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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
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 Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone popular during the great depression?, Answer:No, Description of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone: 1997 fantasy novel by J. K. Rowling, Fact1: The Great Depression started in 1929 and ended in 1933., Fact2: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was first published in 1997. Output:
[ "Step1: When did the Great Depression end?, Step2: When was Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone first published?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Great Depression, Wikipedia page for step 2: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-5e3dba25b5fc46529c096266a47dca20
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: Were Greeks essential to crafting Egyptian Lighthouse of Alexandria?, Answer:Yes, Description of Lighthouse of Alexandria: Ancient lighthouse in Egypt, Fact1: The Lighthouse of Alexandria was an impressive monument in Egypt., Fact2: The Lighthouse of Alexandria was built by pharaoh Ptolemy II., Fact3: Ptolemy II was the son of Ptolemy I Soter., Fact4: Ptolemy I Soter was a Greek bodyguard of Alexander the Great and became pharaoh of Egypt. Output:
[ "Step1: Who built the Lighthouse of Alexandria?, Step2: Who was #1's father?, Step3: Was #2 Greek?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Lighthouse of Alexandria, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ptolemy II, Wikipedia page for step 3: Ptolemy I Soter, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-bda31e34b414491a87bc0b3be6a9ed81
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 the book Revolutionary Road give a glimpse at life in a suburb?, Answer:Yes, Description of Suburb: Human settlement that is part of or near to a larger city, Fact1: The setting of the book is in Connecticut., Fact2: The area of Connecticut where the book takes place is not in a major city., Fact3: The book takes place in a suburb called Revolutionary Hill Estates. Output:
[ "Step1: What location is the setting of the book Revolutionary Road?, Step2: Is #1 a suburb?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Revolutionary Road, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-33944a6ac81a47f8a43df5583c3728e8
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 Antarctica become part of NATO?, Answer:No, Description of NATO: Intergovernmental military alliance of Western states, Fact1: NATO constitutes a system of collective defense whereby its independent member states agree to mutual defense in response to an attack by any external party, Fact2: To apply for membership, new members must have their military forces be under firm civilian control., Fact3: The Antarctic Treaty and related agreements, collectively known as the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS), regulate international relations with respect to Antarctica,, Fact4: The treaty sets aside Antarctica as a scientific preserve, establishes freedom of scientific investigation, and bans military activity on the continent. Output:
[ "Step1: What is the nature of the NATO alliance?, Step2: Which system regulates international relations with respect to Antarctica?, Step3: Does #2 allow for #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: NATO, Wikipedia page for step 2: Antarctic Treaty System, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-af79b397579543a09465cd5386cc425e
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 James II approve of the Establishment Clause of the US Constitution?, Answer:Yes, Description of James II of England: 17th-century King of England and Ireland, and of Scotland (as James VII), Fact1: James II passed laws protecting the rights of religious minorities., Fact2: The Establishment Clause of the US Constitution protects the rights of religious minorities. Output:
[ "Step1: James II passed laws regarding what topics?, Step2: The Establishment Clause of the US Constitution is in reference to what topic?, Step3: Is #2 included in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: James II, Wikipedia page for step 2: The Establishment Clause of the US Constitution, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-660e5504bc3e4e5e8012a918296ee01d
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 Tame Impala's studio band play a proper game of Hot Potato?, Answer:No, Description of Potato: plant species producing the tuber used as a staple food, Fact1: Hot Potato is a game in which two or more people toss a potato until the music stops., Fact2: Tame Impala is a band with one member, multi-instrumentalist Kevin Parker. Output:
[ "Step1: How many studio members are in Tame Impala's band?, Step2: What is the minimum number of people that can play hot potato?, Step3: Is #1 greater than or equal to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Tame Impala, Wikipedia page for step 2: Hot potato, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-487b176ffa214419a4d8ae488c9cdfcd
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 Kylee Jenner ask for no cream in her coffee?, Answer:Yes, Description of Cream: Dairy product, Fact1: Kylee Jenner is lactose intolerant., Fact2: Lactose intolerance makes it uncomfortable for people to digest foods containing lactose., Fact3: Cream is a dairy product and is rich in lactose. Output:
[ "Step1: What dietary condition does Kylee (Kylie) Jenner suffer from?, Step2: What do people who have #1 have to avoid?, Step3: Does cream have #2 in it?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Kylie Jenner, Wikipedia page for step 2: Lactose Intolerant, Wikipedia page for step 3: Cream, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-693fcbb5cbe64b939664e2b8267151b4
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 any cultures associate celery with death?, Answer:Yes, Description of Celery: species of plant, Fact1: Ancient Greeks used garlands of celery leafs to bury their dead., Fact2: Ancient Greece was considered a culture. Output:
[ "Step1: What are the various forms of cultural depictions of celery?, Step2: Is any of #1 associated with death?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Celery, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-2137e20acc09456eb35aea2095003b77
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 white light the absence of color?, Answer:No, Description of White: color, Fact1: White light is formed by the combination of red, green, and blue light., Fact2: Instead, black is considered to be the absence of color. Output:
[ "Step1: How many colors of light are mixed to create white light?, Step2: Is #1 equal to zero?, Wikipedia page for step 1: White, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-ca1731afd0454128869da6904aef9520
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 Lionel Richie related to Sheila E?, Answer:No, Description of Lionel Richie: American singer-songwriter, musician, record producer and actor, Fact1: Lionel Richie is an American singer and raised Nicole Richie., Fact2: Nicole Richie was born to Sheila E's brother, Peter Michael Escovedo., Fact3: Lionel Richie adopted Nicole Richie from Peter Michael Escovedo., Fact4: Adoptive parents are not considered related to birth parents. Output:
[ "Step1: What is the relationship between Lionel Richie and Nicole Richie?, Step2: Are #1 considered related to birth parents?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Nicole Richie, Wikipedia page for step 2: Adoption, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-2b72b38fc2f8422fae2c73f2ca3ebc34
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 all the Colitis caused by bacteria?, Answer:No, Description of Colitis: inflammation of the colon or the large intestine, Fact1: Colitis is swelling (inflammation) of the large intestine (colon)., Fact2: Causes of colitis includes lack of blood flow, radiation, bacterial infection etc. Output:
[ "Step1: What are the causes of Colitis?, Step2: Are all of #1 bacteria?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Colitis, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-44c24b0912324fec982be8243de8a7e7
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 Second Amendment to the United States Constitution written without consideration for black Americans?, Answer:Yes, Description of Second Amendment to the United States Constitution: Part of the Bill of Rights, regarding the right to bear arms, Fact1: The writers of the Constitutional Amendments did not view black people as legitimate human beings., Fact2: The writers of the Constitutional Amendments believed that slavery benefited black slaves., Fact3: The Constitutional Amendments were written for people that the writers considered human. Output:
[ "Step1: Who were the writers of the Constitutional Amendments?, Step2: Who was the the Constitutional Amendments written for?, Step3: Did #1 fail to view black Americans as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Constitutional Amendments , Wikipedia page for step 2: the Constitutional Amendments , Wikipedia page for step 3: Slavery, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-cb89b91e916845a1974063d90f4076b4
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 Canterbury Tales written before One Thousand and One Nights?, Answer:No, Description of One Thousand and One Nights: Collection of Middle Eastern stories and folk tales compiled in Arabic during the Islamic Golden Age, Fact1: One Thousand and One Nights was compiled during the Islamic Golden Age., Fact2: The Islamic Golden Age lasted from 800 AD to 1258 AD., Fact3: The Canterbury Tales was written in 1392. Output:
[ "Step1: When were the The Canterbury Tales written?, Step2: When was One Thousand and One Nights written?, Step3: Which years are included in #2?, Step4: Is #1 before #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Canterbury Tales, Wikipedia page for step 2: One Thousand and One Nights, Wikipedia page for step 3: Islamic Golden Age, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-15f0f05f963447f69cc676bc23edf57b
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 a game engine have a fuel injector?, Answer:No, Description of Game engine: Software-development environment designed for building video games, Fact1: A game engine is the software used to develop video games, Fact2: A fuel injector is part of an automotive engine Output:
[ "Step1: Which kind of engine uses a fuel injector?, Step2: Is 'game engine' a kind of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Fuel injection, Wikipedia page for step 2: Game engine, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-ec7e24edde0c48c2b12b95a0d7407902
