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Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Could someone make rosewater during the Silurian?, Answer:No, Description of Silurian: Third period of the Paleozoic Era, Fact1: Rosewater is made from roses., Fact2: Roses are flowering plants., Fact3: Flowering plants didn't evolve until the Cretaceous, hundreds of millions of years after the Silurian.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How long ago was the Silurian?, Step2: What kind of plants are roses?, Step3: How long ago did #2 evolve?, Step4: Is #3 at least as old as #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Silurian, Wikipedia page for step 2: Roses, Wikipedia page for step 3: Flowering plants, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-493dbb55ea7b45a8be7ff50c424d93e3 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did John Kerry run in the 2010 United Kingdom general election?, Answer:No, Description of 2010 United Kingdom general election: election of members to the House of Commons in 2010, Fact1: John Kerry is an American citizen and politician, Fact2: Only citizens of the UK, Ireland or a Commonwealth nation are eligible to run in the United Kingdom general elections
Output:
| [
"Step1: In order to run in the UK general election, a person must be a citizen of one of which countries? , Step2: John Kerry is a citizen of what country?, Step3: Is #2 listed in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: UK elections, Wikipedia page for step 2: John Kerry, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-6f6952f0aee1406fb1f09e618049ecc0 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do some psychotherapy patients have no mental illness?, Answer:Yes, Description of Psychotherapy: clinically applied psychology for desired behavior modification, Fact1: Psychotherapy is useful for couples navigating relationship issues., Fact2: Grief is a common reason that people seek psychotherapy.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are some common issues that make people seek psychotherapy?, Step2: Does #1 not always involve mental illness?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Psychotherapy, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-1d0fb824e6e64ea6abb1542a7e9ec10d |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do any Islamic dominated countries have a Starbucks?, Answer:Yes, Description of Starbucks: American multinational coffee company, Fact1: Starbucks is a coffee shop found in numerous countries including USA, China, and the United Arab Emirates., Fact2: The United Arab Emirates has a Starbucks in Dubai., Fact3: Islam is the largest and the official state religion of the United Arab Emirates., Fact4: Pew Research estimates state that over 76% of the citizens of the United Arab Emirates are Islamic.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which countries does Starbucks have branch(es) in?, Step2: Is any of #1 an Islamic dominated country?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Starbucks, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-4fd0218da87c4d679685eb1b8caa87b1 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did Christina Aguilera turn her chair around for Kelly Clarkson on The Voice?, Answer:No, Description of Kelly Clarkson: American singer-songwriter, actress, and television personality, Fact1: Christina Aguilera is a judge on the voice., Fact2: Kelly Clarkson is a judge on the voice., Fact3: Judges only turn their chairs around for competitors. , Fact4: Kelly Clarkson has not competed on the voice.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Do judges on the voice turn their chair for only contestants?, Step2: Has Kelly Clarkson ever been a contestant on the voice?, Step3: Are #1 and #2 the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Voice, Wikipedia page for step 2: The Voice, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f4dced0bedae4702896e273703e5ae94 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was Claude Shannon influenced by Medhatithi Gautama?, Answer:Yes, Description of Claude Shannon: American mathematician and information theorist (1916-2001), Fact1: Medhatithi Gautama was instrumental in the development of Indian logic., Fact2: George Boole's works were influenced by Indian logic., Fact3: George Boole developed Boolean Algebra., Fact4: Claude Shannon wrote his thesis on the applications of Boolean Algebra.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What discipline was Medhatithi Gautama instrumental in developing?, Step2: What was George Boole's most famous contribution?, Step3: Does #2 use elements of #1?, Step4: What did Claude Shannon write his thesis on?, Step5: Is both #3 yes and is #2 the same as #4?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Medhatithi Gautama, Wikipedia page for step 2: Boolean Algebra, Wikipedia page for step 3: Boolean Algebra, Wikipedia page for step 4: , Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-e3f3497ef8d048a48a581b1d0b726164 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did Polar Bears roam around in Ancient Greece?, Answer:No, Description of Ancient Greece: Civilization belonging to an early period of Greek history, Fact1: Polar Bears live in the Arctic, with temperatures that can get as low as -35 degrees celsius., Fact2: Ancient Greece had an average temperature of 24 degrees celsius.