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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: Can children be soldiers in the US Army?, Answer:No, Description of Soldier: one who serves as part of an organized armed force, Fact1: A soldier is a member of the armed forces., Fact2: The US Army is the land warfare branch of the United States., Fact3: The minimum age for enlistment in the US Army is 18 years old. , Fact4: A child is considered is considered to be anyone under the age of 18 years old.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the minimum age to enlist in the US Army?, Step2: Is a child's age above #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: US Army, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-98584c96d62e47d1bf90f926d5515d93 |
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 half muggle wizards fear Lord Voldemort?, Answer:Yes, Description of Lord Voldemort: Fictional character of Harry Potter series, Fact1: Lord Voldemort created a slur to describe half muggle wizards, calling them mudbloods., Fact2: Lord Voldemort sought to purge the wizarding world of half muggle wizards through death.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What did Lord Voldemort seek to do to half muggle wizards?, Step2: Is #1 enough to instill fear in them?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Lord Voldemort, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-c16e5a9271f648a39f338ee995b45873 |
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 fastest tortoise win a race against a Chicago "L"?, Answer:No, Description of Chicago "L": rapid transit system in Chicago, Illinois, operated by the CTA, Fact1: Top speed of Chicago "L" is 55 mph (89 km/h)., Fact2: The Guinness Book of World Records maintains the record for fastest tortoise: the tortoise ran at an average speed of 0.63 miles per hour.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the top speed of a Chicago \"L\"?, Step2: What is the top speed of a tortoise?, Step3: Is #2 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Chicago \"L\", Wikipedia page for step 2: Tortoise, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-7c78ebac31334d05a4fedd2a87c5ccf4 |
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 casualties from deadliest war rival France's population?, Answer:No, Description of War: Intense violent conflict between states, Fact1: The deadliest war in history was World War II., Fact2: Over 56 million people died during World War II., Fact3: The population of France as of 2019 is 66 million.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the population of France?, Step2: What was the deadliest war?, Step3: How many people died in #2?, Step4: Is #3 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: France, Wikipedia page for step 2: World War 2, Wikipedia page for step 3: World War 2, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-697aed824e6741b5af0cc308d67371c5 |
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 Jamie Brewer have attended the United States Naval Academy?, Answer:No, Description of United States Naval Academy: The U.S. Navy's federal service academy, Fact1: Jamie Brewer is a famous actress with down syndrome., Fact2: Individuals with down syndrome are disqualified from military service.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What genetic disorder does Jamie Brewer have?, Step2: Are individuals with #1 allowed to be in the US Naval Academy?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Jamie Brewer, Wikipedia page for step 2: US Naval Academy, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-24c08043a3a1460ea8eeba357691f2e8 |
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 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom have poor job security?, Answer:Yes, Description of Prime Minister of the United Kingdom: Head of UK Government, Fact1: The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom is an elected official., Fact2: Elected officials can be recalled with a vote of no confidence in UK parliament.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How does the prime minister of UK get his position?, Step2: Can people who are #1 be easily removed?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Prime Minister of UK, Wikipedia page for step 2: Elected official, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-67cc39a082f84ba4b4bef69025fe32ea |
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 normal to find parsley in multiple sections of the grocery store?, Answer:Yes, Description of Parsley: species of plant, herb, Fact1: Parsley is available in both fresh and dry forms., Fact2: Fresh parsley must be kept cool., Fact3: Dry parsley is a shelf stable product.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What forms of parsley are consumed?, Step2: What areas of the grocery store carry each of #1?, Step3: Does #2 include places separate from one another?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Parsley , Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Grocery, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-fc85013d3d734738828ade15d0e998d5 |
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 General Motors founded in a leap year?, Answer:Yes, Description of General Motors: American automotive manufacturing company, Fact1: General Motors was originally founded by William C. Durant on September 16, 1908., Fact2: 1908 was a leap year.
Output:
| [
"Step1: In what year was General Motors founded?, Step2: Is #1 a leap year?, Wikipedia page for step 1: General Motors, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-2b7eb6c66dd04216857a2910763053e4 |
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 bird on the crest of University of the West Indies feed on whitebait in New Zealand?, Answer:Yes, Description of University of the West Indies: International university in the Caribbean, Fact1: The crest of University of the West Indies features a pelican., Fact2: Pelicans are carnivorous., Fact3: Pelicans found in the waters around New Zealand., Fact4: Whitebait is a small species of fish native to the waters around New Zealand.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which bird is on the crest of University of the West Indies?, Step2: Where are #1 usually found?, Step3: How are #2 classified according to what they feed on?, Step4: Considering #2 and #3, are whitebait in New Zealand feasible prey for #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: University of the West Indies, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pelican, Wikipedia page for step 3: Pelican, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-ad5d43a4ff77461ebf40f2be6b76997b |
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 an ocelot a good present for a kindergartener?, Answer:No, Description of Ocelot: Small wild cat, Fact1: An ocelot is a small wild cat native to South America, Mexico, and the southern US., Fact2: Ocelots are carnivores that hunt other animals and are aggressive, and strong for their size., Fact3: Kindergarteners are usually 5 years old and weigh around 39 pounds.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the behavior and social nature of an ocelot?, Step2: Is #1 suitable for kindergartners considering their age?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ocelot, Wikipedia page for step 2: Kindergarten, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5392f626a0a64d3daa3d2942b5c644ec |
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 electric car struggle to finish Daytona 500?, Answer:Yes, Description of Daytona 500: Auto race held in Daytona, Florida, United States, Fact1: The Daytona 500 is a 2.5 mile long race., Fact2: The Daytona 500 requires 200 laps to complete., Fact3: The best electric car engines last around 390 miles.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How long (in miles) is the Daytona 500 race?, Step2: What is the maximum electric range (in miles) of the world's best selling electric car?, Step3: Is #2 less than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: , Wikipedia page for step 2: Electric car, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-4ddf9f6d111148489b94490ccb723955 |
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 Ariana Grande's signature style combine comfort items and high fashion?, Answer:Yes, Description of Ariana Grande: American singer, songwriter, and actress, Fact1: Ariana Grande's signature style is a long, over-sized pullover sweater with thigh high heels., Fact2: Oversized pullovers are considered lounge wear, for relaxing at home in. , Fact3: High heels are associated with high style.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is Ariana Grande's signature top?, Step2: What is Ariana Grande's signature shoewear?, Step3: What type of clothing is #1 considered?, Step4: Is #3 considered a comfort and item and is #2 considered a high style item?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ariana Grande, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ariana Grande, Wikipedia page for step 3: Pullover, Wikipedia page for step 4: High heels, Lounge Wear, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-4bd4e600852245009e31526509c265eb |
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 a Kiwi national?, Answer:No, Description of Lionel Richie: American singer-songwriter, musician, record producer and actor, Fact1: Kiwis are the citizens of New Zealand., Fact2: Lionel Richie is a citizen of United States of America
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where are Kiwis from?, Step2: What country is Lionel Richie a citizen of?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: New Zealand, Wikipedia page for step 2: Lionel Richie, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-072406c928364ef7a21987b11db0b229 |
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 Moscow Kremlin near the Eiffel Tower?, Answer:No, Description of Moscow Kremlin: fortified complex in Moscow, Russia, Fact1: Eiffel Tower is in Paris, France, Fact2: Moscow Kremlin is Moscow, Russia, Fact3: They are separated by a distance of 2,840.4 Kms which is very far
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where is the Moscow Kremlin located?, Step2: Where is the Eiffel Tower located?, Step3: Is #1 near #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Moscow Kremlin, Wikipedia page for step 2: Eiffel Tower, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-e5d82b7e11624a7ab953db94f23b6619 |
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 an eleventh-grader be eligible for Medicare?, Answer:No, Description of Eleventh grade: educational year, Fact1: Students in the 11th grade are typically between 16-17 years old., Fact2: The age requirement for most Medicare recipients is 65 or older.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What ages are people in eleventh grade?, Step2: What ages are most medicare recipients?, Step3: Is there an overlap between #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: US Public Schools, Wikipedia page for step 2: Medicare, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-34fa01ee65a34e01b8d2234f3b45d1fa |
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: What type of game is Dungeons & Dragons considered?, Answer:No, Description of Dungeons & Dragons: Fantasy role-playing game, Fact1: Dungeons & Dragons is commonly know as D & D, Fact2: D & D is considered a table board game, Fact3: D & D allows you to play your own character, Fact4: D & D is a tabletop fantasy role playing game
Output:
| [
"Step1: What type of game is Dungeons & Dragons considered?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True"
] | task168-c1a9771716be460984b5cf6e2be325e6 |
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 Admirals and Air-Chief marshals share the same rank?, Answer:Yes, Description of Admiral: , Fact1: Admirals are the highest ranks given to the naval command., Fact2: Air-Chief Marshal is the highest rank given to the Air force command.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the order of the Admiral rank in the navy?, Step2: What is the order of the Air-Chief Marshal rank in the air-force?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Admiral, Wikipedia page for step 2: , Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True"
] | task168-6a575c1a40824df5b877ed47f3d02907 |
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 Carl Linnaeus share the same final resting place as Michael Jackson?, Answer:No, Description of Carl Linnaeus: Swedish botanist, physician, and zoologist, Fact1: Carl Linnaeus is buried in the Uppsala Cathedral., Fact2: Michael Jackson is entombed at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where is Carl Linnaeus buried?, Step2: Where is Michael Jackson entombed?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Carl Linnaeus, Wikipedia page for step 2: Michael Jackson, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8931b9711cbb4a709a27522f35592647 |
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 most people only memorize slightly over half of their ZIP code?, Answer:Yes, Description of ZIP Code: numeric postal code used in the United States, Fact1: ZIP codes in the US are 9 digits in length. , Fact2: Most forms in the US only require and have space for the first 5 digits of a ZIP code?
