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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: If you're pregnant, might you be recommended ginger?, Answer:Yes, Description of Ginger: Species of plant, Fact1: Pregnancy often causes nausea and stomach upset., Fact2: Small doses of ginger have been shown to help with vomiting and nausea., Fact3: Doctors say that, in small doses, ginger is safe for pregnant women.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What symptoms can ginger help alleviate?, Step2: Do pregnant women suffer from any symptoms in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ginger, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pregnancy, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-864780bed27b4a1eaa842167036a8357
|
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 Arnold Schwarzenegger deadlift an adult Black rhinoceros?, Answer:No, Description of Arnold Schwarzenegger: Austrian-American actor, businessman, bodybuilder and politician, Fact1: Arnold Schwarzenegger deadlifted 710 pounds in a competition., Fact2: The world deadlift record is 1,104 pounds, set by Game of Thrones actor Hafthor Bjornsson., Fact3: The weight of an adult Black rhinoceros is between 1,800 – 3,100 pounds.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How much can Arnold Schwarzenegger deadlift?, Step2: How much does an adult Black rhino weigh?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Wikipedia page for step 2: Black Rhino, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-6a6e897e9f314cfc83e5a7cde14f4c64
|
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 Paulo Coelho's wife make a living through speech?, Answer:No, Description of Paulo Coelho: Brazilian lyricist and novelist, Fact1: Paulo Coelho's wife is Christina Oiticica., Fact2: Christina Oiticica is a Brazilian artist., Fact3: Artists make a living through drawing things, which is done by their hands., Fact4: Speech is typically performed with one's mouth.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who is Paulo Coelho's wife?, Step2: What does #1 do for a living?, Step3: What body part does she use to do #2?, Step4: What body part do singers use to produce their craft?, Step5: Is #3 the same as #4?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Paul Coelho, Wikipedia page for step 2: Christina Oiticica, Wikipedia page for step 3: drawing (how to), Wikipedia page for step 4: Singing (how to), Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-45130da4d491426f9ab5d7241db6c0aa
|
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 weather phenomena avoided when naming minor league baseball teams?, Answer:No, Description of Minor League Baseball: hierarchy of professional baseball leagues affiliated with Major League Baseball, Fact1: Weather phenomena refers to types of weather caused conditions such as cyclones, storms, and tsunamis., Fact2: Minor league baseball teams include the Brooklyn Cyclones and Lake Elsinore Storm.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What are some names of weather phenomena?, Step2: What are the name of minor league baseball teams?, Step3: Are any terms in #1 also present in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: list of severe weather phenomena, Wikipedia page for step 2: List of Minor League Baseball Teams, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-c7a064ac7f404892b98956d8ccfb7dd3
|
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 human following a hyena diet be unwelcome at a vegan festival?, Answer:Yes, Description of Hyena: family of mammal, Fact1: A hyena is a carnivorous mammal that feeds on the flesh of other animals., Fact2: Vegans are people that stick to a strict diet that does not include animals or animal products.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What does the hyena diet consist mainly of?, Step2: What do people on a vegan diet eat?, Step3: Is there an overlap between #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hyena, Wikipedia page for step 2: Vegan, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-d0d0a2f2c85748919511123fee05ff93
|
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 François Mitterrand serve under Napoleon Bonapart in the French army?, Answer:No, Description of François Mitterrand: 21st President of the French Republic, Fact1: François Mitterrand was born in 1916., Fact2: Napoleon Bonapart died in 1821.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was François Mitterrand born?, Step2: When did Napoleon Bonapart die?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: François Mitterrand, Wikipedia page for step 2: Napoleon Bonapart, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-55cf891d9db4493ba12d62cbf2a75e3a
|
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 myocardial infarction a brain problem?, Answer:No, Description of Myocardial infarction: Interruption of blood supply to a part of the heart, Fact1: Myocardial infarction is a problem in the heart., Fact2: The equivalent in the brain would be similar to a stroke.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which organ in the body does myocardial infarction affect?, Step2: Is #1 the same as the brain?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Myocardial infarction, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b5e043ebc35d4eff976fff945b47c6b5
|
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 Samsung accountable to shareholders?, Answer:Yes, Description of Samsung: South Korean multinational conglomerate, Fact1: Samsung is a publicly traded company., Fact2: Publicly traded companies are ultimately accountable to shareholders.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What kind of company is Samsung?, Step2: Are #1's accountable to shareholders?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Samsung, Wikipedia page for step 2: Public Company, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is Samsung a publically traded company?, Step2: Are #1 accontable to shareholders?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Samsung , Wikipedia page for step 2: Public Company, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-77d801c8004e4216923af17eac1ad32e
|
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 Woodrow Wilson consider Blacks to be equal members of society?, Answer:No, Description of Woodrow Wilson: 28th president of the United States, Fact1: Woodrow Wilson supported the Ku Klux Klan., Fact2: The Ku Klux Klan consider Blacks to be inferior.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What group did Woodrow Wilson support?, Step2: Did #1 consider Blacks to be equal members of society?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Woodrow Wilson, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ku Klux Klan, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-8e5aff3e1de44081b4a7107eaaaa2f9f
|
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 Christians anticipate an existence in Sheol after death?, Answer:No, Description of Christians: people who adhere to Christianity, Fact1: Sheol appears in the Christian Bible, in the Old Testament., Fact2: Christians do not recognize Sheol as part of their afterlife.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which Testament of the Bible makes reference to Sheol?, Step2: Is #1 the New Testament?, Step3: Is Sheol included in Christians' concept of afterlife as expressed in the New Testament?, Step4: Is #2 or #3 positive?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sheol, Wikipedia page for step 2: , Wikipedia page for step 3: Christian eschatology, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b46f0a4a614b4588942ff6e74e42e2f2
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was the man who played the male lead in Mrs. Doubtfire known for his humour?, Answer:Yes, Description of Humour: tendency of experiences to provoke laughter and provide amusement, Fact1: Robin Williams played the male lead in Mrs. Doubtfire., Fact2: Robin Williams had a prolific standup and film comedy career.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who played the male lead in MRs. Doubtfire?, Step2: What was the career of #1?, Step3: Is #2 a humorous job?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mrs. Doubtfire, Wikipedia page for step 2: Robin Williams, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-c1eefa9f84594f10abcdeede982bbeab
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Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Could Tom Cruise explain mental auditing?, Answer:Yes, Description of Tom Cruise: American actor and producer, Fact1: Mental auditing is a practice within the church of Scientology., Fact2: Tom Cruise is a long standing member of the church of Scientology and is high in the ranks.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What church practices mental auditing?, Step2: Is Tom Cruise a member of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mental auditing, Wikipedia page for step 2: Tom Cruise, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-55e82c0715454d29a6815312c2b79bd3
|
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 triples tandem bike support Apollo 15 crew?, Answer:Yes, Description of Apollo 15: Fourth crewed mission to land on the Moon, Fact1: A tandem bike has seats for more than one rider., Fact2: A triples tandem bike has three seats and can support three riders., Fact3: The crew of Apollo 15 consisted of three people.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many people were on the Apollo 15 mission?, Step2: How many people can ride a triple tandem bike?, Step3: Is #2 at least #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Apollo 15 mission, Wikipedia page for step 2: Tandem bicycle, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-21c3a554901d499e8ea8cad527f0a3d4
|
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 Gymnastics a non-sedentary sport?, Answer:Yes, Description of Gymnastics: Sport, Fact1: Gymnastics is a sport that includes exercises requiring balance, strength, flexibility, agility, coordination, and endurance., Fact2: Exercise is an activity requiring physical effort, carried out to sustain or improve health and fitness., Fact3: Being sedentary is characterized by prolonged periods of inactivity or very little physical movement while awake.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What are compulsory in gymnastics?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wiki gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What are some fun facts about gymnastics?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wiki Gymnasatics, not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: True",
