to prevent aging?", "Title: Hayflick limit\n\nPassage: The Hayflick limit, or Hayflick phenomenon, is the number of times a normal somatic, differentiated human cell population will divide before cell division stops. However, this limit does not apply to stem cells."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828205.2296, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828204.9925, "finish": 1720828205.2296, "ip": "", "conv_id": "83e07a0e16f2418aa06e00bf406050e7", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "How to prevent aging?", "output": [["How to prevent aging?", "Title: Life extension\n\nPassage: Hormone treatment\nThe anti-aging industry offers several hormone therapies. Some of these have been criticized for possible dangers and a lack of proven effect. For example, the American Medical Association has been critical of some anti-aging hormone therapies.\nWhile growth hormone (GH) decreases with age, the evidence for use of growth hormone as an anti-aging therapy is mixed and based mostly on animal studies. There are mixed reports that GH or IGF-1 modulates the aging process in humans and about whether the direction of its effect is positive or negative.\nKlotho and exerkines like irisin are being investigated for potential pro-longevity therapies.\nLifestyle factors\nLoneliness/isolation, social life and support, exercise/physical activity (partly via neurobiological effects and increased NAD+ levels), psychological characteristics/personality (possibly highly indirectly), sleep duration, circadian rhythms (patterns of sleep, drug-administration and feeding), type of leisure activities, not smoking, altruistic emotions and behaviors, subjective well-being, mood and stress (including via heat shock protein) are investigated as potential (modulatable) factors of life extension.\nHealthy lifestyle practices and healthy diet have been suggested as \"first-line function-preserving strategies, with pharmacological agents, including existing and new pharmaceuticals and novel 'nutraceutical' compounds, serving as potential complementary approaches\".\nSocietal strategies\nCollectively, addressing common causes of death could extend lifespans of populations and humanity overall. For instance, a 2020 study indicates that the global mean loss of life expectancy (LLE) from air pollution in 2015 was 2.9 years, substantially more than, for example, 0.3\u2009years from all forms of direct violence, albeit a significant fraction of the LLE (a measure similar to years of potential life lost) is considered to be unavoidable.\nRegular screening and doctor visits has been suggested as a lifestyle-societal intervention. (See also: medical test and biomarker)\nHealth policy and changes to standard healthcare could support the adoption of the field's conclusions \u2013 a review suggests that the longevity diet would be a \"valuable complement to standard healthcare and that, taken as a preventative measure, it could aid in avoiding morbidity, sustaining health into advanced age\" as a form of preventive healthcare.\nIt has been suggested that in terms of healthy diets, Mediterranean-style diets could be promoted by countries for ensuring healthy-by-default choices (\"to ensure the healthiest choice is the easiest choice\") and with highly effective measures including dietary education, food checklists and recipes that are \"simple, palatable, and affordable\".\nA review suggests that \"targeting the aging process per se may be a far more effective approach to prevent or delay aging-associated pathologies than treatments specifically targeted to particular clinical conditions\".\nLow ambient temperature\nLow ambient temperature as a physical factor affecting free radical levels was identified as a treatment producing exceptional lifespan increase in Drosophila melanogaster and other living beings.\nHistory"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828240.5256, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828240.3135, "finish": 1720828240.5256, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3a0e4e74120743769ee08ce8201b93e7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's bitcoin?", "output": [["What's bitcoin?", "Title: List of medical abbreviations: B\n\nPassage: B"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828240.5256, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828240.3135, "finish": 1720828240.5256, "ip": "", "conv_id": "712bdb0830ca4ae584ee6689c06d0454", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What's bitcoin?", "output": [["What's bitcoin?", "Title: Digital currency\n\nPassage: According to the European Central Bank's 2015 \"Virtual currency schemes \u2013 a further analysis\" report, virtual currency is a digital representation of value, not issued by a central bank, credit institution or e-money institution, which, in some circumstances, can be used as an alternative to money. In the previous report of October 2012, the virtual currency was defined as a type of unregulated, digital money, which is issued and usually controlled by its developers, and used and accepted among the members of a specific virtual community.\nAccording to the Bank for International Settlements' November 2015 \"Digital currencies\" report, it is an asset represented in digital form and having some monetary characteristics. Digital currency can be denominated to a sovereign currency and issued by the issuer responsible to redeem digital money for cash. In that case, digital currency represents electronic money (e-money). Digital currency denominated in its own units of value or with decentralized or automatic issuance will be considered as a virtual currency. As such, bitcoin is a digital currency but also a type of virtual currency. Bitcoin and its alternatives are based on cryptographic algorithms, so these kinds of virtual currencies are also called cryptocurrencies.\nDigital versus cryptocurrency\nCryptocurrency is a sub-type of digital currency and a digital asset that relies on cryptography to chain together digital signatures of asset transfers, peer-to-peer networking and decentralization. In some cases a proof-of-work or proof-of-stake scheme is used to create and manage the currency. Cryptocurrencies can allow electronic money systems to be decentralized. When implemented with a blockchain, the digital ledger system or record keeping system uses cryptography to edit separate shards of database entries that are distributed across many separate servers. The first and most popular system is bitcoin, a peer-to-peer electronic monetary system based on cryptography.\nDigital versus traditional currency\nMost of the traditional money supply is bank money held on computers. They are considered digital currency in some cases. One could argue that our increasingly cashless society means that all currencies are becoming digital currencies, but they are not presented to us as such.\nTypes of systems\nCentralized systems\nCurrency can be exchanged electronically using debit cards and credit cards using electronic funds transfer at point of sale.\nMobile digital wallets\nA number of electronic money systems use contactless payment transfer in order to facilitate easy payment and give the payee more confidence in not letting go of their electronic wallet during the transaction.\nIn 1994 Mondex and National Westminster Bank provided an \"electronic purse\" to residents of Swindon\nIn about 2005 Telef\u00f3nica and BBVA Bank launched a payment system in Spain called Mobipay which used simple short message service facilities of feature phones intended for pay-as-you-go services including taxis and pre-pay phone recharges via a BBVA current bank account debit."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828256.5693, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828256.3454, "finish": 1720828256.5693, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b32a4eb13ddf4823b14922cb007e30f9", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what was the name of darth vader star destroyer", "output": [["what was the name of darth vader star destroyer", "Title: Sith\n\nPassage: Darth Vader\nDarth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a human-cyborg Dark Lord of the Sith and the third and final apprentice of Darth Sidious, who first appeared in the Star Wars original trilogy, and later in the prequel trilogy. As the Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker, he fought alongside his master Obi-Wan Kenobi during the galaxy-wide Clone Wars, but was slowly seduced to the dark side by Darth Sidious, then Sheev Palpatine, a well respected senator. After helping Sidious kill Jedi Master Mace Windu, he swore allegiance to the Sith and was given the name Darth Vader before setting out to destroy all Jedi left on Coruscant. After being sent by Sidious to assassinate the Separatist council members on Mustafar, Vader was badly injured in a duel with Kenobi, resulting in the loss of his remaining organic arm, both legs, and severe burn injuries. He was saved by Sidious, and encased in a black suit of armor with extensive cybernetics which kept him alive. As the Galactic Empire was established and continued to grow, Vader became the Emperor's immensely feared second-in-command and was given the task of finding surviving Jedi and the Rebel Alliance's base. After the destruction of the first Death Star, Vader was charged with tracking down the Rebel Alliance and destroying their headquarters. However, the actions of his son, Luke Skywalker, eventually turned Vader against his master, resulting in both Sidious' and Vader's deaths, as well as the fulfilment of the Chosen One prophecy.\nDarth Plagueis\nDarth Plagueis was a Muun Dark Lord of the Sith and Darth Sidious' master, first referenced in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. In the film, Sidious (as Palpatine) uses Plagueis' story to seduce Anakin Skywalker to the dark side, claiming that Plagueis' abilities in the Force grew to such an extent that he could create life by influencing microscopic Force-sensitive entities called \"midi-chlorians,\" and even save people from dying. According to the Rule of Two, Plagueis was eventually killed by Sidious in his sleep, who subsequently became the new Sith Master and would later take on an apprentice of his own.\nPlagueis is the main character of the Legends novel, Star Wars: Darth Plagueis, which explains much of his backstory, including his training under Darth Tenebrous, mentorship of Palpatine, and early plans to undermine the Galactic Republic and drive the Jedi Order into ruins. The novel also reveals that Plagueis' public identity was Hego Damsk II, a member of the Intergalactic Banking Clan.\nDarth Bane"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828256.5693, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828256.3454, "finish": 1720828256.5693, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3a1f02df477e406ca42602db8ad81fd1", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what was the name of darth vader star destroyer", "output": [["what was the name of darth vader star destroyer", "Title: Tantive IV\n\nPassage: The ship appears in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker as the center of the Resistance's base and during the final battle on Exegol as part of the Resistance's initial attack fleet. It was one of the ships hit by the resurrected Darth Sidious' Force lightning assault, and although the fate of the ship and its pilot, Nien Nunb, are not mentioned in the movie, it is presumed to be destroyed and Nunb lost. This supposition was confirmed by the novelization's author, Rae Carson.\nName\nThe ship was initially referred to as the \"Rebel blockade runner\", and National Public Radio's radio adaptation of Star Wars in 1981 reveals the name \"Tantive\u00a0IV\" (pronounced 'Tan-tiv-ee four'). Star Wars Expanded Universe material initially referred to the class of ships as \"Corellian corvettes\", but Lucasfilm later identified them as Alderaan Cruisers. The name Tantive IV was used in various merchandise as well as the official Rogue One novelization. The name may be derived from the term tantivy, referring to a rapid gallop or blaring of horns, associated with the sport of fox hunting, suggesting the Tantive IV's role in the early scenes of A New Hope as the hunters' quarry.\nGames and models\nBoth Decipher, Inc. and Wizards of the Coast published Tantive IV and Corellian corvette cards for the Star Wars Customizable Card Game and Star Wars Trading Card Game, respectively.\nA small Lego model of the Tantive IV is included with the Ultimate Collector series 3,000-piece Star Destroyer which, at the time of its 2002 release was Lego's largest set. Lego's 1,700-piece Ultimate Collector series blockade runner model, released in 2001, was the first set to include dark red bricks. In 2019, to celebrate the 20th anniversary of such models, Lego released an updated model of the Tantive IV .\nTwo Micro Machines three-packs included a Corellian corvette toy, and Hasbro's Collector Fleet line included an electronic blockade runner.\nKenner's Die Cast Star Destroyer from 1979 includes a miniature Tantive IV that can be inserted into a docking bay under the Star Destroyer.\nThe Tantive IV also appears as a ship model in both the X-Wing miniatures game and Star Wars Armada produced by Fantasy Flight Games. A miniature of the Tantive IV sold at auction for $450,000, making it the most expensive Star Wars item sold at auction."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828293.5657, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828293.3654, "finish": 1720828293.5657, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e396e4db3e8b46fb823e614585a7ec3b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is hyperspace?", "output": [["What is hyperspace?", "Title: Intelligent life in the Universe\n\nPassage: About intelligent life in the Universe, see:\nLife"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828293.5657, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828293.3654, "finish": 1720828293.5657, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b0aaeca397654fddb86c7b6c2c555479", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is hyperspace?", "output": [["What is hyperspace?", "Title: Hyperspace\n\nPassage: Hyperspace is generally seen as a fictional concept, incompatible with our present-day understanding of the universe (in particular, the theory of relativity). Some science fiction writers attempted quasi-scientific rubber science explanations of this concept. For others, however, it is just a convenient MacGuffin enabling faster-than-light travel necessary for their story without violating the prohibitions against FTL travel in ordinary space imposed by known laws of physics.\nTerminology\nThe term \"hyperspace\" originated in 19th-century mathematical texts in the context of higher-dimensional space, and it is still occasionally used in academic works in that context, popularized among others by theoretical physicist Michio Kaku's popular science book Hyperspace (1994). The means of accessing hyperspace is often called a \"hyperdrive\", and navigating hyperspace is typically referred to as \"jumping\" (as in \"the ship will now jump through hyperspace\").\nA number of related terms (such as imaginary space, Jarnell intersplit, jumpspace, megaflow, N-Space, nulspace, slipstream, overspace, Q-space, subspace, and tau-space) have been used by various writers, although none have gained recognition to rival that of hyperspace. Some works use multiple synonyms; for example, in the Star Trek franchise, the term hyperspace itself is only used briefly in a single 1988 episode (\"Coming of Age\") of Star Trek: The Next Generation, while a related set of terms \u2013 such as subspace, transwarp, and proto-warp \u2013 are employed much more often, and most of the travel takes place through the use of a warp drive. Hyperspace travel has also been discussed in the context of wormholes and teleportation, which some writers consider to be similar whereas others view them as separate concepts.\nHistory\nEmerging in the early 20th century, within several decades hyperspace became a common element of interstellar space travel stories in science fiction. Kirk Meadowcroft's \"The Invisible Bubble\" (1928) and John Campbell's Islands of Space (1931) feature the earliest known references to hyperspace, with Campbell, whose story was published in the science fiction magazine Amazing Stories Quarterly, likely being the first writer to use this term in the context of space travel. According to the Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction, the earliest known use of the word \"hyper-drive\" comes from a preview of Murray Leinster's story \"The Manless Worlds\" in Thrilling Wonder Stories 1946."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828317.6512, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828317.4587, "finish": 1720828317.6512, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6fcb8de98d304d5d909e57875ef578df", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Could Darth Plagueis really prevent death?", "output": [["Could Darth Plagueis really prevent death?", "Title: The Last of the Immortals\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828317.6512, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828317.4587, "finish": 1720828317.6512, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6cd00a6fd3554856b927a38c774bb201", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Could Darth Plagueis really prevent death?", "output": [["Could Darth Plagueis really prevent death?", "Title: Sith\n\nPassage: Darth Vader\nDarth Vader (Anakin Skywalker) was a human-cyborg Dark Lord of the Sith and the third and final apprentice of Darth Sidious, who first appeared in the Star Wars original trilogy, and later in the prequel trilogy. As the Jedi hero Anakin Skywalker, he fought alongside his master Obi-Wan Kenobi during the galaxy-wide Clone Wars, but was slowly seduced to the dark side by Darth Sidious, then Sheev Palpatine, a well respected senator. After helping Sidious kill Jedi Master Mace Windu, he swore allegiance to the Sith and was given the name Darth Vader before setting out to destroy all Jedi left on Coruscant. After being sent by Sidious to assassinate the Separatist council members on Mustafar, Vader was badly injured in a duel with Kenobi, resulting in the loss of his remaining organic arm, both legs, and severe burn injuries. He was saved by Sidious, and encased in a black suit of armor with extensive cybernetics which kept him alive. As the Galactic Empire was established and continued to grow, Vader became the Emperor's immensely feared second-in-command and was given the task of finding surviving Jedi and the Rebel Alliance's base. After the destruction of the first Death Star, Vader was charged with tracking down the Rebel Alliance and destroying their headquarters. However, the actions of his son, Luke Skywalker, eventually turned Vader against his master, resulting in both Sidious' and Vader's deaths, as well as the fulfilment of the Chosen One prophecy.\nDarth Plagueis\nDarth Plagueis was a Muun Dark Lord of the Sith and Darth Sidious' master, first referenced in Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. In the film, Sidious (as Palpatine) uses Plagueis' story to seduce Anakin Skywalker to the dark side, claiming that Plagueis' abilities in the Force grew to such an extent that he could create life by influencing microscopic Force-sensitive entities called \"midi-chlorians,\" and even save people from dying. According to the Rule of Two, Plagueis was eventually killed by Sidious in his sleep, who subsequently became the new Sith Master and would later take on an apprentice of his own.\nPlagueis is the main character of the Legends novel, Star Wars: Darth Plagueis, which explains much of his backstory, including his training under Darth Tenebrous, mentorship of Palpatine, and early plans to undermine the Galactic Republic and drive the Jedi Order into ruins. The novel also reveals that Plagueis' public identity was Hego Damsk II, a member of the Intergalactic Banking Clan.\nDarth Bane"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828354.3952, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828354.1727, "finish": 1720828354.3952, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fc51dff8d4cc4f08bff2a11bc77830c0", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which character in Star Wars was able to prevent people from dying?", "output": [["Which character in Star Wars was able to prevent people from dying?", "Title: Sin-Eater (character)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828354.3952, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828354.1727, "finish": 1720828354.3952, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7354ad2469794a75b195a154e7d63733", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Which character in Star Wars was able to prevent people from dying?", "output": [["Which character in Star Wars was able to prevent people from dying?", "Title: The Force\n\nPassage: Depiction\nObi-Wan Kenobi describes the Force as \"an energy field created by all living things\" in Star Wars. In The Phantom Menace, Qui-Gon says microscopic lifeforms called midi-chlorians, which exist inside all living cells, allow some characters to be Force-sensitive; characters must have a high enough midi-chlorian count to feel and use the Force. Midi-chlorians are sentient, and arguably were the first species to emerge in the Star Wars universe. The species was a foundation of all life, as some deemed life impossible without midi-chlorians, and ultimately resided in all living beings, connecting two aspects of the Force. The Living Force (also known as a spirit or life essence) is the energy generated by all living things. Through midi-chlorians, it is fed into the Cosmic Force, which bounds all things and communicates with living sentient beings.\nIn 1981, Lucas compared using the Force to yoga, saying any character can use its power. Dave Filoni said in 2015 that all Star Wars characters are \"Force intuitive\": some characters, like Luke Skywalker, are aware of their connection to the Force, while characters such as Han Solo draw upon the Force unconsciously. Filoni said the most potent Force users are characters whose midi-chlorian count provides a natural affinity for using the Force and who undertake intense training and discipline. Rogue One (2016) portrays the Force more as a religion \"than simply a way to manipulate objects and people\". In the years following the Great Jedi Purge depicted in the prequel trilogy, some characters have lost faith in the Force, and the Galactic Empire hunts down surviving Jedi and other Force-sensitive characters. By the time of the events in The Force Awakens, some characters think the Jedi and the Force are myths.\nSome Force-sensitive characters derive special, psychic abilities from it, such as telekinesis, mind control, and extrasensory perception. The Force is sometimes referred to in terms of \"dark\" and \"light\" sides, with villains like the Sith drawing on the dark side to act aggressively while the Jedi use the light side for defense and peace. According to Filoni, Lucas believed a character's intentions when using the Force\u2014their \"will to be selfless or selfish\"\u2014is what distinguishes light and dark sides. The Force is also used by characters who are neither Jedi nor Sith, such as Leia Organa and Kylo Ren. Characters throughout the franchise use their Force powers in myriad ways, including Obi-Wan using a \"mind trick\" to undermine a stormtrooper's will, Darth Vader choking subordinates without touching them, Qui-Gon Jinn repelling several battle droids at once, Rey lifting a large pile of rocks, and Kylo Ren stopping blaster fire in mid-air. Film and television use of the Force is sometimes accompanied by a sound effect, such as a deep rumble associated with aggressive use or a more high-pitched sound associated with benevolent use."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828418.1253, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828417.9211, "finish": 1720828418.1253, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ca1a9e9f382e43d0906ff3a4e0e9b1e7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What are some famous books from Asimov?", "output": [["What are some famous books from Asimov?", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828418.1253, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828417.9211, "finish": 1720828418.1253, "ip": "", "conv_id": "73cc1720572c491792bbfe4a9ead3927", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What are some famous books from Asimov?", "output": [["What are some famous books from Asimov?", "Title: Isaac Asimov\n\nPassage: Isaac Asimov ( ; \u00a0\u2013 April 6, 1992) was an American writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston University. During his lifetime, Asimov was considered one of the \"Big Three\" science fiction writers, along with Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke. A prolific writer, he wrote or edited more than 500 books. He also wrote an estimated 90,000 letters and postcards. Best known for his hard science fiction, Asimov also wrote mysteries and fantasy, as well as popular science and other non-fiction.\nAsimov's most famous work is the Foundation series, the first three books of which won the one-time Hugo Award for \"Best All-Time Series\" in 1966. His other major series are the Galactic Empire series and the Robot series. The Galactic Empire novels are set in the much earlier history of the same fictional universe as the Foundation series. Later, with Foundation and Earth (1986), he linked this distant future to the Robot series, creating a unified \"future history\" for his works. He also wrote more than 380\u00a0short stories, including the social science fiction novelette \"Nightfall\", which in 1964 was voted the best short science fiction story of all time by the Science Fiction Writers of America. Asimov wrote the Lucky Starr series of juvenile science-fiction novels using the pen name Paul French.\nMost of his popular science books explain concepts in a historical way, going as far back as possible to a time when the science in question was at its simplest stage. Examples include Guide to Science, the three-volume Understanding Physics, and Asimov's Chronology of Science and Discovery. He wrote on numerous other scientific and non-scientific topics, such as chemistry, astronomy, mathematics, history, biblical exegesis, and literary criticism.\nHe was the president of the American Humanist Association. Several entities have been named in his honor, including the asteroid (5020) Asimov, a crater on Mars, a Brooklyn elementary school, Honda's humanoid robot ASIMO, and four literary awards.\nSurname"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828429.1405, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828428.9502, "finish": 1720828429.1405, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7252d59b4c0c4babb8374482d1b4497b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who wrote The Foundation Series?", "output": [["Who wrote The Foundation Series?", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828429.1405, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828428.9502, "finish": 1720828429.1405, "ip": "", "conv_id": "27fe1be9e4bf435ebd838c422e6a483f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who wrote The Foundation Series?", "output": [["Who wrote The Foundation Series?", "Title: Isaac Asimov\n\nPassage: Isaac Asimov ( ; \u00a0\u2013 April 6, 1992) was an American writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston University. During his lifetime, Asimov was considered one of the \"Big Three\" science fiction writers, along with Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke. A prolific writer, he wrote or edited more than 500 books. He also wrote an estimated 90,000 letters and postcards. Best known for his hard science fiction, Asimov also wrote mysteries and fantasy, as well as popular science and other non-fiction.\nAsimov's most famous work is the Foundation series, the first three books of which won the one-time Hugo Award for \"Best All-Time Series\" in 1966. His other major series are the Galactic Empire series and the Robot series. The Galactic Empire novels are set in the much earlier history of the same fictional universe as the Foundation series. Later, with Foundation and Earth (1986), he linked this distant future to the Robot series, creating a unified \"future history\" for his works. He also wrote more than 380\u00a0short stories, including the social science fiction novelette \"Nightfall\", which in 1964 was voted the best short science fiction story of all time by the Science Fiction Writers of America. Asimov wrote the Lucky Starr series of juvenile science-fiction novels using the pen name Paul French.\nMost of his popular science books explain concepts in a historical way, going as far back as possible to a time when the science in question was at its simplest stage. Examples include Guide to Science, the three-volume Understanding Physics, and Asimov's Chronology of Science and Discovery. He wrote on numerous other scientific and non-scientific topics, such as chemistry, astronomy, mathematics, history, biblical exegesis, and literary criticism.\nHe was the president of the American Humanist Association. Several entities have been named in his honor, including the asteroid (5020) Asimov, a crater on Mars, a Brooklyn elementary school, Honda's humanoid robot ASIMO, and four literary awards.\nSurname"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828479.1013, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828478.8773, "finish": 1720828479.1013, "ip": "", "conv_id": "47db3b082f7e4430b1b0c27538bb7e83", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who wrote the book that famously introduced Psychohistory?", "output": [["Who wrote the book that famously introduced Psychohistory?", "Title: List of members of the National Academy of Sciences (Psychology)\n\nPassage: Psychology"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828479.1013, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828478.8773, "finish": 1720828479.1013, "ip": "", "conv_id": "62a8ef30ec0d41e1b3d1320e36b5618c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who wrote the book that famously introduced Psychohistory?", "output": [["Who wrote the book that famously introduced Psychohistory?", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828488.3912, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828488.1962, "finish": 1720828488.3912, "ip": "", "conv_id": "540992bf63d246209848fb1ea1dd7c9c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who wrote the book that introduced Psychohistory?", "output": [["Who wrote the book that introduced Psychohistory?", "Title: List of members of the National Academy of Sciences (Psychology)\n\nPassage: Psychology"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828488.3912, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828488.1962, "finish": 1720828488.3912, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e376c5973a5245318d672487ab751f73", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who wrote the book that introduced Psychohistory?", "output": [["Who wrote the book that introduced Psychohistory?", "Title: Hari Seldon\n\nPassage: Seldon is the subject of a biography by Gaal Dornick. Seldon is Emperor Cleon I's second and last First Minister, the first being Eto Demerzel/R. Daneel Olivaw. He is deposed as First Minister after Cleon I's assassination.\nFoundation\nUsing psychohistory, Seldon mathematically determines what he calls The Seldon Plan\u2014a plan to determine the right time and place to set up a new society, one that would replace the collapsing Galactic Empire by sheer force of social pressure, but over only a thousand-year time span, rather than the ten-to-thirty-thousand-year time span that would normally have been required, and thus reduce the human suffering from living in a time of barbarism. The Foundation is placed on Terminus, a remote and resource-poor planet entirely populated by scientists and their families. The planet\u2014or so Seldon claimed\u2014was originally occupied to create the Encyclopedia Galactica, a vast compilation of the knowledge of a dying galactic empire. In reality, Terminus had a much larger role in his Plan, which he had to conceal from its inhabitants at first.