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where do polar bears live?, Step2: What is the average temperature of #1?, Step3: What was the average temperature of Ancient Greece?, Step4: Is #3 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Polar Bears, Wikipedia page for step 2: Arctic, Wikipedia page for step 3: Ancient Greece, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8116bedf059849f596540088ea5c2c51 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is Rand Paul guilty of catch-phrase used to attack John Kerry in 2004?, Answer:Yes, Description of Rand Paul: American politician, ophthalmologist, and United States Senator from Kentucky, Fact1: John Kerry was attacked by his opponents in the 2004 Presidential Campaign by being called a Flip-Flopper., Fact2: A Flip-Flopper is someone that makes a complete change in policy from one thing to another., Fact3: In May 2010 Rand Paul called for an electronic fence to keep out immigrants and deplored amnesty in any form., Fact4: In 2013 Rand Paul said he was in favor of undocumented immigrants being granted legal status.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What catch-phrase was used against John Kerry in 2004?, Step2: What policy changes has Rand Paul expressed?, Step3: Would #2 be considered #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: John Kerry, Wikipedia page for step 2: Rand Paul, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-cbbd410ea41244d480758dade87ee301 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did Northwest Airlines' longevity surpass Betty White?, Answer:No, Description of Northwest Airlines: 1926–2010 major airline, merged into Delta Air Lines, Fact1: Northwest Airlines lasted 84 years from 1926-2010., Fact2: Betty White is 98 years old as of 2020.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How many years was Northwest Airlines in business?, Step2: How old is Betty White?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Northwest Airlines, Wikipedia page for step 2: Betty White, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-e4fd8ef73ac64ff5a5476d466e03e890 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is Molecular biology a subject in my economics class?, Answer:No, Description of Molecular biology: Branch of biology dealing with biological activity's molecular basis, Fact1: Molecular biology is the branch of biology that concerns the molecular basis of biological activity in and between cells, including molecular synthesis, modification, mechanisms and interactions., Fact2: Economics is the social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are the main topics taught in a molecular biology class?, Step2: What are the main topics taught in an Economics class?, Step3: Is there any overlap between #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Molecular biology (education), Wikipedia page for step 2: Economics (education), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8d377719f3a04e4989108420a6e7d7c3 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would a baby gray whale fit in a tractor-trailer?, Answer:Yes, Description of Gray whale: species of mammal, Fact1: Gray whales measure 4.9 m (16 ft) in length for newborns., Fact2: A semi-trailer is 48 feet long.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How large is a baby gray whale?, Step2: How large is a tractor-trailer?, Step3: Is #2 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gray whale, Wikipedia page for step 2: Semi-trailer truck, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-836daaab73804101a39bfb3d799e5d39 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would you hire someone with dyscalculia to do surveying work?, Answer:No, Description of Surveying: The technique, profession, and science of determining the positions of points and the distances and angles between them, Fact1: Dyscalculia is a learning disability in math. People with dyscalculia have trouble with math at many levels. , Fact2: Surveyors work with elements of geometry, trigonometry, regression analysis, physics, engineering, metrology, programming languages, and the law. , Fact3: Geometry and trigonometry are types of advanced mathematics.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What do people with dyscalculia struggle with?, Step2: What skills are necessary to be a competent surveyor?, Step3: Is #1 not listed in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Dyscalculia, Wikipedia page for step 2: Surveyor, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-995ab05ba10c4d249f1e0082e9629fa9 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would someone with back pain enjoy picking strawberries?, Answer:No, Description of Strawberry: edible fruit, Fact1: Back pain may be worsened by repeated bending at the waist., Fact2: Strawberries grow very close to the ground.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are some common body postures that can aggravate back pain?, Step2: At which position relative to the ground do strawberries grow?, Step3: What posture would one have to assume to reach #2?, Step4: Is #3 excluded from #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Back pain, Wikipedia page for step 2: Strawberry, Wikipedia page for step 3: , Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-49c63c0dd5884f3584b4ad91a48cbcd1 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Can a penny conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Description of Penny: unit of currency in various countries, Fact1: The penny was originally made of copper but changed to mostly zinc after 1982., Fact2: Zinc is a moderately good conductor of electricity, Fact3: Copper is a good conductor of electricity because of its huge charge density allowing more electrons to flow in its conducting system.