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 breakdancing grow in popularity during WW2?, Answer:No, Description of Breakdancing: Style of street dance, Fact1: Breakdancing was created by the African American youth in the early 1970s., Fact2: World War II was a global war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. Output:
[ "Step1: When did break-dancing experience a growth in popularity?, Step2: Through which period did World War II take place?, Step3: Is #1 within #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Breakdancing, Wikipedia page for step 2: World War II, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-93014fd47729427b879023adf4ac8513
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 unusual to play Happy hardcore music at a funeral?, Answer:Yes, Description of Funeral: ceremony for a person who has died, Fact1: Happy hardcore is a music genre of hard dance., Fact2: Happy hardcore emerged both from the UK breakbeat hardcore rave scene, and Belgian, German and Dutch hardcore techno scenes., Fact3: A funeral is traditionally a somber event., Fact4: Funerals typically do not involve dancing., Fact5: Raves are typically energetic and upbeat places and are not somber like a funeral. Output:
[ "Step1: What type of music is usually played at funerals?, Step2: What are the characteristics of Happy Hardcore music?, Step3: Do any of #1 have the characteristics of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Funeral, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Happy Hardcore, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-7d6a2a02a52e4f9e8f89bda85235e126
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 Johann Sebastian Bach leave his first wife for his second wife?, Answer:No, Description of Johann Sebastian Bach: German composer, Fact1: Johann Sebastian Bach was married to Maria Barbara Bach from 1707–1720., Fact2: Johann Sebastian Bach was married to Anna Magdalena Bach from 1721–1750., Fact3: Maria Barbara Bach died suddenly in 1720. Output:
[ "Step1: What dates was Johann Sebastian Bach married to Anna Magdalena Bach?, Step2: When did Maria Barbara Bach die?, Step3: Is #2 included in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Johann Sebastian Bach, Wikipedia page for step 2: Maria Barbara Bach, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-457b1d955b5345aeb29a6f340735d37b
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 Reza Shah alive during World War II?, Answer:Yes, Description of Reza Shah: Shah of Iran, Founder of the Imperial state of iran, Fact1: World War II occurred from 1939 to 1945., Fact2: Reza Shah died in July 1944. Output:
[ "Step1: When did Reza Shah die?, Step2: When did World War II start?, Step3: Was #1 after #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Reza Shah, Wikipedia page for step 2: World War II, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-506f919919494a44a55813307a193295
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 Who concert in international space station be audible?, Answer:Yes, Description of The Who: English rock band, Fact1: Sound travels through the vibration of atoms and molecules in a medium (such as air or water). , Fact2: There is air in the international space station. Output:
[ "Step1: What is the most common medium of transmission of sound?, Step2: Is #1 present in the international space station?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sound, Wikipedia page for step 2: International space station, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-bd7a25298c2147db80ba3e0afb0d1b1a
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 Julius Caesar read books on Pharmacology?, Answer:No, Description of Pharmacology: Branch of biology concerning drugs, Fact1: Pharmacology has its origins in the Middle Ages., Fact2: The Middle Ages took place from 476 AD-1453 AD., Fact3: Julius Caesar lived from 100 BC-44 BC. Output:
[ "Step1: When did Julius Caesar die?, Step2: When did Pharmacology emerge as a field of study?, Step3: Is #1 after or within #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Julius Caesar, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pharmacology, Wikipedia page for step 3: Middle Ages, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-f80a80313921443cb8d6914a8c83e255
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 Godzilla's image likely grounds for a lawsuit in 2050?, Answer:No, Description of Godzilla: Giant monster or kaiju, Fact1: The copyright for Godzilla is owned by Toho Company Limited., Fact2: The first Godzilla film was released by Toho in 1954., Fact3: Works that are significantly old enter the public domain and can be used without copyright permission., Fact4: Godzilla will enter the public domain in the year 2049. Output:
[ "Step1: When can a copyrighted item be used without permission?, Step2: In what year will Godzilla as a creative piece of work attain #1 status?, Step3: Is #2 after 2050?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Copyright, Wikipedia page for step 2: Godzilla, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-1bdeba6cc8144cf39e1ca93467e70b46
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 in Boston not receive the Toronto Star?, Answer:Yes, Description of Toronto Star: Newspaper in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Fact1: The Toronto Star is only distributed in Canada., Fact2: Boston is located in the United States. Output:
[ "Step1: Where is the Toronto Star distributed?, Step2: Where is Boston located?, Step3: Is #2 not in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Toronto Star, Wikipedia page for step 2: Boston, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-92958cc70fe84b5cb6f28e7551eca5d5
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 Blas de Lezo need to be cautious of beavers?, Answer:Yes, Description of Sea captain: Commander of a ship or other sea-going vessel, Fact1: Blas de Lezo was a sea captain with a wooden leg., Fact2: Beavers like to chew on wood. Output:
[ "Step1: What was Blas de Lezos' prosthetic leg made of?, Step2: Would beavers cause damage to #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Blas de Lezos, Wikipedia page for step 2: Beavers, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-2fed8e89d8a947e7b2de49eea6ec3ed0
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 flour used to make roads?, Answer:No, Description of Flour: powder which is made by grinding cereal grains, Fact1: Flour is a powder made by grinding cereal grains., Fact2: A cereal is any grass cultivated (grown) for the edible components of its grain. Output:
[ "Step1: What is flour made of?, Step2: What are roads made of?, Step3: Are #1 and #2 the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Flour, Wikipedia page for step 2: Roads, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-5779de17d34c439d9b85ac2b143743f0
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 body builder prefer an elk burger over a beef burger?, Answer:Yes, Description of Elk: Large antlered species of deer from North America and east Asia, Fact1: Bodybuilders want to build muscle and keep fat low, Fact2: Elk meat is leaner than beef, Fact3: Elk meat has higher protein than beef, Fact4: Protein helps build muscle Output:
[ "Step1: Which nutrients are more important for a body builder's diet?, Step2: How is an elk burger different from a beef burger in terms of nutrients?, Step3: Considering #1 and #2 would an elk burger be a better source of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Body biluding, Wikipedia page for step 2: , Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-4a080b71018a43a3b39233050364fa40
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 Mozart accused of stealing from Richard Wagner?, Answer:No, Description of Richard Wagner: German composer, Fact1: Mozart died in 1791., Fact2: Richard Wagner was born in 1813. Output:
[ "Step1: When did Mozart die?, Step2: When was Richard Wagner born?, Step3: Is #2 an earlier date than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mozart, Wikipedia page for step 2: Richard Wagner, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-324986775ab147e8bc44991790e0b1e1
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 the Social Democratic Party of Germany help Frederick II become King of Prussia?, Answer:No, Description of Social Democratic Party of Germany: Social-democratic political party in Germany, Fact1: The Social Democratic Party of Germany was founded in 1863., Fact2: Frederick II was King of Prussia from 1740-1786. Output:
[ "Step1: In what year was the Social Democratic Party of Germany founded?, Step2: In what year did Frederick II become King of Prussia?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Democratic_Party_of_Germany, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_the_Great, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-dd561594a33d44c4b9593b1ad0f9ada2
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 there a type of chord that shares its name with a crime syndicate?, Answer:Yes, Description of Chord (music): harmonic set of three or more notes, Fact1: Chords with three notes are referred to as triads., Fact2: Organized crime syndicates in Asia are often referred to as triads. Output:
[ "Step1: What is the name of a chord with three notes?, Step2: What are Asian crime syndicates called?, Step3: Is #1 also found in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Triad (music), Wikipedia page for step 2: Triad (crime), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-3890eebe52bb4714a5008d946c08a26d
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 Katharine Hepburn have ridden the AirTrain JFK?, Answer:No, Description of AirTrain JFK: People mover system at JFK Airport in New York City, Fact1: The AirTrain JFK was built in December 17, 2003., Fact2: Katharine Hepburn died on June 29, 2003. Output:
[ "Step1: When was the AirTrain JFK built?, Step2: When did Katharine Hepburn die?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: AirTrain JFK, Wikipedia page for step 2: Katharine Hepburn, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-22e85352576940f99941aac21b1e0012
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 Jupiter considered to be classified as a gas giant?, Answer:Yes, Description of Jupiter: Fifth planet from the Sun in the Solar System, Fact1: Jupiter consists mainly of hydrogen and helium., Fact2: A gas giant is a giant planet composed mainly of hydrogen and helium. Output:
[ "Step1: What is Jupiter's classification?, Step2: Is #1 equal to gas giant?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-ef726e6b94b84940a012630d6b2e78cc