\nPrelude to Foundation\nSeldon visits Trantor to attend the Decennial Mathematics Convention. He presents a paper which indicates that one could theoretically predict the Galactic Empire's future. He is able to show that Galactic society can be represented in a simulation simpler than itself (in a finite number of iterations before the onset of chaotic noise smears discerning sets of events). He does so using a technique invented that past century. At first, Seldon has no idea how this could be done in practice, and he is fairly confident that no one could actually fulfill the possibility. Shortly after his presentation, he becomes a lightning rod for political forces who want to use psychohistory for their own purposes. The rest of the novel tells of his flight, which lasts for approximately a year and which takes him through the complex and variegated world of Trantor. During his flight to escape the various political factions, he discovers how psychohistory can be made a practical science. It is in this novel that he meets his future wife Dors Venabili, future adopted son Raych Seldon, and future partner Yugo Amaryl.\nForward the Foundation\nThis novel is told as a sequence of short stories, as was the case with the original trilogy. They take place at intervals a decade or more apart, and tell the story of Hari's life, starting about ten years after Prelude and ending with his death. The stories contrast his increasingly successful professional life with his increasingly unsuccessful personal life."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828502.4441, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828502.2754, "finish": 1720828502.4441, "ip": "", "conv_id": "307865068ae54ca6886bdbcea543e8ef", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Who wrote the Foundation Trilogy?", "output": [["Who wrote the Foundation Trilogy?", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828502.4441, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828502.2754, "finish": 1720828502.4441, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fce96df4140c49768966f8fc98cb5153", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Who wrote the Foundation Trilogy?", "output": [["Who wrote the Foundation Trilogy?", "Title: The Foundation Trilogy (BBC Radio)\n\nPassage: Isaac Asimov's The Foundation Trilogy was adapted for the BBC Radio 4 in eight hour-long episodes by Patrick Tull (episodes 1 to 4) and Mike Stott (episodes 5 to 8), directed by David Cain, first broadcast in 1973, and repeated in 1977 and 2002.\nEpisodes\nOriginally broadcast in 8 parts, between 6 May and 24 June 1973.\n1: Psychohistory and Encyclopedia\nThe opening episode begins on Trantor, capital of the Galactic Empire, with the meeting of Hari Seldon and Gaal Dornick, their trial, and their exile to Terminus. The action then jumps forward fifty years, to the first Seldon Crisis, where the repercussions of the recent independence of the Four Kingdoms of the Periphery are being felt on Terminus, and are handled by the first Mayor, Salvor Hardin.\n2: The Mayors\nThe scene moves forward a further twenty years, as Mayor Hardin faces down the domination of the nearby and most powerful of the Four Kingdoms, Anacreon, whose ruler intends to annex the Foundation by force.\n3: The Merchant Princes"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828517.1502, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828516.953, "finish": 1720828517.1502, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a5abd29457342f3ba9640082e45e09b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for information on The Foundation Series by Asimov.", "output": [["I am searching for information on The Foundation Series by Asimov.", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828517.1502, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828516.953, "finish": 1720828517.1502, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fe38858516ae481385deaa6594e1dbbf", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching for information on The Foundation Series by Asimov.", "output": [["I am searching for information on The Foundation Series by Asimov.", "Title: Isaac Asimov book series bibliography\n\nPassage: This is a bibliography of books by Isaac Asimov organized by series chronologically and by series timeline (i.e. prequels first).\nSee also Isaac Asimov bibliography (chronological), Isaac Asimov bibliography (alphabetical), and Isaac Asimov short stories bibliography.\nScience fiction\nRobot series\nAlso see Robot series List of books for short stories about robots by Asimov.\nThe Robot novels\nThe Positronic Man (1993), a novel based on Asimov's short story \"The Bicentennial Man\", co-written by Robert Silverberg\nThe Caves of Steel (1954)\nThe Naked Sun (1957)\nThe Robots of Dawn (1983)\nRobots and Empire (1985)\nThe Caliban trilogy (Not written by Asimov but in the same series)\nIsaac Asimov's Caliban (1993) by Roger MacBride Allen\nIsaac Asimov's Inferno (1994) by Roger MacBride Allen\nIsaac Asimov's Utopia (1996) by Roger MacBride Allen\nGalactic Empire series\nThe Stars, Like Dust (1951)\nThe Currents of Space (1952)\nPebble in the Sky (1950), his first novel\n\"Blind Alley\" (1945), short story reprinted in The Early Asimov\nFoundation series\nAlso see Foundation series List of books for short stories also in the Foundation universe by Asimov.\nPrequels\nPrelude to Foundation (1988)\nForward the Foundation (1991)\nFoundation Trilogy\nFoundation (1951)\nFoundation and Empire (1952)\nSecond Foundation (1953)\nSequels\nFoundation's Edge (1982)\nFoundation and Earth (1986)\nThe Second Foundation Trilogy (not written by Asimov)\nFoundation's Fear (1997) by Gregory Benford\nFoundation and Chaos (1998) by Greg Bear\nFoundation's Triumph (1999) by David Brin\nLucky Starr series (using pseudonym Paul French)\nDavid Starr, Space Ranger (1952)\nLucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids (1954)\nLucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus (1954)\nLucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury (1956)\nLucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter (1957)\nLucky Starr and the Rings of Saturn (1958)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828529.6238, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828529.4399, "finish": 1720828529.6238, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e04f1473ff9a4ffb91ac44c44a3bb43d", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for books written by Isaac Asimov.", "output": [["I am looking for books written by Isaac Asimov.", "Title: Exploring the Earth and the Cosmos\n\nPassage: Exploring the Earth and the Cosmos is a book written by Isaac Asimov in 1982."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828529.6238, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828529.4399, "finish": 1720828529.6238, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9a1b044757d2400db90016404f8ab7e7", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am looking for books written by Isaac Asimov.", "output": [["I am looking for books written by Isaac Asimov.", "Title: Isaac Asimov\n\nPassage: Isaac Asimov ( ; \u00a0\u2013 April 6, 1992) was an American writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston University. During his lifetime, Asimov was considered one of the \"Big Three\" science fiction writers, along with Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke. A prolific writer, he wrote or edited more than 500 books. He also wrote an estimated 90,000 letters and postcards. Best known for his hard science fiction, Asimov also wrote mysteries and fantasy, as well as popular science and other non-fiction.\nAsimov's most famous work is the Foundation series, the first three books of which won the one-time Hugo Award for \"Best All-Time Series\" in 1966. His other major series are the Galactic Empire series and the Robot series. The Galactic Empire novels are set in the much earlier history of the same fictional universe as the Foundation series. Later, with Foundation and Earth (1986), he linked this distant future to the Robot series, creating a unified \"future history\" for his works. He also wrote more than 380\u00a0short stories, including the social science fiction novelette \"Nightfall\", which in 1964 was voted the best short science fiction story of all time by the Science Fiction Writers of America. Asimov wrote the Lucky Starr series of juvenile science-fiction novels using the pen name Paul French.\nMost of his popular science books explain concepts in a historical way, going as far back as possible to a time when the science in question was at its simplest stage. Examples include Guide to Science, the three-volume Understanding Physics, and Asimov's Chronology of Science and Discovery. He wrote on numerous other scientific and non-scientific topics, such as chemistry, astronomy, mathematics, history, biblical exegesis, and literary criticism.\nHe was the president of the American Humanist Association. Several entities have been named in his honor, including the asteroid (5020) Asimov, a crater on Mars, a Brooklyn elementary school, Honda's humanoid robot ASIMO, and four literary awards.\nSurname"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828540.8519, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828540.7114, "finish": 1720828540.8519, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7c98516e89f1423885280fc76312d09c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching books written by Isaac Asimov.", "output": [["I am searching books written by Isaac Asimov.", "Title: Exploring the Earth and the Cosmos\n\nPassage: Exploring the Earth and the Cosmos is a book written by Isaac Asimov in 1982."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828540.8519, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828540.7114, "finish": 1720828540.8519, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cb897187d1db4af599ffcae998203736", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching books written by Isaac Asimov.", "output": [["I am searching books written by Isaac Asimov.", "Title: Isaac Asimov\n\nPassage: Isaac Asimov ( ; \u00a0\u2013 April 6, 1992) was an American writer and professor of biochemistry at Boston University. During his lifetime, Asimov was considered one of the \"Big Three\" science fiction writers, along with Robert A. Heinlein and Arthur C. Clarke. A prolific writer, he wrote or edited more than 500 books. He also wrote an estimated 90,000 letters and postcards. Best known for his hard science fiction, Asimov also wrote mysteries and fantasy, as well as popular science and other non-fiction.\nAsimov's most famous work is the Foundation series, the first three books of which won the one-time Hugo Award for \"Best All-Time Series\" in 1966. His other major series are the Galactic Empire series and the Robot series. The Galactic Empire novels are set in the much earlier history of the same fictional universe as the Foundation series. Later, with Foundation and Earth (1986), he linked this distant future to the Robot series, creating a unified \"future history\" for his works. He also wrote more than 380\u00a0short stories, including the social science fiction novelette \"Nightfall\", which in 1964 was voted the best short science fiction story of all time by the Science Fiction Writers of America. Asimov wrote the Lucky Starr series of juvenile science-fiction novels using the pen name Paul French.\nMost of his popular science books explain concepts in a historical way, going as far back as possible to a time when the science in question was at its simplest stage. Examples include Guide to Science, the three-volume Understanding Physics, and Asimov's Chronology of Science and Discovery. He wrote on numerous other scientific and non-scientific topics, such as chemistry, astronomy, mathematics, history, biblical exegesis, and literary criticism.\nHe was the president of the American Humanist Association. Several entities have been named in his honor, including the asteroid (5020) Asimov, a crater on Mars, a Brooklyn elementary school, Honda's humanoid robot ASIMO, and four literary awards.\nSurname"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828559.2219, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828559.034, "finish": 1720828559.2219, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cd536cd499c5432ca5b2d520c66a2e89", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for books written by Isaac Asimov. Among others he wrote I, Robot & The Foundation Series.", "output": [["I am searching for books written by Isaac Asimov. Among others he wrote I, Robot & The Foundation Series.", "Title: List of Robot series characters\n\nPassage: The following is a list of characters in Isaac Asimov's Robot series.\nKelden Amadiro"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828559.2219, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828559.034, "finish": 1720828559.2219, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e5ea504909a94c829ad81dad355bf2ff", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching for books written by Isaac Asimov. Among others he wrote I, Robot & The Foundation Series.", "output": [["I am searching for books written by Isaac Asimov. Among others he wrote I, Robot & The Foundation Series.", "Title: Isaac Asimov book series bibliography\n\nPassage: This is a bibliography of books by Isaac Asimov organized by series chronologically and by series timeline (i.e. prequels first).\nSee also Isaac Asimov bibliography (chronological), Isaac Asimov bibliography (alphabetical), and Isaac Asimov short stories bibliography.\nScience fiction\nRobot series\nAlso see Robot series List of books for short stories about robots by Asimov.\nThe Robot novels\nThe Positronic Man (1993), a novel based on Asimov's short story \"The Bicentennial Man\", co-written by Robert Silverberg\nThe Caves of Steel (1954)\nThe Naked Sun (1957)\nThe Robots of Dawn (1983)\nRobots and Empire (1985)\nThe Caliban trilogy (Not written by Asimov but in the same series)\nIsaac Asimov's Caliban (1993) by Roger MacBride Allen\nIsaac Asimov's Inferno (1994) by Roger MacBride Allen\nIsaac Asimov's Utopia (1996) by Roger MacBride Allen\nGalactic Empire series\nThe Stars, Like Dust (1951)\nThe Currents of Space (1952)\nPebble in the Sky (1950), his first novel\n\"Blind Alley\" (1945), short story reprinted in The Early Asimov\nFoundation series\nAlso see Foundation series List of books for short stories also in the Foundation universe by Asimov.\nPrequels\nPrelude to Foundation (1988)\nForward the Foundation (1991)\nFoundation Trilogy\nFoundation (1951)\nFoundation and Empire (1952)\nSecond Foundation (1953)\nSequels\nFoundation's Edge (1982)\nFoundation and Earth (1986)\nThe Second Foundation Trilogy (not written by Asimov)\nFoundation's Fear (1997) by Gregory Benford\nFoundation and Chaos (1998) by Greg Bear\nFoundation's Triumph (1999) by David Brin\nLucky Starr series (using pseudonym Paul French)\nDavid Starr, Space Ranger (1952)\nLucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids (1954)\nLucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus (1954)\nLucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury (1956)\nLucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter (1957)\nLucky Starr and the Rings of Saturn (1958)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828630.3955, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828630.0602, "finish": 1720828630.3955, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a492bcb320fb4dbaacdd0a89fc3e4fc1", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching a paper that discusses instruction tuning of Code LLMs.", "output": [["I am searching a paper that discusses instruction tuning of Code LLMs.", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828630.3955, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828630.0602, "finish": 1720828630.3955, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a2e286f6780e4508b4e5d8ef131f6b00", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching a paper that discusses instruction tuning of Code LLMs.", "output": [["I am searching a paper that discusses instruction tuning of Code LLMs.", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828658.0871, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828657.907, "finish": 1720828658.0871, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3b48bd060c39472dacdc3790e2edabca", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "output": [["I am searching a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828658.0871, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828657.907, "finish": 1720828658.0871, "ip": "", "conv_id": "20c09887e290468696b89305be62909d", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "output": [["I am searching a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828666.8655, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828666.7693, "finish": 1720828666.8655, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f1e82214a9104e649543f999a9531384", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "output": [["I am searching for a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828666.8655, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828666.7693, "finish": 1720828666.8655, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63fdf1fba82142c383695117b19d80f9", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I am searching for a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "output": [["I am searching for a paper that instruction tunes and evaluates Code Large Language Models (LLMs).", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828681.5182, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828681.348, "finish": 1720828681.5182, "ip": "", "conv_id": "17819da2dc8a4badb0313aed0db6ab8b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Octopack: Instruction tuning code large language models", "output": [["Octopack: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828681.5182, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828681.348, "finish": 1720828681.5182, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bf15458f5a134c7d873c6b4107042347", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "Octopack: Instruction tuning code large language models", "output": [["Octopack: 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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828705.576, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828705.4364, "finish": 1720828705.576, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a3e653d67644439845872444182c408", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I had this idea of using Git Commits to instruction Code Large Language Models. Is there some previous paper on this?", "output": [["I had this idea of using Git Commits to instruction Code Large Language Models. Is there some previous paper on this?", "Title: Using Large Language Models for Commit Message Generation: A Preliminary\n Study\n\nPassage: A commit message is a textual description of the code changes in a commit,\nwhich is a key part of the Git version control system (VCS). It captures the\nessence of software updating. Therefore, it can help developers understand code\nevolution and facilitate efficient collaboration between developers. However,\nit is time-consuming and labor-intensive to write good and valuable commit\nmessages. Some researchers have conducted extensive studies on the automatic\ngeneration of commit messages and proposed several methods for this purpose,\nsuch as generationbased and retrieval-based models. However, seldom studies\nexplored whether large language models (LLMs) can be used to generate commit\nmessages automatically and effectively. To this end, this paper designed and\nconducted a series of experiments to comprehensively evaluate the performance\nof popular open-source and closed-source LLMs, i.e., Llama 2 and ChatGPT, in\ncommit message generation. The results indicate that considering the BLEU and\nRouge-L metrics, LLMs surpass the existing methods in certain indicators but\nlag behind in others. After human evaluations, however, LLMs show a distinct\nadvantage over all these existing methods. Especially, in 78% of the 366\nsamples, the commit messages generated by LLMs were evaluated by humans as the\nbest. This work not only reveals the promising potential of using LLMs to\ngenerate commit messages, but also explores the limitations of commonly used\nmetrics in evaluating the quality of auto-generated commit messages.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828705.576, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828705.4364, "finish": 1720828705.576, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a284768eb6a94a2b9c3bcd480a79d2b8", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I had this idea of using Git Commits to instruction Code Large Language Models. Is there some previous paper on this?", "output": [["I had this idea of using Git Commits to instruction Code Large Language Models. Is there some previous paper on this?", "Title: Evaluating Instruction-Tuned Large Language Models on Code Comprehension\n and Generation\n\nPassage: In this work, we evaluate 10 open-source instructed LLMs on four\nrepresentative code comprehension and generation tasks. We have the following\nmain findings. First, for the zero-shot setting, instructed LLMs are very\ncompetitive on code comprehension and generation tasks and sometimes even\nbetter than small SOTA models specifically fine-tuned on each downstream task.\nWe also find that larger instructed LLMs are not always better on code-related\ntasks. Second, for the few-shot setting, we find that adding demonstration\nexamples substantially helps instructed LLMs perform better on most code\ncomprehension and generation tasks; however, the examples would sometimes\ninduce unstable or even worse performance. Furthermore, we find widely-used\nBM25-based shot selection strategy significantly outperforms the basic random\nselection or fixed selection only on generation problems. Third, for the\nfine-tuning setting, we find that fine-tuning could further improve the model\nperformance on downstream code comprehension and generation tasks compared to\nthe zero-shot/one-shot performance. In addition, after being fine-tuned on the\nsame downstream task dataset, instructed LLMs outperform both the small SOTA\nmodels and similar-scaled LLMs without instruction tuning. Based on our\nfindings, we further present practical implications on model and usage\nrecommendation, performance and cost trade-offs, and future direction.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828727.4848, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828727.3161, "finish": 1720828727.4848, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8f867acb2cc24bba8ef133152f07b4b4", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I had this idea of using git commits and their messages to instruction tune Code Large Language Models. Is there a previous paper on this?", "output": [["I had this idea of using git commits and their messages to instruction tune Code Large Language Models. Is there a previous paper on this?", "Title: Using Large Language Models for Commit Message Generation: A Preliminary\n Study\n\nPassage: A commit message is a textual description of the code changes in a commit,\nwhich is a key part of the Git version control system (VCS). It captures the\nessence of software updating. Therefore, it can help developers understand code\nevolution and facilitate efficient collaboration between developers. However,\nit is time-consuming and labor-intensive to write good and valuable commit\nmessages. Some researchers have conducted extensive studies on the automatic\ngeneration of commit messages and proposed several methods for this purpose,\nsuch as generationbased and retrieval-based models. However, seldom studies\nexplored whether large language models (LLMs) can be used to generate commit\nmessages automatically and effectively. To this end, this paper designed and\nconducted a series of experiments to comprehensively evaluate the performance\nof popular open-source and closed-source LLMs, i.e., Llama 2 and ChatGPT, in\ncommit message generation. The results indicate that considering the BLEU and\nRouge-L metrics, LLMs surpass the existing methods in certain indicators but\nlag behind in others. After human evaluations, however, LLMs show a distinct\nadvantage over all these existing methods. Especially, in 78% of the 366\nsamples, the commit messages generated by LLMs were evaluated by humans as the\nbest. This work not only reveals the promising potential of using LLMs to\ngenerate commit messages, but also explores the limitations of commonly used\nmetrics in evaluating the quality of auto-generated commit messages.\n"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828727.4848, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828727.3161, "finish": 1720828727.4848, "ip": "", "conv_id": "91a68e2d26ff44d2944500b81219bcdc", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "I had this idea of using git commits and their messages to instruction tune Code Large Language Models. Is there a previous paper on this?", "output": [["I had this idea of using git commits and their messages to instruction tune Code Large Language Models. Is there a previous paper on this?", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828753.0614, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828752.8672, "finish": 1720828753.0614, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4e5880e7c04442498cb056a4235d07af", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720828753.0614, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720828752.8672, "finish": 1720828753.0614, "ip": "", "conv_id": "948bdae1b0994c0a8a0046726ff11c83", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829413.1663, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829392.5968, "finish": 1720829413.1663, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ae1f604271024f969cddc46d0b4b6836", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720829413.1663, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720829392.5968, "finish": 1720829413.1663, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bcb56998a1bb49e3809f4c0ef24ea278", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720834912.5825, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834912.1821, "finish": 1720834912.5825, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7a989a537345485b88bf48f70568480f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who sang the song i wanna be sedated", "output": [["who sang the song i wanna be sedated", "Title: I Wanna Be Sedated\n\nPassage: \"I Wanna Be Sedated\" is a song by American punk rock band Ramones, originally released on the band's fourth studio album, Road to Ruin (1978), in September 1978. The B-side of the UK single \"She's the One\" was released on September 21, 1978. The song was later released as a single in the Netherlands in 1979, and in the U.S. in 1980 by RSO Records from the Times Square soundtrack album. It has since remained one of the band's best known songs.\nHistory\n\"I Wanna Be Sedated\" was written by Joey Ramone. In an interview about the song, Joey explains the chorus:\nMusic video\nThe music video for the song, directed by Bill Fishman, was released in September 1988, about ten years after the song was originally released, to promote the compilation album Ramones Mania. The iconic video features the Ramones sitting at a table (left to right: Johnny, Joey, Marky and Dee Dee), nonchalantly reading and eating generic corn flakes (branded \"Corn Flakes\") while the background hallway erupts into a venue for nuns, acrobats, ballerinas, monsters, cheerleaders, clowns, doctors, fetish nurses, and smoking schoolgirls. The film is intentionally sped up to show the excitement of the background, while the band's actions are in regular motion. This was achieved by having the band members move very slowly, while the crowd moved normally, and then speeding up the film. (Furthermore, one of the video's characters is a young Courtney Love.)\nA still from the video was featured in the liner notes of the band's 1989 album Brain Drain, though the song itself does not appear on that album.\nReception\n\"I Wanna Be Sedated\" was number 145 on the Rolling Stone'''s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Marky Ramone is the drummer on this track.\nIn 1999, National Public Radio included the song in the \"NPR 100\", in which NPR's music editors sought to compile the one hundred most important American musical works of the 20th century.\nKelefa Sanneh said of the song, \"I loved it because it seemed like the beginning of a tradition, pointing away from all the conventional thing a rock 'n' roll band might do, and pointing toward anything and everything else.\"\nAccording to Alice Cooper, Joey Ramone acknowledged the similarity to Cooper's earlier 1972 song \"Elected,\" explaining that the Ramones listened to a lot of Alice Cooper.\nIn popular culture\nThe song was featured in the official teaser trailer of the 2019 film Spider-Man: Far From Home, after \"Blitzkrieg Bop\" was prominently featured in the film's 2017 predecessor, Spider-Man: Homecoming.\nThe song was featured in the penultimate episode of The Magicians'', which aired on 25 March 2020, sung by most of the cast during a heist operation in a musical episode.\nAt 12:00 am on December 31, 2020, an internet meme began trending on social media that said it was \"2020, 24 hours to go\". This was a reference to the song's opening lyric, \"twenty, twenty, twenty-four hours to go.\"\nCertifications"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720834912.5825, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834912.1821, "finish": 1720834912.5825, "ip": "", "conv_id": "7e4ce6ad5ea04956ba9bce790800bfc1", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "who sang the song i wanna be sedated", "output": [["who sang the song i wanna be sedated", "Title: I Wanna Be Sedated\n\nPassage: \"I Wanna Be Sedated\" is a song by American punk rock band Ramones, originally released on the band's fourth studio album, Road to Ruin (1978), in September 1978. The B-side of the UK single \"She's the One\" was released on September 21, 1978. The song was later released as a single in the Netherlands in 1979, and in the U.S. in 1980 by RSO Records from the Times Square soundtrack album. It has since remained one of the band's best known songs.\nHistory\n\"I Wanna Be Sedated\" was written by Joey Ramone. In an interview about the song, Joey explains the chorus:\nMusic video\nThe music video for the song, directed by Bill Fishman, was released in September 1988, about ten years after the song was originally released, to promote the compilation album Ramones Mania. The iconic video features the Ramones sitting at a table (left to right: Johnny, Joey, Marky and Dee Dee), nonchalantly reading and eating generic corn flakes (branded \"Corn Flakes\") while the background hallway erupts into a venue for nuns, acrobats, ballerinas, monsters, cheerleaders, clowns, doctors, fetish nurses, and smoking schoolgirls. The film is intentionally sped up to show the excitement of the background, while the band's actions are in regular motion. This was achieved by having the band members move very slowly, while the crowd moved normally, and then speeding up the film. (Furthermore, one of the video's characters is a young Courtney Love.)\nA still from the video was featured in the liner notes of the band's 1989 album Brain Drain, though the song itself does not appear on that album.\nReception\n\"I Wanna Be Sedated\" was number 145 on the Rolling Stone'''s 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Marky Ramone is the drummer on this track.\nIn 1999, National Public Radio included the song in the \"NPR 100\", in which NPR's music editors sought to compile the one hundred most important American musical works of the 20th century.\nKelefa Sanneh said of the song, \"I loved it because it seemed like the beginning of a tradition, pointing away from all the conventional thing a rock 'n' roll band might do, and pointing toward anything and everything else.\"\nAccording to Alice Cooper, Joey Ramone acknowledged the similarity to Cooper's earlier 1972 song \"Elected,\" explaining that the Ramones listened to a lot of Alice Cooper.\nIn popular culture\nThe song was featured in the official teaser trailer of the 2019 film Spider-Man: Far From Home, after \"Blitzkrieg Bop\" was prominently featured in the film's 2017 predecessor, Spider-Man: Homecoming.\nThe song was featured in the penultimate episode of The Magicians'', which aired on 25 March 2020, sung by most of the cast during a heist operation in a musical episode.\nAt 12:00 am on December 31, 2020, an internet meme began trending on social media that said it was \"2020, 24 hours to go\". This was a reference to the song's opening lyric, \"twenty, twenty, twenty-four hours to go.