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which family of elements are pennies made of?, Step2: Are #1 generally known as conductors of electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Penny, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-e9e3a371d2b1490f97be022eed69f493 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Can spiders help eggplant farmers control parasites?, Answer:Yes, Description of Eggplant: plant species Solanum melongena, Fact1: The potato tuber moth is a parasite that targets the plant family Solanaceae, including eggplant , Fact2: Selenops radiatus is a spider genus in South Africa that effectively controls the potato tuber moth
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which major parasite insect are eggplants host plants to?, Step2: What are the natural enemies of #1 that farmers can use to control them?, Step3: Is any of #2 a spider?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Eggplant, Wikipedia page for step 2: Phthorimaea operculella, Wikipedia page for step 3: Selenops, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f55257521bd44a63a0fa3325f0473a48 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was Google Earth available during the Gulf War?, Answer:No, Description of Google Earth: 3D globe-based map program created by Google, Fact1: Google Earth was originally developed at Intrinsic Graphics in the late 1990s., Fact2: The Gulf War (2 August 1990 – 28 February 1991)
Output:
| [
"Step1: When was Google Earth developed?, Step2: When did the Gulf War take place?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-33d6736c1b054df09da1416741ec4c1f |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would baker's dozen of side by side Mac Trucks jam up Golden Gate Bridge?, Answer:Yes, Description of Golden Gate Bridge: suspension bridge on the San Francisco Bay, Fact1: The width of the Golden Gate Bridge is 90 feet. , Fact2: A baker's dozen includes 13 items., Fact3: The width of a Mac truck is around 8 feet.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How wide is a Mac truck?, Step2: How many items are in a baker's dozen?, Step3: What is #1 multiplied by #2?, Step4: How wide is the Golden Gate Bridge?, Step5: Is #3 greater than or equal to #4?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mac Truck, Wikipedia page for step 2: Baker's dozen, Wikipedia page for step 3: , Wikipedia page for step 4: Golden Gate Bridge, Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-0b9918b782fb4301a6110729e5af3e29 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Are Sable's a good choice of Mustelidae to weigh down a scale?, Answer:No, Description of Sable: Species of marten, Fact1: Mustelidae is the scientific designation for animals that share similarities including polecats, sables, and ferrets., Fact2: Polecats weigh between 2.2 and 3.3 pounds., Fact3: Sable's weigh around 2.4 pounds., Fact4: Ferrets can weigh up to 44 pounds., Fact5: Sable's have sharp teeth and a painful bite and are outlawed in many states.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How much does a sable weigh?, Step2: What are the weights of other common members of Mustelidae?, Step3: Is #1 greater than all #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Sable, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Mustelidae, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-4eb33e76f2614e60867649e52f1db6cb |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would someone on Venus be unlikely to experience hypothermia?, Answer:Yes, Description of Hypothermia: A human body core temperature below 35.0°C, Fact1: Hypothermia typically occurs from exposure to extreme cold., Fact2: The average surface temperature on Venus is 863°F., Fact3: A warmer surface temperature on the planet will result in a higher body temperature for people on that planet.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the average surface temperature on Venus?, Step2: In order for the human body to experience hypothermia, it would have to be exposed to temperature that are what in relation to body temp?, Step3: What is human body temperature?, Step4: Does #1 meet the condition of #2 relative to #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Venus (planet), Wikipedia page for step 2: Hypothermia, Wikipedia page for step 3: Human body, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-22e575a8560d4ec4b601b08c1c6f3f61 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did Ivan the Terrible's father and grandfather have nicer nicknames?, Answer:Yes, Description of Ivan the Terrible: Grand Prince of Moscow and 1st Tsar of Russia, Fact1: Ivan the Terrible was nicknamed terrible because of his harsh rule., Fact2: Ivan the Terrible's father, Vasili III Ivanovich, was nicknamed Vasili the Adequate., Fact3: Ivan the Terrible's grandfather, Ivan III Vasilyevich, was nicknamed Ivan the Great.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Who was Ivan the Terrible's father?, Step2: Who was the father of #1?, Step3: Do #1 and #2 have nicer nicknames than \"the Terrible\"?