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data/retrieval_battle-cc11c9ee-fc93-4cd6-a4b5-246a7f21038c.jsonl CHANGED
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  {"tstamp": 1722322823.912, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "a8361e48a2134bafa6135be25d8ad87d", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "What is Sentence Transformers?", "0_output": [["What is Sentence Transformers?", "BERT (language model)\n\nBidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) is a language model based on the transformer architecture, notable for its dramatic improvement over previous state of the art models. It was introduced in October 2018 by researchers at Google. A 2020 literature survey concluded that \"in a little over a year, BERT has become a ubiquitous baseline in Natural Language Processing (NLP) experiments counting over 150 research publications analyzing and improving the model.\"\nBERT was originally implemented in the English language at two model sizes: (1) BERTBASE: 12 encoders with 12 bidirectional self-attention heads totaling 110 million parameters, and (2) BERTLARGE: 24 encoders with 16 bidirectional self-attention heads totaling 340 million parameters. Both models were pre-trained on the Toronto BookCorpus (800M words) and English Wikipedia (2,500M words).\nDesign\nBERT is an \"encoder-only\" transformer architecture."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a162df51a68a4151bf8a4c558811e179", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_prompt": "What is Sentence Transformers?", "1_output": [["What is Sentence Transformers?", "Transformers\n\nIn 1986, the cartoon became the film The Transformers: The Movie, which is set in the year 2005. It introduced the Matrix as the \"Autobot Matrix of Leadership\", as a fatally wounded Prime gives it to Ultra Magnus; however, as Prime dies he drops the matrix, which is then caught by Hot Rod who subsequently becomes Rodimus Prime later on in the film. Unicron, a Transformer who devours planets, fears its power and re-creates a heavily damaged Megatron as Galvatron, as well as Bombshell or Skywarp becoming Cyclonus, Thundercracker becoming Scourge and two other Insecticons becoming Scourge's huntsmen, the Sweeps. Eventually, Rodimus Prime takes out the Matrix and destroys Unicron. In the United Kingdom, the weekly comic book interspliced original material to keep up with U.S. reprints, and The Movie provided much new material. Writer Simon Furman proceeded to expand the continuity with movie spin-offs involving the time travelling Galvatron. The Movie also featured guest voices from Leonard Nimoy as Galvatron, Scatman Crothers as Jazz, Casey Kasem as Cliffjumper, Orson Welles as Unicron and Eric Idle as the leader of the Junkions (Wreck-Gar, though unnamed in the movie). The Transformers theme tune for the film was performed by Lion with \"Weird Al\" Yankovic adding a song to the soundtrack."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
8
  {"tstamp": 1722322871.5465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "7f876a2cc06144d8bccbdef351f800f2", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "Chicaco attacks", "0_output": [["Chicaco attacks", "USS Chicago (CA-29)\n\nWorld War II When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, Chicago was at sea with Task Force 12 and the Force immediately began a five-day sweep in the Oahu-Johnston-Palmyra triangle in an effort to intercept the enemy. The Force returned to Pearl Harbor on 12 December; from 14–27 December, Chicago operated with Task Force 11 on patrol and search missions.\nOn 2 February 1942, Chicago departed Pearl Harbor for Suva, where she joined the newly formed ANZAC Squadron, later redesignated as Task Force 44. During March and April, the cruiser operated off the Louisiade Archipelago, covering the attacks on Lae and Salamaua, New Guinea. In a position to intercept enemy surface units which attempted to attack Port Moresby, Chicago also provided cover for the arrival of American troops on New Caledonia.\nOn 1 May, Chicago was ordered from Nouméa to join Commander, Southwest Pacific, and on the 4th she supported in her strike against the Japanese on Tulagi, Solomon Islands during the Battle of the Coral Sea. On 7 May, she proceeded, with the Support Group, to intercept and attack the Japanese Port Moresby invasion group. The following day, the group underwent several Japanese air attacks, during which Chicago suffered several casualties from strafing, but drove off the planes and proceeded ahead until it was clear that the Japanese force had been turned back."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "39e24b7acfbc433fbe17b9aaebd9b23b", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "Chicaco attacks", "1_output": [["Chicaco attacks", "Chiapas conflict\n\n6 July 2003: Violent acts take place during the legislative elections in indigenous regions of Chiapas, principally in San Juan Cancuc, Zinacantán and Chenalhó. At the federal level, the largest rate of absenteeism was registered in the recent history of the country.\nSeptember/October 2003: A series of conflicts between members of the Independent Center of Agricultural Workers and Campesinos (CIOAC) and Zapatistas, around the detention of Armín Morales Jiménez by militants of the EZLN for the accused crime of abuse of confidence.\n22 January 2004: The houses of the community of Nuevo San Rafael in Montes Azules Reserve were all burned. According to the Secretary of Agrarian Reform (SRA), the inhabitants had voluntarily decided to abandon their homes and return to their places of origin. NGOs accused the SRA of having divided the population so as to force residents to leave the reserve.\n10 April 2004: Zapatista supporters from the municipality of Zinacantán were ambushed by members of the PRD, leaving dozens wounded and displacing 125 Zapatista families.\n23 April 2004: Noel Pável González, student at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and the National School of Anthropology and History, was found murdered in Mexico City. Elements of the investigation point towards the involvement of the ultra-right group \"El Yunque.\""]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
9