\"\nCertifications"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720834991.4441, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834991.2694, "finish": 1720834991.4441, "ip": "", "conv_id": "07de332b46de4651aa2f9410a88cbfab", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "who has won the most olympic medals in curling", "output": [["who has won the most olympic medals in curling", "Title: World Junior Curling Championships\n\nPassage: The World Junior Curling Championships are an annual curling bonspiel featuring the world's best curlers who are 21 years old or younger. The competitions for both men and women occur at the same venue. The men's tournament has occurred since 1975 and the women's since 1988. Since curling became an Olympic sport in 1998, the World Junior Curling Championship of the year preceding the Olympic Games have been held at the site of the curling tournament for the upcoming Games.\nThe event had its origins with the Ontario Junior Masters Curling Championship, which began in 1968 and, at first, mostly consisted of teams in the Greater Toronto Area. Eventually the event was renamed to the International Junior Masters Bonspiel and began attracting teams from other countries. In 1973, the tournament was sponsored by Uniroyal, and was renamed the Uniroyal International Junior Curling Championship. It became the World Junior Curling Championship in 1974, before being officially sanctioned in 1975. The tournament was held every year at the East York Curling Club before being sanctioned. Uniroyal remained the event's sponsor until 1990.\nQualification\nTeams qualify to participate in the World Junior Curling Championships through final rankings at the previous year's championships or through the World Junior B Curling Championships, which includes any teams that did not already qualify for the championships via the previous year's rankings. The top three teams of this tournament qualify for the main tournament, and the bottom three teams from the main tournament are then demoted to the B tournament. This type of tournament also existed from 2001 to 2004, where two teams were awarded qualification spots through the B tournament instead of three.\nPreviously, teams that did not qualify through rankings qualified through regional qualifiers. In the Europe Zone, teams participated in the European Junior Curling Challenge, in which the winner advances to the World Championships. In the Pacific Zone, teams participated in the Pacific-Asia Junior Curling Championships, in which the winner advances to the World Championships.\nSummary\nMen's\nSkips listed below nation.\nWomen's\nAll-time Medal Tables\nAs of 2024 Championships\nMen\nWomen\nOverall"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720834991.4441, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720834991.2694, "finish": 1720834991.4441, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cb1e6cf640c14b0883a8b0e15a2fb8fe", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "who has won the most olympic medals in curling", "output": [["who has won the most olympic medals in curling", "Title: List of multiple Olympic medalists\n\nPassage: In cases where two or more athletes have the same number of total medals, the first tiebreaker is the number of gold medals, followed by the number of silver medals. If the tied athletes have exactly the same number of gold, silver and bronze medals, the ranking is given as a tie and the athletes are listed in order first by career years and then alphabetically by surname.\nTimeline\nThis is a progressive list of Olympians that have held the record for most medals won. Medals won in the 1906 Intercalated Games are not included. It includes top-three placings in 1896 and 1900, before medals were awarded for top-three placings. All record-holders have competed at Summer Games rather than Winter Games.\nLegend: G = Gold, S = Silver, B = Bronze\nList of most career medals in individual events\nThis list contains only medals won in individual events, so no relays or team events count for this section.\nAthletes with medals in different disciplines\nIn the Summer and Winter Games\nGillis Grafstr\u00f6m became the first person to win a medal in the same event in Summer and Winter Olympics, winning figure skating golds at the 1920 Olympics and at the first Winter Olympics in 1924.\nEddie Eagan became the first person to win a medal in the Winter Olympics and in the Summer Olympics in different events. He is the only Summer and Winter medalist to win gold medals in different events.\nChrista Luding-Rothenburger is the only person to win medals at the Winter and Summer Games in the same year. (This feat is no longer possible due to the staggering of the Winter and Summer Olympic years). She is also the first person to win medals in successive Winter and Summer Games or vice versa.\nClara Hughes is the first person to win multiple medals in both Summer and Winter Games and holds the highest number of medals of any Olympian to win medals in both the Summer and Winter Games.\nIn the Summer Games\nSwimming and water polo\nOthers in Summer Games\n(athletics and rugby)\n(athletics and tennis)\n(indoor volleyball and beach volleyball)\n(swimming and fencing)\nCarl Schuhmann (GER) (gymnastics and wrestling)\n(cycling and rowing)\n(swimming and handball)\n(shooting and sculpture)\n(swimming and architecture)\n(rowing and sailing)\n(gymnastics and shooting)\n(gymnastics and shooting)\n(gymnastics and equestrian)\nFritz Hofmann (GER) (gymnastics and athletics)\n(gymnastics and tug of war). But one of these at the unofficial 1906 Summer Olympics\n(modern pentathlon and fencing)\nIn the Winter Games\nCross-country skiing and Nordic combined\nOthers in Winter Games\n(biathlon and cross-country skiing)\n(luge and bobsleigh)\n(luge and bobsleigh)\n(long track speed skating and short track speed skating)\n(long track speed skating and short track speed skating)\n(alpine skiing and snowboarding)"]]}
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-{"tstamp": 1721157545.8647, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157500.3534, "finish": 1721157545.8647, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a10566974bf64a639a0a2e18f452b425", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where does jack ryan live in patriot games", "output": [["where does jack ryan live in patriot games", "Title: Clear and Present Danger (film)\n\nPassage: Clear and Present Danger is a 1994 American action thriller film directed by Phillip Noyce and based on Tom Clancy's 1989 novel of the same name. It is a sequel to The Hunt for Red October (1990) and Patriot Games (1992) and part of a series of films featuring Clancy's character Jack Ryan. It is the last film version of Clancy's novels to feature Harrison Ford as Ryan and James Earl Jones as Vice Admiral James Greer, as well as the final installment directed by Noyce.\nAs in the novel, Ryan is appointed CIA Acting Deputy Director (Intelligence) (DDI), and discovers he is being kept in the dark by colleagues who are conducting a covert war against a drug cartel in Colombia, apparently with the approval of the President. The film was released in theaters in the United States on August 3, 1994, and was a critical and financial success, earning over $215 million worldwide.\nPlot\nA United States Coast Guard vessel intercepts and boards an American yacht in the Caribbean Sea. Evidence indicates the ship's owner and passengers, American businessman Peter Hardin and his family, were murdered by the occupying Colombian crew. CIA analyst Jack Ryan learns that Hardin was laundering money for the South American Cali Cartel. Drug lord Ernesto Escobedo ordered Hardin's murder for embezzling millions in drug profits. U.S. President Bennett, Hardin's close friend, discreetly authorizes National Security Advisor James Cutter to initiate covert operations in Colombia to destroy the cartel.\nRyan is appointed acting Deputy Director of Intelligence when Admiral James Greer undergoes treatment for pancreatic cancer. Ryan requests Congress increase funding to support Colombians fighting the drug cartels, giving his assurance there is no U.S. military involvement. Ryan is unaware that Cutter will use the funds to assemble RECIPROCITY, a special forces team recruited by CIA operative John Clark, and aided by Robert Ritter, the CIA Deputy Director of Operations. President Bennett sends Ryan to negotiate with the Colombian government to allow the United States to seize Escobedo's assets, including $650 million hidden in off-shore accounts. Escobedo's intelligence officer, Colonel F\u00e9lix Cortez, secretly orders the Cartel to ambush Ryan's convoy. Jack survives, though several colleagues are killed, including Dan Murray and FBI Director Emile Jacobs. Cortez's identity is ascertained after he murders Jacobs\u2019 secretary, Moira, who was an unwitting informant."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157545.8647, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157500.3534, "finish": 1721157545.8647, "ip": "", "conv_id": "75413ee24f4c4634a9e24f5f3d9e0ebb", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "where does jack ryan live in patriot games", "output": [["where does jack ryan live in patriot games", "Title: Patriot Place\n\nPassage: Patriot Place is an open-air shopping center owned by The Kraft Group built around Gillette Stadium, the home of the New England Patriots and New England Revolution. It is located in Foxborough, Massachusetts.\nThe first phase opened in fall 2007, which included the construction of a small strip mall. The second phase is built on what were parking lots for Gillette Stadium, which in turn were previously the site of the now-demolished Foxboro Stadium. Phase two of Patriot Place is also home to one of the first locations for Showcase Cinemas' Cinema de Lux brand.\nTenants\nBass Pro Shops built their first New England location at the Patriot Place; it was among the first stores to be announced and opened in the complex. It includes an animatronic shooting range and overlooks a small swamp that was once part of a larger one that the store was built over with land reclamation. Many events are held there as well.\nPatriot Place has various restaurants, such as CBS Sporting Club, which features American cuisine. Around the complex are over 125 HDTVs showing games by the Patriots, as well as classic programs once shown on CBS. The restaurant shut down after the 2022-23 New England Patriots season.\nCinema de Lux was launched by Showcase Cinemas with a location at the complex. It is aimed more upmarket with an American-style restaurant and a live music venture known as Showcase Live. The theater has 14 screens. There is also a bar and restaurant inside.\nThe Brigham and Women's/Mass General Health Care Center is a four-story outpatient health care center and a joint venture between Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, both located in Boston.\nRenaissance Hotel is a four-star hotel.\nPatriots Hall of Fame\nOpened in September 2008, the Patriots Hall of Fame presented by RTX is a museum that includes the New England Patriots Hall of Fame and displays the history of the New England Patriots \u2013 including historical wins and losses, memorabilia, the game-worn uniforms and equipment of famous players such as Tom Brady, Rob Gronkowski, Wes Welker, Julian Edelman, Ty Law, Randy Moss, John Hannah, Mike Haynes, and Andre Tippett, the six Super Bowl trophies among other trophies and awards, such as the numerous Lamar Hunt trophies."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157625.6267, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157560.5123, "finish": 1721157625.6267, "ip": "", "conv_id": "94d1ca9fc0974c0da94d651819a8d26c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "calpurnia son name in to kill a mockingbird", "output": [["calpurnia son name in to kill a mockingbird", "Title: Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry\n\nPassage: Hammer Logan: David Logan's older brother and Cassie's uncle. Hammer is a black veteran of World War I, during which he nearly lost his left leg. He moved to Chicago before the events of the novel to escape Mississippi's virulent racism. He is portrayed as having a hair-trigger temper, which is something a black man \"isn't allowed to have\" in the Jim Crow South. He provides financial assistance to the rest of the family several times, which they secretly appreciate.\nOther characters\nT.J. Avery: A manipulative, foolish 14-year-old who somehow became Stacey's friend, he is disliked by the other Logan children. T.J. is a troublemaker who is responsible for getting Mama fired from her job. At the end of the novel, T.J. is severely beaten by R.W. and Melvin Simms, who break his ribs and later his jaw, and nearly gets lynched for a crime he did not commit. Papa saves him for the time being by setting fire to his own land.\nClaude Avery: T.J.\u2019s younger brother, who is good friends with his classmate Christopher-John Logan. He is quieter than T.J. but often gets blamed for T.J.\u2019s troublemaking.\nThe Averys: T.J.'s family, including his father, his mother, and his seven younger siblings, four of whom are preschoolers. They are friends with the Logans.\nJoe Avery: The father of the Avery children, a sharecropper who works on Harlan Granger's land.\nFannie Avery: The mother of the Avery children, a maid who works in Harlan Granger's house.\nThe Berrys: A black family that lives in Smellings Creek. They don't often appear in the area, but they do occasionally attend the local black church.\nJohn Henry Berry: A black veteran of World War I and lynching victim.\nBeacon Berry: John Henry's brother.\nSamuel Berry: The uncle of John Henry and Beacon. All three men are dragged out of their house and burned alive. Samuel and Beacon survive the attack, but are badly burned.\nCharlie Simms: The father of the Simms children. Though his family is as poor as the Logans, he believes they are racially superior.\nJeremy Simms: A white boy who is friends with the Logan children. He doesn't abuse black people, unlike the rest of his family, even though he\u2019s harassed both at home and school for associating with the Logan children.\nR.W. and Melvin Simms: Jeremy's elder brothers, who both dropped out of school years ago. They are white supremacists who are part of the lynch mob that nearly kills T.J., but they do help their father and brother fight the fire set by Cassie's father soon afterwards.\nLillian Jean Simms: Jeremy\u2019s elder sister. She sees herself as racially superior to the Logans, although they are no wealthier. She treats Cassie rudely but is later outsmarted and humiliated by the younger girl, who pretends to befriend her."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1721157625.6267, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1721157560.5123, "finish": 1721157625.6267, "ip": "", "conv_id": "02b63d892c1d4a8bb07a96381ec655d4", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "calpurnia son name in to kill a mockingbird", "output": [["calpurnia son name in to kill a mockingbird", "Title: 2542 Calpurnia\n\nPassage: 2542 Calpurnia, provisionally designated , is a carbonaceous high-albedo asteroid from the outer regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 20 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 11 February 1980, by American astronomer Edward Bowell at Anderson Mesa Station, Flagstaff, United States. The asteroid was named after Julius Caesar's wife, Calpurnia.\nOrbit and classification\nCalpurnia orbits the Sun in the outer main-belt at a distance of 2.9\u20133.4\u00a0AU once every 5 years and 6 months (2,024 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.07 and an inclination of 5\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic. In 1954, a first precovery was taken at the Palomar Observatory in California, extending the body's observation arc by 26 prior to its official discovery observation at Anderson Mesa.\nPhysical characterization\nDiameter and albedo\nAccording to the surveys carried out by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite IRAS and NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer with its subsequent NEOWISE mission, Calpurnia measures 27.6 and 20.854 kilometers in diameter, and its surface has an albedo of 0.0639 and 0.102, respectively. It has an absolute magnitude of 11.6.\nNear-infrared spectroscopic observations, however, gave a higher albedo of 0.15 with a subsequently shorter diameter of 18 kilometers. Calpurnia has a featureless surface with up to 60% amorphous magnesium pyroxenes that might explain the high albedo for an carbonaceous outer-belt asteroid.\nLightcurve\nAs of 2017, no rotational lightcurve has been obtained. The body's spectral type, as well as its rotation period and shape remain unknown.\nNaming\nThis minor planet was named after Calpurnia, the last wife of Julius Caesar. The approved naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 8 April 1982 ()."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-e9e3e06c-8598-43df-99d0-97c790fc0f67.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-e9e3e06c-8598-43df-99d0-97c790fc0f67.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 6bf98927cf9a45effdbcfb038393ad4339858a84..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-e9e3e06c-8598-43df-99d0-97c790fc0f67.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720825081.7731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825017.977, "finish": 1720825081.7731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "268243b4ed944c75bcd5d1eb0f2dd2e5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720825081.7731, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720825017.977, "finish": 1720825081.7731, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6bf86480fb79451b8126ada69b0b1b2f", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-efd05f91-eedc-4081-a648-199cad63070c.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-efd05f91-eedc-4081-a648-199cad63070c.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index b18bc2dab991655206ec87731356f9e4c13f21d8..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-efd05f91-eedc-4081-a648-199cad63070c.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720588848.0705, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588819.6868, "finish": 1720588848.0705, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8196f5c3bfc54430952d2e0464505651", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720589032.0387, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588993.8716, "finish": 1720589032.0387, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5115c0330d3749b68505a4ac887e67b8", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720589032.0387, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720588993.8716, "finish": 1720589032.0387, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ff8fcbfd18cb43e5be3da94392348d0c", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720589111.1452, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720589079.1168, "finish": 1720589111.1452, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c0494f30e0144dc4b678586d18c698cb", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (M)\n\nPassage: M"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720589162.6253, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720589139.5577, "finish": 1720589162.6253, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6b862973bbac4da9967abafdce266c4c", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720589209.7548, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720589193.7276, "finish": 1720589209.7548, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e35756094ac14c04bbda81cb2cdd1c8f", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Memory-level parallelism\n\nPassage: In computer architecture, memory-level parallelism (MLP) is the ability to have pending multiple memory operations, in particular cache misses or translation lookaside buffer (TLB) misses, at the same time.\nIn a single processor, MLP may be considered a form of instruction-level parallelism (ILP). However, ILP is often conflated with superscalar, the ability to execute more than one instruction at the same time, e.g. a processor such as the Intel Pentium Pro is five-way superscalar, with the ability to start executing five different microinstructions in a given cycle, but it can handle four different cache misses for up to 20 different load microinstructions at any time.\nIt is possible to have a machine that is not superscalar but which nevertheless has high MLP.\nArguably a machine that has no ILP, which is not superscalar, which executes one instruction at a time in a non-pipelined manner, but which performs hardware prefetching (not software instruction-level prefetching) exhibits MLP (due to multiple prefetches outstanding) but not ILP. This is because there are multiple memory operations outstanding, but not instructions. Instructions are often conflated with operations.\nFurthermore, multiprocessor and multithreaded computer systems may be said to exhibit MLP and ILP due to parallelism\u2014but not intra-thread, single process, ILP and MLP. Often, however, we restrict the terms MLP and ILP to refer to extracting such parallelism from what appears to be non-parallel single threaded code."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-f089ed4d-481f-4061-b925-017064222bf7.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-f089ed4d-481f-4061-b925-017064222bf7.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e496fc61f6faa7eac7f2d93c9c82f1127fff6f9b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-f089ed4d-481f-4061-b925-017064222bf7.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722098982.8647, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098963.3329, "finish": 1722098982.8647, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c3942a19474244b2af9410010137ddc5", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "output": [["I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nAbstract: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098982.8647, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098963.3329, "finish": 1722098982.8647, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9be04d011a674aa294ea02daeb9e52cc", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "output": [["I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nAbstract: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098991.3025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098990.8351, "finish": 1722098991.3025, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e8e52bb0f07409c9158a840694a4542", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nAbstract: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a single task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is unclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity (STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking. This makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are constantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we introduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding tasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the benchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive benchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding method dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to converge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to provide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with open-source code and a public leaderboard at https://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098991.3025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098990.8351, "finish": 1722098991.3025, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5f883970de07426fa02201dac3ac2aa5", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "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: MTEB: Massive Text Embedding Benchmark\n\nAbstract: Text embeddings are commonly evaluated on a small set of datasets from a single task not covering their possible applications to other tasks. It is unclear whether state-of-the-art embeddings on semantic textual similarity (STS) can be equally well applied to other tasks like clustering or reranking. This makes progress in the field difficult to track, as various models are constantly being proposed without proper evaluation. To solve this problem, we introduce the Massive Text Embedding Benchmark (MTEB). MTEB spans 8 embedding tasks covering a total of 58 datasets and 112 languages. Through the benchmarking of 33 models on MTEB, we establish the most comprehensive benchmark of text embeddings to date. We find that no particular text embedding method dominates across all tasks. This suggests that the field has yet to converge on a universal text embedding method and scale it up sufficiently to provide state-of-the-art results on all embedding tasks. MTEB comes with open-source code and a public leaderboard at https://github.com/embeddings-benchmark/mteb."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098996.4579, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "text-embedding-3-large", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098995.9516, "finish": 1722098996.4579, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b7be6e554c144c4a95da1aeab8832613", "model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "prompt": "Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: OctoPack: Instruction Tuning Code Large Language Models\n\nAbstract: Finetuning large language models (LLMs) on instructions leads to vast performance improvements on natural language tasks. We apply instruction tuning using code, leveraging the natural structure of Git commits, which pair code changes with human instructions. We compile CommitPack: 4 terabytes of Git commits across 350 programming languages. We benchmark CommitPack against other natural and synthetic code instructions (xP3x, Self-Instruct, OASST) on the 16B parameter StarCoder model, and achieve state-of-the-art performance among models not trained on OpenAI outputs, on the HumanEval Python benchmark (46.2% pass@1). We further introduce HumanEvalPack, expanding the HumanEval benchmark to a total of 3 coding tasks (Code Repair, Code Explanation, Code Synthesis) across 6 languages (Python, JavaScript, Java, Go, C++, Rust). Our models, OctoCoder and OctoGeeX, achieve the best performance across HumanEvalPack among all permissive models, demonstrating CommitPack's benefits in generalizing to a wider set of languages and natural coding tasks. Code, models and data are freely available at https://github.com/bigcode-project/octopack."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722098996.4579, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722098995.9516, "finish": 1722098996.4579, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fdcc02b7c13149f5b224557bb13d9441", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "output": [["Please find me the paper on training code large language models to follow instructions via git commits.", "Title: A Systematic Evaluation of Large Language Models of Code\n\nAbstract: Large language models (LMs) of code have recently shown tremendous promise in completing code and synthesizing code from natural language descriptions. However, the current state-of-the-art code LMs (e.g., Codex (Chen et al., 2021)) are not publicly available, leaving many questions about their model and data design decisions. We aim to fill in some of these blanks through a systematic evaluation of the largest existing models: Codex, GPT-J, GPT-Neo, GPT-NeoX-20B, and CodeParrot, across various programming languages. Although Codex itself is not open-source, we find that existing open-source models do achieve close results in some programming languages, although targeted mainly for natural language modeling. We further identify an important missing piece in the form of a large open-source model trained exclusively on a multi-lingual corpus of code. We release a new model, PolyCoder, with 2.7B parameters based on the GPT-2 architecture, which was trained on 249GB of code across 12 programming languages on a single machine. In the C programming language, PolyCoder outperforms all models including Codex. Our trained models are open-source and publicly available at https://github.com/VHellendoorn/Code-LMs, which enables future research and application in this area."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-f1980055-2f53-4936-815c-00e216a90a0f.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-f1980055-2f53-4936-815c-00e216a90a0f.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 9b8739c63e4ce3420fd5471b2f10486c43c5d848..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-f1980055-2f53-4936-815c-00e216a90a0f.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720758272.5565, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758119.9625, "finish": 1720758272.5565, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e80e2c2543e34e8d87d02e97f9f7ee2f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is an MLP?", "output": [["What is an MLP?", "Title: Natural gas in Papua New Guinea\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758402.6005, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758402.4643, "finish": 1720758402.6005, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0bb3bc1a717441318d6c68fe580e1275", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "output": [["\u7aef\u5348\u8282\u662f\u4ec0\u4e48\uff1f", "Title: Dongzhi Festival\n\nPassage: The Dongzhi Festival or Winter Solstice Festival () is a traditional Chinese festival celebrated during the Dongzhi solar term (winter solstice), which falls between December 21 and December 23."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758436.9211, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758436.7677, "finish": 1720758436.9211, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b13bb20d1e1e48bcad9aceb092e419e3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "output": [["I am searching for a very remote island withouth any human inhabitants", "Title: Diogo Rodrigues\n\nPassage: Rodrigues Island"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758456.4533, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758456.3088, "finish": 1720758456.4533, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d60d94be695a45bd9e6c6972efc512b6", "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: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758482.0546, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758481.9071, "finish": 1720758482.0546, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cbf43c0e676744f2b8858ee6c617c9fa", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "when did goku first go super saiyan 4", "output": [["when did goku first go super saiyan 4", "Title: Mewtwo\n\nPassage: In anime and related media"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758489.8163, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758489.6708, "finish": 1720758489.8163, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5dad069357534b3f91ad43405994a3c7", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what was an economic effect of world war ii", "output": [["what was an economic effect of world war ii", "Title: The Second World War (book series)\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758510.357, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758510.2098, "finish": 1720758510.357, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4e9d54594da044caade85569098d33ca", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who played john coffey in the movie the green mile", "output": [["who played john coffey in the movie the green mile", "Title: The Green Mile\n\nPassage: The Green Mile may refer to:\nThe Green Mile (novel), a 1996 serial novel by Stephen King\nThe Green Mile (film), a 1999 film based on the Stephen King novel, starring Tom Hanks and Michael Clarke Duncan"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758525.3795, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758525.1304, "finish": 1720758525.3795, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4a5a1f47610848629461c1a17b35cfd2", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who is the girl that played darlene in roseanne", "output": [["who is the girl that played darlene in roseanne", "Title: List of Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996 TV series) characters\n\nPassage: Zelda Spellman"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758552.7373, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758552.5946, "finish": 1720758552.7373, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f7e30323930f46538c58db0e892276cb", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who is the current defence against the dark arts teacher", "output": [["who is the current defence against the dark arts teacher", "Title: Outsider (comics)\n\nPassage: The New 52"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758743.8164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758563.518, "finish": 1720758743.8164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1dc7dc790ab643329752cbbca8c6e5ef", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who sings the pokemon theme song season 1", "output": [["who sings the pokemon theme song season 1", "Title: List of Pok\u00e9mon theme songs\n\nPassage: This is a list of Pok\u00e9mon theme songs that includes the media and release information, which is original Japanese and English dubbed opening and ending themes of Pok\u00e9mon anime. They are as follows.