Output:
| [
"Step1: How long are zip codes in the US?, Step2: When forms ask for zip codes, how many spaces do they typically request?, Step3: Is #2 less than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Zip Codes, Wikipedia page for step 2: Zip Code, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-a153cb60dbfc46359d69a595dc428cd8 |
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 Chuck Norris be a nonagenarian by time next leap year after 2020 happens?, Answer:No, Description of Chuck Norris: American martial artist, actor, film producer and screenwriter, Fact1: A nonagenarian is a person between 90 and 99 years of age., Fact2: Chuck Norris is 80 years old in 2020., Fact3: The next leap year after 2020 is 2024., Fact4: Chuck Norris will be 84 in 2024.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When was Chuck Norris born?, Step2: When is the next leap year after 2020?, Step3: What is the difference between #1 and #2?, Step4: How many years of age makes one a nonagenarian?, Step5: Is #3 greater than or equal to #4?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Chuck Norris, Wikipedia page for step 2: Leap year, Wikipedia page for step 3: , Wikipedia page for step 4: Nonagenarian, Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-21f9fd78d57a47e3be303ccd2a7275de |
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 member of the United States Air Force get a discount at Dunkin Donuts?, Answer:Yes, Description of United States Air Force: Air and space warfare branch of the United States Armed Forces, Fact1: The United States Air Force is part of the military., Fact2: Dunkin Donuts offers a military discount.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the The United States Air Force a branch of?, Step2: What groups of people get a discount at Dunkin Donuts?, Step3: Is there any overlap between #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The United States Air Force, Wikipedia page for step 2: Dunkin Donuts, Wikipedia page for step 3: Dunkin Donuts, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-abc6741f9bab49e4bf1fec4716e366f2 |
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 spend less on your food at Aldi than at Whole Foods?, Answer:Yes, Description of Aldi: Germany-based supermarket chain, Fact1: Whole Foods is known for costing 10-20% more than other stores., Fact2: Aldi is known for having deeply discounted food and home supplies.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is Aldi mainly known for?, Step2: Compared to other stores, how do Whole Foods prices compare?, Step3: Would #1 have goods that cost less than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Aldi, Wikipedia page for step 2: Whole Foods, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-479532bfb55c4d4c9476b43aed56ed81 |
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 owners of the company Peter Griffin works for need barley?, Answer:Yes, Description of Barley: Species of plant, Fact1: Peter Griffin works for Pawtucket Brewery., Fact2: Pawtucket Brewery produces beer., Fact3: Barley is the preferred grain for making beer.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What kind of company is Peter Griffin?, Step2: What does #1 produce?, Step3: Does producing #2 require barley?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Peter Griffin, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pawtucket Brewery, Wikipedia page for step 3: beer, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-c36079a25960473eb5742872b423dfd9 |
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 impossible for Cheb Mami to win a Pulitzer Prize for musical composition?, Answer:Yes, Description of Pulitzer Prize: U.S. award for achievements in newspaper and online journalism, literature, and musical composition, Fact1: The history Pulitzer Prize can be won by any citizen, all other Pulitzer Prize winners must be a US Citizen., Fact2: Cheb Mami is an Algerian singer., Fact3: Cheb Mami is a citizen of Algeria.
Output:
| [
"Step1: The Pulitzer Prize for musical composition is exclusive to the citizens of which country?, Step2: Which country is Cheb Mami from?, Step3: Is #1 different from #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Pulitzer Prize, Wikipedia page for step 2: Cheb Mami, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-aacfb86cbd4c4bef8d5677b34966dfc6 |
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 amoebas get cancer?, Answer:No, Description of Cancer: group of diseases, Fact1: An amoeba is a single-celled organism., Fact2: Cancer is the improper growth of a mass of cellular tissue, made of many incorrectly formed cells.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is cancer the growth of?, Step2: Does an amoeba have #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Cancer, Wikipedia page for step 2: amoeba, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-ac644b46436643f2a4f48c5307926938 |
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 Larry King's marriages be counted on two feet?, Answer:Yes, Description of Larry King: American television and radio host, Fact1: The typical person has 10 toes spread across their two feet., Fact2: Larry King has been married 8 times., Fact3: You can count each marriage on each toe.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How many times has Larry King been married?, Step2: How many toes do most people have?, Step3: Is #2 at least as much as #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Larry King, Wikipedia page for step 2: Anatomy, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-82f242e8a1454b11b82f17d5fb6a92bb |
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 call of duty make games for iphone?, Answer:Yes, Description of Call of Duty: First-person shooter video game franchise, Fact1: Call of Duty Mobile is a game for the iOS platform, Fact2: iOS platform is the operating system for an iphone
Output:
| [
"Step1: What platforms have Call of Duty games been made available for?, Step2: Is iPhone (iOS) one of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Call of Duty, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-57ab242d68e440fcaf23de6720857dac |
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 MF Doom a Fantastic Four villain?, Answer:No, Description of MF Doom: US-based English rapper and producer, Fact1: MF Doom is a British rapper raised on Long Island., Fact2: Doctor Victor Von Doom is a fictional supervillain that made his debut in the Fantastic Four., Fact3: The MF in MF Doom stands for Metal Face.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which villains are featured in Fantastic Four?, Step2: Is MF doom one of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Fantastic Four, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5c5822ffa23f403eaa9d4f94d67da3f3 |
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 historic Hattori Hanzō admire Naruto?, Answer:No, Description of Naruto: Japanese manga and anime series, Fact1: Naruto is a ninja, Fact2: Ninja tactics were considered dishonorable by samurai, Fact3: Hattori Hanzō is a famous historical samurai
Output:
| [
"Step1: What was Naruto's profession?, Step2: What was Hattori Hanzō's profession? , Step3: Did #2 respect the actions of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Naruto, Wikipedia page for step 2: Hattori Hanzō, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-6864243b002e45b8a39793b04c2e0fbe |
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 Cherokee people send a delegation to oppose allotment?, Answer:Yes, Description of Cherokee: Native American people indigenous to the Southeastern United States, Fact1: The Four Mothers Society or Four Mothers Nation is a religious, political, and traditionalist organization of Muscogee Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw and Chickasaw people., Fact2: The Four Mothers Society sent a delegation to Congress in 1906 to oppose the Curtis Act and the Dawes Act., Fact3: With the passage of the Curtis Act in 1898 and Dawes Act, allotment became US policy and the various tribal governments were forced to allot land.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which acts cause allotment to become US policy?, Step2: Who sent as a delegate to congress to oppose #1?, Step3: Is #2 related to the Cherokee people?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Curtis Act, Dawes Act, Wikipedia page for step 2: The Four Mothers Society , Wikipedia page for step 3: The Four Mothers Society, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-9f0a707c17a74610ab664a0782446f5d |
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 monks forbidden from engaging in warfare?, Answer:No, Description of Monk: member of a monastic religious order, Fact1: Monks are members of religious orders that usually take vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience., Fact2: The Knights Templar were a religious order that fought during the Crusades and captured Jerusalem in 1099., Fact3: Buddhist Shaolin monks developed very powerful martial arts skills, have defended temples during conquests.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What role did the Knights Templar play during the Crusades?, Step2: What role have Shaolin monks played at temples during conquests?, Step3: Did #1 or #2 not involve warfare?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Knights Templar, Wikipedia page for step 2: Shaolin monk, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-4873465c2b2b438ab2ef40e5691be545 |
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 leading figure in the Iran-Contra affair avoid television appearances?, Answer:No, Description of JAG (TV series): American legal drama television series (1996-2005), Fact1: The leading figure in the Iran-Contra affair was Oliver North., Fact2: Oliver North appeared on the show JAG in 1995, 1996, and 2002., Fact3: Oliver North appeared on the tv show Wings in 1991.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Who was the leading figure in the Iran-Contra affair?, Step2: Has #1 never appeared on television?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Iran–Contra affair, Wikipedia page for step 2: Oliver North, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-898222971b6349ee8c57b00f176cac62 |