  {"tstamp": 1722322910.9879, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "830fdba8c1114ad692ade33324a03c62", "0_model_name": "BM25", "0_prompt": "What is Hugging Face?", "0_output": [["What is Hugging Face?", "X-23\n\nAfter being found by Kitty, Laura was taken to their base to recover. When Laura wakes up, with her memories now returning, at the former Weapon X facility she immediately tries to escape. Teen Cyclops goes to talk to her, while he's gone Teen Jean mentions to the team that Teen Cyclops \"fancies\" Laura. As Laura makes it outside she's met by Teen Cyclops, who was waiting for her. Teen Cyclops tries to calm her down but Laura only ceases hostility after getting Teen Cyclops scent and figuring out that Teen Cyclops is who he says he is.\nThe two talk, with Laura telling him that she does not want to talk about her past or what happened to her. Suddenly Teen Cyclops awkwardly hugs her, when she was distracted and looking sad, because he thought she needed a hug. Laura tells him that she does not do hugs, especially not with an audience as Kitty, Teen Jean, and Teen Beast were watching them. Teen Jean expressed a very conflicted look upon her face due to the hug and having read part of Laura's mind, thus she knows what happened in Avengers Arena. Laura thanks them for helping her and suggests they take the fight to the Purifiers, but in order for her to track them down, they will have to return her to where they found her."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "395cfbc72eed40159ded5a02938adc32", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "What is Hugging Face?", "1_output": [["What is Hugging Face?", "Hug\n\nEtymology The origins of the word are unknown, but two hypotheses exist. The first is that the verb \"hug\" (first used in the 1560s) could be related to the Old Norse word , which meant to comfort. The second hypothesis is that the word is related to the German word , which means to foster or cherish, and originally meant to enclose with a hedge.\nCharacteristics\nA hug, sometimes in association with a kiss, is a form of nonverbal communication. Depending on culture, context and relationship, a hug can indicate familiarity, love, affection, friendship, brotherhood, flirting or sympathy.\nHugs can indicate support, comfort, and consolation, particularly where words are insufficient. A hug usually demonstrates affection and emotional warmth, sometimes arising from joy or happiness when reunited with someone or seeing someone absent after a long time. A non-reciprocal hug may demonstrate a relational problem.\nA hug can range from a brief one-second squeeze, with the arms not fully around the other person, to an extended holding. The length of a hug in any situation is socially and culturally determined. In the case of lovers, and occasionally others, the hips may also be pressed together. The emotionality of the hug can also influence the direction of the hug.\nThe direction of hugs generally corresponds with handedness, with right-handed people tending to lead with the right hand, but a heightened emotional state makes it slightly more likely for people to lead with the left hand. This small but significant effect has been attributed to right-hemispheric emotional processing."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
 
 
 
 
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  {"tstamp": 1722322823.912, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "a8361e48a2134bafa6135be25d8ad87d", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "What is Sentence Transformers?", "0_output": [["What is Sentence Transformers?", "BERT (language model)\n\nBidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT) is a language model based on the transformer architecture, notable for its dramatic improvement over previous state of the art models. It was introduced in October 2018 by researchers at Google. A 2020 literature survey concluded that \"in a little over a year, BERT has become a ubiquitous baseline in Natural Language Processing (NLP) experiments counting over 150 research publications analyzing and improving the model.\"\nBERT was originally implemented in the English language at two model sizes: (1) BERTBASE: 12 encoders with 12 bidirectional self-attention heads totaling 110 million parameters, and (2) BERTLARGE: 24 encoders with 16 bidirectional self-attention heads totaling 340 million parameters. Both models were pre-trained on the Toronto BookCorpus (800M words) and English Wikipedia (2,500M words).\nDesign\nBERT is an \"encoder-only\" transformer architecture."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a162df51a68a4151bf8a4c558811e179", "1_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "1_prompt": "What is Sentence Transformers?", "1_output": [["What is Sentence Transformers?", "Transformers\n\nIn 1986, the cartoon became the film The Transformers: The Movie, which is set in the year 2005. It introduced the Matrix as the \"Autobot Matrix of Leadership\", as a fatally wounded Prime gives it to Ultra Magnus; however, as Prime dies he drops the matrix, which is then caught by Hot Rod who subsequently becomes Rodimus Prime later on in the film. Unicron, a Transformer who devours planets, fears its power and re-creates a heavily damaged Megatron as Galvatron, as well as Bombshell or Skywarp becoming Cyclonus, Thundercracker becoming Scourge and two other Insecticons becoming Scourge's huntsmen, the Sweeps. Eventually, Rodimus Prime takes out the Matrix and destroys Unicron. In the United Kingdom, the weekly comic book interspliced original material to keep up with U.S. reprints, and The Movie provided much new material. Writer Simon Furman proceeded to expand the continuity with movie spin-offs involving the time travelling Galvatron. The Movie also featured guest voices from Leonard Nimoy as Galvatron, Scatman Crothers as Jazz, Casey Kasem as Cliffjumper, Orson Welles as Unicron and Eric Idle as the leader of the Junkions (Wreck-Gar, though unnamed in the movie). The Transformers theme tune for the film was performed by Lion with \"Weird Al\" Yankovic adding a song to the soundtrack."