\nJapanese theme songs\nOpening themes\nEnding themes\nSpecial themes\nPok\u00e9mon Get\u2606TV\nWeekly Pok\u00e9mon Broadcasting Station\nPocket Monsters Best Wishes!\nPocket Monsters Sun & Moon\nPocket Monsters (2019)\nPocket Monsters Legends: Arceus anime\nPok\u00e9mon\u2606Sunday\nPok\u00e9mon Smash!\nMeet Up at the Pok\u00e9mon House?\nEnglish theme songs\nOpening themes\nEnding themes"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720758743.8164, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720758563.518, "finish": 1720758743.8164, "ip": "", "conv_id": "402eb7542501441ca72bd8b3f273c641", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who sings the pokemon theme song season 1", "output": [["who sings the pokemon theme song season 1", "Title: Pok\u00e9mon Theme\n\nPassage: \"Pok\u00e9mon Theme\" is a fast-paced pop rock song with continuous male vocals intermixed with backup vocal accompaniment that also sings the chorus: \"Pok\u00e9mon! (Gotta catch \u2019em all!\").\nLyrics\nThe song is sung in first person by an aspiring Pok\u00e9mon trainer. He is determined to become the very best, \"like no one ever was\". To do this, he intends to travel far and wide, catching new Pok\u00e9mon. He exhorts the listener to follow him, knowing they will encounter a lot of challenges, but promising to surmount them all together, and that they will learn a lot of new things along the way.\nHistory\nSiegler and Loeffler wrote the lyrics to the song while Siegler (previously a bassist for bands including Todd Rundgren's Utopia and Hall & Oates) produced the track, also playing keyboards, bass, and programming drum machines. David Rolfe, the vocalist for later themes of the series, played the guitar while Jason Paige provided the vocals. Although the theme song premiered on the debut episode \"Pok\u00e9mon, I Choose You!\" on September 8, 1998, Jason Paige was called back again in 1999 to produce an extended version of the theme song for the album Pok\u00e9mon 2.B.A. Master.\nAccording to Norman Grossfeld, the then-president of 4Kids Productions, the line \"Gotta catch 'em all!\" was created as a \"tagline for marketing purposes that would also be included in the theme song\". It is derived from the Japanese tagline \"(\u30dd\u30b1\u30e2\u30f3GET\u3060\u305c!, Pok\u00e9mon getto da ze!)\" Furthermore, \"Gotta Catch 'em all!\" came from a series of contenders, which included \"Catch 'em if you can\" (which made it in an earlier version of the theme song). Meanwhile, when first approached about the theme song, Siegler initially saw the show's concept as \"incomprehensible\" before realizing that the series was about friendship. Although he was reluctant at first, he saw the show's potential when he took his son to premiere of the debut episode in Columbus Circle.\nIn November 2005, the internet comedy duo Smosh recorded a video for the song on YouTube. It became the most viewed video on the site before being surpassed by \"The Evolution of Dance\". Afterwards, Smosh's video was removed on YouTube due to a copyright notice. The original video was later reuploaded by fans. Then in 2010, Smosh themselves recreated the video, this time with altered lyrics being critical of the original video being taken down. During the 2012 primary election, Paige himself performed a parody of the song in support of the Republican candidate Ron Paul. In 2015, the song was voted to be part of the annual Dutch Top 2000 radio marathon, after a call-for-action on Facebook went viral within the country. It has since remained in the chart in subsequent years, peaking at number 115 in 2018."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814324.4106, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814324.1615, "finish": 1720814324.4106, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a3f5a73236304bc1a61165c4493535dc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "where is connective tissue found in the body", "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.)"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814461.1549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814460.8645, "finish": 1720814461.1549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "86dfaf8cfdc940539affcc1dd3ec99ff", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "output": [["who sang rip it up and start again", "Title: Nicki Minaj\n\nPassage: "]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814461.1549, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814460.8645, "finish": 1720814461.1549, "ip": "", "conv_id": "27168e3a8efa437d9dfec6a106fc351e", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who sang rip it up and start again", "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."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814578.8921, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814578.6624, "finish": 1720814578.8921, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5d7c5b6728524454b346fbd5f033bb81", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "who grows the most coffee in the world\n\n\n", "output": [["who grows the most coffee in the world\n\n\n", "Title: List of coffee companies\n\nPassage: This is a worldwide list of notable coffee companies that roast or distribute coffee.\nList"]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814578.8921, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814578.6624, "finish": 1720814578.8921, "ip": "", "conv_id": "16cf6013190d46fe8692471fb253c51d", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "who grows the most coffee in the world\n\n\n", "output": [["who grows the most coffee in the world\n\n\n", "Title: Coffee bean\n\nPassage: Roasted beans first sold on retail market (Pittsburgh) \u2013 1865\nImportant spray-drying techniques developed in 1950s, which along with freeze drying are a method to create instant coffee\nDistribution\nBrazil produces about 45% of the world's total coffee exports. The United States imports more coffee than any other nation. As of 2015, Americans consumed approximately 400 million cups of coffee per day, making the United States the leading consumer of coffee in the world.\nCoffee plants grow within a defined area between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, termed the bean belt or coffee belt.\nEtymology\nThe Oxford English Dictionary suggests that the European languages generally appear to have gotten the name from Turkish kahveh, about 1600, perhaps through Italian caff\u00e8. Arab qahwah, in Turkish pronounced kahveh, the name of the infusion or beverage; said by Arab lexicographers to have originally meant \"wine\" or some type of wine, and to be a derivative of a verb-root qahiya \"to have no appetite\". Another common theory is that the name derives from Kaffa Province, Ethiopia, where the species may have originated.\nCoffee plant\nThe coffee tree averages from in height. As the tree gets older, it produces less fruit and slowly loses any pest- and disease-resistance. The coffee beans come from the seeds which contained in fruits from trees and shrubs naturally grown in African forests. Humans produce coffee by roasting, grinding and brewing the green coffee beans.\nCoffee plants are often grown in rows spaced apart depending on the desired density chosen by the farmer. Some farmers plant other trees, such as shade trees or other cash-crop trees, such as orange trees around them or plant the coffee on the sides of hills, because they need specific conditions to flourish. Ideally, Arabica coffee beans are grown at temperatures between and Robusta between and receive between of rainfall per year. More rain is needed at the beginning of the season when the fruit is developing and less later in the season as it ripens.\nTwo lesser known species grown for consumption are Coffea liberica and Coffea racemosa.\nProcessing\nWhen the fruit is ripe, it is almost always handpicked, using either \"selective picking\", where only the ripe fruit is removed, or \"strip-picking\", where all of the fruit is removed from a limb all at once. Selective picking is often used to produce higher quality coffee because the cherries are picked at their ripest. Strip-picking is indiscriminate and will harvest unripe, ripe, and over-ripe fruit. To improve quality after strip-picking, the harvest must be sorted.\nTwo methods are primarily used to process coffee berries. The first, \"wet\" or \"washed\" process, has historically usually been carried out in Central America and areas of Africa. The flesh of the cherries is separated from the seeds and then the seeds are fermented \u2013 soaked in water for about two days. This softens the mucilage, which is a sticky pulp residue that is still attached to the seeds. Then this mucilage is washed off with water."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814609.296, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814609.073, "finish": 1720814609.296, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2f7b345888aa42a8a6611a58d0d0b103", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is final season of game of thrones", "output": [["what is final season of game of thrones", "Title: Game of Thrones\n\nPassage: Game of Thrones is an American fantasy drama television series created by David Benioff and for HBO. It is an adaptation of A Song of Ice and Fire, a series of fantasy novels by , the first of which is A Game of Thrones. The show premiered on HBO in the United States on April 17, 2011, and concluded on May 19, 2019, with 73 episodes broadcast over eight seasons.\nSet on the fictional continents of Westeros and Essos, Game of Thrones has a large ensemble cast and follows several story arcs throughout the course of the show. The first major arc concerns the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros through a web of political conflicts among the noble families either vying to claim the throne or fighting for independence from whomever sits on it. The second major arc focuses on the last descendant of the realm's deposed ruling dynasty, who has been exiled to Essos and is plotting to return and reclaim the throne. The third follows the Night's Watch, a military order defending the realm against threats from beyond Westeros's northern border."]]}
-{"tstamp": 1720814609.296, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720814609.073, "finish": 1720814609.296, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e83b187bea7a49e3baa1c8cecf654811", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "what is final season of game of thrones", "output": [["what is final season of game of thrones", "Title: Game of Thrones\n\nPassage: After the Thrones\nAfter the Thrones was a live aftershow during which hosts Andy Greenwald and Chris Ryan discussed episodes of the series. It aired on HBO Now, the Monday following each season six episode. The Game of Thrones Live Concert Experience, a North American 28-city orchestral tour which performed the series's soundtrack with composer Ramin Djawadi, began in February 2017 and concluded in April 2017. A second tour followed in 2018 across cities in Europe and North America.\nHome media extras\nEach season's Blu-ray and DVD set contains several short still motion animated sequences titled Histories and Lore, narrated by the cast, in character, as they detail events in the history of Westeros. For the seventh season, this was to include the animated prequel series Game of Thrones: Conquest & Rebellion, illustrated in a different animation style than previous videos. The series focuses on Aegon Targaryen's conquest of the Seven Kingdoms of Westeros. A week after the series finale, HBO released a behind-the-scenes documentary entitled Game of Thrones: The Last Watch. The program documented the production of season 8 along with read-throughs and interviews with the cast.\nSuccessors\nIn May 2017, after years of speculation about possible successor series, HBO commissioned Max Borenstein, Jane Goldman, Brian Helgeland, Carly Wray, and Bryan Cogman to develop five individual Game of Thrones successor series; the writers were to be working individually with , who also co-wrote two of the scripts. and David Benioff said that they would not be involved with any of the projects.\nMartin said that all the concepts under discussion were prequels, although he believes the term \"successor show\" applies better to these projects, as they are not Game of Thrones spin-offs in the traditional sense. He ruled out Robert's Rebellion (the overthrow of Daenerys's father by Robert Baratheon) as a possible idea and revealed that some may be set outside Westeros. In September 2018, speaking about the four projects (i.e. not about Goldman's project), HBO president of programming Casey Bloys said that some of them had been abandoned completely, while others remained as possibilities for the future; Martin said that: \"at least two of them are solidly based on material in Fire & Blood\". In May 2019, Martin stated that two of the projects were still in the script stage, but were \"edging closer\". In April 2019, Cogman confirmed his prequel would not be moving forward.\nIn January 2021, an adult animated spin-off series was announced to be in development at HBO Max. In July 2021, two more animated series were in development at HBO Max, with one being set in Yi Ti, a nation in Essos loosely based on Imperial China. The working title is The Golden Empire."]]}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-f6ba69f5-3698-47bd-a9c9-6e7d01f7b183.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-f6ba69f5-3698-47bd-a9c9-6e7d01f7b183.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index b806a455975a2d584877bce7e3d4d5addf4b1dd7..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-f6ba69f5-3698-47bd-a9c9-6e7d01f7b183.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722215123.3475, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722215030.1552, "finish": 1722215123.3475, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b880cd1aaffe4635a9a874a524dbc9ad", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "output": [["Which test was devised to determine whether robots can think?", "Turing test\n\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"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722215363.5313, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722215294.4646, "finish": 1722215363.5313, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0f64d8834083443eb1e5056136c407cf", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "output": [["I am looking for a paper to help me deal with data constraints as I scale up my language model.", "Title: Scaling Data-Constrained Language Models\n\nAbstract: The current trend of scaling language models involves increasing both parameter count and training dataset size. Extrapolating this trend suggests that training dataset size may soon be limited by the amount of text data available on the internet. Motivated by this limit, we investigate scaling language models in data-constrained regimes. Specifically, we run a large set of experiments varying the extent of data repetition and compute budget, ranging up to 900 billion training tokens and 9 billion parameter models. We find that with constrained data for a fixed compute budget, training with up to 4 epochs of repeated data yields negligible changes to loss compared to having unique data. However, with more repetition, the value of adding compute eventually decays to zero. We propose and empirically validate a scaling law for compute optimality that accounts for the decreasing value of repeated tokens and excess parameters. Finally, we experiment with approaches mitigating data scarcity, including augmenting the training dataset with code data or removing commonly used filters. Models and datasets from our 400 training runs are freely available at https://github.com/huggingface/datablations."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1722215876.1594, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722215696.0911, "finish": 1722215876.1594, "ip": "", "conv_id": "23d8dc8442bf4fc981a7bf5fda306293", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does `if name == \"__main__\"` mean in Python? \nPossible Duplicate:\nWhat does do? \n\nI have wrote scripts in Python for quite a while now and I study more of Python as I need it. When reading other people's code I meet if name == \"__main__\": construct quite often. \nWhat is it good for?\n\nA: Basically, \nThere's a distinction between the \"main\" script file and external files which were imported or referenced in another way. If the script is the \"main\" script then the special variable __name__ will equal \"__main__\".\nYou can use this to protect the \"execution\" code from the classes and variables the script has. This enables you to import a script and use classes and variables without actually running that script's main code if it has any.\nSee also: What does if name == \u201cmain\u201d: do?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722216948.2312, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722216946.0179, "finish": 1722216948.2312, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8b101c33bee34a56a87b31f4e2326200", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "what is the difference between of and on?", "output": [["what is the difference between of and on?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: difference between progress ON and progress OF I'm still confused even after studying the prepositions on and of. Can you please help me and explain to me the difference of the ff:\n\n \n*\n \n*progress ON your project\n \n*progress OF your project\n\nWhen should I use on? of?\n\nA: This depends upon the wider context in which the sentence is used. The two examples you have given do not, on their own, make sense.\nIf the progress is the subject then of, if you are the subject then on.\nHave you made any progress on your project?\nWhat is the progress of your project?\nI have made progress on my project\nThere has been progress on the project\nThe progress of the project is satisfactory\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_individual-fe4d16ef-87e3-4cc7-9359-810c7e4c2285.jsonl b/data/retrieval_individual-fe4d16ef-87e3-4cc7-9359-810c7e4c2285.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8f4e496edd4b9beff1151460831f5466a2da3328..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_individual-fe4d16ef-87e3-4cc7-9359-810c7e4c2285.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,38 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722099126.611, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099094.7275, "finish": 1722099126.611, "ip": "", "conv_id": "396ddfdde0fe4bcfbde07af9d7512fcc", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the meaning of life, the universe and everything?", "output": [["What is the meaning of life, the universe and everything?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why is '42' the meaning of life? According to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, 42 is the Answer to The Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything. \nIs it ever explained, in canon1, why the answer to the meaning of life is 42?\n1 - Book, Film, TV series or Radio series.\n\nA: This is one of those questions, that if you have to ask you can't understand the answer. \nTo expand; in the recorded history of the question only a single being (a human from the planet earth) has ever truly understood the meaning, the understanding was immediately followed by the destruction of the planet Earth. This gets rather complex in that understanding has not yet occurred in our timeline. This is self-evident as our planet has not yet been destroyed, and we are still asking the question. \nWe do have enough knowledge to define when the answer will be available/understandable. One need just skip over to the planning office and see when the hyperspace bypass is scheduled to begin construction in our area. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099126.611, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099094.7275, "finish": 1722099126.611, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b957c6dff0f94db298eb60ac0cacb623", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "What is the meaning of life, the universe and everything?", "output": [["What is the meaning of life, the universe and everything?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: coffeescript multiline strings compile into multiline strings How come that this string\n\"answer \n to life \n the universe \n and everything\n is\n #{40+2}\n\"\n\ncompiles into\n\" answer to life the universe and everything is \" + (40 + 2) + \"\";\n\nhow can I force coffescript to keep it multiline (keeping string interpolation intact):\n \"answer \\ \n to life \\\n the universe \\\n and everything \\\n is \\\n \"+(40+2)\n\n\nA: Try using the heredoc syntax:\nmyString = \"\"\"\nanswer\nto life\nthe universe\nand everything\nis\n#{40+2}\n\"\"\"\n\nThis converts to this javascript:\nvar myString;\n\nmyString = \"answer\\nto life\\nthe universe\\nand everything\\nis\\n\" + (40 + 2);\n\nThere's not really any point to make it actually be on newlines in the compiled javascript visually, is there?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099285.7194, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099285.5411, "finish": 1722099285.7194, "ip": "", "conv_id": "345a6ee0c290469cb4250c7524a94e2c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "MTEB benchmark", "output": [["MTEB benchmark", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What machine learning benchmarks are out there? What repositories for machine learning benchmarks do you know?\n\nA: Try the UCI Machine Learning Repository\nhttp://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099285.7194, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099285.5411, "finish": 1722099285.7194, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ccdb37d0d2014762b731f0b9f05b8feb", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "MTEB benchmark", "output": [["MTEB benchmark", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: creating an array from a command line option (python::optparse) There is a python script which reads a benchmark name from command line like this:\n-b benchname1\n\nThe code for this perpose is:\nimport optparse\nimport Mybench\nparser = optparse.OptionParser()\n# Benchmark options\nparser.add_option(\"-b\", \"--benchmark\", default=\"\", help=\"The benchmark to be loaded.\")\nif options.benchmark == 'benchname1':\n process = Mybench.b1\nelif options.benchmark == 'benchname2':\n process = Mybench.b2\nelse:\n print \"no such benchmark!\"\n\nwhat I want to do is to create a an array of benchmarks for this command line:\n-b benchname1 benchname2\n\nSo the \"process\" should be an array that is:\nprocess[0] = Mybench.b1\nprocess[1] = Mybench.b2\n\nIs there any suggestion for that?\nThanx\n\nA: If you have Python 2.7+, you can use argparse module instead of optparse.\nimport argparse\n\nparser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Process benchmarks.')\nparser.add_argument(\"-b\", \"--benchmark\", default=[], type=str, nargs='+',\n help=\"The benchmark to be loaded.\")\n\nargs = parser.parse_args()\nprint args.benchmark\n\nSample run of the script -\n$ python sample.py -h\nusage: sample.py [-h] [-b BENCHMARK [BENCHMARK ...]]\n\nProcess benchmarks.\n\noptional arguments:\n -h, --help show this help message and exit\n -b BENCHMARK [BENCHMARK ...], --benchmark BENCHMARK [BENCHMARK ...]\n The benchmark to be loaded.\n\n$ python sample.py -b bench1 bench2 bench3\n['bench1', 'bench2', 'bench3']\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099353.2886, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099353.1183, "finish": 1722099353.2886, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2e8085bc60a04cb4b33fd95ad8875bea", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Does \"Verb + \u3053\u3068\u3067\" mean \"by + verb in the gerund\"?", "output": [["Does \"Verb + \u3053\u3068\u3067\" mean \"by + verb in the gerund\"?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does it mean by ask a question? Should the \"ask\" be in an \"ing\" form? Consider the following conversation,\n\nA: I think I can ask a question on Stack Exchange.\nB: What do you mean by ask a question?\n\nShould I convert the verb into a gerund? It seems that the verb differs from the gerund, and if B does the conversion, it doesn't quote A exactly. Something changes.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099353.2886, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099353.1183, "finish": 1722099353.2886, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ca650679483e49f697ea4daecce494bb", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Does \"Verb + \u3053\u3068\u3067\" mean \"by + verb in the gerund\"?", "output": [["Does \"Verb + \u3053\u3068\u3067\" mean \"by + verb in the gerund\"?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does it mean by ask a question? Should the \"ask\" be in an \"ing\" form? Consider the following conversation,\n\nA: I think I can ask a question on Stack Exchange.\nB: What do you mean by ask a question?\n\nShould I convert the verb into a gerund? It seems that the verb differs from the gerund, and if B does the conversion, it doesn't quote A exactly. Something changes.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099421.093, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099420.8973, "finish": 1722099421.093, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b9a198dab5e940f89321cf067153c19c", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Would the One Ring even work for anyone but Sauron?", "output": [["Would the One Ring even work for anyone but Sauron?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Would the One Ring work if it was worn on the toe instead of the finger? Would the One Ring work if it was worn on someone\u2019s toe instead of their finger?\n\nA: I say yes.\nThere was nothing to suggest that the ring's power was limited to working when it was on someones finger.\nBeing that ring can change in size to suit the bearer\n\nThough he had found out that the thing needed looking after; it did\n not seem always of the same size or weight; it shrank or expanded in\n an odd way, and might suddenly slip off a finger where it had been\n tight.\u2019\n\n\n\n\nSo , if one were to put it on their toe, you could only assume that it would change size to fit the toe. \nAs for it working while being worn on the toe, a toe an appendage just like a finger and there is nothing to show in the LOTR that it shouldn't.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099421.093, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099420.8973, "finish": 1722099421.093, "ip": "", "conv_id": "caa4bc94a6a0416b902d0835e4fc0eb7", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Would the One Ring even work for anyone but Sauron?", "output": [["Would the One Ring even work for anyone but Sauron?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why did Sauron keep Mount Doom alive after forging of the One Ring? Sauron knew that the One Ring could be destroyed only in Mount Doom, where it was forged. From Sauron's perspective, no one would think about destroying the One Ring. But if someone did, then Mount Doom would be the only place to do so.\nWhy did he keep Mount Doom active? Wasn't the risk too high?\n\nA: \n\"Sauron never considered that somebody would do anything other than\n try to claim it\"\n\nIn my opinion, a more phylosophical approach would apply better, as implied by Anthony Grist. A complementary reason for the ring's creation was to corrupt and therefore get valuable information. Sauron in the end represents corruption itself and not necessarily the effects of it. It wasn't even thinkable for it to be destroyed. Who would even dare to think and try to destroy it, apart from an \"innocent\" and pure hobbit. It is an amazing parallelism of modern society's egoism an concentrated power i.e. political leaderships etc.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099446.887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099446.7444, "finish": 1722099446.887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6c8fc249b1e44d07a73749ee0f7a6121", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Could Earth one day look like Coruscant?", "output": [["Could Earth one day look like Coruscant?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Asimov's Foundation Epic the 'granddaddy of sci fi'? What are the big influences that Asimov's Foundation Saga has had on other science fiction franchises?\n\nA: Coruscant == Trantor. OK, not exactly identical, but it was a MAJOR influence, and is acknowledged.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099446.887, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099446.7444, "finish": 1722099446.887, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0b0228892be84b7386e3a27029830e1c", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Could Earth one day look like Coruscant?", "output": [["Could Earth one day look like Coruscant?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Planet farthest from Coruscant? What is the planet farthest from Coruscant in the Star Wars Galaxy? I understand that this information might not be available. If it isn't, please tell me.\n\nA: Assuming the opening scrawl is correct, I'd say that the single farthest Earth-like planet that we know of (from Coruscant) would be Earth. \n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099485.062, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099484.9093, "finish": 1722099485.062, "ip": "", "conv_id": "77f826a9c101417a9748764655bc97dd", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Could cryonics make you immortal?", "output": [["Could cryonics make you immortal?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: How likely that Frank Poole could be revived after 1000 years in space How likely is it both scientifically and medically that Frank Poole could have been found in space and revived as in 3001: The Final Odyssey, 1000 years after Hal jettisoned his body from the Discovery?\n\nA: Scientifically and medically, Frank Poole had no chance of survival. Space is not a cryogenic freezer. In fact due to the vacuum your body would start outgassing, and your cells would be frozen in a crystalline structure that would do massive damage both as they froze and as they thawed. Even if you are in a space suit, you would eventually be subject to these issues - you would just survive a little longer until the suit's batteries/electronics/seals failed.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099485.062, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099484.9093, "finish": 1722099485.062, "ip": "", "conv_id": "9d6b887f957b42208b83256926260398", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Could cryonics make you immortal?", "output": [["Could cryonics make you immortal?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the title of that novel where an immortal Disciple of Jesus becomes a disillusioned mercenary? If you are immortal (and jaded) you could always put your talents to work. Maybe make a little extra dough on the side...\nI heard about it in 1983 or 1984. I always meant to get around to reading it, but now I can't remember the name of it.\n\nA: Is it possible you are thinking of the Casca series of novels? The first one (published in 1979) is called The Eternal Mercenary. Casca is the Roman soldier who stabbed Jesus Christ with a spear on Golgotha, cursed to immortality.