"Step1: What are sedentary activities?, Step2: What activities are involved in gymnastics?, Step3: Are the results of #2 not included in the results of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is a sedentary lifestyle?, Step2: What is the opposite of #1?, Step3: What is ?, Step4: Is #2 needed in #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: sedentary lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 2: sedentary lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 3: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 4: Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: IS Gymnastics is a good exercise for a healthy body?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is Gymnastics gives a better healthy life for human beings? , Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does gymnastics require a lot of physical effort?, Step2: Is gymnastics a physical effort sport?, Step3: Is Step #2 same Step #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: Sport, Wikipedia page for step 3: Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does sedentary require much movement?, Step2: Is Gymnastics a sport which requires a lot of movement?, Step3: Is the answer for #2 same as #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sedentary lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is Gymnastics is needed to keep the body healthy?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wiki:Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Gymnastics is a type of what activity? , Step2: What does sedentary mean?, Step3: Can you do both #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: what is gymnastics?, Step2: is #1 non-sedentary sport?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics is a sport that includes exercises requiring balance, strength, flexibility, agility, coordination, and endurance, Wikipedia page for step 2: Exercise is an activity requiring physical effort, carried out to sustain or improve health and fitness., not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is gymnastics a sport that requires physical effort?, Step2: Does being sedentary mean having little or no physical activity?, Step3: Does following #2 mean you can't do #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki Sedentary Lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True",
"Step1: What kind of physical activity is attributive of a sedentary lifestyle?, Step2: What amount of physical activity is required for gymnastics?, Step3: Are the attributes of #1 contrary to the levels of physical activity in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What does Gymnastics require a person to do? , Step2: Can you achieve #1 while being non-sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is gymnastics?, Step2: What is sedentary?, Step3: Is #1 different than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What are the actions performed in gymnastics?, Step2: Are any of #1 considered non-sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is gymnastics?, Step2: what does sedentary mean?, Step3: Is non applied to sedentary indicate the opposite of sedentary?, Step4: does #3 pertain to #1, Wikipedia page for step 1: gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: sedentary lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 3: non-, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does gymnastics require movement and physical effort?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is Gymnastics a sport?, Step2: What are the characteristics of a sport?, Step3: What does 'sedentary' characterize? , Step4: Is #2 different from #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: Sport, Wikipedia page for step 3: Sedentary, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What are the events in Gymnastics?, Step2: Are any of #1 a non-sedentary activity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: sedentary, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What are they types of events in gymnastics?, Step2: Are any of #1 considered non-sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: sedentary, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does gymnastics involve exercises?, Step2: Do exercises involve physical movement?, Step3: Are #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: Exercise, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is exercise considered to be a characteristic of being non-sedinary?, Step2: Is Gymnastics considered exercise?, Step3: Do #1 and #2 agree?, Wikipedia page for step 1: gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What are the actions involved in Gymnastics?, Step2: Are any of #1 non-sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does gymnastics involve physical activity?, Step2: What is considered sedentary?, Step3: Is #1 the opposite of #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Is Gymnastics considered a sport?, Step2: Does Gymnastics require prolonged physical activity?, Step3: Are #1 and #2 both True?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wiki: Gymnastic, Wikipedia page for step 2: Wiki: Gymnastic, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What is an exercise?, Step2: What exercises does gymnastics include?, Step3: Is #2 a #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exercise, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?cirrusUserTesting=control&search=gymnasstics&title=Special%3ASearch&go=Go&ns0=1, Wikipedia page for step 3: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?cirrusUserTesting=control&search=gymnasstics&title=Special%3ASearch&go=Go&ns0=1, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What activities are involved gymnastics?, Step2: What does #1 require?, Step3: Is #2 being non-sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: exercise, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does Gymnastics require physical effort?, Step2: Does #1 mean sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/322910#physical-dangers, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: How is gymnastics played?, Step2: does #1 involve physical effort?, Step3: can #2 be termed as sedentary?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://www.google.com/search?q=how+is+gymnastics+played&oq=how+is+gym&aqs=chrome.2.69i57j0l7.8583j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk00nHafoo6B-DQQa_5G2ynmu45l0qw%3A1592800996581&ei=5DbwXteEI4mqUMHFvYAO&q=does+gymnastics+involve+physical+effort%3F&oq=does+gymnastics+involve+physical+effort%3F&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQAzoECCMQJzoFCAAQkQI6CAgAELEDEJECOgUIABCDAToCCAA6BQgAELEDOgQIABBDOgcIABAUEIcCOgYIABAWEB46BAgAEA06CAgAEA0QBRAeOgcIIRAKEKABOgUIIRCgAVCHgwFYgPoDYJSABGgEcAB4AYABmgSIAZNekgEKMi0zOC4yLjIuMpgBAKABAaoBB2d3cy13aXo&sclient=psy-ab&ved=0ahUKEwjXhuWMzpTqAhUJFRQKHcFiD-AQ4dUDCAw&uact=5, Wikipedia page for step 3: https://www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk00kOU2g8Sfp-YJ0xxrCZErfMTrLuQ%3A1592801063353&ei=JzfwXvScFZrlgwf4_ZmwCg&q=is+physical+activity+the+same+as+sedentary+behaviour&oq=is+physical+activity+the+same+as+sedentar&gs_lcp=CgZwc3ktYWIQARgBMggIIRAWEB0QHjIICCEQFhAdEB4yCAghEBYQHRAeMggIIRAWEB0QHjIICCEQFhAdEB46BAgjECc6CAgAELEDEJECOgUIABCRAjoECAAQQzoFCAAQsQM6BQgAEIMBOgIIADoHCCMQ6gIQJzoHCAAQFBCHAjoGCAAQFhAeOgQIABANUKnYB1jj3Qhg6vkIaANwAHgAgAH9A4gBj1aSAQoyLTM3LjMuMS4xmAEAoAEBqgEHZ3dzLXdperABCg&sclient=psy-ab, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does Gymnastics require physical exercise?, Step2: Does Exercise require physical activity?, Step3: Does sedentary involve lot of physical exercise?, Step4: Compare #1, #2 and #3, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: Exercise, Wikipedia page for step 3: Sedentary, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does gymnastics require physical fitness?, Step2: Is #1 true?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: Does a non-sedentary sport require physical activity?, Step2: Does gymnastics involve physical activity?, Step3: Is the answer to #1 different from the answer to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedentary_lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What type of activity is non-sedentary (opposite of sedentary)?, Step2: Does gymnastics meet the criteria of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sedentary lifestyle, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gymnastics, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What are non-sedentary sports?, Step2: What is Gymnastics?, Step3: Is #2 a part of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Non-sedentary sports, Wikipedia page for step 2: Gymnastics, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What type of physical abilities does gymnastics require?, Step2: Which components of wellness does #1 improve?, Step3: Does non-sedentary sport result in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: gymnastics , Wikipedia page for step 2: health and fitness, Wikipedia page for step 3: non-sedentary, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-a7acbe12f8af4de9953fc28ec6e9803c
|
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 cow methane safer for environment than cars?, Answer:No, Description of Methane: Simplest organic molecule with one carbon atom and four hydrogen, Fact1: Methane is a gas that pollutes the environment and leads to shifts in temperature., Fact2: Cars produce 2.7 tons of methane per year., Fact3: Cows produce 4 tons of methane gas per year.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How much methane is produced by cars annually?, Step2: How much methane is produced by cows annually?, Step3: Is #2 less than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Global Warming, Wikipedia page for step 2: Cows, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-98e108a5f66f4f26918eb6c9670cd085
|
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 Curiosity (rover) kill a cat?, Answer:Yes, Description of Curiosity (rover): American robotic rover exploring the crater Gale on Mars, Fact1: Cats weigh on average between 7 to 10 pounds., Fact2: Curiosity (rover), a space vehicle that explores Mars, weighs 1,982 pounds., Fact3: As mass falls, it picks up acceleration and adds to the force of impact.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How much does a cat weigh?, Step2: How much does Curiosity (rover) weigh?, Step3: Is #2 more than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Cat, Wikipedia page for step 2: Curiosity (rover), Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-8ea7635008844f4390939a04655420d0
|
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 Supreme Court of Canada fight a Lucha trios match?, Answer:Yes, Description of Supreme Court of Canada: highest court of Canada, Fact1: A Lucha trios match requires at least two teams of three wrestlers each, Fact2: The Supreme Court of Canada has nine justices
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many Justices are in the Supreme Court of Canada?, Step2: What is the total number of people needed to fight in a Lucha trios match?, Step3: Is #1 greater than or equal to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Supreme Court of Canada, Wikipedia page for step 2: Lucha Underground Trios Championship, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-36bce82f62064181a1cfc97e977871de
|
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 TMNT coloring book have pizza in it?, Answer:Yes, Description of Pizza: Usually savory dish of flattened bread and toppings, Fact1: TMNT is an abbreviation for 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles'., Fact2: The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles canonically only ever ate pizza in the animated series.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What cartoon does TMNT stand for?, Step2: In the animated series, did #1 canonically eat only pizza?, Wikipedia page for step 1: TMNT , Wikipedia page for step 2: The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-0b081347d77a48e3bcfed23a480ddbe1