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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  {"tstamp": 1722322871.5465, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "7f876a2cc06144d8bccbdef351f800f2", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "Chicaco attacks", "0_output": [["Chicaco attacks", "USS Chicago (CA-29)\n\nWorld War II When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, Chicago was at sea with Task Force 12 and the Force immediately began a five-day sweep in the Oahu-Johnston-Palmyra triangle in an effort to intercept the enemy. The Force returned to Pearl Harbor on 12 December; from 14–27 December, Chicago operated with Task Force 11 on patrol and search missions.\nOn 2 February 1942, Chicago departed Pearl Harbor for Suva, where she joined the newly formed ANZAC Squadron, later redesignated as Task Force 44. During March and April, the cruiser operated off the Louisiade Archipelago, covering the attacks on Lae and Salamaua, New Guinea. In a position to intercept enemy surface units which attempted to attack Port Moresby, Chicago also provided cover for the arrival of American troops on New Caledonia.\nOn 1 May, Chicago was ordered from Nouméa to join Commander, Southwest Pacific, and on the 4th she supported in her strike against the Japanese on Tulagi, Solomon Islands during the Battle of the Coral Sea. On 7 May, she proceeded, with the Support Group, to intercept and attack the Japanese Port Moresby invasion group. The following day, the group underwent several Japanese air attacks, during which Chicago suffered several casualties from strafing, but drove off the planes and proceeded ahead until it was clear that the Japanese force had been turned back."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "39e24b7acfbc433fbe17b9aaebd9b23b", "1_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "1_prompt": "Chicaco attacks", "1_output": [["Chicaco attacks", "Chiapas conflict\n\n6 July 2003: Violent acts take place during the legislative elections in indigenous regions of Chiapas, principally in San Juan Cancuc, Zinacantán and Chenalhó. At the federal level, the largest rate of absenteeism was registered in the recent history of the country.\nSeptember/October 2003: A series of conflicts between members of the Independent Center of Agricultural Workers and Campesinos (CIOAC) and Zapatistas, around the detention of Armín Morales Jiménez by militants of the EZLN for the accused crime of abuse of confidence.\n22 January 2004: The houses of the community of Nuevo San Rafael in Montes Azules Reserve were all burned. According to the Secretary of Agrarian Reform (SRA), the inhabitants had voluntarily decided to abandon their homes and return to their places of origin. NGOs accused the SRA of having divided the population so as to force residents to leave the reserve.\n10 April 2004: Zapatista supporters from the municipality of Zinacantán were ambushed by members of the PRD, leaving dozens wounded and displacing 125 Zapatista families.\n23 April 2004: Noel Pável González, student at the National Autonomous University of Mexico and the National School of Anthropology and History, was found murdered in Mexico City. Elements of the investigation point towards the involvement of the ultra-right group \"El Yunque.\""]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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  {"tstamp": 1722322910.9879, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "bothbadvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "830fdba8c1114ad692ade33324a03c62", "0_model_name": "BM25", "0_prompt": "What is Hugging Face?", "0_output": [["What is Hugging Face?", "X-23\n\nAfter being found by Kitty, Laura was taken to their base to recover. When Laura wakes up, with her memories now returning, at the former Weapon X facility she immediately tries to escape. Teen Cyclops goes to talk to her, while he's gone Teen Jean mentions to the team that Teen Cyclops \"fancies\" Laura. As Laura makes it outside she's met by Teen Cyclops, who was waiting for her. Teen Cyclops tries to calm her down but Laura only ceases hostility after getting Teen Cyclops scent and figuring out that Teen Cyclops is who he says he is.\nThe two talk, with Laura telling him that she does not want to talk about her past or what happened to her. Suddenly Teen Cyclops awkwardly hugs her, when she was distracted and looking sad, because he thought she needed a hug. Laura tells him that she does not do hugs, especially not with an audience as Kitty, Teen Jean, and Teen Beast were watching them. Teen Jean expressed a very conflicted look upon her face due to the hug and having read part of Laura's mind, thus she knows what happened in Avengers Arena. Laura thanks them for helping her and suggests they take the fight to the Purifiers, but in order for her to track them down, they will have to return her to where they found her."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "395cfbc72eed40159ded5a02938adc32", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "What is Hugging Face?", "1_output": [["What is Hugging Face?", "Hug\n\nEtymology The origins of the word are unknown, but two hypotheses exist. The first is that the verb \"hug\" (first used in the 1560s) could be related to the Old Norse word , which meant to comfort. The second hypothesis is that the word is related to the German word , which means to foster or cherish, and originally meant to enclose with a hedge.\nCharacteristics\nA hug, sometimes in association with a kiss, is a form of nonverbal communication. Depending on culture, context and relationship, a hug can indicate familiarity, love, affection, friendship, brotherhood, flirting or sympathy.\nHugs can indicate support, comfort, and consolation, particularly where words are insufficient. A hug usually demonstrates affection and emotional warmth, sometimes arising from joy or happiness when reunited with someone or seeing someone absent after a long time. A non-reciprocal hug may demonstrate a relational problem.\nA hug can range from a brief one-second squeeze, with the arms not fully around the other person, to an extended holding. The length of a hug in any situation is socially and culturally determined. In the case of lovers, and occasionally others, the hips may also be pressed together. The emotionality of the hug can also influence the direction of the hug.\nThe direction of hugs generally corresponds with handedness, with right-handed people tending to lead with the right hand, but a heightened emotional state makes it slightly more likely for people to lead with the left hand. This small but significant effect has been attributed to right-hemispheric emotional processing."