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Ivan the Terrible, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Vasili III Ivanovich, Wikipedia page for step 3: wiki: Ivan III Vasilyevich, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-eec8cadeca744b0f9691c594ffeacad7 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is it worse to spill paprika-flavored soup on a wedding dress versus a glass of milk?, Answer:Yes, Description of Paprika: spice made from dried fruits of Capsicum annuum, Fact1: Paprika is a dark reddish color., Fact2: Milk is white., Fact3: Wedding dresses are white., Fact4: Liquids that are the same color as the fabric don't stain as badly.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What color is paprika?, Step2: What color is milk?, Step3: What color is a wedding dress?, Step4: Would putting #1 on #3 be more noticeable than putting #2 on #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Paprika , Wikipedia page for step 2: Milk, Wikipedia page for step 3: Wedding Dress, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-590339e8f1b34289b200e348e27f447e |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is a doctorate required to teach at a SUNY School?, Answer:No, Description of Doctorate: academic or professional degree, Fact1: At SUNY schools, there are some full time professors with doctorates., Fact2: At SUNY schools, there are adjunct professors who teach with a Masters degree.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Is it the case, that there are no people teaching at SUNY that do not have a doctorate degree?, Wikipedia page for step 1: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-41bebc6216b7412a92b508347d120214 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do guitarist's have fingers that can handle pain better than average?, Answer:Yes, Description of Guitarist: person who plays the guitar, Fact1: Guitarists typically have calloused fingertips. , Fact2: Callouses are formed of layers of dead skin and usually lack sensation.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What typically forms on a Guitarists' finger?, Step2: Does #1 usually cause a lack of sensation?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Guitarists, Wikipedia page for step 2: Callous , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5efeff0b80074c358542470ea814e578 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Are Saturn's famous rings solid?, Answer:No, Description of Saturn: Sixth planet from the Sun in the Solar System, Fact1: The rings are made mostly of dust and particles., Fact2: The ring matter is constantly in orbital motion around Saturn.
Output:
| [
"Step1: In what form do Saturn's famous rings exist in?, Step2: Can #1 be considered solid?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Saturn, Wikipedia page for step 2: Solid, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-2f8909d453ee4090abf7b6f68a3140bb |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Could Ben Franklin have written HTML?, Answer:No, Description of HTML: Hypertext Markup Language, Fact1: HTML was first developed in 1990., Fact2: Ben Franklin died in 1790.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When did Ben Franklin die?, Step2: When was HTML first developed?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8da09716a6224500b13ce7992035bd6a |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Can liquid form of hydrogen harm human beings?, Answer:Yes, Description of Hydrogen: Chemical element with atomic number 1, Fact1: Hydrogen must be cooled below its critical point of 33 K to become liquid., Fact2: liquid hydrogen is a hazard for cold burns.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What temperature is hydrogen liquid?, Step2: At what temperature can frostbite form?, Step3: Is #1 less than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hydrogen, Wikipedia page for step 2: frostbite (mechanism), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f97ff2bf9cef4b95b46e9b24854f0620 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would Cuba Libre consumption help with insomnia?, Answer:No, Description of Insomnia: The inability to fall or stay sleep, Fact1: Cuba Libre is a highball cocktail consisting of cola, rum, and in many recipes lime juice on ice., Fact2: Traditionally, the cola ingredient is Coca-Cola ("Coke"), and the alcohol is a light rum such as Bacardi. , Fact3: Coca-Cola typically contains caffeine., Fact4: Caffeine consumption often promotes insomnia.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the traditional source of cola in Cuba Libre?, Step2: Does intake of #1 help treat insomnia?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Cuba Libre, Wikipedia page for step 2: Caffeine, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-60bc8777c0ea4ffca7e92d89c856fd61 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Are the founders of Skype from Asia?, Answer:No, Description of Skype: telecommunications software service, Fact1: Skype was created by the Niklas Zennström and the Dane Janus Friis., Fact2: Niklas Zennström and Dane Janus Friis are from Sweden., Fact3: Sweden is located in Europe, not Asia.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Who are the founders of Skype?, Step2: What country are #1 from?, Step3: What continent is #2 on?, Step4: Is #3 Asia?