|
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 founders of the biggest city in Orange County, California speak Italian?, Answer:No, Description of Orange County, California: County in California, United States, Fact1: Anaheim is the biggest city in Orange County, California, Fact2: Anaheim was founded by fifty German families, Fact3: People from Germany speak German
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is the biggest city in Orange County, California?, Step2: Who founded #1?, Step3: Did #2's speak Italian? , Wikipedia page for step 1: Orange County, Wikipedia page for step 2: Anaheim , Wikipedia page for step 3: German, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-5c19ebf9fdad4684bd4ace89e3b42010
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do some home remedies result in your skin color turning blue?, Answer:Yes, Description of Blue: A primary colour between purple and green, Fact1: Colloidal silver is a popular alternative treatment/home remedy that is used by some people., Fact2: Ingestion of colloidal silver in high amounts can tint the skin blue.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What can cause skin color to change?, Step2: Of #1, what changes can be caused by ingestion of something?, Step3: Of #2, what causes skin color to become blue?, Step4: Is #3 used in home remedies?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Human skin color, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Human skin color, Wikipedia page for step 3: wiki: Argyria , Wikipedia page for step 4: wiki: Collodial silver, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-304bd18b13b34351b668ccd4005b69a3
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Could someone with fine motor control issues benefit from an altered keyboard layout?, Answer:Yes, Description of Keyboard layout: any specific mechanical, visual, or functional arrangement of the keys of a keyboard or typewriter, Fact1: Fine motor control involves making small, precise movements like painting or typing. , Fact2: The standard keyboard layout is designed to be used by someone without any motor control issues., Fact3: There are modified keyboards for multiple types of disability.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What types of keyboard layouts exist?, Step2: Among #1, which keyboard layouts are optimized for disabilities?, Step3: Are any of #2 better for those with limited fine motor control?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Keyboard layout, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: List of Latin-script keyboard layouts, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b1d5cf5e0f064890bf05bb4c50719942
|
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 Adam Sandler get a reference to Cole Spouse and a scuba man doll?, Answer:Yes, Description of Adam Sandler: American actor, comedian, screenwriter, and producer, Fact1: Adam Sandler and Cole Sprouse starred together in "Big Daddy"., Fact2: A prop used throughout "Big Daddy" was a scuba diving action figure that Cole's character called 'Scuba Steve'.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What did Adam Sandler and Cole Sprouse star together in?, Step2: Was a scuba man doll used as a prop by Cole in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Big Daddy, Wikipedia page for step 2: Big Daddy, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-44b5ef3cccb84523bc7feacca13314f0
|
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 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change sell ice?, Answer:No, Description of United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change: international treaty, Fact1: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change produced an agreement to limit future global warming at some degree., Fact2: Creating ice require energy., Fact3: Consuming energy makes heat., Fact4: global warming would not be prevented by ice.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Does United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change sell anything?, Wikipedia page for step 1: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-fd31a079165c479b84834741c4e4312a
|
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 Brooke Shields succeed at University of Pennsylvania?, Answer:Yes, Description of University of Pennsylvania: Private Ivy League research university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Fact1: Brooke Shields graduated from Princeton University., Fact2: Princeton is ranked as the number 1 national college by US news., Fact3: University of Pennsylvania is ranked as number 6 national college by US news., Fact4: Princeton only admits around 6 percent of applicants as of 2018., Fact5: University of Pennsylvania accepts around 9% of applicants as of 2018.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What college did Brooke Shields go to?, Step2: Out of all colleges in the US, how is #1 ranked?, Step3: Is the ranking of University of Pennsylvania similar to #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Brooke Shields, Wikipedia page for step 2: Princeton University, Wikipedia page for step 3: University of Pennsylvania, not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-6c791b845ff44b22b62abf5fb8762c54
|
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 Moliere have appreciated Chapter 11 protection?, Answer:Yes, Description of Molière: 17th-century French playwright and actor, Fact1: Moliere founded the Illustre Théâtre., Fact2: The Illustre Théâtre went bankrupt., Fact3: Chapter 11 filings offer businesses bankruptcy protection.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What did Moliere create?, Step2: What happened to #1 financially?, Step3: What is chapter 11 protection?, Step4: Would #3 have helped #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Moliere , Wikipedia page for step 2: Illustre Théâtre, Wikipedia page for step 3: Chapter 11, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-4ab46a8e3a67428cbadd72ce85260c62
|
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 Snoopy look like Chance from Homeward Bound?, Answer:No, Description of Snoopy: cartoon dog, Fact1: Chance from Homeward Bound is a golden retriever. , Fact2: Snoopy is black and white., Fact3: Golden Retrievers are yellow in color.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What kind of animal is Chance from Homeward Bound?, Step2: What color is Snoopy?, Step3: What color is #1 typically?, Step4: Is #2 the same as #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Homeward Bound, Wikipedia page for step 2: Snoopy, Wikipedia page for step 3: golden retriever, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-cc504580481a4a6b9f66401e44ce5f9a
|
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 Bob Marley's children hypothetically win tug of war against Kublai Khan's children?, Answer:No, Description of Bob Marley: Jamaican singer-songwriter, Fact1: Bob Marley had 9 children., Fact2: Kublai Khan had 23 children., Fact3: Many of Bob Marley's children became singers, and followed his themes of peace and love., Fact4: The children of Kublai Khan followed in his footsteps and were fierce warlords.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many children did Bob Marley have?, Step2: How many children did Kublai Khan have?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Bob Marley, Wikipedia page for step 2: Kublai Khan, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-31d0348206ad45679354ffd240b413f2
|
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 polyamory allowed in the Catholic Church?, Answer:No, Description of Polyamory: Practice of or desire for intimate relationships with more than one partner, Fact1: A central tenet of the Catholic Church is a one-to-one match between man and woman., Fact2: The ten commandments claim that "coveting your neighbors wife" is a sin.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is Polyamory?, Step2: Is #1 allowed in catholic churches?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Polyamory, Wikipedia page for step 2: Catholic Church, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-891e61c5bd7444dd98bbb341368eae09
|
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 Harry Houdini's wife make psychics look foolish?, Answer:Yes, Description of Harry Houdini: American magician, escapologist, and stunt performer, Fact1: Psychics are people that claim to have special powers to talk to the dead., Fact2: Harry Houdini gave his wife a code word to ask psychics to repeat after his death., Fact3: The wife of Harry Houdini, Wilhelmina Beatrice "Bess" Rahner, asked several psychics for the code word and none knew it.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What did Harry Houdini give to his wife to test psychics after his death?, Step2: Were psychics unable to provide #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Harry Houdini, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-10b06ff9863f465497e60460500cdd92
|
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: For bone growth, is kale more beneficial than spinach?, Answer:Yes, Description of Spinach: species of plant, Fact1: Calcium is an important nutrient for bone health., Fact2: Kale has more calcium per serving than spinach.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What nutrient is critical for bone growth?, Step2: How much #1 does kale contain?, Step3: How much #1 does spinach contain?, Step4: Is #2 greater than #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Calcium in biology, Wikipedia page for step 2: Kale, Wikipedia page for step 3: Spinach, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-69e4f5ac6d764282b6aec5399b43acda
|
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 Japanese Zen practitioners follow a set of tenets of the same name as an emperor?, Answer:Yes, Description of Empire of Japan: Empire in the Asia-Pacific region between 1868–1947, Fact1: Zen is a branch of Buddhism popular in Japan., Fact2: Zen Buddhism incorporates the teaching found in the Taishō Tripiṭaka., Fact3: Emperor Taishō ruled Japan from 30 July 1912 – 25 December 1926
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which emperor ruled Japan from 1912 to 1926?, Step2: Which teachings do Japanese Zen adhere to?, Step3: Is any of #2 named similarly to #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: List of emperors of Japan, Wikipedia page for step 2: Japanese Zen, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-9565a83920d3460680d87faa67bf1028