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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+ {"tstamp": 1722322936.8317, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "49aa9d1fb4e54f14b66643bdec0e311a", "0_model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "0_prompt": "What is NLTK?", "0_output": [["What is NLTK?", "Computational linguistics\n\nComputational linguistics is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the computational modelling of natural language, as well as the study of appropriate computational approaches to linguistic questions. In general, computational linguistics draws upon linguistics, computer science, artificial intelligence, mathematics, logic, philosophy, cognitive science, cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, anthropology and neuroscience, among others.\nOrigins\nThe field overlapped with artificial intelligence since the efforts in the United States in the 1950s to use computers to automatically translate texts from foreign languages, particularly Russian scientific journals, into English. Since rule-based approaches were able to make arithmetic (systematic) calculations much faster and more accurately than humans, it was expected that lexicon, morphology, syntax and semantics can be learned using explicit rules, as well. After the failure of rule-based approaches, David Hays coined the term in order to distinguish the field from AI and co-founded both the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) and the International Committee on Computational Linguistics (ICCL) in the 1970s and 1980s. What started as an effort to translate between languages evolved into a much wider field of natural language processing.\nAnnotated corpora\nIn order to be able to meticulously study the English language, an annotated text corpus was much needed. The Penn Treebank was one of the most used corpora. It consisted of IBM computer manuals, transcribed telephone conversations, and other texts, together containing over 4.5 million words of American English, annotated using both part-of-speech tagging and syntactic bracketing."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "340198e89e784b64b1d79d0e65500135", "1_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "1_prompt": "What is NLTK?", "1_output": [["What is NLTK?", "Natural Language Toolkit\n\nThe Natural Language Toolkit, or more commonly NLTK, is a suite of libraries and programs for symbolic and statistical natural language processing (NLP) for English written in the Python programming language. It supports classification, tokenization, stemming, tagging, parsing, and semantic reasoning functionalities. It was developed by Steven Bird and Edward Loper in the Department of Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania. NLTK includes graphical demonstrations and sample data. It is accompanied by a book that explains the underlying concepts behind the language processing tasks supported by the toolkit, plus a cookbook.\nNLTK is intended to support research and teaching in NLP or closely related areas, including empirical linguistics, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, information retrieval, and machine learning.\nNLTK has been used successfully as a teaching tool, as an individual study tool, and as a platform for prototyping and building research systems. There are 32 universities in the US and 25 countries using NLTK in their courses.\nLibrary highlights\nDiscourse representation\nLexical analysis: Word and text tokenizer\nn-gram and collocations\nPart-of-speech tagger\nTree model and Text chunker for capturing"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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+ {"tstamp": 1722323001.851, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "904708d39d7f40d69ba876b5f826d941", "0_model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "0_prompt": "What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "0_output": [["What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "Vinson Massif\n\nMount Vinson is the highest peak in Antarctica, at . It lies in the north part of Vinson Massif's summit plateau in the south portion of the main ridge of the Sentinel Range about north of Hollister Peak. It was first climbed in 1966 by an American team led by Nicholas Clinch. An expedition in 2001 was the first to climb via the Eastern route, and also took GPS measurements of the height of the peak. As of February 2010, 1,400 climbers have attempted to reach the summit of Mount Vinson. Mount Vinson is ranked 6th by topographic isolation.\nGeography\nThe Vinson Massif extends between Goodge Col and Branscomb Glacier to the northwest, Nimitz Glacier and Gildea Glacier to the southwest and south, and Dater Glacier and its tributary Hinkley Glacier to the east. The southeastern part of the massif ends at Hammer Col, which joins it to the Craddock Massif, of which the highest point is Mount Rutford (). The massif comprises both the high central Vinson Plateau with its few peaks rising to over , and several side ridges mostly trending southwest or northeast from the plateau.\nThe current height () of Mount Vinson was measured by a GPS survey that was conducted by the 2004 Omega Foundation team comprising Damien Gildea of Australia (leader) and Rodrigo Fica and Camilo Rada of Chile. Since 1998 and continuing through 2007, the Omega Foundation has placed a GPS receiver on the summit for a suitable period of time to obtain accurate satellite readings."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "a21aee4127f6494db3edb0f70eebdbc1", "1_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "1_prompt": "What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "1_output": [["What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "Vinson Massif\n\nMount Vinson is the highest peak in Antarctica, at . It lies in the north part of Vinson Massif's summit plateau in the south portion of the main ridge of the Sentinel Range about north of Hollister Peak. It was first climbed in 1966 by an American team led by Nicholas Clinch. An expedition in 2001 was the first to climb via the Eastern route, and also took GPS measurements of the height of the peak. As of February 2010, 1,400 climbers have attempted to reach the summit of Mount Vinson. Mount Vinson is ranked 6th by topographic isolation.