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{"tstamp": 1722357180.6325, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "42394a8aba7e4beda1c9a6de11159583", "0_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "0_prompt": "How do people think about the current Iran president?", "0_output": [["How do people think about the current Iran president?", "President of Iran\n\nThe president of Iran () is the head of government of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the second highest-ranking official, after the Supreme Leader. The first election was held in 1980 and was won by Abulhassan Banisadr. Mohammad Mokhber currently serves as the acting President of Iran following the death of Ebrahim Raisi, the former president, on 19 May 2024. He is expected to be succeeded by Masoud Pezeshkian on July 30, who won the 2024 Iranian presidential election.\nHistory\nAfter the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and 1979 Iranian Islamic Republic referendum on March 29 and 30, the new government needed to craft a new constitution. Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini, ordered an election for the Assembly of Experts, the body tasked with writing the constitution. The assembly presented the constitution on October 24, 1979, and Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini and Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan approved it."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "52214b21d0284944897b648b75b8af91", "1_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "1_prompt": "How do people think about the current Iran president?", "1_output": [["How do people think about the current Iran president?", "History of the Islamic Republic of Iran\n\n2009 election controversy Ahmadinejad's 2009 election victory was hotly disputed and marred by large protests that formed the \"greatest domestic challenge\" to the leadership of the Islamic Republic \"in 30 years\". Despite high turnout and large enthusiastic crowds for reformist opponent Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Ahmadinejad was officially declared to have won by a 2–1 margin against three opponents. Allegations of voting irregularities and protest by Mousavi his supporters were immediate and by 1 July 2009 1000 people had been arrested and 20 killed in street demonstrations. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and others Islamic officials blamed foreign powers for fomenting the protest. However, according to World Public Opinion (a United States poll), the protest does not mean Iran is in a \"pre-revolutionary\" situation as a WPO poll of Iranians taken in early September 2009 found high levels of satisfaction with the regime. 80% of the Iranians respondents said President Ahmadinejad was honest, 64% expressed a lot of confidence in him, and nine in ten said they were satisfied with Iran's system of government.\nPublic opinion\nAccording to the (U.S.) International Peace Institute's 2010-poll conducted in Persian by a representative sample of the Iranian people:\nIranians are divided on the government's performance.\nDissatisfied with the economy.\nWorry over sanctions and isolation.\nWant to focus on domestic affairs.\nFavor closer ties to the West.\nRising tensions sparked hostility toward the US, Europe, and U.N.\nFavor nuclear arms and do not want to back deals to halt enrichment.\nIndependent polls do not contradict official turnout of 2009 election, which gave around 60% of the vote to Ahmadinejad.\nRouhani Administration\nHassan Rouhani was elected as President of Iran on 12 June 2013 and took office on 3 August. He is known as a moderate left-leaner, supported by reformists in the election. He has open ideas in the area of economics and a high-level foreign policy, as he served as a diplomat before his election. He has moved quickly to engage in diplomatic negotiations with Western countries, seeking the lifting of crippling economic sanctions on oil exports in exchange for Iran's cooperation with UN treaties regarding the development of nuclear weapons. Economic conditions improved during Rouhani's first term and led to his reelection in 2017 with his reformist agenda."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722357524.4041, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "3d09c01e7dfb4691b24743a8201671cf", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "Winter war", "0_output": [["Winter war", "Winter War\n\nOn 30 November 1939, Soviet forces invaded Finland with 21 divisions, totalling 450,000 men, and bombed Helsinki, killing about 100 citizens and destroying more than 50 buildings. In response to international criticism, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov stated that the Soviet Air Force was not bombing Finnish cities but rather dropping humanitarian aid to the starving Finnish population; the bombs were sarcastically dubbed Molotov bread baskets by Finns. The Finnish statesman J. K. Paasikivi commented that the Soviet attack without a declaration of war violated three separate non-aggression pacts: the Treaty of Tartu, which was signed in 1920, the non-aggression pact between Finland and the Soviet Union, which was signed in 1932 and again in 1934; and also the Covenant of the League of Nations, which the Soviet Union signed in 1934. Field Marshal C.G.E. Mannerheim was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Finnish Defence Forces after the Soviet attack. In a further reshuffling, Aimo Cajander's caretaker cabinet was replaced by Risto Ryti and his cabinet, with Väinö Tanner as foreign minister because of opposition to Cajander's prewar politics. Finland brought the matter of the Soviet invasion before the League of Nations. The League expelled the Soviet Union on 14 December 1939 and exhorted its members to aid Finland.