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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: Would Hannah Nixon be proud of Richard Nixon following the Watergate scandal?, Answer:No, Description of Watergate scandal: Political scandal that occurred in the United States in the 1970s, Fact1: Hannah Nixon was the mother of Richard Nixon., Fact2: Richard Nixon resigned due to the unethical actions that he committed during the Watergate scandal., Fact3: Parents are typically not proud of their children when they act immorally or unethically.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is Hannah Nixon relation to Richard Nixon?, Step2: What happened to Richard Nixon as a result of the Watergate scandal?, Step3: Why did Richard Nixon have to #2?, Step4: Are #1's usually proud if their child does #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hannah Nixon, Wikipedia page for step 2: Richard Nixon, Wikipedia page for step 3: Richard Nixon, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-035eda2c8296438480fc367c90db0614
|
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 Elmo an original muppet character on Sesame Street?, Answer:No, Description of Sesame Street: American children's television program, Fact1: Sesame Street started in 1969., Fact2: Elmo first appeared on the show in 1980.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When did Sesame Street make its debut?, Step2: When did Elmo first appear on Sesame Street?, Step3: Is #2 the same as #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sesame Street, Wikipedia page for step 2: Elmo, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-45fe557970b7452fb43525d81070edb8
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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: Is the cuisine of Hawaii suitable for a vegan?, Answer:No, Description of Cuisine of Hawaii: Cuisine of Hawaii, Fact1: Per capita, Hawaiians are the second largest consumers of Spam in the world, right behind Guam., Fact2: Kalua pig is another famous cuisine of Hawaii., Fact3: Fish and seafood are also very common in Hawaii.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What are the popular foods in Hawaiian cuisine?, Step2: Which foods will a vegan exclude from their diet?, Step3: Are all of #2 excluded from #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Cuisine of Hawaii, Wikipedia page for step 2: Veganism, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-5b987370cb6e422bb07e6de6c47163e8
|
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 goblin shark eat at Crossroads Kitchen?, Answer:No, Description of Goblin shark: Deep-sea shark, Fact1: Goblin sharks are carnivores that subsist on other fish, cephalopods and crustaceans, Fact2: Crossroads Kitchen is a vegan restaurant in Los Angeles, Fact3: Vegans do not consume any animal products
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is the goblin shark's diet-based classification?, Step2: What kind of food is served at Crossroads Kitchen?, Step3: Would a #1 typically consume #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Goblin shark, Wikipedia page for step 2: Crossroads Kitchen, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-af98e2d7ee9f445483ca748503e76a53
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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: Do Romani people worship Adolf Hitler?, Answer:No, Description of Romani people: Ethnic group living mostly in Europe and the Americas, Fact1: The Romani genocide was the effort by Nazi Germany, Fact2: Nazi Germany had Adolf Hitler as a leader.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What group was the driving force behind the Romani genocide?, Step2: Who was the leader of #1?, Step3: Would Romani people worship #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Romani genocide, Wikipedia page for step 2: Nazi, Wikipedia page for step 3: Hitler, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-cdf1f23c01294e529072a78ca1f50797
|
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 Statue of Liberty be visible if submerged in Bohai Sea?, Answer:Yes, Description of Bohai Sea: The innermost gulf of the Yellow Sea and Korea Bay on the coast of Northeastern and North China, Fact1: The Bohai Sea is 230 feet deep., Fact2: The Statue of Liberty is 305 feet tall.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How deep is the Bohai Sea?, Step2: How tall is the Statue of Liberty?, Step3: Is #2 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Bohai Sea, Wikipedia page for step 2: Statue of Liberty, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-31bfe3563e724d9896468e29f1aedbce
|
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 SnapCap an example of a retail store?, Answer:No, Description of Retail: Sale of goods and services from individuals or businesses to the end-user, Fact1: SnapCap specializes in small business loans., Fact2: Retail stores sell products to individual consumers. , Fact3: Small businesses are not individual consumers.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What does SnapCap specialize in?, Step2: Who do #1's sell their products to?, Step3: Who do retail stores sell their products to?, Step4: Is #2 the same as #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: SnapCap, Wikipedia page for step 2: Small businesses, Wikipedia page for step 3: Retail stores , Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-0c636d910cbc49e8bb81b7980f45d2e2
|
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 animal on Leipzig's coat of arms eat kudu?, Answer:Yes, Description of Leipzig: Place in Saxony, Germany, Fact1: Leipzig's coat of arms features a lion., Fact2: Lions are found on the savannas of Africa., Fact3: Kudu are a species of antelope from Southern Africa., Fact4: Lions are carnivores.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which animal is featured on Leipzig's coat of arms?, Step2: Which animals are #1 known to feed on?, Step3: Which animals belong to the kudu species?, Step4: Are #3 likely to be included in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Coat of arms of Leipzig, Wikipedia page for step 2: Lion, Wikipedia page for step 3: Kudu, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-5f9a804764034a90a1a0b6277f93491c
|
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 John Lennon known to be a good friend to Sasha Obama?, Answer:No, Description of John Lennon: English singer and songwriter, founding member of the Beatles, Fact1: John Lennon died in 1980., Fact2: Sasha Obama was born in 2001.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was Sasha Obama born?, Step2: When did John Lennon die?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sasha Obama, Wikipedia page for step 2: John Lennon, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-d6538d7617c74027a842ff67812adf21
|
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 Michael Crichton ever in danger of flunking out of Harvard as an undergraduate?, Answer:No, Description of Michael Crichton: American author, screenwriter, film director, Fact1: Scholastic probation or academic dismissal, sometimes known as flunking out, is the termination of students at a higher educational institution as the result of poor academic achievement., Fact2: Michael Crichton obtained his bachelor's degree in biological anthropology summa cum laude in 1964., Fact3: Summa cum laude is the highest distinction a person can achieve in college for academic success., Fact4: Someone who achieves summa cum laude cannot have even a single semester of poor grades.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What grade is considered flunking in US colleges?, Step2: What honors did Michael Crichton graduate with?, Step3: Can someone achieve #2 with grades of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Grading (Education), Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Michael Crichton, Wikipedia page for step 3: wiki: Cum laude, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-3e6afd63e4c3423abe96235674228c29
|
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 Who have to cancel tours due to World War II?, Answer:No, Description of The Who: English rock band, Fact1: The Who was formed in 1964, Fact2: World War II ended in 1945
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was The Who formed?, Step2: In what year did World War II end?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Who, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b6caa571e6594e1ebaf52ddf104ea53e
|
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 Sainsbury's buy Tesco?, Answer:No, Description of Sainsbury's: chain of supermarkets in the United Kingdom, Fact1: Sainsbury is a business worth £29.007 billion in 2019., Fact2: Tesco is a business worth £63.911 billion in 2019., Fact3: 63 billion is more than 29 billion., Fact4: A business needs to have enough revenue to buy another business.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is the total value of Sainsbury's?, Step2: What is the total value of Tesco?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Sainsbury's, Wikipedia page for step 2: Tesco, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-40b280be321648018de591d4b2f8a79f
|
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 Honda created before Tesla company?, Answer:Yes, Description of Honda: Manufacturer of automobiles, aircraft, motorcycles, and power equipment., Fact1: Honda was founded in 1948., Fact2: Tesla company was founding in 2003
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was Honda created?, Step2: When was Tesla created?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: When was Honda founded?, Step2: When was Tesla founded?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-33d85a3590f347288b6476343ffaf1b1
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was the last Harry Potter book released before the release of the first iPhone?, Answer:No, Description of Harry Potter: Fantasy literature series, Fact1: The last book in the Harry Potter series was The Deathly Hallows., Fact2: The Deathly Hallows was released on July 21, 2007., Fact3: The first iPhone was released on June 29, 2007.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was the final Harry Potter book released?, Step2: When was the first iPhone released?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b8b7de9e61a4409289a8b782a69a6915
|
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 San Antonio the site of a major battle in the 19th century?, Answer:Yes, Description of San Antonio: City in Texas, United States, Fact1: The Alamo is located in San Antonio., Fact2: The Alamo was the site of a major battle during the Texan Revolution against Mexico in 1836.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Where did the most notable battle during the Texas Revolution take place?, Step2: Is #1 located in San Antonio in present day US?, Step3: Did the Texas revolution happen during the 19th century?, Step4: Are #2 and #3 positive?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Texas Revolution, Wikipedia page for step 2: Alamo Mission in San Antonio, Wikipedia page for step 3: Texas Revolution, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-49ba9f0eaa8f4977adcc7da1cc9e9fc4
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was the death of Heath Ledger caused by his work on The Dark Knight?, Answer:No, Description of The Dark Knight (film): 2008 film directed by Christopher Nolan, Fact1: Heath Ledger accidentally overdosed on prescription medication., Fact2: Heath Ledger's overdose led to his death.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What was the cause of Heath Ledger's death?, Step2: Is #1 related to his work on the The Dark Knight?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Heath Ledger, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-51bd6f430ceb4ca9b0139e21847bcd37