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 Vietnamese people a great untapped resource for NBA players?, Answer:No, Description of Vietnamese people: ethnic group originally from northern Vietnam, Fact1: Vietnam was ranked as one of the countries with the shortest people on average, in 2019., Fact2: The average height of a Vietnamese man is 5 feet 4.74 inches., Fact3: The average height of an NBA player in 2018 was 6 foot 7 inches tall.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the average height of NBA players?, Step2: What is the average height of Vietnamese males?, Step3: Is #2 close to being the same as #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Basketball , Wikipedia page for step 2: Vietnam (people), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-b4bb182b8ba8485fad04d3aaa8e43d07 |
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 the Gospel grill food?, Answer:No, Description of Gospel: description of the life of Jesus, canonical or apocryphal, Fact1: The gospel is defined as the Christian teaching about the life of Jesus, Fact2: The term gospel has become a nickname for preaching anything rather than something with definitive content., Fact3: a grill is a metal framework used for cooking food over an open fire
Output:
| [
"Step1: What properties are necessary for an item to be able to grill food?, Step2: What properties does the Gospel have?, Step3: Are all the elements in #1 also found in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Grill (cooking), Wikipedia page for step 2: Gospel, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5b43739baa594a37b8bc41afda08d0f2 |
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 Holy Land important to Eastern religions?, Answer:No, Description of Holy Land: Term used by Jews, Christians, and Muslims to describe the Land of Israel and Palestine, Fact1: Eastern religions include Hinduism, Buddhism, and Shintoism., Fact2: Hinduism recognizes seven Holy Cities which are Ayodhya, Mathura, Haridwar, Varanasi, Kanchipuram, Dvaraka and Ujjain., Fact3: Bodh Gaya: (in the current Mahabodhi Temple, Bihar, India), is the most important religious site and place of pilgrimage for Buddhists., Fact4: The most sacred Shinto shrine is located in the city of Ise, within the Shima Peninsula of Japan.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are some typical Eastern religions?, Step2: Which place is referred to as the Holy Land?, Step3: Which places do some of #1 consider sacred or holy?, Step4: Is #2 included in #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Eastern religion, Wikipedia page for step 2: Holy Land, Wikipedia page for step 3: Hinduism, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-2993d7b10c6945ba830d330698eb0fc2 |
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 Roman Gallic Wars army struggle to build the pyramids faster?, Answer:No, Description of Gallic Wars: Wars in which the Roman Republic conquered Gaul, Fact1: The pyramids were built by an estimated 30,000 workers., Fact2: The Roman Gallic war army had around 75,000 soldiers.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How many people worked on the pyramids?, Step2: How many soldiers were in the Roman Gallic war army?, Step3: Is #1 greater than or equal to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: pyramids, Wikipedia page for step 2: Roman Gallic war, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-7706cdbe449a4758bcc10c90b6b81a47 |
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 Vice President of the United States kill with impunity?, Answer:Yes, Description of Vice President of the United States: Second highest executive office in United States, Fact1: Vice President Aaron Burr fatally wounded Alexander Hamilton in a duel on July 11, 1804., Fact2: Aaron Burr continued his term as Vice President of the United States after killing Alexander Hamilton., Fact3: US stand-your-ground laws allow a person to defend themselves even to the point of applying lethal force.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What was the outcome of Vice President Aaron Burr's duel in July, 1804?, Step2: Did#1 lead to loss of his opponent's life and did he continue his term afterwards?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Aaron Burr , Wikipedia page for step 2: Aaron Burr , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5e34de552fb646c1a6524edb1a2987b2 |
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 Ludacris have Greek heritage?, Answer:Yes, Description of Ludacris: American rapper and actor, Fact1: Ludacris's real name is Christopher Brian Bridges, Fact2: Christopher is a name derived from Greek origins
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is Ludacris's real name?, Step2: Where is #1 derived from?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ludacris , Wikipedia page for step 2: Christopher , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-741f531b376f440bbfd95e12891011dc |
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 northern fur seal needing emergency surgery in July likely a safe anesthesia candidate?, Answer:Yes, Description of Northern fur seal: The largest fur seal in the northern hemisphere, Fact1: Northern fur seals fast throughout the mating season, Fact2: It is recommended that patients, including animals, fast for a time before surgery that requires anesthesia , Fact3: Peak mating season for northern fur seals occurs in June and July
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is recommended for patients needing anesthesia?, Step2: What do northern fur seals do in July?, Step3: Does #2 include #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Anesthesia , Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Northern fur seal, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-ca1da73b1d2a40e0b2d29b0247c1eef7 |
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 Partition of India happen in summer?, Answer:Yes, Description of Partition of India: partition of British India into the independent states of India and Pakistan in 1947, Fact1: Partition of India happened in August 1947., Fact2: India is in Northern hemisphere., Fact3: August is summer in Northern hemisphere.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When did the partition of India happen?, Step2: In which hemisphere is India?, Step3: What are the summer months in #2?, Step4: Is #1 in #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: India, Wikipedia page for step 2: India, Wikipedia page for step 3: Seasons, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-0ca9d3441c8946d5af06272b3af740a3 |
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 Mother Theresa a follower of atheism?, Answer:No, Description of Atheism: Absence of belief in the existence of deities, Fact1: Mother Theresa was a Catholic nun., Fact2: Atheism is the absence of belief in a diety., Fact3: Catholics believe in the Holy Trinity, which is a representation of God.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What was Mother Teresa's religion?, Step2: Can an adherent of #1 be regarded a follower of atheism?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mother Teresa, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What was Mother Teresa's religion?, Step2: Can an adherent of #1 be regarded a follower of atheism?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mother Teresa, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8c9a8c708d4b4a4eb6e92220e3b80e3b |
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 taking ukemi halt kinetic energy?, Answer:No, Description of Kinetic energy: Energy in motion Or Object In Motion, Fact1: "Taking ukemi" refers to the art of falling or receiving in martial arts, Fact2: Taking ukemi usually requires the person doing it to move their body in a way that minimizes injury, and so it uses kinetic energy
Output:
| [
"Step1: What does the term 'taking ukemi' refer to?, Step2: What state of an object indicates exertion of kinetic energy?, Step3: Can #1 be executed while avoiding #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Uke (martial arts), Wikipedia page for step 2: Kinetic energy, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f4e02ae1cf244f8d9cc6d311554cfaeb |
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 hear music in space?, Answer:No, Description of Music: form of art using sound and silence, Fact1: Music is an art form, and cultural activity, whose medium is sound., Fact2: Sound is a vibration that propagates as an acoustic wave, through a transmission medium such as a gas, liquid or solid., Fact3: Space is usually regarded as being completely empty but there are vast gaps between the stars and planets that are filled with huge amounts of thinly spread gas and dust., Fact4: The sparseness of space carries sounds that create longer wavelengths because of the average distance a molecule can travel after colliding with one molecule and before colliding with the next., Fact5: The sound waves produced in space are called infrasound and are too low frequency to be heard by human ears.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the medium of propagation of music?, Step2: What are the media of propagation of #1?, Step3: Does outer space, being almost a perfect vacuum, have an abundance of any of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Music, Wikipedia page for step 2: Sound, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-d824456cdf564bf28c3334daf829e02d |
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 March begin on the same day of the week as February during leap years?, Answer:No, Description of March: third month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars, Fact1: During normal years, February has exactly 28 days, so March begins on the same day of the week as February., Fact2: However, on leap years, February has an extra day, so March begins the next day of the week from whichever day started February.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How many days are in February in a non-leap year?, Step2: How many days are in February in a leap year?, Step3: Does #1 mean that March will begin on the same day as February?, Step4: Given that #3 is positive, will #2 make no difference to this outcome?, Wikipedia page for step 1: February, Wikipedia page for step 2: February, Wikipedia page for step 3: Days of the Week, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-df855a5f889f48ef8f37f76fd2bc261e |