\nHeaded by Otto Wille Kuusinen, the Finnish Democratic Republic puppet government operated in the parts of Finnish Karelia occupied by the Soviets, and was also referred to as the \"Terijoki Government\", after the village of Terijoki, the first settlement captured by the advancing Red Army. After the war, the puppet government was reabsorbed into the Soviet Union. From the very outset of the war, working-class Finns stood behind the legitimate government in Helsinki. Finnish national unity against the Soviet invasion was later called the spirit of the Winter War.\nFirst battles and Soviet advance to Mannerheim Line"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "b082f7b0fd6a44e9b625a592b31c17dc", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "Winter war", "1_output": [["Winter war", "Arab Winter\n\nThe Arab Winter () is a term referring to the resurgence of authoritarianism and Islamic extremism in some Arab countries in the 2010s in the aftermath of the Arab Spring protests. The term \"Arab Winter\" refers to the events across Arab League countries in the Middle East and North Africa, including the Syrian civil war, the Iraqi insurgency and the subsequent War in Iraq, the Egyptian Crisis, the First Libyan Civil War and the subsequent Second Libyan Civil War, and the Yemeni civil war. Events referred to as the Arab Winter include those in Egypt that led to the removal from office in 2013 of Mohamed Morsi and the subsequent election in 2014 of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.\nThe term was first coined by Chinese political scientist Zhang Weiwei during a debate with American political scientist Francis Fukuyama on June 27, 2011. Fukuyama believed the Arab Spring movement would inevitably spread to China, while Zhang predicted the Arab Spring would soon turn into an Arab Winter.\nAccording to scholars of the University of Warsaw, the Arab Spring fully devolved into the Arab Winter four years after its onset, in 2014. The Arab Winter is characterized by the emergence of multiple regional wars, mounting regional instability, economic and demographic decline of Arab countries, and ethno-religious sectarian strife. According to a study by the American University of Beirut, by the summer of 2014, the Arab Winter had resulted in nearly a quarter of a million deaths and millions of refugees. Perhaps the most significant event in the Arab Winter was the rise of the extremist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which controlled swathes of land in the region from 2014 to 2019."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722357588.6391, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d4f10aa5072847e6823253fa571550a1", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_prompt": "Suomen startup skene", "0_output": [["Suomen startup skene", "Startup company\n\nA startup or start-up is a company or project undertaken by an entrepreneur to seek, develop, and validate a scalable business model. While entrepreneurship includes all new businesses including self-employment and businesses that do not intend to go public, startups are new businesses that intend to grow large beyond the solo-founder. During the beginning, startups face high uncertainty and have high rates of failure, but a minority of them do go on to become successful and influential.\nActions\nStartups typically begin by a founder (solo-founder) or co-founders who have a way to solve a problem. The founder of a startup will do the market validation by problem interview, solution interview, and building a minimum viable product (MVP), i.e. a prototype, to develop and validate their business models. The startup process can take a long period of time; hence, sustaining effort is required. Over the long term, sustaining effort is especially challenging because of the high failure rates and uncertain outcomes. Having a business plan in place outlines what to do and how to plan and achieve an idea in the future. Typically, these plans outline the first three to five years of your business strategy.\nDesign principles\nModels behind startups presenting as ventures are usually associated with design science. Design science uses design principles considered to be a coherent set of normative ideas and propositions to design and construct the company's backbone. For example, one of the initial design principles is affordable loss.