|
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 buy bananas for tostones?, Answer:No, Description of Banana: edible fruit, Fact1: Tostones are a Latin American twice fried dish made of plantains., Fact2: Plantains resemble bananas, but are not bananas.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What ingredients are used to make tostones?, Step2: Are bananas included in #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Tostones, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-65527418374140e9b29a6690fcecb8ee
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was Harry Truman's presidency unaffected by the twenty-third Amendment to the US Constitution?, Answer:Yes, Description of Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution: Grants residents of Washington, D.C. the right to vote in U.S. presidential elections, Fact1: The 23rd Amendment to the US Constitution was passed in 1961., Fact2: Harry Truman was the President from 1945-1953.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was Harry Truman the president of the United States?, Step2: When was the 23rd Amendment passed?, Step3: Is #2 after #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Harry S. Truman, Wikipedia page for step 2: Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-52530e3f9182473f8ca0f94c254dc615
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Did any killer Manson band members were named for exceed Charles Manson's kills?, Answer:Yes, Description of Charles Manson: American criminal, cult leader, Fact1: Many of the members of the band Marilyn Manson combined the names of a model or actress with a serial killer., Fact2: Marilyn Manson band memberTwiggy Ramirez took his name from model Twiggy and serial killer Richard Ramirez., Fact3: Richard Ramirez was charged with 13 counts of murder., Fact4: Charles Manson was charged with 9 counts of murder.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What serial killers were members of the Manson band named after?, Step2: How many counts of murder was Charles Manson charged with?, Step3: Were the murder charges of any of #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Marilyn Manson, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Charles Manson, Wikipedia page for step 3: wiki: Richard Ramirez, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-68818ac2b77b4a1cbde153f5750a46a3
|
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 Jimmy Carter President of the US when the Constitution of India was accepted?, Answer:No, Description of Constitution of India: Supreme law of India, Fact1: The Constitution of India was accepted in 1949., Fact2: Jimmy Carter started serving as President of the US in 1977.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was the Constitution of India accepted?, Step2: What years were Jimmy Carter president?, Step3: Is #1 within #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: India, Wikipedia page for step 2: Jimmy Carter, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-e0e45fe14c9a49f2a1c4a896d9f855ca
|
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 J. D. Salinger ever ask his father for a quinceañera?, Answer:No, Description of J. D. Salinger: American writer, Fact1: A quinceañera is celebration of a girl's 15th birthday., Fact2: J. D. Salinger was male., Fact3: A quinceañera is a Hispanic tradition., Fact4: J. D. Salinger was Jewish.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What gender is a quinceañera usually held for?, Step2: What gender is J. D. Salinger?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: quinceañera, Wikipedia page for step 2: J. D. Salinger, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-d586cfdee19c48cf9392c22247cb67a5
|
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 name Michael peak in popularity during Reagan's presidency?, Answer:No, Description of Michael: male given name, Fact1: The name Michael peaked in popularity in the 1960s., Fact2: Reagan was president from 1980-1988.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When did the name Michael reach a peak in popularity in the US?, Step2: Through which period was Ronald Reagan President?, Step3: Is #1 within #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Michael, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ronald Reagan, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-629c865d9c0248dc9cc9e6e37fd2c7b2
|
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 Julia Roberts lose the prolific acting contest in her family?, Answer:Yes, Description of Julia Roberts: American actress and producer, Fact1: As of May 2020, Julia Roberts has acted in 64 projects., Fact2: Julia Roberts has a brother in acting, Eric Roberts, and a niece in acting, Emma Roberts., Fact3: As of May 2020, Eric Roberts has acted in 577 projects.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who is Julia Roberts brother?, Step2: Is #1 an actor?, Step3: How many projects has #2 appeared in?, Step4: How many projects has Julia Roberts acted in?, Step5: Is #3 larger than #4?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Julia Roberts, Wikipedia page for step 2: Eric Roberts, Wikipedia page for step 3: Eric Roberts, Wikipedia page for step 4: Julia Roberts, Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b6f0b63a55c641d8bbc74e0a8612d4b7
|
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 Invisible Man more prevalent in films than Picnic at Hanging Rock?, Answer:Yes, Description of The Invisible Man: 1897 science fiction novella by H. G. Wells, Fact1: H.G. Wells's book The Invisible Man has been adapted into more than 7 films., Fact2: Joan Lindsay's book Picnic at Hanging Rock was adapted into one film and one TV series.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many films have been made of \"The Invisible Man\", Step2: How many films have been made of Picnic at Hanging Rock?, Step3: Is #1 larger than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Invisible Man, Wikipedia page for step 2: Picnic at Hanging Rock, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-a985dd6c219348c68ee77980e6d9c6e7
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Has XML format been an open format longer than PDF format?, Answer:Yes, Description of PDF: family of file formats used to present documents, Fact1: XML format was defined as an open standard in 1998., Fact2: PDF was released as an open standard in 2008.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When was XML released as an open format?, Step2: When was PDF released as an open format?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: When did XML become an open format?, Step2: When did PDF become an open format?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: When did XML become an open format?, Step2: When did PDF become an open format?, Step3: Is #1 before #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b867360b9b564ea991ead2326a31df6e
|
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 coopers required in the beverage industry?, Answer:Yes, Description of Cooper (profession): Maker of staved vessels such as barrels, Fact1: Coopers make barrels., Fact2: Barrels are used to store certain alcoholic beverages during production.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What liquids are barrels made for?, Step2: Are any of #1 part of the beverage industry?, Wikipedia page for step 1: wiki: Barrel, Wikipedia page for step 2: wiki: Beverage industry, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-77293ab4b2c14fe99faa138c05d9efb6
|
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 Wembley Arena still called by that name?, Answer:No, Description of Wembley Arena: An indoor arena in Wembley, London, Fact1: Wembley Arena was renamed in 2014. , Fact2: Wembley Arena is now called SSE Arena.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What was the name of the arena in Wembley, London until 2014?, Step2: What is the name of the area in Wembley, London now?, Step3: Are #1 and #2 the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wembley Arena, Wikipedia page for step 2: Wembley Arena, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-a5fdfddae835482eac3b604bfb15dd6f
|
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 Methuselah live at least 800 years as long as Sarah?, Answer:Yes, Description of Sarah: Biblical character, Fact1: The biblical Sarah lived to the age of 127., Fact2: The biblical Methuselah lived to 969 years of age.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: At what age did Methuselah die?, Step2: At what age did Sarah die?, Step3: What is the difference between #1 and #2?, Step4: Is #3 at least 800?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Methuselah, Wikipedia page for step 2: Sarah, Wikipedia page for step 3: , Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: True, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-371bfbded94744ee854acd3b2bf7f468
|
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 koala be a good mascot for Ambien?, Answer:Yes, Description of Koala: An arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia., Fact1: Koalas sleep 20+ hours a day., Fact2: Ambien is a sleep aid.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which activity is Ambien used as an aid for?, Step2: Do Koalas engage in #1 much?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ambien, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What activity does Ambien promote?, Step2: Are koalas known for #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ambien, Wikipedia page for step 2: Mascot, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-6e6b1444670543fa89b1d50fa33995f2
|
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 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines named by an Italian explorer?, Answer:Yes, Description of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines: Country in the Caribbean, Fact1: Christopher Columbus, an Italian explorer, was the first European to discover the islands., Fact2: He named them after St. Vincent because he first saw the island on the saint's feast day, and the Spanish city of Granada.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who discovered Saint Vincent and the Grenadines?, Step2: Was #1 from Italy?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Wikipedia page for step 2: Christopher Columbus, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-978dbdb592f44fa9bc8b5c88d39f9e6c
|
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 paraplegic suitable for conducting an orchestra?, Answer:Yes, Description of Conducting: Directing a musical performance by way of visible gestures, Fact1: Musical conductors use their hands to wave a baton and guide the orchestra., Fact2: Paraplegics are people that are paralyzed from the waist down., Fact3: Paraplegics are able to play sports that involve their upper body, such as basketball.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What part(s) of the body is/are needed to conduct an orchestra?, Step2: Which portion of a paraplegic's body is paralyzed?, Step3: Are #1 separate from #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Conducting, Wikipedia page for step 2: Paraplegic, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b830362e6ba743ca820f5921e593afaf