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 there fifty English kings throughout the Middle Ages?, Answer:No, Description of Middle Ages: Period of European history from the 5th to the 15th century, Fact1: The Middle Ages was a period of history from 476-1453 AD., Fact2: From 476 to 1453 AD there were around 36 Kings of England including disputed claimants to the throne.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which span of time is referred to as the Middle Ages?, Step2: How many kings ruled England through #1?, Step3: Is #2 equal to fifty?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Middle Ages, Wikipedia page for step 2: Middle Ages, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-efd787d179b84f2a9cdecd66aee1c577 |
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 having lip piercings lead to more expensive dental bills?, Answer:Yes, Description of Lip: Visible body part at the mouth, Fact1: Lip piercings can rub the enamel on your teeth and can cause tissue damage to the gums., Fact2: Tooth enamel protects the teeth from decay.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What can lip piercings do to the enamel of teeth?, Step2: When #1 occurs, what is more likely to happen to a person's teeth?, Step3: Does #2 result in a higher dental bill?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Lip piercings , Wikipedia page for step 2: Tooth Decay, Wikipedia page for step 3: Tooth decay, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is the function of Tooth Enamel?, Step2: Can Lip piercing cause damage to #1, Step3: Will #2 cost you more expensive dental bills?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Enamel, Wikipedia page for step 2: Piercing , Wikipedia page for step 3: Dental, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8404019012f84712be7c6d10905e0440 |
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 Mr. Peanut compose the music for Saturday Night Live?, Answer:No, Description of Saturday Night Live: American late-night live television sketch comedy show, Fact1: Mr. Peanut is serves as an advertising logo and mascot of Planters., Fact2: Advertising logos are non living things., Fact3: Non living things can not compose, understand, or comprehend language or sound.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Is Mr. Peanut alive?, Step2: Do you have to be alive to compose something?, Step3: Are the answers to #1 and #2 the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mr. Peanut, Wikipedia page for step 2: Composition, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-bb4d28297e024c18829e17a650cf0a08 |
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 Nine Inch Nails's lead singer associated with David Lynch?, Answer:Yes, Description of Nine Inch Nails: American industrial rock band, Fact1: David Lynch is a director that created the television show Twin Peaks., Fact2: Trent Reznor is the lead singer of Nine Inch Nails., Fact3: Trent Reznor appeared on Twin Peaks: The Return in 2017., Fact4: David Lynch directed the music video for Nine Inch Nail's Came Back Haunted.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Who is the lead singer of Nine Inch Nails?, Step2: What works has #1 appeared in?, Step3: What are the works of David Lynch?, Step4: Is there overlap between #2 and #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Nine Inch Nails, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Trent Reznor, Wikipedia page for step 3: wiki: David Lynch, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-1680921ee1db48e1a88c1d74bb3b709d |
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 smaller gorillas more likely to leave their birth troop?, Answer:No, Description of Gorilla: Genus of mammals, Fact1: Male gorillas are more likely to leave their birth troops than female gorillas., Fact2: Female gorillas are smaller than male gorillas on average.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Are female gorillas smaller than the males?, Step2: Are male gorillas more likely to leave their troop than female?, Step3: Are #1 and #2 \"yes\"?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gorilla, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gorilla, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-10511944ccfa4caaab3d54af007f1c9c |
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 Medieval English lords engage in fair trade with peasants?, Answer:No, Description of Fair trade: form of trade, Fact1: Fair trade is a system in which fair prices are paid to the producers of a product., Fact2: English lords had peasants working on their manors and the peasants were indentured servants., Fact3: The peasants had few rights, were unpaid, and had to even ask their lord for permission to marry.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is fair trade?, Step2: Are peasants able to participate in #1 with Lords?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Fair trade, Wikipedia page for step 2: Peasant, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-9954c944f8574ebfbf5e31d5d68b5252 |
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 actress Leila George lack the height to be a model?, Answer:No, Description of Model (person): person employed to display, advertise and promote products, or to serve as a visual aid, Fact1: Actress Leila George, the daughter of Vincent D'onofrio, is 5'9" tall., Fact2: Model Cindy Crawford is 5'9" tall., Fact3: Model Agyness Deyn is 5'8" tall., Fact4: Model Sara Sampaio is 5'8" tall.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How tall is Leila George?, Step2: How tall is Cindy Crawford? , Step3: What is the height of model Sara Sampaio?, Step4: Is #1 shorter than both #2 and #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Leila George, Wikipedia page for step 2: Cindy Crawford, Wikipedia page for step 3: Sara Sampaio, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-dfb43cfcbb6e415e888dd15e16ede9f7 |
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 fissile record of snakes first appear in the period when eustatic sea level is low?, Answer:No, Description of Snake: limbless, scaly, elongate reptile, Fact1: Fossils readily identifiable as snakes first appear in the fossil record during the Cretaceous period., Fact2: The Cretaceous was a period with a relatively warm climate, resulting in high eustatic sea levels that created numerous shallow inland seas.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where in the fossil record do snakes first appear?, Step2: Were the eustatic sea levels in #1 low?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Snake (evolution), Wikipedia page for step 2: Cretaceous period, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-6df50ff7cf174e5db3a56a8c20964ed3 |
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 Pavlov love the taste of Cookie Crisp?, Answer:No, Description of Ivan Pavlov: Russian physiologist, Fact1: Ivan Pavlov lived from Sep 26, 1849 - Feb 27, 1936 , Fact2: Cookie Crisp is a cereal made to recreate the taste of chocolate chip cookies., Fact3: Cookie Crisp was introduced in 1977
Output:
| [
"Step1: When was Cookie Crisp introduced?, Step2: When did Ivan Pavlov die?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Cookie Crisp, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ivan Pavlov, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-46a81c77b277470095370236ed507ad1 |
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 human nails carve a statue out of quartz?, Answer:No, Description of Nail (anatomy): hard projection of digit, Fact1: Human nails have a Mohs hardness of 2.5, Fact2: Quartz has a Mohs hardness of 7., Fact3: Softer objects can't carve harder objects.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What advantage makes it possible for one object to cut another?, Step2: What is the Moh hardness value of human nails?, Step3: What is the Moh hardness value of quartz?, Step4: How does #2 compare to #3?, Step5: Considering #4 and #1, can nails carve quartz?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hardness, Wikipedia page for step 2: Human nail, Wikipedia page for step 3: Quartz, Wikipedia page for step 4: , Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-51b4990c8b5e47e4b7e74b0c5cce3089 |
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 a Bottlenose dolphin have a TV show?, Answer:No, Description of Bottlenose dolphin: genus of dolphin, Fact1: Flipper is an American television program first broadcast on NBC from September 19, 1964, until April 15, 1967., Fact2: Flipper, the star animal of the show, is a bottlenose dolphin
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which animal was featured in American TV program 'Flipper' from 1964 - 67?, Step2: Was #1 a bottlenose dolphin?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Flipper, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True"
] | task168-4a219b0c54d34830b8c44908a214de5d |
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 dog respond to bell before Grey seal?, Answer:Yes, Description of Grey seal: species of seal, Fact1: Grey seals have no ear flaps and their ears canals are filled with wax., Fact2: Grey seals hear better underwater when their ears open like a valve., Fact3: Dogs have sensitive ears that can hear as far as a quarter of a mile away.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How sensitive is a grey seal's hearing on land?, Step2: How sensitive is a dog's hearing on land?, Step3: Is #2 better than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Grey seal, Wikipedia page for step 2: Dig, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-8e4f1cdc601a4a3aa23e66d51df47d2a |