\nHeuristics and biases in startup actions"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "7d2dccb966ad4902a22b492ec1a01a3b", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "Suomen startup skene", "1_output": [["Suomen startup skene", "Suseok\n\nHistory Suseok began as votive art over 3000 years ago and became a fixture of Korean society during the Joseon Dynasty, when Confucian scholars displayed them on their writing desks. From here is where the English name \"scholar's rock\" originates. Suseok regained popularity amongst nouveau riche businessmen in the 1980s during Korea's economic boom.\nThe art usually works on three scales: large installations of monumental shaped stones as ornamental gates; medium-sized shaped stones for landscape decoration within Korean gardens; and the smaller shaped stones for scholar's tables, the most important of these scales.\nChinese gongshi influenced the development of suseok in Korea.\nEvaluation\nEarly on, important sites within landscape were marked with shaped stones, similarly to distance markers on post roads. Burial sites were also given permanent marking by large scale tumuli or mounds, often surrounded by anthropomorphic shaped stones much akin to that of Inuit or First Nations' memory markers. The animistic belief of nature being alive, and large-scaled elements of nature having souls, has led to the continued use of massive sculpted stone in natural forms throughout Korean traditional entranceways, as the firstgrowth cedarwood traditionally used for gates is now rare.\nAs Confucian scholarship ascended into the golden age of the Joseon dynasty, scholar rocks became an essential fixture of the writing tables of the yangban class of scholars, and a brilliant example of Confucian art."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722357180.6325, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "42394a8aba7e4beda1c9a6de11159583", "0_model_name": "BAAI/bge-large-en-v1.5", "0_prompt": "How do people think about the current Iran president?", "0_output": [["How do people think about the current Iran president?", "President of Iran\n\nThe president of Iran () is the head of government of the Islamic Republic of Iran and the second highest-ranking official, after the Supreme Leader. The first election was held in 1980 and was won by Abulhassan Banisadr. Mohammad Mokhber currently serves as the acting President of Iran following the death of Ebrahim Raisi, the former president, on 19 May 2024. He is expected to be succeeded by Masoud Pezeshkian on July 30, who won the 2024 Iranian presidential election.\nHistory\nAfter the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and 1979 Iranian Islamic Republic referendum on March 29 and 30, the new government needed to craft a new constitution. Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini, ordered an election for the Assembly of Experts, the body tasked with writing the constitution. The assembly presented the constitution on October 24, 1979, and Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini and Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan approved it."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "52214b21d0284944897b648b75b8af91", "1_model_name": "voyage-multilingual-2", "1_prompt": "How do people think about the current Iran president?", "1_output": [["How do people think about the current Iran president?", "History of the Islamic Republic of Iran\n\n2009 election controversy Ahmadinejad's 2009 election victory was hotly disputed and marred by large protests that formed the \"greatest domestic challenge\" to the leadership of the Islamic Republic \"in 30 years\". Despite high turnout and large enthusiastic crowds for reformist opponent Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Ahmadinejad was officially declared to have won by a 2–1 margin against three opponents. Allegations of voting irregularities and protest by Mousavi his supporters were immediate and by 1 July 2009 1000 people had been arrested and 20 killed in street demonstrations. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and others Islamic officials blamed foreign powers for fomenting the protest. However, according to World Public Opinion (a United States poll), the protest does not mean Iran is in a \"pre-revolutionary\" situation as a WPO poll of Iranians taken in early September 2009 found high levels of satisfaction with the regime. 80% of the Iranians respondents said President Ahmadinejad was honest, 64% expressed a lot of confidence in him, and nine in ten said they were satisfied with Iran's system of government.\nPublic opinion\nAccording to the (U.S.) International Peace Institute's 2010-poll conducted in Persian by a representative sample of the Iranian people:\nIranians are divided on the government's performance.\nDissatisfied with the economy.\nWorry over sanctions and isolation.\nWant to focus on domestic affairs.\nFavor closer ties to the West.\nRising tensions sparked hostility toward the US, Europe, and U.N.\nFavor nuclear arms and do not want to back deals to halt enrichment.\nIndependent polls do not contradict official turnout of 2009 election, which gave around 60% of the vote to Ahmadinejad.