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: was the ancient murdered man preserved in Alps?, Answer:Yes, Description of Alps: Major mountain range system in Central Europe, Fact1: In 1991 a mummy of a neolithic body was discovered by hikers on the Similaun glacier in Alps., Fact2: The mummy is of a man who lived between 3400 and 3100 BCE and called Ötzi., Fact3: Ötzi had an arrowhead has been found in his left shoulder., Fact4: Ötzi is believed to have been murdered.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who is the ancient murdered man?, Step2: Where was #1 found?, Step3: Is #2 located in the Alps?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ötzi, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ötzi, Wikipedia page for step 3: Ötztal Alps, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-52fdf1e6b0514e60a1a4f65b11167131
|
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 stargazers prefer binoculars over a telescope?, Answer:No, Description of Telescope: Optical instrument that makes distant objects appear magnified, Fact1: Depending on a stargazer's goal, the scope of view necessary can change. , Fact2: Companies produce both telescopes and binoculars for stargazing.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How does the scope of a stargazer's observation vary?, Step2: Does #1 stay the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Stargazing, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-08de4123d65e4702bdaeb9d6ad242130
|
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 Hague border multiple bodies of water?, Answer:No, Description of The Hague: City and municipality in South Holland, Netherlands, Fact1: The Hague is in the Netherlands. , Fact2: The Hague is in the Western part of the Netherlands. , Fact3: The Netherlands borders the North Sea to its west.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What country is the Hague located in?, Step2: What bodies of water does #1 border on?, Step3: What part of #1 is the Hague located in?, Step4: How many bodies of water in #2 does #3 border?, Step5: Is #4 greater than 1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hague, Wikipedia page for step 2: Netherlands, Wikipedia page for step 3: Netherlands, Wikipedia page for step 4: Netherlands, Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-8bbf268504ba456e99fa2ce674b2feee
|
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 Antarctica a good location for Groundhog Day?, Answer:No, Description of Groundhog Day: Traditional method of weather prediction, Fact1: Groundhog Day relies on a groundhog seeing their shadow., Fact2: Antarctica has an irregular sun pattern and some days have no sun rise or 24 hour sunlight., Fact3: Antarctica has temperatures can range from -10C to -60C., Fact4: Groundhogs live in forests or woodlands with plenty of sunlight.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What does a groundhog have to see in order for a prediction to be made on Groundhog Day?, Step2: Which particular light source is responsible for casting #1?, Step3: How is the #2 pattern like on Antarctica?, Step4: Is #3 is irregular?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Groundhog Day, Wikipedia page for step 2: Groundhog Day, Wikipedia page for step 3: Antarctica, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-09f4703ff41f4b98aab0e53f748f0d7b
|
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 hamster experience two leap years?, Answer:No, Description of Hamster: subfamily of mammals, Fact1: Pet hamsters typically have a maximum lifespan of three years., Fact2: Leap years are typically separated by four years.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How long is the lifespan of a hamster?, Step2: How many years are between two leap years?, Step3: Is #1 longer than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Hamster, Wikipedia page for step 2: Leap Year, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-479a2d4baf52425e8247a44ccff444f9
|
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 Spiderman fight against Falcon in the MCU?, Answer:Yes, Description of Spider-Man: Fictional Marvel superhero, Fact1: In Captain America: Civil War, Iron Man and Captain America became enemies following a disagreement., Fact2: Iron Man summoned Spiderman to fight with his team of still-loyal Avengers., Fact3: Falcon was one of Captain America's best friends and supported the Captain in the conflict., Fact4: Therefore, Spiderman and Falcon were on opposite teams during the inter-Avenger battle in the movie.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: In the marvel movie Captain America: Civil War, which factions were the avengers divided into?, Step2: Were Spiderman and Falcon on opposing sides of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Captain America: Civil War, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-719f9ed09fb54321953bf5b2dbec6b2b
|
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 order an Alfa Romeo at Starbucks?, Answer:No, Description of Alfa Romeo: Italian automotive manufacturer, Fact1: Alfa Romeo is a brand of automobile, Fact2: Starbucks sells coffee, tea, food, and some drink products like thermoses
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What kind of product is an Alfa Romeo?, Step2: What kind of goods does Starbucks sell?, Step3: Is #1 found in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Alfa Romeo, Wikipedia page for step 2: Starbucks, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-735a3cb9d4bf4bbba817f50c4aca1cca
|
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 Ludacris in same music genre as 2000's Binaural?, Answer:No, Description of Ludacris: American rapper and actor, Fact1: Ludacris is a rapper, particularly in the southern rap style., Fact2: Binaural was a 2000 album released by Pearl Jam., Fact3: Pearl Jam is a grunge rock band formed in Seattle.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What genre does Ludacris produce music in?, Step2: Who recorded the 2000 album Binaural?, Step3: What genre does #2 produce music in?, Step4: Is #1 the same as #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ludacris, Wikipedia page for step 2: Pearl Jam, Wikipedia page for step 3: Pearl Jam, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-3aa0ad7694cd45649ad33f0d35863669
|
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 someone from New England profit by growing coffee?, Answer:No, Description of New England: Region in the northeastern United States, Fact1: Coffee can only be grown in subtropical and equatorial climates, Fact2: New England is located in a humid continental climate
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What climates does coffee grow in?, Step2: What kind of climate does New England have?, Step3: Is #1 the same as #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee#Cultivation, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_england, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-3318caf202744214a0e8553c4dd06f44
|
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 tibia necessary to win the Stanley Cup?, Answer:Yes, Description of Tibia: larger of the two bones of the leg below the knee for vertebrates, Fact1: The Stanley Cup is the championship trophy of the National Hockey League, Fact2: Ice hockey is a game played by individuals wearing ice skates to move around a frozen playing field, Fact3: The tibia is a leg bone, Fact4: Legs are required in order to use ice skates
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which achievement leads to the award of the Stanley Cup?, Step2: Which sport does #1 involve?, Step3: Which body parts are actively involved in playing #2, Step4: Which part of the body is the tibia found in?, Step5: Is #4 included in #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Stanley Cup, Wikipedia page for step 2: , Wikipedia page for step 3: Ice hockey, Wikipedia page for step 4: Tibia, Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-69eea49989514cfb820f39bd22b86a42
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Has a crayon not studied meterology?, Answer:Yes, Description of Meteorology: Interdisciplinary scientific study of the atmosphere focusing on weather forecasting, Fact1: A crayon (or wax pastel) is a stick of colored wax, charcoal, chalk or other material used for writing or drawing., Fact2: To study is the act of making an effort to learn by reading, practicing, or memorizing., Fact3: Reading, practicing, or memorizing require one to be an active living organism., Fact4: A crayon is not an active living organism as it does not possess any of its characteristics.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is a crayon?, Step2: In order to study meteorology, what must one be capable of doing?, Step3: Is #1 unable to do #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Crayon, Wikipedia page for step 2: meteorology, Wikipedia page for step 3: Crayon, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False",
"Step1: What properties are needed for something to be able to study?, Step2: What properties do crayons have?, Step3: Is there a significant overlap between #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: studying, Wikipedia page for step 2: Crayon, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-3408b26b4d8349858feaed35e28f49e6
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Was the original James Bond actor born near the Washington Monument?, Answer:No, Description of James Bond: Media franchise about a British spy, Fact1: The original James Bond actor was Sean Connery., Fact2: Sean Connery was born in Scotland., Fact3: The Washington Monument is located in Washington, D.C., Fact4: Washington, D.C. and Scotland are nearly 3,500 miles apart.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who originally played James Bond?, Step2: Where was #1 born?, Step3: Where is the Washington Monument located?, Step4: What is the distance between #2 and #3?, Step5: Is #4 a short enough of a distance to be considered \"close\"?, Wikipedia page for step 1: James Bond (films), Wikipedia page for step 2: Sean Connery, Wikipedia page for step 3: Washington Monument, Wikipedia page for step 4: , Wikipedia page for step 5: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-06c5fc1dcd454ebbb02e89cc816e3ee3
|
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 Dante have hypothetically placed Nostradamus in 3rd Circle of Hell?, Answer:No, Description of Nostradamus: 16th-century French apothecary and reputed seer, Fact1: Nostradamus was a famous seer and court astrologer., Fact2: Dante's 3rd Circle of Hell is reserved for gluttons., Fact3: The 8th Circle of Hell is reserved for frauds., Fact4: Astrology was seen as a valuable skill during Dante's lifetime., Fact5: Dante places the mystic and prophet Joachim of Flora in the heaven of the sun.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What type of people did Dante put in the 3rd Circle of Hell?, Step2: Is there evidence Nostradamus was #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Dante's Inferno, Wikipedia page for step 2: Nostradamus, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-fc8c8718900d4c1e8c6fe70fc0e58cbd