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 the country that made meatballs famous invent pasta?, Answer:No, Description of Meatball: dish made from ground meat rolled into a small ball-like form, Fact1: Italy made meatballs famous., Fact2: China invented pasta. Output:
[ "Step1: What is the most popular meatball dish in the US?, Step2: In what country did #1 originate?, Step3: What country invented pasta?, Step4: Is #2 the same as #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Spaghetti and meatballs, Wikipedia page for step 2: Spaghetti and meatballs, Wikipedia page for step 3: Noodles, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-e4b42f30f30b4016979886d9190fa127
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 ants like chives?, Answer:Yes, Description of Chives: edible species of plant, Fact1: Chives make good insect repellents. , Fact2: An ant is an insect. Output:
[ "Step1: What kind of pests can chives be used to control?, Step2: Are ants excluded from #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Chives, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True" ]
task168-816d12611bd744ba9b55779357cd1633
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 Europa (moon) name origin related to Amunet?, Answer:No, Description of Europa (moon): The smallest of the four Galilean moons of Jupiter, Fact1: Europa (moon) gets its name from the Greek Classical Mythology story., Fact2: Europa was a woman that Zeus was in love with, and he changed into a bull to deceive her., Fact3: Amunet is a primordial goddess in Ancient Egyptian religion. Output:
[ "Step1: What was the moon 'Europa' named after?, Step2: Which myth is #1 a part of?, Step3: Is Amunet a part of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Europa (moon), Wikipedia page for step 2: Europa, Wikipedia page for step 3: Amunet, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-f5c767a6e4c8462e9d1daadacd53b44e
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 sun bears stay active during winter?, Answer:Yes, Description of Sun bear: bear found in tropical forest habitats of Southeast Asia, Fact1: The sun bear is a species in the family Ursidae occurring in the tropical forests of Southeast Asia., Fact2: Sun bears do not seem to hibernate., Fact3: Hibernation is a seasonal heterothermy characterized by low body-temperature, slow breathing and heart-rate, and low metabolic rate. It most commonly occurs during winter months. Output:
[ "Step1: What characterizes the state of hibernation that some animals go into during winter?, Step2: Are sun bears known to not exhibit the behavior described by #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Winter, Wikipedia page for step 2: Sun bear, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-c1bc728a998146a58e02be280da56832
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: Should a Celiac sufferer avoid spaghetti?, Answer:Yes, Description of Spaghetti: Type of pasta, Fact1: Celiac is a disease in which the body cannot process gluten., Fact2: Gluten is a protein found in wheat., Fact3: Spaghetti is made with milled wheat and water. Output:
[ "Step1: What food ingredients should people with celiac disease avoid?, Step2: What ingredients make up spaghetti?, Step3: Is #2 listed in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Celiac, Wikipedia page for step 2: Spaghetti, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-be9a5709c0c14871bf52b10a167c1d85
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 Saint Peter watch television?, Answer:No, Description of Saint Peter: apostle and first pope, Fact1: Saint Peter died in 64 BC., Fact2: The television was invented in 1900. Output:
[ "Step1: When was television invented?, Step2: When did Saint Peter die?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Television, Wikipedia page for step 2: Saint Peter, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-f88ed495e439457a9c518f932e6b0711
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 some adherents to Christianity in China historic enemies of Catholic Church?, Answer:Yes, Description of Christianity in China: Religious community, Fact1: Christianity in China is comprised of several different groups including: Protestants, Catholics, Evangelicals, and Orthodox Christians., Fact2: Catholics have been at war with Protestants throughout history., Fact3: The 1572 St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre saw thousands of Protestants killed by Catholic mobs., Fact4: English Protestant rulers killed many Irish Catholics during the Reformation. Output:
[ "Step1: Which Christian denominations are historic enemies of the Catholic Church?, Step2: Do any of the denominations in #1 currently have adherents in China?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Catholicism, Wikipedia page for step 2: China, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-7c2b7511526a4680a50a2b7db0692e5f
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 Beethoven enjoy listening to EDM?, Answer:No, Description of Electronic dance music: broad category of electronic music, Fact1: Ludwig van Beethoven died in 1827., Fact2: EDM originated in the mid-to-late 20th century. Output:
[ "Step1: When did Ludwig van Beethoven die?, Step2: When did EDM originate?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ludwig van Beethoven, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electronic dance music, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-9326dbbae68a4879b2c78bc19ec8d470