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Skype, Wikipedia page for step 2: Skype, Wikipedia page for step 3: Sweden, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-11767d562e374e64a3bcb1e30a1bd2c3 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Can any person with a driver's license work in transport of aviation fuel?, Answer:No, Description of Transport: Human-directed movement of things or people between locations, Fact1: A vehicle operator must possess a Commercial Driver's License to work in the delivery of fuel., Fact2: The process for getting a CDL is much lengthier than that of getting a Driver's License.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What certification is required of a driver to work in transport of aviation fuel?, Step2: Does #1 consist only of a regular driver's license?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Driver's license (US), Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-bdf8fbeb66544bdfa7e9f060019fcda1 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did Lionel Richie ever have dinner with Abraham Lincoln?, Answer:No, Description of Lionel Richie: American singer-songwriter, musician, record producer and actor, Fact1: Abraham Lincoln died in 1865., Fact2: Lionel Richie was born in 1949.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When did Abraham Lincoln die?, Step2: When was Lionel Richie born?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Abraham Lincoln, Wikipedia page for step 2: Lionel Richie, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-fb9620c34e034d1f8cfa6b1728a499ec |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is it foolish to stand on giraffe's head to see over Eiffel Tower?, Answer:Yes, Description of Giraffe: Tall African ungulate, Fact1: The neck of a giraffe can be up to 7 feet in length., Fact2: Including their necks, giraffes can be as tall as 20 feet., Fact3: The Eiffel Tower is 1,063 feet tall.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How tall is a giraffe?, Step2: How tall is the Eiffel Tower?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Giraffe, Wikipedia page for step 2: Eiffel Tower, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-a1a9f07f8f2446f8bf3f1b00412b7f9d |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would a black widow woman have use for peaches?, Answer:Yes, Description of Peach: species of fruit tree (for the fruit use Q13411121), Fact1: A black widow woman refers to a woman who murders her husbands for money and remarries., Fact2: Peach pits contain amygdalin, a type of cyanide., Fact3: Cyanide is poisonous to humans.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is a black widows main goal?, Step2: What do peach pits contain?, Step3: If a human ate #2, would #1 occur?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Black Widow, Wikipedia page for step 2: Peach, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8fe084f657124abba6b657855d392f21 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Would the birds on Saint Kitts and Nevis' coat of arms survive in Nome, Alaska?, Answer:No, Description of Saint Kitts and Nevis: country in Central America and Caribbean, Fact1: The coat of Saint Kitts and Nevis features pelicans., Fact2: Pelican species have a patchy global distribution, ranging latitudinally from the tropics to the temperate zone, though they are absent from polar regions., Fact3: Pelicans are not adapted to arctic areas., Fact4: Nome, Alaska is near the arctic circle.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which birds are on Saint Kitts and Nevis' Coat of arms?, Step2: What are the climatic conditions in Alaska?, Step3: Are #1 well adapted to the conditions of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Coat of arms of Saint Kitts and Nevis, Wikipedia page for step 2: Alaska, Wikipedia page for step 3: Pelican, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-9a70022a75474b52a3bbcd63a0e70dc5 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Can a computer be programmed entirely in Boolean algebra?, Answer:Yes, Description of Boolean algebra: Algebra involving variables containing only "true" and "false" (or 1 and 0) as values, Fact1: Boolean algebra is the branch of algebra in which the values of the variables are the truth values true and false, usually denoted 1 and 0 respectively. , Fact2: Mathematics in 1 and 0 is also called binary or machine language., Fact3: Computers are programmed in machine language.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are values included in Boolean algebra?, Step2: At what level are program codes read directly by computers?, Step3: Are the values included in #2 the same as #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Boolean algebra, Wikipedia page for step 2: Computer programming, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-4439d2807cf7446cbb8bce1477ffc2ab |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was the Dominican Order was founded by the patron saint of Astronomers?, Answer:Yes, Description of Dominican Order: Roman Catholic religious order, Fact1: The Dominican Order is also known as the Order of Preachers., Fact2: The Order of Preachers was founded in France by the Spanish priest Saint Dominic., Fact3: Saint Dominic is the patron saint of astronomers.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Who was the founder of the Dominican Order?, Step2: Is #1 also the patron saint of astronomers?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Dominican Order, Wikipedia page for step 2: Saint Dominic, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Who is the patron saint of Astronomers?, Step2: Who founded the Dominican Order?