\nGeography\nThe Vinson Massif extends between Goodge Col and Branscomb Glacier to the northwest, Nimitz Glacier and Gildea Glacier to the southwest and south, and Dater Glacier and its tributary Hinkley Glacier to the east. The southeastern part of the massif ends at Hammer Col, which joins it to the Craddock Massif, of which the highest point is Mount Rutford (). The massif comprises both the high central Vinson Plateau with its few peaks rising to over , and several side ridges mostly trending southwest or northeast from the plateau.\nThe current height () of Mount Vinson was measured by a GPS survey that was conducted by the 2004 Omega Foundation team comprising Damien Gildea of Australia (leader) and Rodrigo Fica and Camilo Rada of Chile. Since 1998 and continuing through 2007, the Omega Foundation has placed a GPS receiver on the summit for a suitable period of time to obtain accurate satellite readings."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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+ {"tstamp": 1722323045.033, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "e4f62079ab11428192993e45d8717927", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_prompt": "What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "0_output": [["What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "Magazine\n\nA magazine is a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content. They are generally financed by advertising, purchase price, prepaid subscriptions, or by a combination of the three.\nDefinition\nIn the technical sense a journal has continuous pagination throughout a volume. Thus, Bloomberg Businessweek, which starts each issue anew with page one, is a magazine, but the Journal of Business Communication, which continues the same sequence of pagination throughout the coterminous year, is a journal. Some professional or trade publications are also peer-reviewed, for example the Journal of Accountancy. Non-peer-reviewed academic or professional publications are generally professional magazines. That a publication calls itself a journal does not make it a journal in the technical sense; The Wall Street Journal is actually a newspaper."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "63e8ab3f20544d1eafd32af5009506d8", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "1_output": [["What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "The Australian Women's Weekly\n\nThe Australian Women's Weekly, sometimes known as simply The Weekly, is an Australian monthly women's magazine published by Are Media in Sydney and founded in 1933. For many years it was the number one magazine in Australia before being outsold by the Australian edition of Better Homes and Gardens in 2014. , The Weekly has overtaken Better Homes and Gardens again, coming out on top as Australia's most read magazine. The magazine invested in the 2020 film I Am Woman about Helen Reddy, singer and feminist icon.\nHistory and profile\nThe magazine was started in 1933 by Frank Packer and Ted Theodore as a weekly publication. The first editor was George Warnecke and the initial dummy was laid out by William Edwin Pidgeon who went on to do many famous covers over the next 25 years. It was to have two distinctive features; firstly, the newspaper's features would have an element of topicality, and secondly the magazine would appeal to all Australian women, regardless of class, and have a national focus. Wanting it to appeal to a mass audience, Warnecke hoped The Weekly would be a sign that Australia finally was coming out of the Depression. Jean Williamson was hired (moving from the Sydney Morning Herald) where she was surprised to find that she was the editor for \"fiction\". Soon letters were arriving from women who were obviously lonely and light fiction brought them comfort."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
data/retrieval_individual-cc11c9ee-fc93-4cd6-a4b5-246a7f21038c.jsonl CHANGED
@@ -22,3 +22,9 @@
22
  {"tstamp": 1722322898.0607, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322897.8496, "finish": 1722322898.0607, "ip": "", "conv_id": "395cfbc72eed40159ded5a02938adc32", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "What is Hugging Face?", "output": [["What is Hugging Face?", "Hug\n\nEtymology The origins of the word are unknown, but two hypotheses exist. The first is that the verb \"hug\" (first used in the 1560s) could be related to the Old Norse word , which meant to comfort. The second hypothesis is that the word is related to the German word , which means to foster or cherish, and originally meant to enclose with a hedge.\nCharacteristics\nA hug, sometimes in association with a kiss, is a form of nonverbal communication. Depending on culture, context and relationship, a hug can indicate familiarity, love, affection, friendship, brotherhood, flirting or sympathy.\nHugs can indicate support, comfort, and consolation, particularly where words are insufficient. A hug usually demonstrates affection and emotional warmth, sometimes arising from joy or happiness when reunited with someone or seeing someone absent after a long time. A non-reciprocal hug may demonstrate a relational problem.\nA hug can range from a brief one-second squeeze, with the arms not fully around the other person, to an extended holding. The length of a hug in any situation is socially and culturally determined. In the case of lovers, and occasionally others, the hips may also be pressed together. The emotionality of the hug can also influence the direction of the hug.\nThe direction of hugs generally corresponds with handedness, with right-handed people tending to lead with the right hand, but a heightened emotional state makes it slightly more likely for people to lead with the left hand. This small but significant effect has been attributed to right-hemispheric emotional processing."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
23