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 breast cancer associated with a ribbon?, Answer:Yes, Description of Breast cancer: cancer that originates in the mammary gland, Fact1: Breast cancer is one of many diseases associated with a specific color of ribbon., Fact2: Breast cancer's ribbon is pink.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which diseases are associated with a (certain color of) ribbon?, Step2: Is breast cancer included in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ribbon, Wikipedia page for step 2: Breast cancer, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-7dcf41fb9e944427937ddecae1f0b065 |
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 paratroopers be used in a vacuum?, Answer:No, Description of Paratrooper: Military parachutists functioning as part of an airborne force, Fact1: Paratroopers use parachutes to glide, Fact2: Parachutes function by creating drag in an atmosphere, Fact3: There is no atmosphere in a vacuum
Output:
| [
"Step1: What equipment do paratroopers use?, Step2: What does #1 need to create in order to function?, Step3: In what does #1 create #2?, Step4: Is #3 present in a vacuum?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Paratroopers, Wikipedia page for step 2: Parachute, Wikipedia page for step 3: Drag, Wikipedia page for step 4: Vacuum, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-c66414aa68f04ae68c7c9d0805997325 |
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 nickel dominant material in US 2020 nickels?, Answer:No, Description of Nickel: Chemical element with atomic number 28, Fact1: Nickels have been made of various materials including silver in the 1940s., Fact2: Nickels in 2020 are made from a mix of copper and nickel., Fact3: 2020 nickels are 25% nickel and 75% copper.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the composition of the US 2020 nickel?, Step2: Of the elements listed in #1, do any of them make up more than 50% of the US 2020 Nickel?, Step3: If #2 is yes, is that element nickel?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Nickel, Wikipedia page for step 2: Nickel, Wikipedia page for step 3: Nickel, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f9918a2670c5424aa9309260bfa98844 |
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 snakebite hypothetically be a threat to T-1000?, Answer:No, Description of Snakebite: Injury caused by a bite from a snake, Fact1: Snakebites are dangerous because they inject venom into blood streams., Fact2: The T-1000 is an android from the movie series Terminator., Fact3: Androids are machines made of wires and computer parts.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where does the injurous action of a snakebite happen?, Step2: What kind of entity is a T-1000?, Step3: Does a #2 have a #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Snakebite, Wikipedia page for step 2: Terminator, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-d9fa98027ee34705872023032ff0f72c |
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: After viewing the Mona Lisa, could you get lunch nearby on foot?, Answer:Yes, Description of Mona Lisa: Painting by Leonardo da Vinci, Fact1: The Mona Lisa is housed in The Louvre., Fact2: There are many restaurants within walking distance of The Louvre.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where is the Mona Lisa located?, Step2: Is #1 a place likely to have at least a restaurant/hotel nearby?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mona Lisa, Wikipedia page for step 2: Louvre, not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-0ddc4acfbb714346995bd638b9245f84 |
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 teacher still have their job if they called a black student an ape?, Answer:No, Description of Ape: superfamily of mammals, Fact1: 'Ape' and 'monkey' are words that have been used in a derogatory manner against black people., Fact2: Teachers are held to a level of professionalism and cannot act in an abusive way towards children.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What kind of term would \"Ape\" be if used to describe a black person?, Step2: What standards are teachers held up to?, Step3: If a teacher used #1, would they be upholding #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: derogatory term, Wikipedia page for step 2: Teacher, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-60c3cd2387a2437890310fe7ca770e5a |
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 Christmas trees typically deciduous?, Answer:No, Description of Deciduous: Trees or shrubs that lose their leaves seasonally, Fact1: Christmas trees are almost always pine trees., Fact2: Christmas trees are green all year round.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What happens to the leaves of deciduous plants?, Step2: What kind of trees are Christmas trees?, Step3: Does #1 happen to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Deciduous, Wikipedia page for step 2: Christmas Trees, Wikipedia page for step 3: Pine Trees, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What types of trees are used as Christmas trees?, Step2: Are any of #1 deciduous?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Christmas tree, Wikipedia page for step 2: Christmas tree, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-b1857bccb9fa4b57a5f5d1747cfa264c |
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 you have to sacrifice flavor when on a sodium reduced diet?, Answer:No, Description of Sodium: Chemical element with atomic number 11, Fact1: Salt is an acquired tasted., Fact2: Gradually reducing salt in the diet will adjust taste buds will expect a less salty flavor., Fact3: Herbs and spices can be used to replace sodium.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is sodium used for in cooking?, Step2: Are there other ingredients used for the same thing as #1 in cooking?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sodium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Seasoning, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is required for a person to experience flavor?, Step2: Is salt a requirement in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavor, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavor, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is Mrs Dash a good salt substitute?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wikipedia sodium salt, not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: True",
"Step1: Does sodium intake affect fat loss?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wiki Sodium, not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: True",
"Step1: What is Sodium?, Step2: salt , Step3: what is herbs and spices?, Step4: How can you reduce sodium without sacrificing flavor?, Step5: is #3 before #1 and #2 and #4, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sodium(chemical element), Wikipedia page for step 2: Salt( food), Wikipedia page for step 3: list of culinary herbs and spices, Wikipedia page for step 4: by adding spices and herbs,, Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Intake of which food seasoning is reduced in a sodium reduced diet?, Step2: Is #1 the only seasoning that can be used to flavor food?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Low sodium diet, Wikipedia page for step 2: Seasoning, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What can a low-sodium diet include?, Step2: What kinds of foods are flavorful?, Step3: Are all of the items in #2 not in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_sodium_diet#Low_sodium_content, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavor#Regulations_on_natural_flavoring, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is salt reduction tasteless?, Step2: Should we avoid low-salt foods?, Step3: Is Step #2 same Step #1, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sodium salts, Wikipedia page for step 2: Salt, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Do herbs and spices have flavour?, Step2: Can herbs and spices be used to replace sodium?, Step3: Is yes the answer to #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki List of culinary herbs and spices, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki List of culinary herbs and spices, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: do flavors contains salt? , Step2: can one adjust the consumption of salt?, Step3: can #1 be reduced by #2, Wikipedia page for step 1: Salt is an acquired tasted, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gradually reducing salt in the diet will adjust taste buds will expect a less salty flavor., Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What does sodium taste like? , Step2: Is #1 required for good flavor?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Taste, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Are spices used to enhance meal flavor?, Step2: What other foods are low in sodium?, Step3: Is #1 not in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spice#Function, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_sodium_diet#Low_sodium_content, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Which sense is most important when determining a foods flavor?, Step2: What basic taste is related to sodium or lack of sodium?, Step3: Which sense is used to determine #2?, Step4: Is #1 the same as #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavor, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavor, Wikipedia page for step 3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taste, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does sodium have a taste associated with it?, Wikipedia page for step 1: sodium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: How many types of taste are there?, Step2: What type of taste does salt have?, Step3: Is #2 the only item in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Taste, Wikipedia page for step 2: Salt, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does sodium have a taste?, Step2: What are common human tastes?, Step3: Is #1 the same as any of #2, Wikipedia page for step 1: sodium, Wikipedia page for step 2: taste, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What does sodium taste like?, Step2: What are the common human tastes?, Step3: Are any of #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: sodium, Wikipedia page for step 2: taste, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Why is salt added to food?, Step2: Is salt the only thing that accomplishes #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt#Salt_in_food, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spice, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: sodium and chloride make salt., Step2: preference of #1 is an acquired taste that can be unlearned., Step3: Retraining your taste buds leads to #2., Step4: Herbs and spices helps #3. by livening up your food and adding variety., Wikipedia page for step 1: https://www.henryford.com/blog/2016/03/salt-vs-sodium-whats-the-difference, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://theheartfoundation.org/2017/07/07/salt/#:~:text=Salt%20preference%20is%20an%20acquired,they%20taste%20way%20too%20salty., Wikipedia page for step 3: https://www.dummies.com/food-drink/special-diets/high-blood-pressure-diet/reduce-your-salt-intake-by-retraining-your-taste-buds/, Wikipedia page for step 4: https://www.bhf.org.uk/informationsupport/heart-matters-magazine/nutrition/herbs-and-spices, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What common food ingredient contains sodium?, Step2: What is the general category for ingredients that give food flavor?, Step3: Is #1 the only item that falls under category #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasoning, Wikipedia page for step 3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seasoning, not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Which chemical element gives the flavor in salt?, Step2: What is the substitute for sodium chloride salt?, Step3: Do herbs have potassium?, Step4: Compare #3 and #2 and substitute for #1, Wikipedia page for step 1: Salt, Wikipedia page for step 2: Potassium Chloride, Wikipedia page for step 3: Basil, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What level of sodium consumption constitutes a low sodium diet?, Step2: What sense contributes most to the flavor of food?, Step3: Does having #1 compromise #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low_sodium_diet, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavor, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is the sodium based food constituent?, Step2: can reduction of #1 in food cause reduced flavor?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sodium, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is salt? , Step2: Does decreasing #1 sacrifice tast., Wikipedia page for step 1: sodium, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-e72c2e3db67e40be9c9e49d8d17cd12a |
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 Bees die to murder hornets?, Answer:Yes, Description of Bee: Clade of insects, Fact1: Murder Hornet is a nickname given to the Asian giant hornet., Fact2: The Asian Giant Hornet is a ruthless predator that kills other hornet species, yellow jackets, bees, large insects and mantises.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Which species are known as Murder Hornet?, Step2: Which species are common preys to #1?, Step3: Are bees included in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Asian giant hornet, Wikipedia page for step 2: , Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-527446bd6330435db3f8111d5148e464 |
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 Hobbit more profitable for proofreader than Constitution of the United States?, Answer:Yes, Description of Constitution of the United States: Supreme law of the United States of America, Fact1: Proofreaders typically get paid per the number of words in a document., Fact2: The Constitution of the United States contains around 7,500 words., Fact3: The Hobbit contains 95,356 words.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How many words are in the US Constitution?, Step2: What classification is the Hobbit?, Step3: How many words do books in #2 have?, Step4: Is #3 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: State constitution (United States), Wikipedia page for step 2: Hobbit, Wikipedia page for step 3: Word count, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-08d039306e5e476187b084d6be621d68 |
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 Switzerland support the United States in the Spanish–American War?, Answer:No, Description of Spanish–American War: Conflict in 1898 between Spain and the United States, Fact1: The Spanish–American War was an armed conflict between Spain and the United States in 1898., Fact2: Switzerland avoids alliances that might entail military, political, or direct economic action and has been neutral since the end of its expansion in 1515., Fact3: Its policy of neutrality was internationally recognised at the Congress of Vienna in 1815.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is Switzerland's major policy in terms of foreign relations and international institutions?, Step2: Considering #1, is it likely that Switzerland would have supported the US in the Spanish–American War?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Switzerland, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-fd044fe923bc4a91839f6aef22a742df |
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 the leopard cats first to be domesticated in the final period of stone age in china?, Answer:Yes, Description of Leopard cat: Small wild cat, Fact1: Leopard cat was the first cat species domesticated in Neolithic China about 5,000 years ago, Fact2: Neolithic is the last period of the stone age
Output:
| [
"Step1: In what age was the Leopard cat first domesticated in China?, Step2: Is #1 considered the final division of the Stone Age?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Leopard cat, Wikipedia page for step 2: Neolithic, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-193962036ba048658df87bdd947abbdb |
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 starving Hamas agent eating pig bad?, Answer:No, Description of Hamas: Palestinian Sunni-Islamist fundamentalist organization, Fact1: Hamas is a Sunni-Islam fundamentalist group that strictly prohibits the eating of a pig., Fact2: Sunni Islam has a concept called the Law of Necessity., Fact3: The Law of Necessity states that, "That which is necessary makes the forbidden permissible."
Output:
| [
"Step1: What religion do members of Hamas follow?, Step2: What foods are forbidden in #1?, Step3: Are there no exceptions to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Hamas, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Sunni Islam, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-ab7cad231a044cc994dc04f36a6bbde7 |
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 kindergarten teacher make a lesson of the New Testament?, Answer:No, Description of New Testament: Second division of the Christian biblical canon, Fact1: The majority of Kindergarten teachers work in public schools., Fact2: Public schools abide by a separation of church and state, and do not have any overall religion., Fact3: Students of all religions are welcome to attend public school.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where do the majority of kindergarten teachers work?, Step2: Do students in #1 follow a paritcular religion?, Wikipedia page for step 1: kindergarten teacher , Wikipedia page for step 2: Public Schools, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-bd4749feccc84a2199d3a15f24aa0580 |
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 broadcast from Spirit make the news in 2020?, Answer:Yes, Description of Spirit (rover): NASA Mars rover, Fact1: In 2010, the Spirit rover sent what is recorded as its final transmission., Fact2: In 2019, another rover made the news with its viral "final words"
Output:
| [
"Step1: When did the martian rover 'Spirit' send its last transmission?, Step2: Which rover sent another 'final message' in 2019?, Step3: Is #1 before 2020 and did #2 make the news?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Spirit (rover), Wikipedia page for step 2: Opportunity (rover), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-1903274edbed41148b96a3a5a5161cc2 |
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: In isopropyl alcohol, is the solubility of salt low?, Answer:Yes, Description of Solubility: Capacity of a designated solvent to hold a designated solute in homogeneous solution under specified conditions, Fact1: Isopropyl alcohol is unique in the sense that salt remains visible., Fact2: When salt has high solubility, it becomes invisible.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How does high solubility affect the visibility of salt?, Step2: Does salt in isopropyl alcohol fail to exhibit #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Salt, Wikipedia page for step 2: Isopropyl alcohol, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-83f410ffc2db492fb0ca07db86d546e8 |
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 Burundi's communicate with citizens of New Brunswick?, Answer:Yes, Description of New Brunswick: province in Canada, Fact1: French and English are the official languages of New Brunswick., Fact2: French is one of the official languages of Burundi.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are the official languages of New Brunswick, Canada?, Step2: What are the official languages of Burundi?, Step3: Are some elements of #2 also in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: New Brunswick, Canada, Wikipedia page for step 2: Burundi, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-70bb691567aa440b80aa9941d78fef8f |
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 Amy Winehouse familiar with Brexit?, Answer:No, Description of Amy Winehouse: English singer and songwriter, Fact1: Amy Winehouse died in 2011., Fact2: Brexit began in 2017.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When did Amy Winehouse die?, Step2: When did Brexit begin?, Step3: Did #2 occur before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Amy Winehouse, Wikipedia page for step 2: Brexit , Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-aa37733899fc46a3befd95b62d7d720a |