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Dominic, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_Order, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-42525c5dccd642d5ac3654607986f531 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Are there Americans still enlisted in the Confederate States Army?, Answer:No, Description of Confederate States Army: Southern army in American Civil War, Fact1: The Confederate States Army disbanded in 1865., Fact2: The last living confederate soldier died in 1951.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the present status of the Confederate States Army?, Step2: Considering #1, can there still be anyone enlisted?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Confederate States Army, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-72b4894d74b5467dba5342f04b7430cc |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is ITunes shutting down in 2020?, Answer:Yes, Description of ITunes: media player and library software, Fact1: Apple announced that it will soon shut down iTunes on with its Fall 2019 update., Fact2: on Macs, iTunes is indeed going away.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Did Apple announce the shutdown of iTunes in 2020?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-352141d2f1e34d7a8f203d36e0cb4853 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Does harry play a board game with his friends in the harry potter and the philosopher's stone?, Answer:Yes, Description of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone: 1997 fantasy novel by J. K. Rowling, Fact1: Chess is a two-player strategy board game played on a checkered board with 64 squares arranged in an 8×8 grid, Fact2: Harry and his friends play a life-sized game of wizard's chess in which Ron sacrifices himself
Output:
| [
"Step1: What game did Harry play?, Step2: Is #1 a board game?, Step3: Is #2 \"yes\"?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Harry Potter, Wikipedia page for step 2: Chess, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-219202645c374a6d99aad23c171cdb89 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did Eric Clapton have similar taste in women to one of the Beatles?, Answer:Yes, Description of Eric Clapton: English musician, singer, songwriter, and guitarist, Fact1: The Beatles consisted of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr., Fact2: George Harrison was married to Pattie Boyd from 1966-1977., Fact3: Eric Clapton married Pattie Boyd in 1979.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Who are the spouses Eric Clapton has had?, Step2: Who are the spouses the members of the Beatles have had?, Step3: Is #1 listed in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Eric Clapton, Wikipedia page for step 2: Beatles (relationships), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-28362b43a94048ef9033f342bf1c386b |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do people put creatures from the Black Sea on their pizza?, Answer:Yes, Description of Black Sea: Marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean between Europe and Asia, Fact1: Pizza toppings include pepperoni, sausage, bacon, meatball, and anchovies., Fact2: The Black Sea is home to many animals including dogfish, jellyfish, and anchovies.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What creatures are native to the Black Sea?, Step2: What are common pizza toppings?, Step3: Do any of #1 appear in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Black Sea, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Pizza , Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-45284b5e23ad4c29af034232a75c8ce1 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is Miami good place to master Spanish?, Answer:Yes, Description of Miami: , Fact1: Miami is the second-largest U.S. city with a Spanish-speaking majority., Fact2: It is best to learn language from the native speaker.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What language do the majority of Miami residents speak natively?, Step2: Is #1 Spanish?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Miami, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Who is it best to learn a language from?, Step2: What are the top 5 places in the US with Spanish speaking #1's?, Step3: Is Miami included in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Language learning, Wikipedia page for step 2: US languages, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-0686da9eaae1465f94b1398a5d165809 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Can you buy spinal cord at Home Depot?, Answer:No, Description of Spinal cord: long, thin, tubular structure made up of nervous tissue, Fact1: Home Depot sells home improvement and building supplies, Fact2: The spinal cord is an anatomical feature located in the vertebrae