  {"tstamp": 1722322926.4452, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322926.2649, "finish": 1722322926.4452, "ip": "", "conv_id": "49aa9d1fb4e54f14b66643bdec0e311a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is NLTK?", "output": [["What is NLTK?", "Computational linguistics\n\nComputational linguistics is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the computational modelling of natural language, as well as the study of appropriate computational approaches to linguistic questions. In general, computational linguistics draws upon linguistics, computer science, artificial intelligence, mathematics, logic, philosophy, cognitive science, cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, anthropology and neuroscience, among others.\nOrigins\nThe field overlapped with artificial intelligence since the efforts in the United States in the 1950s to use computers to automatically translate texts from foreign languages, particularly Russian scientific journals, into English. Since rule-based approaches were able to make arithmetic (systematic) calculations much faster and more accurately than humans, it was expected that lexicon, morphology, syntax and semantics can be learned using explicit rules, as well. After the failure of rule-based approaches, David Hays coined the term in order to distinguish the field from AI and co-founded both the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) and the International Committee on Computational Linguistics (ICCL) in the 1970s and 1980s. What started as an effort to translate between languages evolved into a much wider field of natural language processing.\nAnnotated corpora\nIn order to be able to meticulously study the English language, an annotated text corpus was much needed. The Penn Treebank was one of the most used corpora. It consisted of IBM computer manuals, transcribed telephone conversations, and other texts, together containing over 4.5 million words of American English, annotated using both part-of-speech tagging and syntactic bracketing."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
24
  {"tstamp": 1722322926.4452, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322926.2649, "finish": 1722322926.4452, "ip": "", "conv_id": "340198e89e784b64b1d79d0e65500135", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is NLTK?", "output": [["What is NLTK?", "Natural Language Toolkit\n\nThe Natural Language Toolkit, or more commonly NLTK, is a suite of libraries and programs for symbolic and statistical natural language processing (NLP) for English written in the Python programming language. It supports classification, tokenization, stemming, tagging, parsing, and semantic reasoning functionalities. It was developed by Steven Bird and Edward Loper in the Department of Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania. NLTK includes graphical demonstrations and sample data. It is accompanied by a book that explains the underlying concepts behind the language processing tasks supported by the toolkit, plus a cookbook.\nNLTK is intended to support research and teaching in NLP or closely related areas, including empirical linguistics, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, information retrieval, and machine learning.\nNLTK has been used successfully as a teaching tool, as an individual study tool, and as a platform for prototyping and building research systems. There are 32 universities in the US and 25 countries using NLTK in their courses.\nLibrary highlights\nDiscourse representation\nLexical analysis: Word and text tokenizer\nn-gram and collocations\nPart-of-speech tagger\nTree model and Text chunker for capturing"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
22
  {"tstamp": 1722322898.0607, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322897.8496, "finish": 1722322898.0607, "ip": "", "conv_id": "395cfbc72eed40159ded5a02938adc32", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "What is Hugging Face?", "output": [["What is Hugging Face?", "Hug\n\nEtymology The origins of the word are unknown, but two hypotheses exist. The first is that the verb \"hug\" (first used in the 1560s) could be related to the Old Norse word , which meant to comfort. The second hypothesis is that the word is related to the German word , which means to foster or cherish, and originally meant to enclose with a hedge.\nCharacteristics\nA hug, sometimes in association with a kiss, is a form of nonverbal communication. Depending on culture, context and relationship, a hug can indicate familiarity, love, affection, friendship, brotherhood, flirting or sympathy.\nHugs can indicate support, comfort, and consolation, particularly where words are insufficient. A hug usually demonstrates affection and emotional warmth, sometimes arising from joy or happiness when reunited with someone or seeing someone absent after a long time. A non-reciprocal hug may demonstrate a relational problem.\nA hug can range from a brief one-second squeeze, with the arms not fully around the other person, to an extended holding. The length of a hug in any situation is socially and culturally determined. In the case of lovers, and occasionally others, the hips may also be pressed together. The emotionality of the hug can also influence the direction of the hug.\nThe direction of hugs generally corresponds with handedness, with right-handed people tending to lead with the right hand, but a heightened emotional state makes it slightly more likely for people to lead with the left hand. This small but significant effect has been attributed to right-hemispheric emotional processing."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
23
  {"tstamp": 1722322926.4452, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322926.2649, "finish": 1722322926.4452, "ip": "", "conv_id": "49aa9d1fb4e54f14b66643bdec0e311a", "model_name": "Alibaba-NLP/gte-Qwen2-7B-instruct", "prompt": "What is NLTK?", "output": [["What is NLTK?", "Computational linguistics\n\nComputational linguistics is an interdisciplinary field concerned with the computational modelling of natural language, as well as the study of appropriate computational approaches to linguistic questions. In general, computational linguistics draws upon linguistics, computer science, artificial intelligence, mathematics, logic, philosophy, cognitive science, cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, anthropology and neuroscience, among others.