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 MIX a word and a roman numeral?, Answer:Yes, Description of Roman numerals: Numbers in the Roman numeral system, Fact1: "Mix" means to combine in english., Fact2: M equals one thousand in roman numerals, Fact3: I equals one in roman numerals , Fact4: I before X in roman numerals equals nine., Fact5: MIX equals one thousand nine in roman numerals.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What does Mix mean in english language?, Step2: Is Mix a number in Roman numerals?, Step3: Based on #1 and #2, is mix both a word and a roman numeral?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mix, Wikipedia page for step 2: Roman Numerals, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-c50e191927584e0aa34b18fd9215d459 |
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 clementine pith highly sought after?, Answer:No, Description of Clementine: nothospecies of plant, Clementine, Fact1: Pith is the white part of the clementine fruit between the orange colored peel and the edible fruit., Fact2: Most people discard the pith after peeling.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is a pith?, Step2: Do people usually like to keep #1 after peeling?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Pith, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pith, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-b92bae7cfdce43d9abf1a90b304505d0 |
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 several of Spartacus's companions born in area where the Gallic Wars took place?, Answer:Yes, Description of Gallic Wars: Wars in which the Roman Republic conquered Gaul, Fact1: The Gallic Wars took place from 58-50 BC in Gaul., Fact2: Spartacus had several companions including Gannicus, Crixus, and Oenomaus., Fact3: Crixus was born in Gaul., Fact4: Oenomaus was born in Gaul.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where did the Gallic Wars take place?, Step2: Who are the important companions of Spartacus?, Step3: Are any of #2 from #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallic_Wars, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spartacus, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-07970aa88f7747238bd696694f1f1346 |
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 Barack Obama participate in the Reformation?, Answer:No, Description of Reformation: Schism within the Christian Church in the 16th century, Fact1: The Reformation took place in the 16th century. , Fact2: Barack Obama was born in 1961.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When did the Reformation take place?, Step2: When was Barack Obama born?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Reformation, Wikipedia page for step 2: Barack Obama, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-7476d67e2bf640bda7dcf39d60792afb |
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 hide a basketball in a sand cat's ear?, Answer:No, Description of Sand cat: Small wild cat, Fact1: The diameter of a standard NBA basketball is around 9.5 inches, Fact2: A sand cat's ear grows to 2.8 inches tall
Output:
| [
"Step1: On average, how large is a sand cat's ear?, Step2: What is the size of a standard NBA basketball?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_cat, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basketball, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-0480b022d9434ae1bc2bc0aa0e726376 |
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 Very Large Telescope the most productive telescope in the world?, Answer:No, Description of Very Large Telescope: telescope in the Atacama Desert, Chile, Fact1: Telescope productivity is measured based on how many scientific papers a telescope generates., Fact2: The Hubble Space Telescope is the most productive telescope in the world.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What are counted when measuring telescope productivity?, Step2: How many occurrences of #1 have there been for the Very Large Telescope?, Step3: How many occurrences of #1 have there been for the Hubble Telescope?, Step4: Is #2 greater than #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Telescope, Wikipedia page for step 2: Very Large Telescope, Wikipedia page for step 3: Hubble Telescope, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-9607d9504c49451aa9d23c252a5fb1bc |
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 ancient handball players have an advantage at a modern concert?, Answer:Yes, Description of Handball: Olympic team sport played by 7 players a side on an indoor court, Fact1: In Ancient Greece, one player sat on the other's shoulder to play handball., Fact2: Sitting on another person's shoulder is a common tactic to get a better view at modern concerts.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How did players play handball in Ancient Greece?, Step2: Would a setup just like #1 get you a better view at a modern day concert?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ancient Greece, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-a84116495ca140a9bbc72ff0c76bf48b |
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 Muscovy Company's trade route to Russia be impassable in December?, Answer:No, Description of White Sea: A southern inlet of the Barents Sea in northwest Russia, Fact1: The Muscovy Company used the White Sea as it's trade route with Russia., Fact2: The White Sea is frozen over October–November to May–June., Fact3: The Muscovy Company used ships to do trade.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the Muscovy Company's trade route with Russia?, Step2: Is #1 typically frozen over in December?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Muscovy Company, Wikipedia page for step 2: White Sea, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f600095a693f4a37b2d62902cc956d96 |
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 Napoleon have any followers on twitter?, Answer:Yes, Description of Napoleon: 19th century French military leader and politician, Fact1: Twitter was founded in 2006., Fact2: Napoleon was born in 1769.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When was Twitter founded?, Step2: When did Napoleon die?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True"
] | task168-a51cf97039a5477f80be389d0225d624 |
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 the moon fit inside the Black Sea?, Answer:No, Description of Black Sea: Marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean between Europe and Asia, Fact1: The volume of the Black Sea is 547,000 cubic kilometers., Fact2: The volume of the moon is 21.9 billion cubic kilometers.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What is the volume of the Black Sea?, Step2: What is the volume of the moon?, Step3: Is #1 higher than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Sea, Wikipedia page for step 2: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moon, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-b2e33e58d0374b7484f99f15ea0e76dd |
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 dichromat probably easily distinguish chlorine gas from neon gas?, Answer:No, Description of Chlorine: Chemical element with atomic number 17, Fact1: A dichromat is someone with color blindness that can have difficulty distinguishing red and green, Fact2: Chlorine gas is green or yellow-green, Fact3: Neon gas is red
Output:
| [
"Step1: What two colors does a dichromat struggle to distinguish between?, Step2: What color is Chlorine gas?, Step3: What color is Neon Gas?, Step4: Is #1 different from #2 and #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Dichromat, Wikipedia page for step 2: Chlorine Gas, Wikipedia page for step 3: Neon Gas, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-1ec5a4488b7f42bb952a39df337e591b |
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 Eminem grow up in the largest U.S. city on the United States–Canada border?, Answer:Yes, Description of Eminem: American rapper and actor, Fact1: Eminem's Home town is Detroit, Michigan, U.S., Fact2: Detroit is the largest U.S. city on the United States–Canada border.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where is Eminem's hometown?, Step2: Is #1 the largest U.S. city on the United States–Canada border?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Eminem, Wikipedia page for step 2: Detroit, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-d58fc59fbc0e4b358d9e6a8e88d27b82 |
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 Jungle Book contain racist subtext?, Answer:Yes, Description of The Jungle Book: 1894 children's book by Rudyard Kipling, Fact1: Baloo, the father character in The Jungle Book, refers to the money characters as "flat-nosed flaky creeps" mocking a common black feature feature., Fact2: The antagonist snake character was made to sound like an Indian mag, and was said to hate men., Fact3: King Louie is viewed socially as a racist archetype of a black man.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What term did Baloo use to refer to the monkey characters in \"The Jungle Book\"?, Step2: What sentiment did the antagonistic snake express towards men?, Step3: Do #1 and #2 have racist connotation?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Jungle Book, Wikipedia page for step 2: The Jungle Book, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What term did Baloo use to refer to the monkey characters in \"The Jungle Book\"?, Step2: What sentiment did the antagonistic snake express towards men?, Step3: Do #1 and #2 have racist connotation?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Jungle Book, Wikipedia page for step 2: The Jungle Book, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f4aafed189644c74bce9fae7354abf91 |
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 week old chlorine water safe to drink?, Answer:Yes, Description of Chlorine: Chemical element with atomic number 17, Fact1: Chlorine is a chemical that is the second lightest halogen element., Fact2: Chlorine is toxic and can attack the respiratory system of humans., Fact3: Chlorine is highly soluble in water and will dissolve in around 4 and a half days., Fact4: The Water Quality and Health Council states that chlorination of drinking water protects consumers from diseases caused by waterborne microorganisms.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How long does it take for chlorine to dissolve in water?, Step2: Is water with dissolved chlorine safe to drink?, Step3: Is #2 positive and #1 less than a week?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Chlorine, Wikipedia page for step 2: Chlorinated water, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-f3389dc954324020acd0d0b205e30d4f |