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where are spinal cords found?, Step2: What does Home Depot sell?, Step3: Is #1 listed in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Spinal cord, Wikipedia page for step 2: Home Depot, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-0c767be47aa84767a6530ddef24b99ec |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Could Rich and Morty be triggered for children of alcoholics?, Answer:Yes, Description of Rick and Morty: Animated sitcom, Fact1: Rick, one of the titular characters of Rick and Morty, is often seen drunk and speaking abusively to Morty., Fact2: Morty's mother Beth is depicted multiple times neglecting her children while getting drunk on wine. , Fact3: Trauma triggers can occur when someone is exposed to something that reminds them of a traumatic situation.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What depictions are common triggers for children of alcoholics?, Step2: Do any of the characters from Rick and Morty exhibit the characteristics in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Trauma Trigger, Wikipedia page for step 2: Rick and Morty, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-25b1d706b4a541bfaaded11ccf033e75 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Will Donald Duck hypothetically purchase bell-bottoms for himself?, Answer:No, Description of Donald Duck: Disney cartoon character, Fact1: Bell-bottoms were a style of pants that were popular in the 60s and 70s., Fact2: Donald Duck is an animated Disney character that never wears pants.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What article of clothing are bell-bottoms?, Step2: What articles of clothing does Donald Duck wear?, Step3: Is #1 listed in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: bell-bottoms, Wikipedia page for step 2: Donald Duck, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-053bef7e9ef04038bde04c347df252c1 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do skeletons have hair?, Answer:No, Description of Hair: protein filament that grows from follicles found in the dermis, or skin, Fact1: Hair grows from the skin., Fact2: Skeletons are a structure of multiple bones., Fact3: Bones do not grow hair.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where does hair grow from?, Step2: What are skeletons made out of?, Step3: Does #2 have #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hair, Wikipedia page for step 2: Skeletons, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-203759e6c3aa4c28ad419fd3290cd59b |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was the United States Military Academy not established in Spain?, Answer:Yes, Description of United States Military Academy: U.S. Army's federal service academy in West Point, New York, Fact1: The United States Military Academy was established March 16, 1802 in West Point, New York., Fact2: West Point, New York is in the United States. , Fact3: The United States is a country in North America., Fact4: Spain is a country in Europe., Fact5: The air travel (bird fly) shortest distance between Spain and United States is 4,730 miles.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where was the United States Military Academy established?, Step2: Is #1 located outside of Spain?, Wikipedia page for step 1: United States Military Academy, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5ec5ec7cbe464048ad06d63c42113062 |
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Is menthol associated with Christmas?, Answer:Yes, Description of Menthol: chemical compound, Fact1: Menthol is the chemical in mint products that give mint its characteristic cool and tangy taste., Fact2: Peppermint is a popular candy flavor during Christmas season.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is a popular candy flavor during Christmas?, Step2: Is menthol an ingredient in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Christmas, Wikipedia page for step 2: Peppermint , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-a919ecaf91d541beaddd66d04bb91dbd |
End of preview. Expand
in Data Studio
Dataset Card for Natural Instructions (https://github.com/allenai/natural-instructions) Task: task168_strategyqa_question_decomposition
Additional Information
Citation Information
The following paper introduces the corpus in detail. If you use the corpus in published work, please cite it:
@misc{wang2022supernaturalinstructionsgeneralizationdeclarativeinstructions,
title={Super-NaturalInstructions: Generalization via Declarative Instructions on 1600+ NLP Tasks},
author={Yizhong Wang and Swaroop Mishra and Pegah Alipoormolabashi and Yeganeh Kordi and Amirreza Mirzaei and Anjana Arunkumar and Arjun Ashok and Arut Selvan Dhanasekaran and Atharva Naik and David Stap and Eshaan Pathak and Giannis Karamanolakis and Haizhi Gary Lai and Ishan Purohit and Ishani Mondal and Jacob Anderson and Kirby Kuznia and Krima Doshi and Maitreya Patel and Kuntal Kumar Pal and Mehrad Moradshahi and Mihir Parmar and Mirali Purohit and Neeraj Varshney and Phani Rohitha Kaza and Pulkit Verma and Ravsehaj Singh Puri and Rushang Karia and Shailaja Keyur Sampat and Savan Doshi and Siddhartha Mishra and Sujan Reddy and Sumanta Patro and Tanay Dixit and Xudong Shen and Chitta Baral and Yejin Choi and Noah A. Smith and Hannaneh Hajishirzi and Daniel Khashabi},
year={2022},
eprint={2204.07705},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.CL},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.07705},
}
More details can also be found in the following paper:
@misc{brüelgabrielsson2024compressserveservingthousands,
title={Compress then Serve: Serving Thousands of LoRA Adapters with Little Overhead},
author={Rickard Brüel-Gabrielsson and Jiacheng Zhu and Onkar Bhardwaj and Leshem Choshen and Kristjan Greenewald and Mikhail Yurochkin and Justin Solomon},
year={2024},
eprint={2407.00066},
archivePrefix={arXiv},
primaryClass={cs.DC},
url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.00066},
}
Contact Information
For any comments or questions, please email Rickard Brüel Gabrielsson
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