\nWikipedia article here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casca_(series)\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099496.1916, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099496.0234, "finish": 1722099496.1916, "ip": "", "conv_id": "de3d5dc944dc4c95832b8468cd7a1c4f", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Cryonics", "output": [["Cryonics", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: How likely that Frank Poole could be revived after 1000 years in space How likely is it both scientifically and medically that Frank Poole could have been found in space and revived as in 3001: The Final Odyssey, 1000 years after Hal jettisoned his body from the Discovery?\n\nA: Scientifically and medically, Frank Poole had no chance of survival. Space is not a cryogenic freezer. In fact due to the vacuum your body would start outgassing, and your cells would be frozen in a crystalline structure that would do massive damage both as they froze and as they thawed. Even if you are in a space suit, you would eventually be subject to these issues - you would just survive a little longer until the suit's batteries/electronics/seals failed.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099496.1916, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099496.0234, "finish": 1722099496.1916, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bf263afa4bab470d8931b26522667404", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Cryonics", "output": [["Cryonics", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: How did Captain America survive freezing? At the end of Captain America: The First Avenger, Steve Rogers crashes in the Arctic and is frozen there. He is rescued 70 years later and brought back to life.\nSince cryonics is not currently possible, is there an in-universe explanation on how he survived freezing? Was it that cryonics is possible in the Avenger universe or there is something related to Captain America's super-soldier status?\n\nA: This harks back the The Avengers #4 (March 1964) where Captain America is defrosted, and they presume that he only survives due to the super-soldier serum from Project Rebirth.\nThe answer then is: He's a super-soldier.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099521.02, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099520.9236, "finish": 1722099521.02, "ip": "", "conv_id": "0a6b734a65214eaca776d1780f9de26b", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Can we one day choose when to die?", "output": [["Can we one day choose when to die?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: \"The right to life\" and \"the right to die\" Why do we say \"the right to life\" but \"the right to die\", instead of \"the right to live\" or \"the right to death\"?\n\nA: \"The right to death\" is not logical, as we can only have the \"right\" to anything if it can be theoretically taken away from us. Death cannot, unfortunately, be avoided. \"The right to die\" is different however, as it refers to the choice about whether to die now, or a bit later.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099521.02, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099520.9236, "finish": 1722099521.02, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ddaafc732e174a6eae3ead762ee053c0", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Can we one day choose when to die?", "output": [["Can we one day choose when to die?", "Math Stackexchange\n\nQ: Is there a way to simulate any $n$-sided die using a fixed set of die types for all $n$? I am assuming that we can increase the number of dice based on $n$, but they have to be $k$-sided, $k\\ge3$.\nWhen I say die types, I mean that we are allowed to use non-standard dice such as non-transitive dice, but we cannot create more die types as we increase $n$. i.e. we have a fixed set of dice from which we can choose from, and we can choose as many as necessary from this set for a given $n$, but we are restricted to choose from this set of dice.\nAlso, all numbers from $1$ to $n$ should be equally likely in our simulation.\n\nA: Hint:\n\n\n*\n\n*You can simulate a $n$-sided die with only fair-coin throws (a biased coin would also work, but with more throws).\n\n*Throw a coin $k = \\lceil\\log_2 n\\rceil$ times and create a number $x$ in $\\{0,1,\\ldots, 2^k-1\\}$.\n\n*If $x+1 > n$ then repeat the previous bullet.\n\n*The expected number of throws is $\\Theta(\\log n)$.\n\n\nI hope this helps $\\ddot\\smile$\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099540.6627, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099540.5144, "finish": 1722099540.6627, "ip": "", "conv_id": "07dc759796b8488685358db7d2a4af7a", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Can aging be cured?", "output": [["Can aging be cured?", "Gaming Stackexchange\n\nQ: Stop aging in sims 2 Besides the elixir of life, is there any option (or maybe a cheat) to stop my sims from aging?\nI'm playing Open for Business and would like to make a lot of money (simoleons) before he is retired and he is aging too fast.\n\nA: According to the information found here, complete the following steps to disable aging for your sim.\n\n\n*\n\n*Press Ctrl+Shift+C to display the console window\n\n*Enter \"aging off\"\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099540.6627, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099540.5144, "finish": 1722099540.6627, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2e9698eae9b64ee7bf848b52deba8060", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Can aging be cured?", "output": [["Can aging be cured?", "Gaming Stackexchange\n\nQ: How can I cure sickness? I made the mistake of eating a Kobold corpse and got sick. My health stopped increasing over time as a result of this, and it lasted for quite a long time. That character is long dead now, but it would still be useful to know for future reference how exactly I should go about curing sickness.\nDoes sickness wear off over time? If not, how can I cure it?\n\nA: To complement izzy's answer, praying indeed cures sickness, as well as eating curaria mancox herbs. Sickness does wear off over time too, but it takes ages and it's not worth the wait. Finally, one possible effect of drinking from pools is curing sickness.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099550.5025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099550.3419, "finish": 1722099550.5025, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c7ce3308cf434162940a5d90c61122ad", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Pokemon", "output": [["Pokemon", "Gaming Stackexchange\n\nQ: How do I find Pok\u00e9mon? After catching my starter Pok\u00e9mon I've not encountered any more Pok\u00e9mon, is it entirely random when Pok\u00e9mon pop up or is there some kind of indicator for me to be on the lookout for?\n\nA: If you look around on the map you will be able to see all the different icons such as Pok\u00e9mon Stop and Pok\u00e9mon Gyms. If you look closely you will be able to see a \"leaf-effect\", this indicates that there are Pok\u00e9mon in that area. \nGo there and you will encounter Pok\u00e9mon.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099550.5025, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099550.3419, "finish": 1722099550.5025, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ef8ca57982ab4bd6ab908e441ae804c6", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Pokemon", "output": [["Pokemon", "Gaming Stackexchange\n\nQ: Are Pokemon in Pokemon Go similar to Pokemon in the original games? I was wondering if Pokemon in Pokemon GO have something in common with original Pokemons from the original games (Pokemon Blue/Red, FireRed/LeafGreen etc).\nFor example, moves and levels from original game can be found in Pokemon database's Pokedex. But do Pokemon in Pokemon GO have same/similar moves and levels as Pokemon in original games?\n\nA: The moves and Pokemon are very similar to the original Blue, Red and Yellow games. The dynamics about how to evolve a Pokemon work different though.\nThey will most likely add more Pokemon and moves as time goes on to keep players engaged with the game. You can find a list of all the Pokemon available, which will show the moves for some Pokemon as well. I guess this data will get updated as players find out about the details of all the Pokemon available in the game.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099731.9376, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099731.7483, "finish": 1722099731.9376, "ip": "", "conv_id": "74de1f6a6dc14232b981bfa0976cf8f5", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does `if name == \"__main__\"` mean in Python? \nPossible Duplicate:\nWhat does do? \n\nI have wrote scripts in Python for quite a while now and I study more of Python as I need it. When reading other people's code I meet if name == \"__main__\": construct quite often. \nWhat is it good for?\n\nA: Basically, \nThere's a distinction between the \"main\" script file and external files which were imported or referenced in another way. If the script is the \"main\" script then the special variable __name__ will equal \"__main__\".\nYou can use this to protect the \"execution\" code from the classes and variables the script has. This enables you to import a script and use classes and variables without actually running that script's main code if it has any.\nSee also: What does if name == \u201cmain\u201d: do?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099731.9376, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099731.7483, "finish": 1722099731.9376, "ip": "", "conv_id": "cf4a581487364b9ab26292c06486f60c", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the purpose of __name__? What does __name__ do? I have only seen it paired with __main__ and nothing else.\nI know that the classic if __name__ == __main__: defines the behavior when acting as a package vs running as stand-alone.\nHowever what other usages are there for __name__?\n\nA: __name__ is \"__main__\" if you're executing the script directly. If you're importing a module, __name__ is the name of the module.\nfoo.py:\nprint(__name__)\n\nbar.py \nimport foo\n\nRun the scripts:\n$ python foo.py\n__main__\n$ python bar.py \nfoo\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099822.5682, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099813.1749, "finish": 1722099822.5682, "ip": "", "conv_id": "329ed390d2b242cb88218bb0f3856f65", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does `if name == \"__main__\"` mean in Python? \nPossible Duplicate:\nWhat does do? \n\nI have wrote scripts in Python for quite a while now and I study more of Python as I need it. When reading other people's code I meet if name == \"__main__\": construct quite often. \nWhat is it good for?\n\nA: Basically, \nThere's a distinction between the \"main\" script file and external files which were imported or referenced in another way. If the script is the \"main\" script then the special variable __name__ will equal \"__main__\".\nYou can use this to protect the \"execution\" code from the classes and variables the script has. This enables you to import a script and use classes and variables without actually running that script's main code if it has any.\nSee also: What does if name == \u201cmain\u201d: do?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099822.5682, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099813.1749, "finish": 1722099822.5682, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1da9463c12a549f29b5b743d97197072", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == \"__main__\"`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the difference between Freidman mse and mse? I'm looking into a GradientBoostingClassifier in sklearn. Then, I found there are 3 kind of criterion. Friedman mse, mse, mae.\nthe descriptions provided by sklearn are:\n\nThe function to measure the quality of a split. Supported criteria are \u201cfriedman_mse\u201d for the mean squared error with improvement score by Friedman, \u201cmse\u201d for mean squared error, and \u201cmae\u201d for the mean absolute error. The default value of \u201cfriedman_mse\u201d is generally the best as it can provide a better approximation in some cases.\n\nI can't understand what is different?\nWho's gonna let me know?\nthanks!\n\nA: I've provided a full answer in this link due to the convenience of writing TeX. However, it resumes in the fact that this splitting criterion allow us to take the decision not only on how close we're to the desired outcome (which is what MSE does), but also based on the probabilities of the desired k-class that we're going to find in the region l or in the region r (by considering a global weight w1*w2 / (w1 + w2)). I strongly recommend you to check the above link for a full explanation. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099878.8484, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099878.6764, "finish": 1722099878.8484, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5383a90ec3ef4bf48141ada5642aa8c6", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does `if name == \"__main__\"` mean in Python? \nPossible Duplicate:\nWhat does do? \n\nI have wrote scripts in Python for quite a while now and I study more of Python as I need it. When reading other people's code I meet if name == \"__main__\": construct quite often. \nWhat is it good for?\n\nA: Basically, \nThere's a distinction between the \"main\" script file and external files which were imported or referenced in another way. If the script is the \"main\" script then the special variable __name__ will equal \"__main__\".\nYou can use this to protect the \"execution\" code from the classes and variables the script has. This enables you to import a script and use classes and variables without actually running that script's main code if it has any.\nSee also: What does if name == \u201cmain\u201d: do?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099878.8484, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099878.6764, "finish": 1722099878.8484, "ip": "", "conv_id": "4e3ce22b5e5f401e9bae73896de8d3d6", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the difference between Freidman mse and mse? I'm looking into a GradientBoostingClassifier in sklearn. Then, I found there are 3 kind of criterion. Friedman mse, mse, mae.\nthe descriptions provided by sklearn are:\n\nThe function to measure the quality of a split. Supported criteria are \u201cfriedman_mse\u201d for the mean squared error with improvement score by Friedman, \u201cmse\u201d for mean squared error, and \u201cmae\u201d for the mean absolute error. The default value of \u201cfriedman_mse\u201d is generally the best as it can provide a better approximation in some cases.\n\nI can't understand what is different?\nWho's gonna let me know?\nthanks!\n\nA: I've provided a full answer in this link due to the convenience of writing TeX. However, it resumes in the fact that this splitting criterion allow us to take the decision not only on how close we're to the desired outcome (which is what MSE does), but also based on the probabilities of the desired k-class that we're going to find in the region l or in the region r (by considering a global weight w1*w2 / (w1 + w2)). I strongly recommend you to check the above link for a full explanation. \n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099889.327, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099889.2421, "finish": 1722099889.327, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8dc25c1971f842da9537c1b5a02e1bed", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does `if name == \"__main__\"` mean in Python? \nPossible Duplicate:\nWhat does do? \n\nI have wrote scripts in Python for quite a while now and I study more of Python as I need it. When reading other people's code I meet if name == \"__main__\": construct quite often. \nWhat is it good for?\n\nA: Basically, \nThere's a distinction between the \"main\" script file and external files which were imported or referenced in another way. If the script is the \"main\" script then the special variable __name__ will equal \"__main__\".\nYou can use this to protect the \"execution\" code from the classes and variables the script has. This enables you to import a script and use classes and variables without actually running that script's main code if it has any.\nSee also: What does if name == \u201cmain\u201d: do?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722099889.327, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722099889.2421, "finish": 1722099889.327, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c9e2d1f30c034ec9a7b8efb1c7aab323", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "output": [["What's the purpose of `if __name__ == '__main__'`?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the purpose of __name__? What does __name__ do? I have only seen it paired with __main__ and nothing else.\nI know that the classic if __name__ == __main__: defines the behavior when acting as a package vs running as stand-alone.\nHowever what other usages are there for __name__?\n\nA: __name__ is \"__main__\" if you're executing the script directly. If you're importing a module, __name__ is the name of the module.\nfoo.py:\nprint(__name__)\n\nbar.py \nimport foo\n\nRun the scripts:\n$ python foo.py\n__main__\n$ python bar.py \nfoo\n\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100153.4488, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100153.2517, "finish": 1722100153.4488, "ip": "", "conv_id": "c1945c5bcf584fcaacd6aec713f9f1e3", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "In what order should the Star Wars movies be watched?", "output": [["In what order should the Star Wars movies be watched?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: In what order should the Star Wars movies be watched? I've never sat through an entire Star Wars film. I'm aware that Episodes I through III are technically prequels, but I feel strange watching three new films before three older films.\nDo I need to watch the new ones then the old ones?\n\nA: No. Don't watch the new ones. In fact, ignore them. Just watch the old ones (A New Hope, Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi). \nSee if you can find ones that have been unadulterated. The originals were brilliant. The recently released DvDs have been altered to retcon in stuff they screwed up in the prequels. \nOr you can watch the old ones and watch the prequels, but just be ready to be thoroughly disappointed by how very bad the prequels are in comparison to the originals.\nAlternately, if you promise not to run screaming when you discover how much the prequels suck. You can watch them in order and instead of disappointment, you may experience a certain level of gratification as they steadily get better.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100153.4488, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100153.2517, "finish": 1722100153.4488, "ip": "", "conv_id": "6ff1796fcccc4bfb80d5062839d44a66", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "In what order should the Star Wars movies be watched?", "output": [["In what order should the Star Wars movies be watched?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: In what order should the Star Wars movies be watched? I've never sat through an entire Star Wars film. I'm aware that Episodes I through III are technically prequels, but I feel strange watching three new films before three older films.\nDo I need to watch the new ones then the old ones?\n\nA: No. Don't watch the new ones. In fact, ignore them. Just watch the old ones (A New Hope, Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi). \nSee if you can find ones that have been unadulterated. The originals were brilliant. The recently released DvDs have been altered to retcon in stuff they screwed up in the prequels. \nOr you can watch the old ones and watch the prequels, but just be ready to be thoroughly disappointed by how very bad the prequels are in comparison to the originals.\nAlternately, if you promise not to run screaming when you discover how much the prequels suck. You can watch them in order and instead of disappointment, you may experience a certain level of gratification as they steadily get better.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100182.1137, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100181.9518, "finish": 1722100182.1137, "ip": "", "conv_id": "10ef462bbc904a89abfe778386c37c86", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "How could we build bacta tanks?", "output": [["How could we build bacta tanks?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: How common are bacta tanks? I've come across the idea of bacta tanks in the extended universe, and my memory from the films is sketchy. As most of my reading about them has been from, well, back ground reading and not from any novels detailing them and that I don't think they're covered in detail in the film, I'd like to know, how common are they? Especially during the Great Jedi Purge?\n\nA: Bacta was invented by the Vratix on the planet Thyferra in antiquity, with the galaxy at large learning of its properties around 4,100 BBY (src: The Essential Atlas). So by the time of ABY it became fairly widely used, though not 100% ubiquitous due to supply constraint.\nBacta was used for a while, but for a time shared the market with Kolto.\nWhen Kolto supplies collapsed, Bacta became fully widely used.\nBacta was synthetic, but mostly produced on 1 planet, until the events of X-Wing novel \"The Bacta War\", when the Vratix finally exported the process off-planet.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100182.1137, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100181.9518, "finish": 1722100182.1137, "ip": "", "conv_id": "56e8724acf4e4cdd85408f3edcf16594", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "How could we build bacta tanks?", "output": [["How could we build bacta tanks?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: How common are bacta tanks? I've come across the idea of bacta tanks in the extended universe, and my memory from the films is sketchy. As most of my reading about them has been from, well, back ground reading and not from any novels detailing them and that I don't think they're covered in detail in the film, I'd like to know, how common are they? Especially during the Great Jedi Purge?\n\nA: Bacta was invented by the Vratix on the planet Thyferra in antiquity, with the galaxy at large learning of its properties around 4,100 BBY (src: The Essential Atlas). So by the time of ABY it became fairly widely used, though not 100% ubiquitous due to supply constraint.\nBacta was used for a while, but for a time shared the market with Kolto.\nWhen Kolto supplies collapsed, Bacta became fully widely used.\nBacta was synthetic, but mostly produced on 1 planet, until the events of X-Wing novel \"The Bacta War\", when the Vratix finally exported the process off-planet.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100209.8903, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100209.7431, "finish": 1722100209.8903, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b418550fa0184c0a8fc71fabc9811f20", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Why does Anakin almost kill Padme?", "output": [["Why does Anakin almost kill Padme?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why Did Anakin Skywalker Believe that Turning to the Dark Side of the Force Would Save Padm\u00e9? Just as the question asks: Why did Anakin come to believe that Padm\u00e9 could be saved if he embraced the Dark side of the Force? Padm\u00e9 clearly didn't believe it. Why was Anakin so driven to save Padm\u00e9 through the dark side?\n\nA: When Anakin tried to follow the Light side by initially ignoring his prophetic dreams about his mother, the end result was that he got there too late to save her. When he started to have similar dreams about Padm\u00e9, and especially when he was unable to foresee the fate of his child, he became fully susceptible to Sidious/Palpatine's stories about Force powers that could cheat death.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100209.8903, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100209.7431, "finish": 1722100209.8903, "ip": "", "conv_id": "8b697d4c82ac4152b950717091b73167", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Why does Anakin almost kill Padme?", "output": [["Why does Anakin almost kill Padme?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Did Ahsoka know Padme was pregnant? Basically what the title says.\nIt's unclear throughout TCW if Ahsoka ever knew about Anakin and Padme. It's very likely that, since Anakin had told Rex about Padme in season 7, Anakin was going to tell Ahsoka but was never able to. Since she's so young throughout TCW, it's never clear if she picks up on Anakin and Padme's relationship.\nAhsoka never interacts with Padme in season 7. But at Padme's funeral, her body was made to still appear pregnant. So - did Ahsoka ever know that Padme was pregnant? If she did, she'd probably have a guess as to the father.\n\nA: Ahsoka absolutely knew Anakin and Padme were in a relationship, based on her comments to Padme during the Forces of Destiny short \"Unexpected Company\", when she showed up on a \"mission\" that Padme and Anakin were supposedly going on which was really them getting away for some private time.\nIt isn't, however, known if Ahsoka knew they were married, or that Padme was pregnant.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100348.3449, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100348.1764, "finish": 1722100348.3449, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b1ff1254e7484dcd84f06eb3b312a444", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Among Star Wars, Harry Potter, LoTR, which is the best?", "output": [["Among Star Wars, Harry Potter, LoTR, which is the best?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why we don't see guns in Harry Potter World? They can shield bullets ? and a shot seems to be much stronger than a expelliarmus\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100348.3449, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100348.1764, "finish": 1722100348.3449, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f040c439203145959ab171b41fbfdbc8", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Among Star Wars, Harry Potter, LoTR, which is the best?", "output": [["Among Star Wars, Harry Potter, LoTR, which is the best?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: What is the official position of JKR franchise on \"canonicity\" of facts in Harry Potter universe? We know that there are multiplicity of different works/sources in Harry Potter Universe:\n\n\n*\n\n*HP books 1-7\n\n*Associated JKR books (Beedle the Bard, QTTA, HP Prequel story, Magical Beasts)\n\n*HP Movies 1-7\n\n*JKR interviews\n\n*jkrowling.com information\n\n*Pottermore\n\n*Harry Potter amusement parks\n\n*Possibly, other non-JKR franchise works, though to the best of my knowledge none exist as of now and none are planned.\n\n*assorted fan fiction :)\nGiven that the universe is pretty big/complex, with many sources, it's not surprising that there already are discrepancies between different sources (the obvious ones between books and movies; ones between different books; and ones between books and JKR interviews).\nTo manage such discrepancies, other universes frequently employ official or unofficial canon rules (as an example, Star Wars has multiple layers of canon, whereas Dr Who officially has no canon).\nIs there an official position of JKR/Harry Potter franchise on HP Universe canon structure?\nNOTE: \"No canon\" and \"No current official position\" are two different answers.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100372.4247, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100372.2629, "finish": 1722100372.4247, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b34e496273e14359af046323536ed778", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "Why do they destroy the ring in LoTR?", "output": [["Why do they destroy the ring in LoTR?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why must Voldemort's body be killed last? Voldemort has horcruxes to grant him \"immortality\" (more like regeneration). But if his body is destroyed, why wouldn't destroying the other horcruxes afterwards not kill him just as easily? Why does the order matter?\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722100372.4247, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722100372.2629, "finish": 1722100372.4247, "ip": "", "conv_id": "bb26a329f12a4bb296b0fb3cdf81b3e5", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "Why do they destroy the ring in LoTR?", "output": [["Why do they destroy the ring in LoTR?", "Scifi Stackexchange\n\nQ: Why Was the One Ring Always Worn On the Forefinger? Is there any significance to the ring-bearers, who actually put the One Ring on, wearing the One Ring on their forefingers rather than on their ring fingers in the LOTR movies? Is this a stylistic choice just for the movies or did Tolkien specify the forefinger in the LOTR canon? \nAt first I thought it was because Sauron's finger was so much larger than a mere man's, but in Fellowship of the Ring the ring shrinks in Isildur's hand to become what appears to be an average size.\nThis may or may not be related, but I noticed that Aragorn wears his snake ring on his forefinger as well. \nI wasn't able to find anything addressing the wearing of the One Ring at either the LOTR Wikia or The Tolkien Gateway. \n\nA: Frodo's \"third finger was missing\" after Gollum bit off the Ring, according to the books (RotK). This wouldn't be the forefinger, regardless of how you count the fingers, so I assume it was a stylistic choice for the movies.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 3fc5983a070a9b9b16584f190f8f7404c07e6617..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-10105ede-85b5-42e8-ad90-5452f9a84847.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721312668.704, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["text-embedding-3-large", "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "03c9e332f23248e1b112bd9b15573b02", "0_model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "0_prompt": "who won the battle of trafalgar", "0_output": [["who won the battle of trafalgar", "Title: Order of battle at the Battle of Trafalgar\n\nPassage: British fleet\nThe table below shows the British vessels as they were deployed just prior to engagement. HMS Africa, somewhat detached to the north due to a combination of weather and a missed signal during the night, was supposed to have been fourth from last, in the lee column. The rest of the ships-of-the-line were divided into two columns, with the weather column forming the northern flank and the lee column the southern flank. The enemy line had been sailing north to south in front of the wind. Just as the battle was beginning they turned individually anticlockwise, wore ship, and came into the wind, hoping to bear down on Nelson. The order of British ships in the table is the one of that moment. Prior to closing with the enemy, they were in a single line, and after engagement, the ships manoeuvred to assume the best firing positions. The British fleet of the battle consisted of 33 warships, 27 of which were ships of the line. During the battle the frigates (which had been the force observing Cadiz) and smaller vessels acted in support to the fleet, relaying messages and towing ships but did not engage. When Collingwood took command after Nelson's death he transferred to Euralyus as his own flagship, the Royal Sovereign, was badly damaged.\nFranco-Spanish fleet\nJust before the engagement the French and Spanish ships of the line had been sailing north to south. After wearing, the order of sailing was reversed, so that the former head was now the rear. During the battle itself the entire line broke into small units and individual ships. The combined fleet consisted of 40 vessels with 18 French ships of the line and 15 Spanish ships of the line.\nLosses\nBelow is a graph of the percentage of casualties plotted for each ship along the three battle columns. The graph is a construct only. The losses were incurred throughout the entire battle and after, most while the ships were not actually in that order. The order in the graph is shown as a convenience.\nThree columns and a separate ship are shown on the horizontal axis, which represents units of conventional distance between ship positions. All units are assumed to be the same. There are three origin points, one for the beginning of each column and the Africa, which was not in the three.