\nOrigins\nThe field overlapped with artificial intelligence since the efforts in the United States in the 1950s to use computers to automatically translate texts from foreign languages, particularly Russian scientific journals, into English. Since rule-based approaches were able to make arithmetic (systematic) calculations much faster and more accurately than humans, it was expected that lexicon, morphology, syntax and semantics can be learned using explicit rules, as well. After the failure of rule-based approaches, David Hays coined the term in order to distinguish the field from AI and co-founded both the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) and the International Committee on Computational Linguistics (ICCL) in the 1970s and 1980s. What started as an effort to translate between languages evolved into a much wider field of natural language processing.\nAnnotated corpora\nIn order to be able to meticulously study the English language, an annotated text corpus was much needed. The Penn Treebank was one of the most used corpora. It consisted of IBM computer manuals, transcribed telephone conversations, and other texts, together containing over 4.5 million words of American English, annotated using both part-of-speech tagging and syntactic bracketing."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
24
  {"tstamp": 1722322926.4452, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322926.2649, "finish": 1722322926.4452, "ip": "", "conv_id": "340198e89e784b64b1d79d0e65500135", "model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "prompt": "What is NLTK?", "output": [["What is NLTK?", "Natural Language Toolkit\n\nThe Natural Language Toolkit, or more commonly NLTK, is a suite of libraries and programs for symbolic and statistical natural language processing (NLP) for English written in the Python programming language. It supports classification, tokenization, stemming, tagging, parsing, and semantic reasoning functionalities. It was developed by Steven Bird and Edward Loper in the Department of Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania. NLTK includes graphical demonstrations and sample data. It is accompanied by a book that explains the underlying concepts behind the language processing tasks supported by the toolkit, plus a cookbook.\nNLTK is intended to support research and teaching in NLP or closely related areas, including empirical linguistics, cognitive science, artificial intelligence, information retrieval, and machine learning.\nNLTK has been used successfully as a teaching tool, as an individual study tool, and as a platform for prototyping and building research systems. There are 32 universities in the US and 25 countries using NLTK in their courses.\nLibrary highlights\nDiscourse representation\nLexical analysis: Word and text tokenizer\nn-gram and collocations\nPart-of-speech tagger\nTree model and Text chunker for capturing"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
25
+ {"tstamp": 1722322990.8571, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322990.4313, "finish": 1722322990.8571, "ip": "", "conv_id": "904708d39d7f40d69ba876b5f826d941", "model_name": "GritLM/GritLM-7B", "prompt": "What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "output": [["What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "Vinson Massif\n\nMount Vinson is the highest peak in Antarctica, at . It lies in the north part of Vinson Massif's summit plateau in the south portion of the main ridge of the Sentinel Range about north of Hollister Peak. It was first climbed in 1966 by an American team led by Nicholas Clinch. An expedition in 2001 was the first to climb via the Eastern route, and also took GPS measurements of the height of the peak. As of February 2010, 1,400 climbers have attempted to reach the summit of Mount Vinson. Mount Vinson is ranked 6th by topographic isolation.\nGeography\nThe Vinson Massif extends between Goodge Col and Branscomb Glacier to the northwest, Nimitz Glacier and Gildea Glacier to the southwest and south, and Dater Glacier and its tributary Hinkley Glacier to the east. The southeastern part of the massif ends at Hammer Col, which joins it to the Craddock Massif, of which the highest point is Mount Rutford (). The massif comprises both the high central Vinson Plateau with its few peaks rising to over , and several side ridges mostly trending southwest or northeast from the plateau.\nThe current height () of Mount Vinson was measured by a GPS survey that was conducted by the 2004 Omega Foundation team comprising Damien Gildea of Australia (leader) and Rodrigo Fica and Camilo Rada of Chile. Since 1998 and continuing through 2007, the Omega Foundation has placed a GPS receiver on the summit for a suitable period of time to obtain accurate satellite readings."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
26
+ {"tstamp": 1722322990.8571, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722322990.4313, "finish": 1722322990.8571, "ip": "", "conv_id": "a21aee4127f6494db3edb0f70eebdbc1", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "output": [["What is the tallest peak in Warren Range, Antarctica?", "Vinson Massif\n\nMount Vinson is the highest peak in Antarctica, at . It lies in the north part of Vinson Massif's summit plateau in the south portion of the main ridge of the Sentinel Range about north of Hollister Peak. It was first climbed in 1966 by an American team led by Nicholas Clinch. An expedition in 2001 was the first to climb via the Eastern route, and also took GPS measurements of the height of the peak. As of February 2010, 1,400 climbers have attempted to reach the summit of Mount Vinson. Mount Vinson is ranked 6th by topographic isolation.\nGeography\nThe Vinson Massif extends between Goodge Col and Branscomb Glacier to the northwest, Nimitz Glacier and Gildea Glacier to the southwest and south, and Dater Glacier and its tributary Hinkley Glacier to the east. The southeastern part of the massif ends at Hammer Col, which joins it to the Craddock Massif, of which the highest point is Mount Rutford (). The massif comprises both the high central Vinson Plateau with its few peaks rising to over , and several side ridges mostly trending southwest or northeast from the plateau.\nThe current height () of Mount Vinson was measured by a GPS survey that was conducted by the 2004 Omega Foundation team comprising Damien Gildea of Australia (leader) and Rodrigo Fica and Camilo Rada of Chile. Since 1998 and continuing through 2007, the Omega Foundation has placed a GPS receiver on the summit for a suitable period of time to obtain accurate satellite readings."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