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: Have Douglas firs been used for transport thousands of miles from their origin?, Answer:Yes, Description of Douglas fir: species of tree, Fact1: The Hawaiian Islands are thousands of miles off from the nearest living Douglas firs., Fact2: Douglas firs have drifted to the Hawaiian Islands., Fact3: Hawaiian's have carved waʻa kaulua out of Douglas firs that floated to Hawaii., Fact4: Waʻa kaulua are a type of double-hulled canoe used for water transport.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where are Douglas firs originally found?, Step2: What are they used for by the Hawaiians?, Step3: How far is #1 from Hawaii?, Step4: Is #2 for transportation and #3 at least a thousand miles?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Douglas fir, Wikipedia page for step 2: Douglas fir, Wikipedia page for step 3: Douglas fir, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-ed00a5394339496a93fca553f0438e47 |
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 band Led Zeppelin own a prime number of gilded gramophones?, Answer:Yes, Description of Led Zeppelin: English rock band, Fact1: 5 is a prime number, Fact2: A Grammy Award trophy is a gilded gramophone, Fact3: Led Zeppelin won 5 Grammy Awards
Output:
| [
"Step1: What award has a trophy which consists of a gilded gramophone?, Step2: How many #1 have Led Zeppelin won?, Step3: Is #2 a prime number?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Grammy Award, Wikipedia page for step 2: List of awards and nominations received by Led Zeppelin, Wikipedia page for step 3: Prime number, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-62637ef49ed745608e3c01405678dae0 |
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 Christopher Nolan's movies finance Cyprus's entire GDP?, Answer:No, Description of Christopher Nolan: British–American film director, screenwriter, and producer, Fact1: The films of Christopher Nolan have grossed around 4.7 billion at the box office., Fact2: The GDP of Cyprus was 24.96 billion in 2018.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How much have Christopher Nolan films grossed?, Step2: What is the GDP of Cypress?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Christopher Nolan, Wikipedia page for step 2: Cypress, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-26d465db1b484908b0a075e795264c14 |
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 Homo erectus pekinensis read gospel?, Answer:No, Description of Gospel: description of the life of Jesus, canonical or apocryphal, Fact1: Homo erectus pekinensis had lived 750,000 years ago., Fact2: Gospel is description of the life of Jesus., Fact3: Jesus died AD 33, about 2000 year ago.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How long ago (in years) was the period of existence of the Homo erectus pekinensis?, Step2: How many years ago was the Gospel written?, Step3: Is #1 much more than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Peking Man, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gospel, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: How long ago (in years) was the period of existence of the Homo erectus pekinensis?, Step2: How many years ago was the Gospel written?, Step3: Is #1 less than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Peking Man, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gospel, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-a750ffb601aa42c0a706734d42e23421 |
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 Iris (mythology) and Hermes hypothetically struggle at a UPS job?, Answer:No, Description of Iris (mythology): Greek goddess of the rainbow, Fact1: UPS is the number one delivery/courier service according to 2019 sales., Fact2: Iris is the goddess of the rainbow and serves as a messenger of the gods in Greek mythology., Fact3: Hermes in Greek mythology was a god that functioned as the emissary and messenger of the gods.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What role does the Greek goddess Iris play for gods?, Step2: What role does the Greek deity Hermes play for gods?, Step3: What kind of service does UPS provide?, Step4: Are #1 and #2 much different from #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iris_(mythology), Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermes, Wikipedia page for step 3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Parcel_Service, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-764cb220a4f4483f9d9d0bb6b3fb53f6 |
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 Dr. Seuss live a tragedy free life?, Answer:No, Description of Dr. Seuss: American children's writer and illustrator, Fact1: Dr. Seuss's wife committed suicide., Fact2: In his later years, Dr. Seuss was diagnosed with cancer.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Was Dr. Seuss' life free of tragic occurrences?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Dr. Seuss, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-9da0852c9f03405890debfa83de11d49 |
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 it be shocking for Alexander Klevan to contract Zika virus in his birth place?, Answer:Yes, Description of Zika virus: Species of virus, Fact1: Alexander Klevan is a Russian-born Israeli painter., Fact2: Alexander Klevan was born in Siberia., Fact3: The Zika virus is carried by mosquitoes and thrives in warm and tropical climates., Fact4: Siberia is one of the coldest places on the planet.
Output:
| [
"Step1: Where was Alexander Klevan born?, Step2: What usually transmits Zika virus?, Step3: Is #1 free of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Alexander Klevan, Wikipedia page for step 2: Zika virus, Wikipedia page for step 3: Mosquitos, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True"
] | task168-b53740d6f7654c8f80273a3d4c86a4df |
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 University of Pittsburgh easier to enter than FBI?, Answer:Yes, Description of University of Pittsburgh: American state-related research university located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Fact1: The University of Pittsburgh has around a 60% acceptance rate., Fact2: The FBI estimated accepting 900 agents out of 16000 applicants in 2019.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What percent of applicants does University of Pittsburgh accept?, Step2: How many applications did the FBI get in 2019?, Step3: Out of #2, how many were accepted?, Step4: What is #3 divided by #2?, Step5: Is #1 greater than #4?, Wikipedia page for step 1: University of Pittsburgh, Wikipedia page for step 2: FBI, Wikipedia page for step 3: FBI, Wikipedia page for step 4: , Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-5955a1f5b9174c76937e98446c7d6571 |
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 6 year old boy show his grandmother his art work via fax?, Answer:Yes, Description of Fax: method of transmitting images, often of documents, Fact1: art work is image., Fact2: fax is used to remit the image.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What do Fax machines transmit?, Step2: What are the characteristics of #1?, Step3: Does art work meet the necessary conditions of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Fax machine, Wikipedia page for step 2: Images, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-e67310d18ea7430d8a63d79f05aea0d7 |
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 write a whole Haiku in a single tweet?, Answer:Yes, Description of Haiku: very short form of Japanese poetry, Fact1: A Haiku is a Japanese poetry in three phrases., Fact2: The average Haiku is composed of 60 to 70 characters., Fact3: A tweet is a short message sent on Twitter., Fact4: The character limit of a single tweet on Twitter is 140.
Output:
| [
"Step1: How many characters can be expected to be in an average haiku?, Step2: What is the current character limit of a single tweet?, Step3: Is #1 reasonably less than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Haiku in English, Wikipedia page for step 2: Twitter, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-79c63caa9a9b489883d42836a93765c0 |
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 majority of Reddit users familiar with the Pledge of Allegiance?, Answer:Yes, Description of Reddit: Online news aggregator, Fact1: 55% of the Reddit user base comes from the United States., Fact2: Congressional sessions open with the recital of the Pledge, as do many government meetings at local levels, and meetings held by many private organizations., Fact3: All states except California, Hawaii, Iowa, Vermont, and Wyoming require a regularly scheduled recitation of the pledge in public schools.
Output:
| [
"Step1: What country do most Reddit users come from?, Step2: What country is the Pledge of Allegiance associated with?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Reddit, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pledge of Allegiance, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-ac1af0a76ad347b39db8f82bd297d5e2 |
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 author of Little Women have remembered the ratification of the 13th Amendment?, Answer:Yes, Description of Little Women: 1860s novel by Louisa May Alcott, Fact1: The 13th Amendment was ratified in 1865., Fact2: Louisa May Alcott died in 1888.
Output:
| [
"Step1: When was the 13th Amendment ratified?, Step2: Who wrote Little Women?, Step3: What years was #2 alive?, Step4: Did #1 occur sometime during #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Wikipedia page for step 2: Little Women, Wikipedia page for step 3: Louisa May Alcott, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] | task168-cf5634de156d431d8cb2cb620a2c1adc |
Subsets and Splits