\nThe vertical axis shows percentage of casualties per ship. For example, casualties for the Victory are plotted at 20%. A casualty is someone who was known to have been wounded, someone who was known to have been killed, or someone missing in action and presumed drowned. The percentage is the ratio of casualties to ship's complement multiplied by 100. Casualties continued over the next few weeks as enemy crews rebelled, retook their ships, and were subdued. The graph covers only the main battle on the first day."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "823650ec28ec49a29295162dc95474f4", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "who won the battle of trafalgar", "1_output": [["who won the battle of trafalgar", "Title: Order of battle at the Battle of Trafalgar\n\nPassage: A square rigged ship cannot sail within 6 points (67.5 degrees) either side of the wind. If the wind is coming from the north, the closest it could sail would be ENE or WNW. In order to travel in that direction, it must \"fall off,\" or move to an angle with the wind on one side or the other, a \"tack.\" A ship tacks back and forth against the wind, or \"beats,\" each tack earning it some \"headway\". However, because of the huge distance a square-rigger had to travel before it could fill its sails again, tacking would only be done in a dire emergency; where speed of manoeuvre outweighed the enormous risk of being caught in irons. By far the most common way of working to windward was wearing round (gybing).\nIn addition, sailing with the wind directly aft (\"abaft\") or directly on either side (\"abeam\") was difficult and inefficient. Sails with the wind in those directions do not fill. The wind must be allowed only from the quarters. At those angles the sails fill and there is a component of force in the desired direction. If the wind is directly abeam, the ship must fall off or close up. The ship may sail on either side of a wind directly astern. A manoeuvre similar to coming about is used to move the wind from one side to another: wearing. The helm is put over, the sails go limp, they are adjusted to fill on the other side. The ship does not have to rotate as far, so the manoeuvre is less disruptive.\nWind is everything to a sailing vessel. It cannot move anywhere without it (is \"becalmed\"). If the wind is too great the sails may have to be shortened to present less area, a procedure call \"reefing.\" In a storm the ship must sail close to the wind or have it close astern. As the waves are generally coming in with the wind, a ship sailing close into the wind generally cuts them perpendicularly and only pitches; i.e., drops into the troughs and rises on the crests. A ship with the storm wind abeam is struck longitudinally and rolls treacherously, running a risk of capsizing. To avoid that risk the captain must run before the wind. All directions are evaluated with regard to the wind. The side of a ship toward the wind is called the \"weather\" or \"upwind\" side; away, the \"lee\" or \"downwind\" side (refer to Windward and leeward)."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index edaef560e9863c96e12b4d476bce6c078fa7cd62..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-42af94dc-3953-4d82-b4db-358bba06087a.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721352126.4117, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["text-embedding-3-large", "text-embedding-004"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "96b5fb73451943ea8b0ab7bf7e8c26a9", "0_model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "0_prompt": "Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "0_output": [["Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "Title: Leveraging Pre-trained Checkpoints for Sequence Generation Tasks\n\nAbstract: Unsupervised pre-training of large neural models has recently revolutionized Natural Language Processing. By warm-starting from the publicly released checkpoints, NLP practitioners have pushed the state-of-the-art on multiple benchmarks while saving significant amounts of compute time. So far the focus has been mainly on the Natural Language Understanding tasks. In this paper, we demonstrate the efficacy of pre-trained checkpoints for Sequence Generation. We developed a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model that is compatible with publicly available pre-trained BERT, GPT-2 and RoBERTa checkpoints and conducted an extensive empirical study on the utility of initializing our model, both encoder and decoder, with these checkpoints. Our models result in new state-of-the-art results on Machine Translation, Text Summarization, Sentence Splitting, and Sentence Fusion."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "a7e9fd24b6a74f3e82d08b83946a162d", "1_model_name": "text-embedding-004", "1_prompt": "Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "1_output": [["Looking for a paper that explores the use of existing pre-trained NLP models to initialize a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model.", "Title: Leveraging Pre-trained Checkpoints for Sequence Generation Tasks\n\nAbstract: Unsupervised pre-training of large neural models has recently revolutionized Natural Language Processing. By warm-starting from the publicly released checkpoints, NLP practitioners have pushed the state-of-the-art on multiple benchmarks while saving significant amounts of compute time. So far the focus has been mainly on the Natural Language Understanding tasks. In this paper, we demonstrate the efficacy of pre-trained checkpoints for Sequence Generation. We developed a Transformer-based sequence-to-sequence model that is compatible with publicly available pre-trained BERT, GPT-2 and RoBERTa checkpoints and conducted an extensive empirical study on the utility of initializing our model, both encoder and decoder, with these checkpoints. Our models result in new state-of-the-art results on Machine Translation, Text Summarization, Sentence Splitting, and Sentence Fusion."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352161.1319, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["text-embedding-3-large", "text-embedding-004"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "8c41d8dd4a44482681bfaadd48343e1a", "0_model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "0_prompt": "Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "0_output": [["Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "Title: Misspelling Oblivious Word Embeddings\n\nAbstract: In this paper we present a method to learn word embeddings that are resilient to misspellings. Existing word embeddings have limited applicability to malformed texts, which contain a non-negligible amount of out-of-vocabulary words. We propose a method combining FastText with subwords and a supervised task of learning misspelling patterns. In our method, misspellings of each word are embedded close to their correct variants. We train these embeddings on a new dataset we are releasing publicly. Finally, we experimentally show the advantages of this approach on both intrinsic and extrinsic NLP tasks using public test sets."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "e20bdda167e04c2bb0bc43a2ae8d693a", "1_model_name": "text-embedding-004", "1_prompt": "Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "1_output": [["Seeking research that introduces embeddings mapping misspelled words close to their correct forms.", "Title: Misspelling Oblivious Word Embeddings\n\nAbstract: In this paper we present a method to learn word embeddings that are resilient to misspellings. Existing word embeddings have limited applicability to malformed texts, which contain a non-negligible amount of out-of-vocabulary words. We propose a method combining FastText with subwords and a supervised task of learning misspelling patterns. In our method, misspellings of each word are embedded close to their correct variants. We train these embeddings on a new dataset we are releasing publicly. Finally, we experimentally show the advantages of this approach on both intrinsic and extrinsic NLP tasks using public test sets."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
-{"tstamp": 1721352228.1102, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["text-embedding-3-large", "text-embedding-004"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "4403240a5eee409f8bb04c13a0d834ab", "0_model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "0_prompt": "A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "0_output": [["A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "Title: Non-Autoregressive Neural Machine Translation\n\nAbstract: Existing approaches to neural machine translation condition each output word on previously generated outputs. We introduce a model that avoids this autoregressive property and produces its outputs in parallel, allowing an order of magnitude lower latency during inference. Through knowledge distillation, the use of input token fertilities as a latent variable, and policy gradient fine-tuning, we achieve this at a cost of as little as 2.0 BLEU points relative to the autoregressive Transformer network used as a teacher. We demonstrate substantial cumulative improvements associated with each of the three aspects of our training strategy, and validate our approach on IWSLT 2016 English-German and two WMT language pairs. By sampling fertilities in parallel at inference time, our non-autoregressive model achieves near-state-of-the-art performance of 29.8 BLEU on WMT 2016 English-Romanian."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "cadb72c8337a40f4828c033175e2a4ee", "1_model_name": "text-embedding-004", "1_prompt": "A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "1_output": [["A paper proposing a non-autoregressive machine translation method that matches Transformers with significant speedup.", "Title: Non-Autoregressive Translation with Layer-Wise Prediction and Deep Supervision\n\nAbstract: How do we perform efficient inference while retaining high translation quality? Existing neural machine translation models, such as Transformer, achieve high performance, but they decode words one by one, which is inefficient. Recent non-autoregressive translation models speed up the inference, but their quality is still inferior. In this work, we propose DSLP, a highly efficient and high-performance model for machine translation. The key insight is to train a non-autoregressive Transformer with Deep Supervision and feed additional Layer-wise Predictions. We conducted extensive experiments on four translation tasks (both directions of WMT'14 EN-DE and WMT'16 EN-RO). Results show that our approach consistently improves the BLEU scores compared with respective base models. Specifically, our best variant outperforms the autoregressive model on three translation tasks, while being 14.8 times more efficient in inference."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-479009f8-8879-4a72-a504-3324722048c7.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-479009f8-8879-4a72-a504-3324722048c7.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index d909619be5f70f6a18e2bf1d72ecf4846f19d4f8..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-479009f8-8879-4a72-a504-3324722048c7.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721055214.607, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "f5f3ffd86f18430fbac1bfb856c24164", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "0_output": [["when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "Title: John Steinbeck\n\nPassage: Of Mice and Men was a drama about the dreams of two migrant agricultural laborers in California. Steinbeck, on vacations to Mexico, witnessed sold-out theater troupes with often poor and illiterate workers consisting of the audience. As such, Steinbeck chose to write Of Mice and Men with a stage play in mind. It was critically acclaimed and Steinbeck's 1962 Nobel Prize citation called it a \"little masterpiece\".\nIts stage production was a hit, starring Wallace Ford as George and Broderick Crawford as George's companion, the mentally childlike, but physically powerful itinerant farmhand Lennie. Steinbeck refused to travel from his home in California to attend any performance of the play during its New York run, telling director George S. Kaufman that the play as it existed in his own mind was \"perfect\" and that anything presented on stage would only be a disappointment. Steinbeck wrote two more stage plays (The Moon Is Down and Burning Bright).\nOf Mice and Men was also adapted as a 1939 Hollywood film, with Lon Chaney Jr. as Lennie (he had filled the role in the Los Angeles stage production) and Burgess Meredith as George. Meredith and Steinbeck became close friends for the next two decades. Another film based on the novella was made in 1992 starring Gary Sinise as George and John Malkovich as Lennie.\nSteinbeck followed this wave of success with The Grapes of Wrath (1939), based on newspaper articles about migrant agricultural workers that he had written in San Francisco. In August 1936, the San Francisco News asked Steinbeck to personally interview multiple families in the impoverished Hoovervilles of the San Joaquin Valley. As Steinbeck visited the slums that hugged the highways across the Central Valley, he was harrowed by what he saw. He talked with multiple families and vowed to make a book depicting their struggles. It is commonly considered his greatest work. According to The New York Times, it was the best-selling book of 1939 and 430,000 copies had been printed by February 1940. In that month, it won the National Book Award, favorite fiction book of 1939, voted by members of the American Booksellers Association. Later that year, it won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was adapted as a film directed by John Ford, starring Henry Fonda as Tom Joad; Fonda was nominated for the best actor Academy Award. Grapes was controversial. Steinbeck's New Deal political views, negative portrayal of aspects of capitalism, and sympathy for the plight of workers, led to a backlash against the author for displaying communist views, especially in his hometown of Salinas. Steinbeck received so many threats that he purchased a handgun for his own safety. Claiming the book both was obscene and misrepresented conditions in the county, the Kern County Board of Supervisors banned the book from the county's publicly funded schools and libraries in August 1939. This ban lasted until January 1941."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "d31a7ad3888a40049d1ed62ccab01116", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "1_output": [["when did john steinbeck write of mice and me", "Title: Of Mice and Men (opera)\n\nPassage: Of Mice and Men is an opera in three acts by the American composer Carlisle Floyd. The English libretto was written by Floyd and is based on the 1937 novella of the same name by John Steinbeck. The opera was composed in 1969.\nHistory\nOf Mice and Men was first performed on January 22, 1970, by the Seattle Opera who revived the original production (with some cast changes) for the 1976/1977 season. The opera has been performed frequently within the United States. The work had its New York debut at the New York City Opera in 1983. In 2003, Albany Records produced a recording of the opera. The opera was performed in the 2011 Opera Australia season, directed by Australian film director Bruce Beresford. Sarasota Opera presented it in 2013. Manitoba Opera and Austin Opera performed it in 2016, and Florida State University Opera performed it in 2019.\nRoles\nSynopsis\nAct 1\nScene 1"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-7632238d-5996-41fb-b512-cbf48c2926f3.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-7632238d-5996-41fb-b512-cbf48c2926f3.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e5da26cb918a503d09b1a0067e271433d70a21b1..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-7632238d-5996-41fb-b512-cbf48c2926f3.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722045876.5674, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["voyage-multilingual-2", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "02e572f482244b96b20618356793134c", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "0_output": [["what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "Title: Brown Girl in the Ring (song)\n\nPassage: 1993 remix Following the successful sales of the compilation album Gold \u2013 20 Super Hits, Frank Farian remixed \"Brown Girl in the Ring\" for a single release in April of 1993 with new lead vocals by Liz Mitchell. The single reached number seven in Denmark and 38 in the UK, while failing to chart in Germany. The single also included a new remix of \"The Calendar Song\". A \"rap version\" with vocals from Marlon B was the B-side to most versions of the 1993 remix single.\n12\" single\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)\" (MCI/BMG 74321 13705 1, 1993)\nSide A\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Funny Girl Club Mix) \u2013 5:45\n\"The Calendar Song (January, February, March...)\" (Remix '93) \u2013 3:24\nSide B\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Club Mix \u2013 Rap Version) \u2013 5:45\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Radio Version) \u2013 3:58\nCD\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)\" (MCI/BMG 74321 13705 2, 1993)\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Radio Version) \u2013 3:58\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Funny Girl Club Mix) \u2013 5:45\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Club Mix \u2013 Rap Version) \u2013 5:45\n\"The Calendar Song (January, February, March...)\" (Remix '93) \u2013 3:24\nRecordings by other artists\nLord Invader, a calypsonian from Trinidad, recorded a version circa 1946\u20131947 in New York. The recording is now part of the Smithsonian Folkways collection and was only released in 2000 on Lord Invader Calypso in New York CD."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "d12025d0f7f841a982b9446c9d429b1e", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "1_output": [["what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "Title: Brown Girl in the Ring (song)\n\nPassage: \"Brown Girl in the Ring\" is a traditional children's song in the islands of the West Indies. Originally said to have originated in Jamaica, as part of the children's game also known as \"Brown Girl in the Ring\". The songs lyrics instruct the game's performance: as a girl enters the ring, formed by children holding hands, and performs a dance.\nThe song became internationally known when it was recorded by Euro-Caribbean vocal group Boney M. in 1978. Originally it was the B-side of their hit \"Rivers of Babylon\" but soon became a hit in its own right and included on their third album, Nightflight to Venus (1978). The song had previously been recorded in 1975 by the group Malcolm's Locks, leading to a dispute over royalties. Bahamian musician Exuma also recorded a version of the song that appears on his 1972 album Reincarnation. The Boney M. version was remixed in 1993 by Frank Farian.\nOrigin\nChildren play ring games in many parts of the world, especially during their pre-teen years. In There's a Brown Girl in the Ring, an anthology of Eastern Caribbean song games by Alan Lomax, J.D. Elder and Bess Lomax Hawes, it is suggested that ring games are a children's precursor to adult courtship."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045879.7255, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "share", "models": ["voyage-multilingual-2", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "02e572f482244b96b20618356793134c", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "0_output": [["what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "Title: Brown Girl in the Ring (song)\n\nPassage: 1993 remix Following the successful sales of the compilation album Gold \u2013 20 Super Hits, Frank Farian remixed \"Brown Girl in the Ring\" for a single release in April of 1993 with new lead vocals by Liz Mitchell. The single reached number seven in Denmark and 38 in the UK, while failing to chart in Germany. The single also included a new remix of \"The Calendar Song\". A \"rap version\" with vocals from Marlon B was the B-side to most versions of the 1993 remix single.\n12\" single\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)\" (MCI/BMG 74321 13705 1, 1993)\nSide A\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Funny Girl Club Mix) \u2013 5:45\n\"The Calendar Song (January, February, March...)\" (Remix '93) \u2013 3:24\nSide B\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Club Mix \u2013 Rap Version) \u2013 5:45\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Radio Version) \u2013 3:58\nCD\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring (Remix '93)\" (MCI/BMG 74321 13705 2, 1993)\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Radio Version) \u2013 3:58\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Funny Girl Club Mix) \u2013 5:45\n\"Brown Girl in the Ring\" (Club Mix \u2013 Rap Version) \u2013 5:45\n\"The Calendar Song (January, February, March...)\" (Remix '93) \u2013 3:24\nRecordings by other artists\nLord Invader, a calypsonian from Trinidad, recorded a version circa 1946\u20131947 in New York. The recording is now part of the Smithsonian Folkways collection and was only released in 2000 on Lord Invader Calypso in New York CD."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "d12025d0f7f841a982b9446c9d429b1e", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "1_output": [["what is the song brown girl in the ring about", "Title: Brown Girl in the Ring (song)\n\nPassage: \"Brown Girl in the Ring\" is a traditional children's song in the islands of the West Indies. Originally said to have originated in Jamaica, as part of the children's game also known as \"Brown Girl in the Ring\". The songs lyrics instruct the game's performance: as a girl enters the ring, formed by children holding hands, and performs a dance.\nThe song became internationally known when it was recorded by Euro-Caribbean vocal group Boney M. in 1978. Originally it was the B-side of their hit \"Rivers of Babylon\" but soon became a hit in its own right and included on their third album, Nightflight to Venus (1978). The song had previously been recorded in 1975 by the group Malcolm's Locks, leading to a dispute over royalties. Bahamian musician Exuma also recorded a version of the song that appears on his 1972 album Reincarnation. The Boney M. version was remixed in 1993 by Frank Farian.\nOrigin\nChildren play ring games in many parts of the world, especially during their pre-teen years. In There's a Brown Girl in the Ring, an anthology of Eastern Caribbean song games by Alan Lomax, J.D. Elder and Bess Lomax Hawes, it is suggested that ring games are a children's precursor to adult courtship."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045892.0123, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["voyage-multilingual-2", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "73cf73bdec2e4d7f940a12b1e598b9ca", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "who is the first wife on sister wives", "0_output": [["who is the first wife on sister wives", "Title: Sister Wives\n\nPassage: Sister Wives is an American reality television series broadcast on TLC that premiered on September 26, 2010. The show documents the life of a polygamist family, which includes Kody Brown, his wife Robyn (n\u00e9e Sullivan), ex-wives Meri (n\u00e9e Barber), Janelle (n\u00e9e Schriever), and Christine (n\u00e9e Allred), and their 18 children (1 by Meri, 6 by both Janelle and Christine, 5 by Robyn although 3 were between her and her ex-husband David Preston Jessop). The family began the series living in Lehi, Utah, moved to Las Vegas in 2011, and to Flagstaff, Arizona, in mid-2018.\nBrown and his four wives have stated they participated in the show to make the public aware of polygamist families and to combat societal prejudices. Brown argues that his polygamist arrangement is legal because he is married (legally) to only one woman (Meri, then later Robyn), while the other marriages are \"spiritual unions\".\nBackground\nThe show follows the lives of Kody Brown, wife Robyn, ex-wives (Meri, Janelle, Christine), and their 18 children. In the first season, the show televised Kody's courting of and marriage to his fourth wife, Robyn, in 2010. Robyn was the first new wife to enter the family in 16 years.\nThe crews continued to film them after the marriage in case the series was picked up for a second season. Sister Wives was publicly introduced on August 6, 2010, at the Television Critics Association summer media tour in Beverly Hills. The series' first episode, an hour-long, was broadcast on TLC on September 26, 2010, and the first season continued with six half-hour episodes until October 17, 2010."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "47b914ac47744b479577d91f6479f0c3", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "who is the first wife on sister wives", "1_output": [["who is the first wife on sister wives", "Title: Sister Wives\n\nPassage: Sister Wives is an American reality television series broadcast on TLC that premiered on September 26, 2010. The show documents the life of a polygamist family, which includes Kody Brown, his wife Robyn (n\u00e9e Sullivan), ex-wives Meri (n\u00e9e Barber), Janelle (n\u00e9e Schriever), and Christine (n\u00e9e Allred), and their 18 children (1 by Meri, 6 by both Janelle and Christine, 5 by Robyn although 3 were between her and her ex-husband David Preston Jessop). The family began the series living in Lehi, Utah, moved to Las Vegas in 2011, and to Flagstaff, Arizona, in mid-2018.\nBrown and his four wives have stated they participated in the show to make the public aware of polygamist families and to combat societal prejudices. Brown argues that his polygamist arrangement is legal because he is married (legally) to only one woman (Meri, then later Robyn), while the other marriages are \"spiritual unions\".\nBackground\nThe show follows the lives of Kody Brown, wife Robyn, ex-wives (Meri, Janelle, Christine), and their 18 children. In the first season, the show televised Kody's courting of and marriage to his fourth wife, Robyn, in 2010. Robyn was the first new wife to enter the family in 16 years.\nThe crews continued to film them after the marriage in case the series was picked up for a second season. Sister Wives was publicly introduced on August 6, 2010, at the Television Critics Association summer media tour in Beverly Hills. The series' first episode, an hour-long, was broadcast on TLC on September 26, 2010, and the first season continued with six half-hour episodes until October 17, 2010."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722045927.4676, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["voyage-multilingual-2", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "979503ccce9d4f2c8cb6f28f141d9465", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "0_output": [["who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "Title: Aladdin (2011 musical)\n\nPassage: Aladdin uses his third and final wish to set Genie free. He then admits to Jasmine that he loves her, but he cannot pretend to be someone he's not. Seeing the nobility in Aladdin, the Sultan decrees that henceforth the Princess can marry whomever she pleases. Babkak, Omar and Kassim are made royal advisors, while Iago is arrested. Aladdin and Jasmine are married, and Genie prepares for a long-awaited vacation. All ends well as Aladdin and Jasmine board the magic carpet and take flight (Finale Ultimo: \"Arabian Nights\"/\"A Whole New World\" (Reprises)).\nCasting controversy\nAlthough the film was Disney's first to feature non-white human protagonists, Disney did not consider ethnicity in the casting process for the musical. This 'colourblind' policy sparked some controversy, with the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee receiving numerous complaints from actors of Middle Eastern descent. The executive director of a US minority rights organisation lamented that the production had 'missed an opportunity' to showcase Arab-American actors, who remain underrepresented on Broadway.\nRoles and principal cast members\nJonathan Freeman had reprised his role of Jafar from the original film. He departed from the cast in 2022.\nOriginal casts\nNotable cast replacements\nBroadway\nAladdin: Telly Leung, Ainsley Melham, Josh Dela Cruz, Michael Maliakel"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a88f06cbd74943e38387b1b8213ad38e", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "1_output": [["who plays the genie in aladdin the musical", "Title: Genie (Disney)\n\nPassage: Theme parks Genie is a meet-and-greet character at Disney Parks. On August 18, 2021, Disney announced the Genie would be the mascot of a new paid skip-the-line service called Genie+, which was implemented later that fall.\nAladdin (musical)\nGenie plays a notable role in the Broadway stage adaptation of the 1992 film, portrayed by James Monroe Iglehart. In this version, Genie replaces the Peddler at the beginning of the story singing \"Arabian Nights\".\nSince the show's debut, Iglehart's portrayal of Genie has received critical acclaim from audiences and critics, which includes winning a Tony Award for Best Featured Actor in a Musical.\nParodies\nThe Genie (voiced by Dan Castellaneta) appears in The Simpsons episode \"MyPods and Boomsticks\" (2008) during a dream of Homer (a character also voiced by Castellaneta), where he uses his magic to transform Springfield into an Islamic republic.\nThe Genie (voiced by Isaiah Mustafa) has an appearance in the Robot Chicken episode \"May Cause Immaculate Conception\" (2021), where one of the bell-ringers that he made appear during the Agrabah parade asks him for food for the animals that were part of the parade.\nReception\nReception to Williams' involvement influenced tributes following his 2014 death, with critics considering the Genie to have been his most memorable performance. Aladdin composer Alan Menken lamented that Williams was \"a brilliant, adorable, hilarious, compassionate, vulnerable manifestation of the human condition.\""]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046188.1488, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "f1d80dfe84fa4c32be7f78b794c3e213", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "0_output": [["what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "Title: 1924 Cuba hurricane\n\nPassage: After a reanalysis of hurricanes between 1921 and 1925, the National Hurricane Centers Atlantic reanalysis project determined that this hurricane attained maximum sustained winds of , making it a Category 5 hurricane on the Saffir\u2013Simpson Hurricane Scale. The hurricane is the earliest known to have attained the intensity, besting the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane, which was previously thought to be the earliest storm of this intensity. It is also one of only two on record to make landfall in Cuba at Category\u00a05 status, with the other being Hurricane Irma of 2017, which also made landfall with maximum sustained winds of . A hurricane in 1846 that hit the country was also thought to have struck at Category\u00a05 status, although the storm existed prior to the start of the Atlantic hurricane database.\nWhen the steamship \"Toledo\" recorded an atmospheric pressure of during the 1924 Cuba hurricane, it was the lowest pressure recorded in an Atlantic hurricane, breaking the previous record of 924 mbar (27.28 inHg) in the Atlantic hurricane of 1853. The record during this storm lasted until the 1932 Cuba hurricane, when a minimum pressure of was reported. The reading of at Los Arroyos in Mantua, Pinar del R\u00edo remains the lowest pressure recorded on land in Cuba."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "d0f5843ab8cb4bac80c5c35f0467be03", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "1_output": [["what was the lowest barometric pressure for hurricane irma", "Title: Hurricane Irma\n\nPassage: Records Irma set multiple records for intensity, especially at easterly longitudes, time spent at such an intensity, and its intensity at landfall. When Irma reached Category\u00a05 intensity with winds of at 11:45\u00a0UTC on September 5 at 57.7\u00b0W, it became the easternmost Atlantic hurricane of this strength on record, surpassing Hurricane David of 1979, later beaten by Hurricane Lorenzo 2 years later. By 00:15\u00a0UTC on September 6, Irma reached peak intensity with () winds and a minimum pressure of . This ties it with Hurricane Mitch of 1998 and Hurricane Rita of 2005 as the sixth-strongest Atlantic hurricane by wind speed. Only five other Atlantic hurricanes have been recorded with wind speeds higher than Irma: Hurricane Allen of 1980, which had maximum sustained winds of , and the 1935 Labor Day hurricane, Hurricane Gilbert of 1988, Hurricane Wilma of 2005, and Hurricane Dorian of 2019, all of which had peak winds of . At the time, Irma was also the strongest hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic Ocean outside the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico; later surpassed by Hurricane Dorian, and was the strongest Atlantic hurricane since Wilma in terms of maximum sustained winds, and the most intense in terms of pressure since Dean in 2007. In addition, Irma achieved one of the longest durations of Category\u00a05 strength winds, and the third-highest accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index for a tropical cyclone in the Atlantic basin, with a value of 64.9\u00a0units. Only the 1899 San Ciriaco hurricane and Hurricane Ivan in 2004 achieved higher values."