27
+ {"tstamp": 1722323025.2085, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722323024.9941, "finish": 1722323025.2085, "ip": "", "conv_id": "e4f62079ab11428192993e45d8717927", "model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "prompt": "What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "output": [["What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "Magazine\n\nA magazine is a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content. They are generally financed by advertising, purchase price, prepaid subscriptions, or by a combination of the three.\nDefinition\nIn the technical sense a journal has continuous pagination throughout a volume. Thus, Bloomberg Businessweek, which starts each issue anew with page one, is a magazine, but the Journal of Business Communication, which continues the same sequence of pagination throughout the coterminous year, is a journal. Some professional or trade publications are also peer-reviewed, for example the Journal of Accountancy. Non-peer-reviewed academic or professional publications are generally professional magazines. That a publication calls itself a journal does not make it a journal in the technical sense; The Wall Street Journal is actually a newspaper."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
28
+ {"tstamp": 1722323025.2085, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "embed-english-v3.0", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722323024.9941, "finish": 1722323025.2085, "ip": "", "conv_id": "63e8ab3f20544d1eafd32af5009506d8", "model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "prompt": "What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "output": [["What is the Australian largest holistic magazine?", "The Australian Women's Weekly\n\nThe Australian Women's Weekly, sometimes known as simply The Weekly, is an Australian monthly women's magazine published by Are Media in Sydney and founded in 1933. For many years it was the number one magazine in Australia before being outsold by the Australian edition of Better Homes and Gardens in 2014. , The Weekly has overtaken Better Homes and Gardens again, coming out on top as Australia's most read magazine. The magazine invested in the 2020 film I Am Woman about Helen Reddy, singer and feminist icon.\nHistory and profile\nThe magazine was started in 1933 by Frank Packer and Ted Theodore as a weekly publication. The first editor was George Warnecke and the initial dummy was laid out by William Edwin Pidgeon who went on to do many famous covers over the next 25 years. It was to have two distinctive features; firstly, the newspaper's features would have an element of topicality, and secondly the magazine would appeal to all Australian women, regardless of class, and have a national focus. Wanting it to appeal to a mass audience, Warnecke hoped The Weekly would be a sign that Australia finally was coming out of the Depression. Jean Williamson was hired (moving from the Sydney Morning Herald) where she was surprised to find that she was the editor for \"fiction\". Soon letters were arriving from women who were obviously lonely and light fiction brought them comfort."]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
29
+ {"tstamp": 1722323066.9848, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722323066.5625, "finish": 1722323066.9848, "ip": "", "conv_id": "960b10306e064d2a9862fd9cec966605", "model_name": "Salesforce/SFR-Embedding-2_R", "prompt": "What is the Antipolo Lady of Lourdes School?", "output": [["What is the Antipolo Lady of Lourdes School?", "Antipolo Cathedral\n\nThe International Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage (; ), popularly known as the Antipolo Cathedral (; ) and alternatively known as the Immaculate Conception Parish (), is a Roman Catholic cathedral in Antipolo, Philippines. It enshrines a venerated Black Madonna image of the Blessed Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage (), and serves as the seat of the Bishop of Antipolo.\nThe shrine attracts millions of pilgrims annually, especially during the pilgrimage season from May to July each year.\nHistory"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
30
+ {"tstamp": 1722323066.9848, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "voyage-multilingual-2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1722323066.5625, "finish": 1722323066.9848, "ip": "", "conv_id": "86f7dbed9c7d4054ae51c8f5bca76139", "model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "prompt": "What is the Antipolo Lady of Lourdes School?", "output": [["What is the Antipolo Lady of Lourdes School?", "Antipolo\n\nOther colleges include College of San Benildo - Rizal, ACLC, AMA University Computer College - East Rizal, World Citi Colleges, and ICCT Colleges.\nThe Antipolo Institute of Technology or AiTech, established by the city government in 2014, is the first CHED-recognized Higher Education Institution (HEI) among Local Colleges and Universities (LUCs). It is the first college in the Philippines offering Bachelor in Construction Engineering Technology and Management (BCETM).\nPublic Elementary Schools\nJuan Sumulong Elementary School\nSan Isidro Elementary School\nDela Paz Elementary School\nPeñafrancia Elementary School\nLores Elementary School\nSta. Cruz Elementary School\nBagong Nayon II Elementary School\nIsaias S. Tapales Elementary School\nCupang Elementary School\nCalawis Elementary School\nPublic High Schools\nAntipolo National High School\nAntipolo City Senior High School\nAntipolo National Science & Technology High School\nCupang National High School\nSan Jose National High School\nSan Isidro National High School\nDela Paz National High School\nCalawis National High School\nMambugan National High School\nPrivate Schools\nOur Lady of Peace School (OLPS)\nAntipolo Immaculate Concepcion School (AICS)\nSumulong Memorial High School (SMHS)\nMontessori Integrated School of Antipolo (MISA)\nMarcelli School of Antipolo\nSt. Clare Montessori and Science High School\nMother Goose Montessori Grade School\nSouthridge Private High School\nWILL School of Antipolo\nSt. John Mary Vianney Academy\nLa Salle College Antipolo\nTransportation\nLand"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}