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 a hundred thousand lolcats fit on a first generation iPhone?, Answer:Yes, Description of Lolcat: image combining a photograph of a cat with text intended to contribute humour, Fact1: Lolcat memes are often in jpeg form, Fact2: The average size of a jpeg is 10 to 30 kb, Fact3: One gigabyte is 1000000 kb, Fact4: The first iPhone had 4GB to 16GB of storage Output:
[ "Step1: What file formats are lolcats usually saved in?, Step2: What is the typical size of #1?, Step3: What was the storage size range of first generation iPhones?, Step4: What is 100000 multiplied by #2 expressed in gigabytes?, Step5: Is #4 less than or equal to the minimum value of #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Lolcat, Wikipedia page for step 2: JPEG, Wikipedia page for step 3: iPhone, Wikipedia page for step 4: , Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-c442bc9c936c4bb8b83bab8011b83e81
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 the Godfather of Soul successfully battle a cancer that only affects men?, Answer:Yes, Description of James Brown: American singer, songwriter, producer and bandleader from South Carolina, Fact1: James Brown is known as the Godfather of Soul., Fact2: James Brown successfully battled prostate cancer., Fact3: Only men have prostates. Output:
[ "Step1: Who is the Godfather of Soul?, Step2: What cancer did #1 overcome?, Step3: Does #2 only affect men?, Wikipedia page for step 1: James Brown, Wikipedia page for step 2: James Brown, Wikipedia page for step 3: Prostate cancer, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-80f70ff9bfcd42f5a50f46f2307cf98a
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 lengths measured in metres in the UK?, Answer:Yes, Description of Metre: SI unit of length, Fact1: Metres are part of the metric system., Fact2: The UK uses the metric system for measurements. Output:
[ "Step1: What system of measurement does the UK use?, Step2: Are meters a unit of measure in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Metric system, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-d92275da36c54e9ebb1da8b942cbd92c
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: Has Ringo Starr been in a relatively large number of bands?, Answer:No, Description of Ringo Starr: British musician, drummer of the Beatles, Fact1: RIngo Starr has been in three bands besides the Beatles., Fact2: Mike Patton, lead singer of Faith No More, has been in at least 12 bands., Fact3: Dave Grohl, lead singer of the Foo Fighters, has played in over 10 bands. Output:
[ "Step1: How many bands has Ringo Starr been part of?, Step2: How many bands has Mike Patton been part of?, Step3: How many bands has Dave Grohl been part of?, Step4: Is #1 larger than #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ringo Starr, Wikipedia page for step 2: Mike Patton, Wikipedia page for step 3: Dave Grohl, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-5248d88e163148d9b83b61daed81ffea
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 James Cotton's instrument be too strident for a smooth jazz band?, Answer:Yes, Description of Smooth jazz: category of music, Fact1: Smooth jazz is an offshoot of jazz music that relies on a more melodic form., Fact2: Smooth jazz employs the following instruments: saxophone. guitar. piano. trumpet. synthesizer. electric bass. and drums., Fact3: James Cotton was a famous blues harmonica player. Output:
[ "Step1: What instument is James Cotton known for?, Step2: What instuments are used to play Smooth Jazz?, Step3: Is #1 not one of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: James Cotton, Wikipedia page for step 2: Smooth jazz, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-d28375163b094f17a6990a63825087aa
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 Barron Trump have lived through the Mexican Revolution?, Answer:Yes, Description of Mexican Revolution: major nationwide armed struggle in Mexico between 1910 and 1920, Fact1: The Mexican Revolution took place over a period of ten years, Fact2: Barron Trump is 14 years old Output:
[ "Step1: How long did the Mexican Revolution last?, Step2: How old has Barron Trump already lived as of 2020?, Step3: Is #2 greater than or equal to #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mexican Revolution, Wikipedia page for step 2: Family of Donald Trump, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-421032436d7e44a191491f32421db7e8
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 the letter D influenced by the shape of ancient doors?, Answer:Yes, Description of D: letter in the Latin alphabet, Fact1: D is the fourth letter of the Latin alphabet, Fact2: D is a descendent of the ancient Phoenician Dalet, Fact3: Dalet was represented by a glyph of a door Output:
[ "Step1: Which ancient language did the letter 'D' descend from?, Step2: What was used to represent 'D' in #1?, Step3: Was #2 a symbol of a door?, Wikipedia page for step 1: D, Wikipedia page for step 2: Phoenician Dalet, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-c298bbb3e80141a6985e4f144dd81b43