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046216.3486, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "5b8f85f3302a45acb27ec4841114b040", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "third president of the united states of america", "0_output": [["third president of the united states of america", "Title: Thomas Jefferson\n\nPassage: Thomas Jefferson (April 13, 1743 \u2013 July 4, 1826) was an American statesman, diplomat, lawyer, architect, philosopher, and Founding Father who served as the third president of the United States from 1801 to 1809. He was the primary author of the Declaration of Independence. Following the American Revolutionary War and prior to becoming president in 1801, Jefferson was the nation's first U.S. secretary of state under George Washington and then the nation's second vice president under John Adams. Jefferson was a leading proponent of democracy, republicanism, and individual rights, and produced formative documents and decisions at the state, national, and international levels. His writings and advocacy for human rights, including freedom of thought, speech, and religion, served as substantial inspirations to the American Revolution and subsequent Revolutionary War in which the Thirteen Colonies succeeded in breaking from British America and establishing the United States as a sovereign nation.\nDuring the American Revolution, Jefferson represented Virginia at the Second Continental Congress and served as the second governor of Virginia from 1779 to 1781. In 1785, Congress appointed Jefferson U.S. minister to France, where he served from 1785 to 1789. President Washington then appointed Jefferson the nation's first secretary of state, where he served from 1790 to 1793. During this time, in the early 1790s, Jefferson and James Madison organized the Democratic-Republican Party to oppose the Federalist Party during the formation of the nation's First Party System. Jefferson and Federalist John Adams became both friends and political rivals. In the 1796 U.S. presidential election between the two, Jefferson came in second, which made him Adams' vice president under the electoral laws of the time. Four years later, in the 1800 presidential election, Jefferson again challenged Adams, and won the presidency. In 1804, Jefferson was reelected overwhelmingly to a second term."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "347dce561ef24e1d93c95a8d2f80cd6f", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "third president of the united states of america", "1_output": [["third president of the united states of america", "Title: Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, third and fourth terms\n\nPassage: The third presidential term of Franklin D. Roosevelt began on January 20, 1941, when he was once again inaugurated as the 32nd president of the United States, and the fourth term of his presidency ended with his death on April 12, 1945. Roosevelt won a third term by defeating Republican nominee Wendell Willkie in the 1940 United States presidential election. He remains the only president to serve for more than two terms. Unlike his first two terms, Roosevelt's third and fourth terms were dominated by foreign policy concerns, as the United States became involved in World War II in December 1941."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046238.2253, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "2d2a3ce15be14d9ab1182bd6eb6155ec", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "0_output": [["who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "Title: James Lafferty\n\nPassage: James Martin Lafferty (born July 25, 1985) is an American actor, director, and producer. He is best known for his portrayal of Nathan Scott on The WB/CW teen drama television series One Tree Hill (2003\u20132012).\nEarly life\nLafferty was born in Hemet, California, to Angelica and Jeffrey Lafferty, who own a local construction company. He has a younger brother, actor Stuart Lafferty."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "ee9c5b633adf4fbebe3994003e71626d", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "1_output": [["who played nathan scott on one tree hill", "Title: Nathan Scott\n\nPassage: Nathan Royal Scott is a fictional character from the CW television series One Tree Hill created by Mark Schwahn and portrayed by James Lafferty. Following Lucas Scott's departure, Nathan became the main character and central figure of the show. Nathan is Lucas's younger half-brother. He fell in love with Lucas's best friend, Haley James; and they married at the end of the first season. Despite various problems in their relationship, the couple remains together married for most of the shows run, and had a son, Jamie, in season four and a daughter, Lydia, in season eight. Considered to be an anti-hero at the beginning of the first season, Nathan became a much friendlier and more caring person as the series progressed, due to his relationship with Haley and other characters.\nCharacter development\nCasting and creation\nThe writers originally wanted Chad Michael Murray to play Nathan, but he chose to portray Lucas as his mother had abandoned him, which helped him relate to the character. James Lafferty was subsequently cast, as he was a talented basketball player."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046295.3612, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ef4f76bb51ee441f92005be565a38359", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "0_output": [["who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "Title: Bancassurance\n\nPassage: Bancassurance is a relationship between a bank and an insurance company that is aimed at offering insurance products or insurance benefits to the bank's customers. In this partnership, bank staff and tellers become the point of sale and point of contact for the customer. Bank staff are advised and supported by the insurance company through wholesale product information, marketing campaigns and sales training. The bank and the insurance company share the commission. Insurance policies are processed and administered by the insurance company."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "bd3a5ce005c940da96ae0fadaf257402", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "1_output": [["who are involved in selling product of mutual fund and insurance", "Title: Primerica\n\nPassage: In a separate offering, private equity firm Warburg Pincus bought a 23 percent stake in Primerica, and had the option to purchase an additional 10 percent stake from Citi. On December 19, 2011, Citigroup sold its remaining equity stake in Primerica.\nPrimerica was listed by Forbes as one of \"America's 50 Most Trustworthy Financial Companies\" in 2015.\nIn July 2021, Primerica acquired e-Telequote, a health insurance marketer.\nProducts and business model\nPrimerica uses a multi-level marketing strategy, with eleven tiers of representatives and recruiters selling financial products and services for commission.\nThe company primarily sells term life insurance, as well as other financial services including auto and home insurance, mutual funds, and credit monitoring.\nIn 2010, Primerica was reported to have over 100,000 representatives selling the company's financial products, with individual earnings averaging $5,156 per year. Some people working for Primerica and similar multi-level marketing organizations reported that they ended up losing money, due to the fees they had to pay.\nIn 2012, Primerica was the target of multiple lawsuits alleging that the company's representatives sought to profit by earning commissions after convincing Florida firefighters, teachers, and other public workers to divest from safe government-secured retirement investments to high-risk retirement products offered by Primerica. In January 2014, the company announced that it was working on a settlement with up to 238 plaintiffs, for $15.4 million."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-91a2012b-381f-4df2-b5a5-e4fd8e4dd315.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-91a2012b-381f-4df2-b5a5-e4fd8e4dd315.jsonl
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-{"tstamp": 1721161444.4793, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "share", "models": ["text-embedding-3-large", "voyage-multilingual-2"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ced81cd7a38d43c881fb7b6be019af0f", "0_model_name": "text-embedding-3-large", "0_prompt": "how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "0_output": [["how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "Title: Gaganyaan\n\nPassage: Gaganyaan (; from Sanskrit: , \"celestial\" and , \"craft, vehicle\") is an Indian crewed orbital spacecraft intended to be the formative spacecraft of the Indian Human Spaceflight Programme. The spacecraft is being designed to carry three people, and a planned upgraded version will be equipped with rendezvous and docking capabilities. In its maiden crewed mission, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)'s largely autonomous 5.3-metric ton capsule will orbit the Earth at 400\u00a0km altitude for up to seven days with a two- or three-person crew on board. The first crewed mission was originally planned to be launched on ISRO's HLVM3 rocket in December 2021. As of October 2023, it is expected to be launched by 2025.\nThe Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL)-manufactured crew module underwent its first uncrewed experimental flight on December 18, 2014. design of the crew module has been completed. Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) will provide support for critical human-centric systems and technologies such as space-grade food, crew healthcare, radiation measurement and protection, parachutes for the safe recovery of the crew module, and the fire suppression system.\nOn June 11, 2020, it was announced that the first uncrewed Gaganyaan launch would be delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in India. The overall timeline for crewed launches was expected to remain unaffected. ISRO chairman S. Somanath announced in 2022 that the first crewed mission would not take place until 2024 at the earliest because of safety concerns.\nThe Gaganyaan Mission will be led by V. R. Lalithambika, the former Director of the Directorate of the Human Spaceflight Programme with ISRO Chairman S Somnath and S. Unnikrishnan Nair, Director of Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre. Imtiaz Ali Khan superseded V. R. Lalithambika as the Director of the Directorate of Human Spaceflight Programme.\nBackground\nIn 1984, Rakesh Sharma became the first Indian born citizen to enter space through a joint Interkosmos mission between ISRO and Soviet space program, when he flew aboard the Soviet rocket Soyuz T-11 launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic on 3 April 1984. The Soyuz T-11 spacecraft carrying cosmonauts including Sharma docked and transferred the three member Soviet-Indian international crew, consisting of the ship's commander, Yury Malyshev, and flight engineer, Gennadi Strekalov, to the Salyut 7 Orbital Station. Sharma spent 7days, 21hours, and 40minutes aboard the Salyut 7. He conducted an Earth observation program concentrating on India. He also did life sciences and materials processing experiments, including silicium fusing tests.\nTo commemorate the occasion special stamps and first day covers were released by the Government of India and Soviet Union.\nProgram history"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a8d3fa5e851b4074b13fddd55a0b6c26", "1_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "1_prompt": "how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "1_output": [["how many indian astronauts have gone to space", "Title: ISRO\n\nPassage: Decade-wise summary of LVM3 launches:\nSmall Satellite Launch Vehicle\nThe Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV) is a small-lift launch vehicle developed by the ISRO with payload capacity to deliver to low Earth orbit () or to Sun-synchronous orbit () for launching small satellites, with the capability to support multiple orbital drop-offs.\nDecade-wise summary of SSLV launches:\nHuman Spaceflight Programme\nThe first proposal to send humans into space was discussed by ISRO in 2006, leading to work on the required infrastructure and spacecraft. The trials for crewed space missions began in 2007 with the Space Capsule Recovery Experiment (SRE), launched using the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket, and safely returned to earth 12 days later.\nIn 2009, the Indian Space Research Organisation proposed a budget of for its human spaceflight programme. An unmanned demonstration flight was expected after seven years from the final approval and a crewed mission was to be launched after seven years of funding. A crewed mission initially was not a priority and left on the backburner for several years. A space capsule recovery experiment in 2014 and a pad abort test in 2018 were followed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's announcement in his 2018 Independence Day address that India will send astronauts into space by 2022 on the new Gaganyaan spacecraft. To date, ISRO has developed most of the technologies needed, such as the crew module and crew escape system, space food, and life support systems. The project would cost less than 100\u00a0billion (US$1.3 billion) and would include sending two or three Indians to space, at an altitude of , for at least seven days, using a GSLV Mk-III launch vehicle.\nAstronaut training and other facilities\nThe newly established Human Space Flight Centre (HSFC) will coordinate the IHSF campaign. ISRO will set up an astronaut training centre in Bengaluru to prepare personnel for flights in the crewed vehicle. It will use simulation facilities to train the selected astronauts in rescue and recovery operations and survival in microgravity, and will undertake studies of the radiation environment of space. ISRO had to build centrifuges to prepare astronauts for the acceleration phase of the launch. Existing launch facilities at Satish Dhawan Space Centre will have to be upgraded for the Indian human spaceflight campaign. Human Space Flight Centre and Glavcosmos signed an agreement on 1 July 2019 for the selection, support, medical examination and space training of Indian astronauts. An ISRO Technical Liaison Unit (ITLU) was to be set up in Moscow to facilitate the development of some key technologies and establishment of special facilities which are essential to support life in space. Four Indian Air Force personnel finished training at Yuri Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center in March 2021.\nCrewed spacecraft"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 70c9349dc0a4b014f957b3ba047fc111f3d4e4e5..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-9cbe9e3c-9ef2-4c24-8c89-ac9e0b2b9300.jsonl
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@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1721157203.4926, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "voyage-multilingual-2"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "7d1c064f99d9404dad287af542d52952", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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: Habitability of natural satellites\n\nPassage: In the Solar System\nThe following is a list of natural satellites and environments in the Solar System with a possibility of hosting habitable environments:\nExtrasolar\nA small list of exomoon candidates has been assembled by various exoastronomy teams, but none of them have been confirmed. Given the general planet-to-satellite(s) mass ratio of 10,000, Large Saturn or Jupiter sized gas planets in the habitable zone are believed to be the best candidates to harbour Earth-like moons with more than 120 such planets by 2018. Massive exoplanets known to be located within a habitable zone (such as Gliese 876 b, 55 Cancri f, Upsilon Andromedae d, 47 Ursae Majoris b, HD 28185 b and HD 37124 c) are of particular interest as they may potentially possess natural satellites with liquid water on the surface.\nHabitability of extrasolar moons will depend on stellar and planetary illumination on moons as well as the effect of eclipses on their orbit-averaged surface illumination. Beyond that, tidal heating might play a role for a moon's habitability. In 2012, scientists introduced a concept to define the habitable orbits of moons; they define an inner border of an habitable moon around a certain planet and call it the circumplanetary \"habitable edge\". Moons closer to their planet than the habitable edge are uninhabitable. When effects of eclipses as well as constraints from a satellite's orbital stability are used to model the runaway greenhouse limit of hypothetical moons, it is estimated that \u2014 depending on a moon's orbital eccentricity \u2014 there is a minimum mass of roughly 0.20 solar masses for stars to host habitable moons within the stellar habitable zone. The magnetic environment of exomoons, which is critically triggered by the intrinsic magnetic field of the host planet, has been identified as another factor of exomoon habitability. Most notably, it was found that moons at distances between about 5 and 20 planetary radii from a giant planet could be habitable from an illumination and tidal heating point of view, but still the planetary magnetosphere would critically influence their habitability.\nIn popular culture\nNatural satellites that host life are common in (science-fictional) written works, films, television shows, video games, and other popular media.\nfactual satellite, fictional life\nThe Moon in A Trip to the Moon (1903) and many other films\nEuropa in Europa Report (2013) and Watchmen (2019)\nTitan in Marvel Comics\nfictional satellite\nAndor from the Star Wars franchise\nYavin 4 from Star Wars (1977)\nEndor in Return of the Jedi (1983)\nLV-426 in Alien (1979) and Aliens (1986)\nLV-223 in Prometheus (2012) and Predators (2010)\nPandora from the Avatar franchise\nK23 in The Midnight Sky (2020)\nLaythe in the video game Kerbal Space Program and its sequel\nEayn, the Kig-Yar homeworld, orbits Chu'ot, the third planet in the Y'Deio system, which is located 41 light years from the Sol system in the lore of Halo.\nHarval, the Angara homeworld, orbits the gas giant Faroang, in Mass Effect: Andromeda; it is also the namesake of their home system."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "0fc31b605ea64cc195674c00c33c39ef", "1_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "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"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-b9939755-3d0c-46d8-a9d8-d177ad4c351e.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-b9939755-3d0c-46d8-a9d8-d177ad4c351e.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e4ded7114fe9330fcf95b77b2fd2f934321c5699..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-b9939755-3d0c-46d8-a9d8-d177ad4c351e.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722091798.5101, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BM25"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e55c4487f39e419f811f46e601d0662f", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "where are xfce notes stored?", "0_output": [["where are xfce notes stored?", "Unix Stackexchange\n\nQ: Where does xfce4-notes store data? I have a lot of xfce-notes groups containing each a lot of text. I want to transfert them to a new machine without copying the whole home directory.\nWhere does xfce4-notes store its data and configation files?\n\nA: The notes are stored as text files in $XDG_DATA_HOME/notes/ (~/.local/share/notes by default).\nThe settings are in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xfce4 (~/.config/xfce4/xfce4-notes.*).\n"]], "0_corpus": "stackexchange", "1_conv_id": "e27b247c38c14068bd4a2163688b7e04", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "where are xfce notes stored?", "1_output": [["where are xfce notes stored?", "Unix Stackexchange\n\nQ: Where does xfce4-notes store data? I have a lot of xfce-notes groups containing each a lot of text. I want to transfert them to a new machine without copying the whole home directory.\nWhere does xfce4-notes store its data and configation files?\n\nA: The notes are stored as text files in $XDG_DATA_HOME/notes/ (~/.local/share/notes by default).\nThe settings are in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/xfce4 (~/.config/xfce4/xfce4-notes.*).\n"]], "1_corpus": "stackexchange"}
-{"tstamp": 1722091942.1047, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "share", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BM25"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "5dfd33c08c8747dea34231b98e216f88", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "what is the difference between of and on?", "0_output": [["what is the difference between of and on?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: difference between progress ON and progress OF I'm still confused even after studying the prepositions on and of. Can you please help me and explain to me the difference of the ff:\n\n \n*\n \n*progress ON your project\n \n*progress OF your project\n\nWhen should I use on? of?\n\nA: This depends upon the wider context in which the sentence is used. The two examples you have given do not, on their own, make sense.\nIf the progress is the subject then of, if you are the subject then on.\nHave you made any progress on your project?\nWhat is the progress of your project?\nI have made progress on my project\nThere has been progress on the project\nThe progress of the project is satisfactory\n"]], "0_corpus": "stackexchange", "1_conv_id": "fe7dda067a73407682462cd19e38f2f4", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "what is the difference between of and on?", "1_output": [["what is the difference between of and on?", "Ell Stackexchange\n\nQ: \"What a difference {it / there} is between him and her!\" \n*\n\n*What a difference it is between him and her!\n\n*What a difference there is between him and her! \nI think sentence 1 is wrong but I cannot explain why. We can say \"it is a difference between him and her\" so I thought it fine but when I read the first sentence again, it just sounds off. Can someone please explain?\n\nA: when you ask difference you can say it this way\nWhat is the difference between him and her?\nor\nIs there a difference bettwen him and her?\nThe answer can be like:\nThe difference between him and her is.... \n"]], "1_corpus": "stackexchange"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index ebaa33cf717409c0bf2a5eaed4bced54529f1d44..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722221941.945, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["voyage-multilingual-2", "BM25"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "66985eb3324148629426035fcd7f2305", "0_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "0_prompt": "what's the capital of Japan?", "0_output": [["what's the capital of Japan?", "Tokyo\n\nTokyo (; , , ), officially the Tokyo Metropolis (, ), is the capital of Japan and one of the most populous cities in the world, with a population of over 14 million residents as of 2023 and the second-most-populated capital in the world. The Greater Tokyo Area, which includes Tokyo and parts of six neighbouring prefectures, is the most-populous metropolitan area in the world, with 40.8 million residents .\nLocated at the head of Tokyo Bay, Tokyo is part of the Kant\u014d region on the central coast of Honshu, Japan's largest island. Tokyo serves as Japan's economic center and the seat of both the Japanese government and the Emperor of Japan. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government administers Tokyo's central 23 special wards (which formerly made up Tokyo City), various commuter towns and suburbs in its western area, and two outlying island chains known as the Tokyo Islands. Despite most of the world recognising Tokyo as a city, since 1943 its governing structure has been more akin to a prefecture, with an accompanying Governor and Assembly taking precedence over the smaller municipal governments which make up the metropolis. Notable special wards in Tokyo include Chiyoda, the site of the National Diet Building and the Tokyo Imperial Palace, Shinjuku, the city's administrative center, and Shibuya, a commercial, cultural, and business hub in the city."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a3ae7922262947ad995b18efd5705cbf", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "what's the capital of Japan?", "1_output": [["what's the capital of Japan?", "Sagami Province\n\nwas a province of Japan located in what is today the central and western Kanagawa Prefecture. Sagami Province bordered the provinces of Izu, Musashi, and Suruga. It had access to the Pacific Ocean through Sagami Bay. However, most of the present-day cities of Yokohama and Kawasaki, now part of Kanagawa Prefecture, were not in Sagami, but rather, in Musashi Province. Its abbreviated form name was .\nHistory\nSagami was one of the original provinces of Japan established in the Nara period under the Taih\u014d Code. The area has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Although remnants from the Japanese Paleolithic and Yayoi periods are scarce, remains from the J\u014dmon period are relatively plentiful. Kofun period remains are generally from the 1st to the 4th century AD. Whether or not Sagami was originally part of Musashi prior to the Nara period is still a topic of controversy.\nThe original capital of the province may have been located in what is now Hiratsuka, although other contenders include \u014ciso and Ebina. Of all the former provinces of Japan, Sagami is the only in which the ruins of the Nara period capital have yet to be found. The Kokubun-ji is located in what is now Ebina. Under the Engishiki classification system, Sagami was ranked as a \"major country\" (\u4e0a\u56fd, j\u014dkoku) in terms of importance and a \"faraway country\" (\u9060\u56fd, ongoku), in terms of distance from the capital. It was also included as one of the T\u014dkaid\u014d provinces and was governed by a Kuni no miyatsuko."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-e1b27f6b-5f9b-4f16-ad5b-95e14349d625.jsonl b/data/retrieval_side_by_side-e1b27f6b-5f9b-4f16-ad5b-95e14349d625.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 0d1b5c7302100ee2fd48270aea7baa6ca0c8800c..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/retrieval_side_by_side-e1b27f6b-5f9b-4f16-ad5b-95e14349d625.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,6 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1722046654.159, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "6146921e35bc448691034e7fdbee1724", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "0_output": [["is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "Better Call Saul\n\nGilligan, who created and developed Breaking Bad, and Gould, who wrote the Breaking Bad episode \"Better Call Saul\", began considering a Saul Goodman spin-off in 2009. Because Saul's role in Breaking Bad had expanded beyond the writing staff's plans, Gilligan felt he could be explored further. He and Gould considered making a half-hour legal comedy featuring Saul and his various clients, but settled on an hour-long tragedy showing how he develops into the character seen in Breaking Bad. Better Call Saul development began during the production of Breaking Bad final season in 2013, with Gilligan and Gould serving as co-showrunners and numerous production staff returning. Odenkirk, Banks, and Esposito reprise their roles from Breaking Bad, as do many others in guest appearances. Gilligan left Better Call Saul early in the third season\u2014making Gould the sole showrunner for the remainder of its run\u2014though he returned to help write the final season.\nBetter Call Saul received critical acclaim, with praise for its acting, characters, writing, direction, and cinematography. Many reviewers have considered it a worthy successor to Breaking Bad\u2014some deeming it superior to its predecessor\u2014and one of the greatest television series of all time. It has garnered many awards and nominations, including two Peabody Awards, 53 Primetime and Creative Arts Emmy Awards, 19 Writers Guild of America Awards, 20 Critics' Choice Television Awards, nine Screen Actors Guild Awards, and six Golden Globe Awards nominations. At the time of its airing, the series premiere held the record for the highest-rated scripted series premiere in basic cable history.\nPremise\nBetter Call Saul is a spin-off of Breaking Bad, a popular crime drama television series that ran from 2008 to 2013. It is primarily a prequel that focuses on Jimmy McGill, a former con artist aiming to gain respectability as a public defender, and chronicles his gradual transformation into his eventual Breaking Bad persona of Saul Goodman, the flamboyant criminal lawyer with ties to the drug cartel. Most of the show takes place over the six-year period before the events of Breaking Bad, spanning approximately 2002 to 2008."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "04749276100748bd9fa96ab3664c1ec3", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "1_output": [["is better call saul prequel to breaking bad", "Better Call Saul\n\nGilligan, who created and developed Breaking Bad, and Gould, who wrote the Breaking Bad episode \"Better Call Saul\", began considering a Saul Goodman spin-off in 2009. Because Saul's role in Breaking Bad had expanded beyond the writing staff's plans, Gilligan felt he could be explored further. He and Gould considered making a half-hour legal comedy featuring Saul and his various clients, but settled on an hour-long tragedy showing how he develops into the character seen in Breaking Bad. Better Call Saul development began during the production of Breaking Bad final season in 2013, with Gilligan and Gould serving as co-showrunners and numerous production staff returning. Odenkirk, Banks, and Esposito reprise their roles from Breaking Bad, as do many others in guest appearances. Gilligan left Better Call Saul early in the third season\u2014making Gould the sole showrunner for the remainder of its run\u2014though he returned to help write the final season.\nBetter Call Saul received critical acclaim, with praise for its acting, characters, writing, direction, and cinematography. Many reviewers have considered it a worthy successor to Breaking Bad\u2014some deeming it superior to its predecessor\u2014and one of the greatest television series of all time. It has garnered many awards and nominations, including two Peabody Awards, 53 Primetime and Creative Arts Emmy Awards, 19 Writers Guild of America Awards, 20 Critics' Choice Television Awards, nine Screen Actors Guild Awards, and six Golden Globe Awards nominations. At the time of its airing, the series premiere held the record for the highest-rated scripted series premiere in basic cable history.\nPremise\nBetter Call Saul is a spin-off of Breaking Bad, a popular crime drama television series that ran from 2008 to 2013. It is primarily a prequel that focuses on Jimmy McGill, a former con artist aiming to gain respectability as a public defender, and chronicles his gradual transformation into his eventual Breaking Bad persona of Saul Goodman, the flamboyant criminal lawyer with ties to the drug cartel. Most of the show takes place over the six-year period before the events of Breaking Bad, spanning approximately 2002 to 2008."