|
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 possible to celebrate midnight in New York City and Seattle in the same year?, Answer:No, Description of New Year's Eve: holiday celebrated on 31 December, Fact1: The flight between New York City and Seattle takes at least five hours., Fact2: New York City is three hours ahead of Seattle.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How far ahead is New York City than Seattle?, Step2: How long does it take to fly from New York City to Seattle?, Step3: Is #1 less than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Time Zone, Wikipedia page for step 2: Seattle–Tacoma International Airport, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-05ce02c854e444a684f87d1959436ba9
|
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 Hermione Granger eligible for the Order of the British Empire?, Answer:No, Description of Order of the British Empire: British order of chivalry, Fact1: The Order of the British Empire is awarded to people that have made significant contributions to the United Kingdom, Fact2: Hermione Granger is a fictional character from the Harry Potter series of books
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What criteria makes one eligible for the Order of the British Empire?, Step2: Does Hermione Granger meet #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Order of the British Empire, Wikipedia page for step 2: Hermione Granger, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-697006448a5a4942b684a55c31060aa4
|
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 Maroon 5 have hypothetically held a concert at Roman Colosseum?, Answer:Yes, Description of Maroon 5: American pop punk band, Fact1: The Roman Colosseum had a capacity of 87,000 people. , Fact2: Maroon 5 has held concerts at Brazil's Allianz Parque, which has a capacity of close to 44,000., Fact3: Almost 30,000 people attended Maroon 5's 2015 Madison Square Garden concert over two days.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many spectators could the Roman Colosseum hold?, Step2: How many people were in attendance at Maroon 5's largest concert?, Step3: Is #1 greater than #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Roman Colloseum, Wikipedia page for step 2: Maroon 5, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-e3c8a9e766ef47f790b17f6540d4df89
|
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 citrus grow in Ulaanbaatar?, Answer:No, Description of Citrus: genus of fruit-bearing plants (source of fruit such as lemons and oranges), Fact1: Citrus can withstand short periods down to as cold as −10 °C (14 °F), but realistically temperatures not falling below −2 °C (28 °F) are required for successful cultivation., Fact2: Ulaanbaatar has an average annual temperature of −0.4 °C or 31.3 °F.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What climates are suitable for growing citrus?, Step2: What is the climate of Ulaanbaatar?, Step3: Is #2 similar to #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Citrus, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ulaanbaatar, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-ab96d4cdc7ed4f22b64375662ac19fcf
|
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 H's most common two letter pair partner a freebie in Wheel of Fortune bonus round?, Answer:Yes, Description of H: letter in the Latin alphabet, Fact1: H forms the most common two letter pair in the English language along with the letter T., Fact2: The Wheel of Fortune bonus round gives the player six free letters: R, S, T, L, N, E.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What letter forms the most common two letter pair in English along with the letter H?, Step2: What free letters does the Wheel of Fortune bonus round give players?, Step3: Is #1 included in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: English language, Wikipedia page for step 2: Wheel of Fortune, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-6f4584877545415eb86b0115f2bbab6c
|
Definition: In the following task, you are given a yes/no question, its answer, and additional information which includes a description of a key term in the question and several facts. Your task is to "decompose the question"i.e. write the steps required to construct the given answer where each step is a question that can be answered using Wikipedia articles. To decompose the question, think of a decomposition strategy you could apply to answer the question through a search against Wikipedia. The decomposition strategy might not be obvious for some questions. For this reason, you are provided with additional information. You are not required to write decompositions that exactly match the provided facts, they are only meant as guidance. If the facts are too noisy, think about how you would have used Wikipedia to answer this question to create the decomposition. "not_definitive_answer" is true if there is no clear answer i.e. the question is ambiguous or a subjective opinion."incorrect_answer" is true if the answer to the question is not correct. If the answer is incorrect, write a decomposition that evaluates the correct answer. Each question should be easy to answer based on simple facts from Wikipedia pages, or a simple check using the answers to preceding questions. To ensure this, we also ask you to enter a potential Wikipedia article that would contain the answer to each question. If you can not think of a Wikipedia page that can answer your question, please think of a different strategy. You do not need to enter a Wikipedia page for steps that don't add new information and only contain simple checks. The answer to the final question is the same as the answer to the original question. Every question's answer has an impact on the final answer and there should be no redundant steps in the decomposition.
Positive Example 1 -
Input: Question: Did Aristotle use a laptop?, Answer:No, Fact1: Aristotle died in 322 BC., Fact2: Laptop was invented in the 19th century.
Output: Step1: When was the laptop invented?, Step2: When did Aristotle die?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Laptop, Wikipedia page for step 2: Aristotle, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Positive Example 2 -
Input: Question: Can you spot helium?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: Does helium have a color?, Step2: Does helium have a smell?, Step3: Does helium have a taste?, Step4: Is #1 or #2 or #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 2: Helium, Wikipedia page for step 3: Helium, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 1 -
Input: Question: Can a suit of armor conduct electricity?, Answer:Yes, Fact1: Suit of armor is made of iron., Fact2: Iron is an electric conductor.
Output: Step1: What is a suit of armor made of?, Step2: Can iron conduct electricity?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Armor, Wikipedia page for step 2: Electrical Conductors, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Negative Example 2 -
Input: Question: Was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo after Pluto had been discovered?, Answer:No
Output: Step1: When was the planet of Jupiter discovered by Galileo?, Step2: When was the planet of Pluto discovered?, Step3: Is #1 after #2?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False
Now complete the following example -
Input: Question: Do the directors of The Matrix advocate for transgender rights?, Answer:Yes, Description of The Matrix: 1999 science fiction action film directed by the Wachowskis, Fact1: Lilly Wachowski is a trans woman who was a director of The Matrix., Fact2: Lena Wachowski is a trans woman who was a director of The Matrix., Fact3: The Wachowski sisters speak actively about viewing their films through a "lens of transness"
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who directed The Matrix?, Step2: Are #1 transgender rights advocates?, Wikipedia page for step 1: The Matrix, Wikipedia page for step 2: The Wachowskis, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-cb17123e1ddc4e47b6a4145757cf08db
|
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 queen bees unnecessary for growing apples?, Answer:Yes, Description of Bee: Clade of insects, Fact1: Mason bees are solitary (they live alone), Fact2: Mason bees are efficient pollinators for orchards, Fact3: Apple trees are grown in orchards
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is the social structure of Mason bees?, Step2: Where are Mason bees recognized as efficient pollinators?, Step3: Is #1 needless of a queen, and are apples grown in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Mason bee, Wikipedia page for step 2: Mason bee, Wikipedia page for step 3: Orchard, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-1f1c0be557184048b784cec0719105d8
|
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 Arnold Schwarzenegger be unable to run for President of the US?, Answer:Yes, Description of Arnold Schwarzenegger: Austrian-American actor, businessman, bodybuilder and politician, Fact1: Arnold Schwarzenegger was born in Austria., Fact2: One requirement of running for the US Presidency is to have been born in the USA.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Where was Arnold Schwarzenegger born?, Step2: Is #1 in the US?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-1ab43fe588d7400499fcf03dfdff6417
|
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 Duke University found by a Buddhist?, Answer:No, Description of Duke University: Private university in Durham, North Carolina, United States, Fact1: Duke university is affiliated with United Methodist Church., Fact2: Church is the place for Christian., Fact3: Buddhist believes in Buddhism.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Who were the founders of Duke University?, Step2: What is the religion of #1?, Step3: Is #2 the same as Buddhism?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Duke University, Wikipedia page for step 2: Methodists, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-dd91688d02fa4c598fa25512b7702fc6
|
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 Wall street visible from the top of Eiffel tower?, Answer:No, Description of Wall Street: Street in Manhattan, New York, Fact1: Wall street is an eight-block-long street in the Financial District of New York City, USA, Fact2: The Eiffel Tower is a wrought-iron lattice tower on the Champ de Mars in Paris, France.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What country is Wall Street in?, Step2: What country is the Eiffel Tower in?, Step3: Is #1 visible from #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Wall Street, Wikipedia page for step 2: Eiffel Tower, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-b622f7ca368a4a9cab8bad165111b10b
|