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 snow leopard swim?, Answer:Yes, Description of Snow leopard: species of mammal, Fact1: except for giraffes and apes, all four legged mammals can swim, Fact2: a snow leopard is a mammal, Fact3: snow leopards have four legs Output:
[ "Step1: Is a snow leopard a four legged mammal?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Snow leopard, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-fe7f76690df848e8be09c865a8578540
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 Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena hypothetically inadequate for hosting Coachella?, Answer:Yes, Description of Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena: Former arena in California, United States, Fact1: The Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena had a capacity of 16,740 people., Fact2: Coachella has had attendance numbers in excess of 99.000 people., Fact3: Coachella relies on an outdoor set up to accommodate the massive crowds. Output:
[ "Step1: How many people can the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena hold?, Step2: How many people usually attend Coachella?, Step3: Is #2 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena, Wikipedia page for step 2: Coachella, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-2423a0e612374dccae6a0e6147e6bc15
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 the Japanese people in Russia speak russian?, Answer:Yes, Description of Japanese people: Ethnic group native to Japan, Fact1: Russian is the native language of Russia, Fact2: Japanese people in russia have their descendants born in Russia, Fact3: Russian is a native language for the Japanese people in Russia Output:
[ "Step1: What is the native language spoken by people living in Russia?, Step2: Is #1 Russian?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Russia, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-2b4c3816780a46fda7b6674e9024c6d3
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 crane slamdunk?, Answer:No, Description of Crane (bird): family of birds, Fact1: Crane are a type of bird. , Fact2: Slamdunking is a basketball maneuver in which the player puts the basketball in the basket with one or two hands above the rim., Fact3: Birds don't have hands. Output:
[ "Step1: What is a slamdunk?, Step2: What body parts are needed to perform #1?, Step3: Do cranes have #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Slamdunk, Wikipedia page for step 2: Slamdunk, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-47524adb35c34136b4d0d9c5ba65ac91
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 Kane challenge Joe Biden in this year's primaries?, Answer:No, Description of Kane (wrestler): American professional wrestler, actor, businessman, and politician, Fact1: Kane is a member of the Republican Party, Fact2: Joe Biden is a member of the Democratic Party, Fact3: Primaries are conducted between members of the same political party Output:
[ "Step1: Primaries are held within what?, Step2: What #1 does Joe Biden belong to?, Step3: What #1 does Kane belong to?, Step4: Are #2 and #3 the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Political Primaries, Wikipedia page for step 2: Joe Biden, Wikipedia page for step 3: Kane, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-cfe4188e939c4f4286e8aab8c766fe9c
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 Finding Dory released during an election year?, Answer:Yes, Description of Finding Dory: 2016 animated film produced by Pixar Animation Studios, Fact1: Finding Dory was released in 2016, Fact2: Election years are every 4 years in the USA., Fact3: 2016 was an election year. Output:
[ "Step1: What year was Finding Dory released?, Step2: Was there a presidential election held during #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Finding Dory, Wikipedia page for step 2: Elections in the United States, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-09bd968654714b70bf66a74d30903026
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 Oak wood softer than Black Walnut wood?, Answer:No, Description of Oak: genus of plants, Fact1: Oak is harder than Black Walnut., Fact2: Oak is 1360 on the wood hardness scale, Fact3: Black Walnut is 1010 on the wood hardness scale Output:
[ "Step1: What is the hardness of oak wood?, Step2: What is the hardness of black walnut wood?, Step3: Is #1 lower than #2, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False", "Step1: What value does Oak wood have on the Janka wood hardness scale?, Step2: What value does Black Walnut have on the Janka wood hardness scale?, Step3: Is #1 less than #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-45278e788dd8480595845a60af2c1e6f
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 General Motors create the first global car?, Answer:No, Description of General Motors: American automotive manufacturing company, Fact1: The Model T was the first automobile built by various countries simultaneously, Fact2: The Model T is an automobile produced by the Ford Motor Company Output:
[ "Step1: Which was the first automobile built by various countries simultaneously?, Step2: Which company produced #1?, Step3: Is #2 the same as General Motors?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ford Model T, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ford Model T, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False" ]
task168-807d12f6ec5346d6a8f83a4cbe6a8740