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046686.215, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "fddd0c504d5d44f0a02dec7161eae417", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "0_output": [["who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "Battles of Saratoga\n\nThe Battles of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) marked the climax of the Saratoga campaign, giving a decisive victory to the Americans over the British in the American Revolutionary War. British General John Burgoyne led an invasion army of 7,200\u20138,000 men southward from Canada in the Champlain Valley, hoping to meet a similar British force marching northward from New York City and another British force marching eastward from Lake Ontario; the goal was to take Albany, New York. The southern and western forces never arrived, and Burgoyne was surrounded by American forces in upstate New York short of his goal. He fought two battles which took place 18 days apart on the same ground south of Saratoga, New York. He gained a victory in the first battle despite being outnumbered, but lost the second battle after the Americans returned with an even larger force.\nBurgoyne found himself trapped by much larger American forces with no relief, so he retreated to Saratoga (now Schuylerville) and surrendered his entire army there on October 17. His surrender, says historian Edmund Morgan, \"was a great turning point of the war because it won for Americans the foreign assistance which was the last element needed for victory.\"\nBurgoyne's strategy to divide New England from the southern colonies had started well but slowed due to logistical problems. He won a small tactical victory over American General Horatio Gates and the Continental Army in the September 19 Battle of Freeman's Farm at the cost of significant casualties. His gains were erased when he again attacked the Americans in the October 7 Battle of Bemis Heights and the Americans captured a portion of the British defenses. Burgoyne was therefore compelled to retreat, and his army was surrounded by the much larger American force at Saratoga, forcing him to surrender on October 17. News of Burgoyne's surrender was instrumental in formally bringing France into the war as an American ally, although it had previously given supplies, ammunition, and guns, notably the de Valliere cannon which played an important role in Saratoga."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "d8612e4ba68f4a6f9266d4e48fcba107", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "1_output": [["who won the battle of saratoga in 1777", "Battles of Saratoga\n\nThe Battles of Saratoga (September 19 and October 7, 1777) marked the climax of the Saratoga campaign, giving a decisive victory to the Americans over the British in the American Revolutionary War. British General John Burgoyne led an invasion army of 7,200\u20138,000 men southward from Canada in the Champlain Valley, hoping to meet a similar British force marching northward from New York City and another British force marching eastward from Lake Ontario; the goal was to take Albany, New York. The southern and western forces never arrived, and Burgoyne was surrounded by American forces in upstate New York short of his goal. He fought two battles which took place 18 days apart on the same ground south of Saratoga, New York. He gained a victory in the first battle despite being outnumbered, but lost the second battle after the Americans returned with an even larger force.\nBurgoyne found himself trapped by much larger American forces with no relief, so he retreated to Saratoga (now Schuylerville) and surrendered his entire army there on October 17. His surrender, says historian Edmund Morgan, \"was a great turning point of the war because it won for Americans the foreign assistance which was the last element needed for victory.\"\nBurgoyne's strategy to divide New England from the southern colonies had started well but slowed due to logistical problems. He won a small tactical victory over American General Horatio Gates and the Continental Army in the September 19 Battle of Freeman's Farm at the cost of significant casualties. His gains were erased when he again attacked the Americans in the October 7 Battle of Bemis Heights and the Americans captured a portion of the British defenses. Burgoyne was therefore compelled to retreat, and his army was surrounded by the much larger American force at Saratoga, forcing him to surrender on October 17. News of Burgoyne's surrender was instrumental in formally bringing France into the war as an American ally, although it had previously given supplies, ammunition, and guns, notably the de Valliere cannon which played an important role in Saratoga."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046746.1569, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "embed-english-v3.0"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "2ea8067445fb4e708214313868606974", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "0_output": [["where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "The Dukes of Hazzard\n\nIn 1977, Waldron was approached by Warner Bros. with the idea of developing Moonrunners into a television series. Waldron reworked various elements from Moonrunners, ultimately devising what became The Dukes of Hazzard. Production began in October 1978 with the original intention of only nine episodes for a mid-season filler. The first five episodes were filmed in Covington and Conyers, Georgia and surrounding areas, including some location work in nearby Atlanta. After completing production on the fifth episode, \"High Octane\", the cast and crew broke for Christmas break, expecting to return in several weeks to complete the ordered run of episodes. In the meantime, executives at Warner Bros. were impressed by the rough preview cuts of the completed episodes and saw potential in developing the show into a full-running series. Part of this plan was to move production from Georgia to the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank, California, to simplify production as well as develop a larger workshop to service the large number of automobiles needed for the series.\nRushing appeared as shady used car dealer Ace Parker in the third episode, \"Repo Men\" (the fourth to be broadcast). Rushing believed this to be the start of a recurring role, in return for which he would supply creative ideas from his experiences: many of the Dukes (and thus Moonrunners) characters and situations were derived from Rushing's experiences as a youth, and much of the character of Bo Duke, he states to be based on him. However, \"Repo Men\" would turn out to be the character's only appearance in the show's run, leading to a legal dispute in the following years over the rights to characters and concepts. Despite this, Rushing remained on good terms with cast and crew and in recent years has made appearances at several fan conventions."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "cd499b495d8c407d80ea2a08dc195b2f", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "1_output": [["where was the dukes of hazzard show filmed", "The Dukes of Hazzard (film)\n\nLocations Principal photography for the film began on November 15, 2004, before wrapping up the following February. The majority of the film was shot in and around Clinton & French Settlement, Louisiana. The Boar's nest was Moonlight Inn located in French Settlement, LA. The street scenes are set in Atlanta, but filmed in the New Orleans Central Business District, and the university scenes were shot on the campus of Louisiana State University.\nReception\nBox office\nThe film was number one at the box office its opening weekend and grossed $30.7 million on 3,785 screens. It also had an adjusted-dollar rank of number 24 all-time for August releases. The film eventually collected $109.8 million worldwide, although it was much less successful financially outside the United States.\nCritical reception\nOn Rotten Tomatoes, 14% of 168 reviews were positive. The website's consensus called the film \"A dumb, goofy, and vacuous adaptation of a TV show where plot is simply an excuse to string together the car chases.\" On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 33% based on 36 reviews, indicating \"Generally unfavorable reviews\". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a grade \"B+\" on scale of A to F. Longtime fans of the original Dukes of Hazzard series were generally disappointed by the film."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722046832.4803, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BM25"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "9b5312e94aa14298aa140a7dbafd70a9", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "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?", "Computing Machinery and Intelligence\n\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" is a seminal paper written by Alan Turing on the topic of artificial intelligence. The paper, published in 1950 in Mind, was the first to introduce his concept of what is now known as the Turing test to the general public.\nTuring's paper considers the question \"Can machines think?\" Turing says that since the words \"think\" and \"machine\" cannot be clearly defined we should \"replace the question by another, which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" To do this, he must first find a simple and unambiguous idea to replace the word \"think\", second he must explain exactly which \"machines\" he is considering, and finally, armed with these tools, he formulates a new question, related to the first, that he believes he can answer in the affirmative."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "16daa0e2cb924beab12d733d57a718ec", "1_model_name": "BM25", "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?", "Turing test\n\nAlan Turing and the Imitation Game\nResearchers in the United Kingdom had been exploring \"machine intelligence\" for up to ten years prior to the founding of the field of artificial intelligence (AI) research in 1956. It was a common topic among the members of the Ratio Club, an informal group of British cybernetics and electronics researchers that included Alan Turing.\nTuring, in particular, had been running the notion of machine intelligence since at least 1941 and one of the earliest-known mentions of \"computer intelligence\" was made by him in 1947. In Turing's report, \"Intelligent Machinery,\" he investigated \"the question of whether or not it is possible for machinery to show intelligent behaviour\" and, as part of that investigation, proposed what may be considered the forerunner to his later tests:\nIt is not difficult to devise a paper machine which will play a not very bad game of chess. Now get three men A, B and C as subjects for the experiment. A and C are to be rather poor chess players, B is the operator who works the paper machine. ... Two rooms are used with some arrangement for communicating moves, and a game is played between C and either A or the paper machine. C may find it quite difficult to tell which he is playing.\n\"Computing Machinery and Intelligence\" (1950) was the first published paper by Turing to focus exclusively on machine intelligence. Turing begins the 1950 paper with the claim, \"I propose to consider the question 'Can machines think? As he highlights, the traditional approach to such a question is to start with definitions, defining both the terms \"machine\" and \"think.\" Turing chooses not to do so; instead, he replaces the question with a new one, \"which is closely related to it and is expressed in relatively unambiguous words.\" In essence he proposes to change the question from \"Can machines think?\" to \"Can machines do what we (as thinking entities) can do?\" The advantage of the new question, Turing argues, is that it draws \"a fairly sharp line between the physical and intellectual capacities of a man.\"\nTo demonstrate this approach Turing proposes a test inspired by a party game, known as the \"imitation game\", in which a man and a woman go into separate rooms and guests try to tell them apart by writing a series of questions and reading the typewritten answers sent back. In this game, both the man and the woman aim to convince the guests that they are the other. (Huma Shah argues that this two-human version of the game was presented by Turing only to introduce the reader to the machine-human question-answer test.) Turing described his new version of the game as follows:"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047526.6621, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "share", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "a8e9c9ac80b440a2afe9bbcdb6d0f39f", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "0_output": [["Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "List of potentially habitable exoplanets\n\nThe following list include some of the potentially habitable exoplanets discovered so far. It is mostly based on estimates of habitability by the Habitable Worlds Catalog (HWC), and data from the NASA Exoplanet Archive. The HWC is maintained by the Planetary Habitability Laboratory at the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo. There is also a speculative list being developed of superhabitable planets.\nSurface planetary habitability is thought to require an orbit at the right distance from the host star for liquid surface water to be present, in addition to various geophysical and geodynamical aspects, atmospheric density, radiation type and intensity, and the host star's plasma environment.\nList\nThis is a list of exoplanets within the circumstellar habitable zone that are under 10 Earth masses and smaller than 2.5 Earth radii, and thus have a chance of being rocky. Note that inclusion on this list does not guarantee habitability, and in particular the larger planets are unlikely to have a rocky composition. Earth is included for comparison.\nNote that mass and radius values prefixed with \"~\" have not been measured, but are estimated from a mass-radius relationship.\nEarth and Venus were included for reference.\nPrevious candidates\nSome exoplanet candidates detected by radial velocity that were originally thought to be potentially habitable were later found to most likely be artifacts of stellar activity. These include Gliese 581 d & g, Gliese 667 Ce & f, Gliese 682 b & c, Kapteyn b, and Gliese 832 c."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "3985fd07d54744b38081cf5279a04b03", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_prompt": "Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "1_output": [["Which planets apart from Earth are most likely to be habitable?", "Eyeball planet\n\nAn eyeball planet is a hypothetical type of tidally locked planet, for which tidal locking induces spatial features (for example in the geography or composition of the planet) resembling an eyeball. They are terrestrial planets where liquids may be present, in which tidal locking will induce a spatially dependent temperature gradient (the planet will be hotter on the side facing the star and colder on the other side). This temperature gradient may therefore limit the places in which liquid may exist on the surface of the planet to ring-or disk-shaped areas.\nSuch planets are further divided into \"hot\" and \"cold\" eyeball planets, depending on which side of the planet the liquid is present. A \"hot\" eyeball planet is usually closer to its host star, and the centre of the \"eye\", facing the star (day side), is made of rock while liquid is present on the opposite side (night side). A \"cold\" eyeball planet, usually farther from the star, will have liquid on the side facing the host star while the rest of its surface is made of ice and rocks.\nBecause most planetary bodies have a natural tendency toward becoming tidally locked to their host body on a long enough timeline, eyeball planets may be common and could host life, particularly in planetary systems orbiting red and brown dwarf stars which have lifespans much longer than other main sequence stars.\nPotential candidates\nKepler-1652b is potentially an eyeball planet. The TRAPPIST-1 system may contain several such planets."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
-{"tstamp": 1722047980.7696, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BM25"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "16fd7aaf3f9245888da1904e381d6f5d", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "0_output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Kepler-62f\n\nKepler-62f (also known by its Kepler Object of Interest designation KOI-701.04) is a super-Earth exoplanet orbiting within the habitable zone of the star Kepler-62, the outermost of five such planets discovered around the star by NASA's Kepler spacecraft. It is located about from Earth in the constellation of Lyra."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a18c067e9a2540e8b6ad62488f5163a6", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "1_output": [["Find me a planet near \u03b1 23h 06m 29.368s and \u03b4 \u221205\u00b0 02\u2032 29.04\u2033 that could be habitable.", "Max Martin production discography\n\nThis is a list of Swedish record producer Max Martin's songwriting and production credits.\nWritten and co-written songs\nindicates a song that reached the number-one position on the Billboard Hot 100.\nindicates a song that reached top ten on the Billboard Hot 100.\nMaratone/MXM/Wolf Cousins\nProductions and co-productions\nMaratone/MXM/Wolf Cousins\nTop ten singles\nThe following singles peaked inside the top ten on the Billboard Hot 100 and Hot 100 Airplay.\nNumber-one singles (Peak date)\n\"...Baby One More Time\" (1999-01-30)\n\"It's Gonna Be Me\" (2000-07-29)\n\"I Kissed a Girl\" (2008-07-05)\n\"So What\" (2008-09-27)\n\"My Life Would Suck Without You\" (2009-02-07)\n\"3\" (2009-10-24)\n\"California Gurls\" (2010-06-19)\n\"Teenage Dream\" (2010-09-18)\n\"Raise Your Glass\" (2010-12-11)\n\"Hold It Against Me\" (2011-01-29)\n\"E.T.\" (2011-04-09)\n\"Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)\" (2011-08-27)\n\"Part of Me\" (2012-03-03)\n\"We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together\" (2012-09-01)\n\"One More Night\" (2012-09-29)\n\"Roar\" (2013-09-14)\n\"Dark Horse\" (2014-02-08)\n\"Shake It Off\" (2014-09-06)\n\"Blank Space\" (2014-11-29)\n\"Bad Blood\" (2015-06-06)\n\"Can't Feel My Face\" (2015-08-22)\n\"Can't Stop the Feeling!\" (2016-05-28)\n\"Blinding Lights\" (2020-04-04)\n\"Save Your Tears\" (2021-05-08)\n\"My Universe\" (2021-10-09)\n\"Yes, And?\" (2024-01-27)\n\"We Can't Be Friends (Wait for Your Love)\" (2024-03-23)\nOther Top 10 hits (Peak date) Peak\n\"Do You Know (What It Takes)\" (1997-08-02) #7\n\"Quit Playing Games (with My Heart)\" (1997-09-06) #2\n\"Show Me Love\" (1997-11-29) #7\n\"Everybody (Backstreet's Back)\" (1998-05-09) #4\n\"I Want It That Way\" (1999-06-26) #6\n\"(You Drive Me) Crazy\" (1999-11-13) #10\n\"That's the Way It Is\" (2000-03-04) #6\n\"Show Me the Meaning of Being Lonely\" (2000-03-18) #6\n\"Oops!... I Did It Again\" (2000-06-10) #9\n\"Shape of My Heart\" (2000-12-02) #9\n\"Since U Been Gone\" (2005-04-09) #2\n\"Behind These Hazel Eyes\" (2005-06-11) #6\n\"U + Ur Hand\" (2007-05-05) #9\n\"Who Knew\" (2007-09-29) #9\n\"Hot n Cold\" (2008-11-22) #3\n\"Whataya Want from Me\" (2010-05-01) #10\n\"Dynamite\" (2010-08-21) #2\n\"DJ Got Us Fallin' in Love\" (2010-10-09) #4\n\"Fuckin' Perfect\" (2011-02-12) #2\n\"Blow\" (2011-03-19) #7\n\"Loser Like Me\" (2011-04-02) #6\n\"Till the World Ends\" (2011-05-14) #3\n\"I Wanna Go\" (2011-08-20) #7\n\"The One That Got Away\" (2012-01-07) #3\n\"Domino\" (2012-02-18) #6\n\"Scream\" (2012-08-04) #9\n\"Wide Awake\" (2012-08-11) #2\n\"Beauty and a Beat\" (2013-01-05) #5\n\"I Knew You Were Trouble\" (2013-01-12) #2\n\"Daylight\" (2013-02-23) #7\n\"Problem\" (2014-06-07) #2\n\"Break Free\" (2014-08-30 #4\n\"Bang Bang\" (2014-10-04) #3\n\"Love Me Harder\" (2014-11-22) #7\n\"Love Me Like You Do\" (2015-03-07) #3\n\"Style\" (2015-03-21) #6\n\"Wildest Dreams\" (2015-11-07) #5\n\"Focus\" (2015-11-21) #7\n\"Hands to Myself\" (2016-02-13) #7\n\"Dangerous Woman\" (2016-06-11) #8\n\"Just Like Fire\" (2016-06-18) #10\n\"Send My Love (To Your New Lover)\" (2016-09-24) #8\n\"Side to Side\" (2016-12-03) #4\n\"Chained to the Rhythm\" (2017-03-04) #4\n\"...Ready for It?\" (2017-09-23) #4\n\"No Tears Left to Cry\" (2018-05-05) #3\n\"God Is A Woman\" (2018-09-01) #8\n\"Break Up with Your Girlfriend, I'm Bored\" (2019-02-23) #2\n\"I Don't Care\" (2019-05-25) #2\n\"Stupid Love\" (2020-03-14) #5\n\"Take My Breath\" (2021-08-21) #6\n\"Bad Blood (Taylor's Version)\" (2023-11-11) #7\n\"Style (Taylor's Version)\" (2023-11-11) #9"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
diff --git a/data/sts_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl b/data/sts_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 16674f471afc9971f0d061f71939ceb537270583..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_battle-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720659272.1494, "task_type": "sts", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "4c61c53acab941aa85fde27845978e89", "0_model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "0_txt0": "People are shopping.", "0_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "0_txt2": "People are showering.", "0_output": "", "1_conv_id": "d0df7de9350e4504b537414084eb6a91", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_txt0": "People are shopping.", "1_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "1_txt2": "People are showering.", "1_output": ""}
-{"tstamp": 1720659334.9286, "task_type": "sts", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "ae82168831c74c37bf8ac969c093abb0", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_txt0": "People are shopping.", "0_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "0_txt2": "People are showering.", "0_output": "", "1_conv_id": "c513476e64474238ac7f75998f809304", "1_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "1_txt0": "People are shopping.", "1_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "1_txt2": "People are showering.", "1_output": ""}
-{"tstamp": 1720659348.0053, "task_type": "sts", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "3e39638c7d1a41c99682d83919350ff0", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_txt0": "People are shopping.", "0_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "0_txt2": "People are showering.", "0_output": "", "1_conv_id": "5c522edf3cef40cb80c1a1647c46a10d", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_txt0": "People are shopping.", "1_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "1_txt2": "People are showering.", "1_output": ""}
-{"tstamp": 1720659357.1151, "task_type": "sts", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "93c5c82ece0f40ada5a01701824416cc", "0_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "0_txt0": "People are shopping.", "0_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "0_txt2": "People are showering.", "0_output": "", "1_conv_id": "46eab689854445a483e1e0ba3b5500fa", "1_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "1_txt0": "People are shopping.", "1_txt1": "Numerous customers browsing for produce in a market", "1_txt2": "People are showering.", "1_output": ""}
diff --git a/data/sts_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl b/data/sts_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 85dba4cdfe3dfdc062fce985979cd1624f2be6cf..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_battle-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720913083.5835, "task_type": "sts", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["GritLM/GritLM-7B", "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5"], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "3737c5be4c5b44c1be4bedf979dca11d", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_txt0": "hello", "0_txt1": "good morning", "0_txt2": "\u65e9\u4e0a\u597d", "0_output": "", "1_conv_id": "9af9d59904524168987f32db2f147e84", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_txt0": "hello", "1_txt1": "good morning", "1_txt2": "\u65e9\u4e0a\u597d", "1_output": ""}
diff --git a/data/sts_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl b/data/sts_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 2ca5a411ba04b62173ba8fc6787546bb5207ac9b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_battle-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720599219.1566, "task_type": "sts", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "5812ed2f1c7341aeb84bff1efd0ad7d9", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_txt0": "A barefoot boy climbs a tree.", "0_txt1": "A young boy wears sandals.", "0_txt2": "A young boy wearing red Croc sandals climbs a tree with healthy, green leaves.", "0_output": "", "1_conv_id": "f0ed6266426d4196ade4190dac6e5fb5", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_txt0": "A barefoot boy climbs a tree.", "1_txt1": "A young boy wears sandals.", "1_txt2": "A young boy wearing red Croc sandals climbs a tree with healthy, green leaves.", "1_output": ""}
diff --git a/data/sts_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl b/data/sts_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 997590d8020c9b923f295e4303e021ffdd37be73..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_battle-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
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diff --git a/data/sts_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index eec74f3814e105f4446d617fb64941f21e57fc45..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-0d0fb83d-616e-4013-acfd-fef020c45996.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
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-{"tstamp": 1720659375.9737, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720659375.9266, "finish": 1720659375.9737, "ip": "", "conv_id": "d470a2025ec941c28dbaf346283cb521", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "txt0": "There's a red bus making a left turn into a traffic circle that has a sprinkler system.", "txt1": "A red bus making a turn", "txt2": "A red bus backing up into a spot", "output": ""}
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diff --git a/data/sts_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 8e60e7c67e2ad0c6047a1805af80fc3bde9f8aba..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-1916beaf-61a7-4897-a08b-5ee4fcc9ea20.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
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diff --git a/data/sts_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e7568cc743bee91cd8a287df566127dafd5b3c0b..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-1b82a52e-e476-481e-8f4b-40a50c6744ac.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
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diff --git a/data/sts_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 1820fe0c0e86d0def2b567a4cbca2a41627ad173..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-399bedc3-d096-4306-bfa1-0198df14e124.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14 +0,0 @@
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-{"tstamp": 1720913118.0426, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720913117.9885, "finish": 1720913118.0426, "ip": "", "conv_id": "2d54b7d32ba5496388dd56864f7533d2", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "txt0": "The men are sitting in silence.", "txt1": "Two men heavily immersed in a conversation worth having.", "txt2": "Two men are talking.", "output": ""}
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diff --git a/data/sts_individual-4cfe069d-2411-4d58-97c6-72e849d05202.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-4cfe069d-2411-4d58-97c6-72e849d05202.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index e258b0d5a077851111e703f30432771e34d7aaed..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-4cfe069d-2411-4d58-97c6-72e849d05202.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
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-{"tstamp": 1720651670.4972, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720651667.2881, "finish": 1720651670.4972, "ip": "", "conv_id": "3c0354a81f7f42aa9d9774c15c9c5abd", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "txt0": "hello", "txt1": "good morning", "txt2": "\u65e9\u4e0a\u597d", "output": ""}
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diff --git a/data/sts_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 7695b6a51129edea93ded15afaadbc63161e6604..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-62a8f1c4-c36d-4fe4-a24b-3639a802f075.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720599200.0996, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599196.5633, "finish": 1720599200.0996, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5812ed2f1c7341aeb84bff1efd0ad7d9", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "txt0": "A barefoot boy climbs a tree.", "txt1": "A young boy wears sandals.", "txt2": "A young boy wearing red Croc sandals climbs a tree with healthy, green leaves.", "output": ""}
-{"tstamp": 1720599200.0996, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720599196.5633, "finish": 1720599200.0996, "ip": "", "conv_id": "f0ed6266426d4196ade4190dac6e5fb5", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "txt0": "A barefoot boy climbs a tree.", "txt1": "A young boy wears sandals.", "txt2": "A young boy wearing red Croc sandals climbs a tree with healthy, green leaves.", "output": ""}
diff --git a/data/sts_individual-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 69207a750072c0b2260e3acccc202d985ef9f63e..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-d34ee9dd-19ae-4184-a367-be46a2d1aacb.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,2 +0,0 @@
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-{"tstamp": 1722222382.3471, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722222378.4994, "finish": 1722222382.3471, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a85dfdf1f1fc4fe39fbbbad1bda5d35e", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "txt0": "She never once claimed that he wasn't hers.", "txt1": "She'd go, Oh no, he's not mine.", "txt2": "She's say something like \"Oh no, he's not mine\".", "output": ""}
diff --git a/data/sts_individual-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index f2e5219ab86de36a72f69c66883a6a3fb72b3ac4..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-d6658b58-3c2a-4c2c-a536-12761d4eb619.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9 +0,0 @@
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-{"tstamp": 1720650832.5635, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720650832.4889, "finish": 1720650832.5635, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5a08046f76c147a286453ec122122161", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "txt0": "The dog likes to catch baseballs.", "txt1": "a puppy about to jump to intercept a yellow ball", "txt2": "The dog is trying to catch a tennis ball.", "output": ""}
-{"tstamp": 1720650841.9386, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720650841.8603, "finish": 1720650841.9386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "906874b1667643f0801e1e85255f74ce", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "txt0": "There's a red bus making a left turn into a traffic circle that has a sprinkler system.", "txt1": "A red bus making a turn", "txt2": "A red bus backing up into a spot", "output": ""}
-{"tstamp": 1720650841.9386, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720650841.8603, "finish": 1720650841.9386, "ip": "", "conv_id": "664e5da6e019406991a55bda68c5b006", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "txt0": "There's a red bus making a left turn into a traffic circle that has a sprinkler system.", "txt1": "A red bus making a turn", "txt2": "A red bus backing up into a spot", "output": ""}
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-{"tstamp": 1720650853.5523, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720650853.5355, "finish": 1720650853.5523, "ip": "", "conv_id": "23b8d5de6a694fbca915d348e04eee9b", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "txt0": "There's a red bus making a left turn into a traffic circle that has a sprinkler system.", "txt1": "A red bus making a turn", "txt2": "A red bus backing up into a spot", "output": ""}
diff --git a/data/sts_individual-fb63ba98-1c91-4ec0-96cc-8001dbf7c68d.jsonl b/data/sts_individual-fb63ba98-1c91-4ec0-96cc-8001dbf7c68d.jsonl
deleted file mode 100644
index 7cc584f994398e995877e35e9d34f6e84c8d9325..0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
--- a/data/sts_individual-fb63ba98-1c91-4ec0-96cc-8001dbf7c68d.jsonl
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1 +0,0 @@
-{"tstamp": 1720986135.7108, "task_type": "sts", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1720986135.1621, "finish": 1720986135.7108, "ip": "", "conv_id": "b13be07b53324a349e877a9d8cf26aaa", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "txt0": "hello", "txt1": "good morning", "txt2": "\u65e9\u4e0a\u597d", "output": ""}