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 bestiality more universally illegal than cousin marriage in the United States?, Answer:Yes, Description of Cousin: any descendant of an ancestor's sibling, Fact1: 24 US states have laws against cousins marrying., Fact2: 45 US states have laws against bestiality.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many states have laws against cousins marrying?, Step2: How many states have laws against bestiality?, Step3: Is #2 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Legality of incest, Wikipedia page for step 2: Legality of bestiality by country or territory, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-58215f34731a4047a980cbed3f66a5c4
|
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 leaves from coca good for gaining weight?, Answer:No, Description of Coca: group of plant varieties cultivated for coca production, Fact1: People who want to gain weight seek to increase caloric intake , Fact2: Coca leaf contains chemicals that suppress hunger and thirst
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What kinds of foods do people who want to gain weight look for?, Step2: Are coca leaves #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Weight Gain, Wikipedia page for step 2: Coca Leaves, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-bbca6e6f60af4aceb2b89b9f3354e1eb
|
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 number of states in Ancient Greece underwhelming compared to US states in 1900?, Answer:No, Description of Ancient Greece: Civilization belonging to an early period of Greek history, Fact1: In the year 1900 there were 42 US states., Fact2: Ancient Greece had several hundred relatively independent city-states called poleis.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How many states were in the United States in 1900?, Step2: How many city-states were there in Ancient Greece?, Step3: Is #2 less than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: United States (History), Wikipedia page for step 2: Ancient Greece, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-49336877bc0d4f7e9468f9ec4cdee1cf
|
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 Eastern chipmunk likely to die before seeing two leap years?, Answer:Yes, Description of Chipmunk: Tribe of mammals (rodent (marmot)), Fact1: A leap year happens every four years., Fact2: The Eastern chipmunk has an average lifespan of three years.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is the average lifespan of an Eastern chipmunk?, Step2: How often does a leap year occur?, Step3: Is #2 greater than #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_chipmunk, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_year, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-4b1c12bf0fb6498c977976c0cc34325c
|
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 safe to share silverware with an HIV positive person?, Answer:Yes, Description of HIV: Human retrovirus, cause of AIDS, Fact1: HIV is transmitted through blood and mucous membrane contact, not saliva., Fact2: Silverware is used in the mouth and contacts saliva but not other bodily fluids.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: How is HIV transmitted?, Step2: What comes in contact with silverware when you use it?, Step3: Is there any overlap between #1 and #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: HIV, Wikipedia page for step 2: Silverware, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-0c46564dc64146bfbf9ca0e8d1ce96e0
|
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 Hades appear in a Disney Channel musical movie?, Answer:Yes, Description of Hades: Greek god of the underworld in Greek mythology, Fact1: The Descendants Trilogy is a series of musical movies that aired on Disney Channel between 2015 and 2019., Fact2: Hades appears as a supporting character in the third Descendants movie.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which major musical series has been aired on Disney Channel?, Step2: Has Hades been featured in any of #1?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Disney Channel, Wikipedia page for step 2: Hades, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-3161fd147caf411194a20b88f9c02308
|
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 Garfield like canid food?, Answer:No, Description of Garfield: Comic strip created by Jim Davis, Fact1: Garfield is a fictional comic strip character that is a cat. , Fact2: Garfield loves to eat spaghetti., Fact3: Canid refers to the species that dogs belong to., Fact4: Dogs like to eat meat and dog food.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is Garfield's favorite food?, Step2: Is the answer to #1 a type of canned food?, Wikipedia page for step 1: , Wikipedia page for step 2: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-bb06322d5ca3412bab91ee401dbdae16
|
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 Lamarck and Darwin agree about the origin of species diversity?, Answer:No, Description of Charles Darwin: "British naturalist, author of ""On the Origin of Species, by Means of Natural Selection""", Fact1: Darwin theorized that evolution was driven by the fittest animals surviving and passing their genes on., Fact2: Lamarck theorized that animals' responses to needs in their life would influence the growth of their offspring.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What was Darwin's theory about the origins of species diversity?, Step2: What was the theory of Lamarck regarding the origins of different species?, Step3: Are the theories of #1 and #2 the same?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Charles Darwin, Wikipedia page for step 2: Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-c2ecdc566bcd4268b740c6ea0c10319b
|
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 transmission control protocol used to control bacterial transmission?, Answer:No, Description of Transmission Control Protocol: Principal protocol used to stream data across an IP network, Fact1: Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) is one of the main protocols of the Internet protocol suite which is digital., Fact2: Bacteria are a type of biological cell which constitute a large domain of prokaryotic microorganisms.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which protocol suite is the transmission control protocol a part of?, Step2: Which process(es) is #1 applicable to?, Step3: Are bacterial transmissions included in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Transmission Control Protocol, Wikipedia page for step 2: Internet protocol suite, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-3df2e402679d4d78814b99ab1df91fde
|
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 Route 66 generally unknown to Americans?, Answer:No, Description of U.S. Route 66: Former US Highway between Chicago and Los Angeles, Fact1: Route 66 was immortalized in the hit "Route 66" by Bobby Troupe., Fact2: "Route 66" as a song has reached the Billboard Top Charts multiple times and is still played often.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: In what hit song was Route 66 mentioned?, Step2: Is #1 a little-known song in America?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Route 66, Wikipedia page for step 2: Bobby Troupe, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-e3fe1dd200b34680852f3ab601545577
|
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 Biochemistry study gluons?, Answer:No, Description of Biochemistry: study of chemical processes in living organisms, Fact1: Biochemistry studies role, function, and structure of biomolecules., Fact2: Gluon, the so-called messenger particle of the strong nuclear force, which binds sub-atomic particles known as quarks within the protons and neutrons of stable matter as well as within heavier, short-lived particles created at high energies., Fact3: biomolecules are comprised of atoms.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What are gluons?, Step2: What things are studied in biochemistry?, Step3: Is #1 included in #2?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Gluon, Wikipedia page for step 2: Biochemistry, Wikipedia page for step 3: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-ac87fa6c230b416884085aad7b3105c6
|
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 Paul the Apostle's cause of death violate the tenets of Ahimsa?, Answer:Yes, Description of Paul the Apostle: Early Christian apostle and missionary, Fact1: Ahimsa is is an ancient Indian principle of nonviolence which applies to all living beings. , Fact2: Ahimsa is a key virtue in Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism., Fact3: Paul the Apostle was violently beheaded.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: What is Ahimsa?, Step2: Does #1 believe in non-violence?, Step3: Did Paul the Apostle die due to violence?, Step4: Are #2 and #3 the same answer?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ahimsa, Wikipedia page for step 2: Ahimsa, Wikipedia page for step 3: Paul the Apostle, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-9fc56614bd2043dc8d7e95c0933d9064
|
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 Richard Nixon have an ITunes account?, Answer:Yes, Description of ITunes: media player and library software, Fact1: Richard Nixon died on April 22, 1994, Fact2: ITunes was created on January 9, 2001.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: When did Richard Nixon die?, Step2: When was ITunes created?, Step3: Is #2 before #1?, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: True"
] |
task168-970320e6f31841b8a6a1a1ff1cb5e705
|
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 any members of the 2020 British royal family allegedly committed a felony?, Answer:Yes, Description of British royal family: Family consisting of close relatives of the monarch of the United Kingdom, Fact1: The 2020 British royal family includes Queen Elizabeth II and her children., Fact2: Prince Andrew is the son of Queen Elizabeth II., Fact3: Prince Andrew was accused of sexual abuse in 2019., Fact4: Sexual assault is classified as a felony.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which royal family does Prince Andrew belong to?, Step2: What is Prince Andrew accused of?, Step3: What type of crime is #2?, Step4: Does #1 have a member accused of #3?, Wikipedia page for step 1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Andrew%2C_Duke_of_York, Wikipedia page for step 2: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Andrew%2C_Duke_of_York, Wikipedia page for step 3: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_abuse, Wikipedia page for step 4: , not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-a23ea763064a44329ff526c32e9af7dd
|
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 Ibn Saud tolerate salsa music?, Answer:No, Description of Salsa music: Latin American dance music genre, Fact1: Ibn Saud was the first ruler of Saudi Arabia and adhered to Wahhabism., Fact2: Wahhabism is an ultra conservative sect of Islam that prohibits dancing., Fact3: Salsa is a popular Latin American music genre that is heavily connected to dance.
Output:
|
[
"Step1: Which religion(s) did Ibn Saud practice?, Step2: Did #1 permit its adherents to listen to or play music during Ibn Saud's lifetime?, Wikipedia page for step 1: Ibn Saud, Wikipedia page for step 2: Wahhabism, not_definitive_answer: False, incorrect_answer: False"
] |
task168-df24cce9ca714e36b103908a5229bc68
|
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