\nRouhani Administration\nHassan Rouhani was elected as President of Iran on 12 June 2013 and took office on 3 August. He is known as a moderate left-leaner, supported by reformists in the election. He has open ideas in the area of economics and a high-level foreign policy, as he served as a diplomat before his election. He has moved quickly to engage in diplomatic negotiations with Western countries, seeking the lifting of crippling economic sanctions on oil exports in exchange for Iran's cooperation with UN treaties regarding the development of nuclear weapons. Economic conditions improved during Rouhani's first term and led to his reelection in 2017 with his reformist agenda."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722357524.4041, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "3d09c01e7dfb4691b24743a8201671cf", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "Winter war", "0_output": [["Winter war", "Winter War\n\nOn 30 November 1939, Soviet forces invaded Finland with 21 divisions, totalling 450,000 men, and bombed Helsinki, killing about 100 citizens and destroying more than 50 buildings. In response to international criticism, Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov stated that the Soviet Air Force was not bombing Finnish cities but rather dropping humanitarian aid to the starving Finnish population; the bombs were sarcastically dubbed Molotov bread baskets by Finns. The Finnish statesman J. K. Paasikivi commented that the Soviet attack without a declaration of war violated three separate non-aggression pacts: the Treaty of Tartu, which was signed in 1920, the non-aggression pact between Finland and the Soviet Union, which was signed in 1932 and again in 1934; and also the Covenant of the League of Nations, which the Soviet Union signed in 1934. Field Marshal C.G.E. Mannerheim was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Finnish Defence Forces after the Soviet attack. In a further reshuffling, Aimo Cajander's caretaker cabinet was replaced by Risto Ryti and his cabinet, with Väinö Tanner as foreign minister because of opposition to Cajander's prewar politics. Finland brought the matter of the Soviet invasion before the League of Nations. The League expelled the Soviet Union on 14 December 1939 and exhorted its members to aid Finland.\nHeaded by Otto Wille Kuusinen, the Finnish Democratic Republic puppet government operated in the parts of Finnish Karelia occupied by the Soviets, and was also referred to as the \"Terijoki Government\", after the village of Terijoki, the first settlement captured by the advancing Red Army. After the war, the puppet government was reabsorbed into the Soviet Union. From the very outset of the war, working-class Finns stood behind the legitimate government in Helsinki. Finnish national unity against the Soviet invasion was later called the spirit of the Winter War.\nFirst battles and Soviet advance to Mannerheim Line"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "b082f7b0fd6a44e9b625a592b31c17dc", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "Winter war", "1_output": [["Winter war", "Arab Winter\n\nThe Arab Winter () is a term referring to the resurgence of authoritarianism and Islamic extremism in some Arab countries in the 2010s in the aftermath of the Arab Spring protests. The term \"Arab Winter\" refers to the events across Arab League countries in the Middle East and North Africa, including the Syrian civil war, the Iraqi insurgency and the subsequent War in Iraq, the Egyptian Crisis, the First Libyan Civil War and the subsequent Second Libyan Civil War, and the Yemeni civil war. Events referred to as the Arab Winter include those in Egypt that led to the removal from office in 2013 of Mohamed Morsi and the subsequent election in 2014 of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.\nThe term was first coined by Chinese political scientist Zhang Weiwei during a debate with American political scientist Francis Fukuyama on June 27, 2011. Fukuyama believed the Arab Spring movement would inevitably spread to China, while Zhang predicted the Arab Spring would soon turn into an Arab Winter.\nAccording to scholars of the University of Warsaw, the Arab Spring fully devolved into the Arab Winter four years after its onset, in 2014. The Arab Winter is characterized by the emergence of multiple regional wars, mounting regional instability, economic and demographic decline of Arab countries, and ethno-religious sectarian strife. According to a study by the American University of Beirut, by the summer of 2014, the Arab Winter had resulted in nearly a quarter of a million deaths and millions of refugees. Perhaps the most significant event in the Arab Winter was the rise of the extremist group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which controlled swathes of land in the region from 2014 to 2019."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722357588.6391, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "d4f10aa5072847e6823253fa571550a1", "0_model_name": "nomic-ai/nomic-embed-text-v1.5", "0_prompt": "Suomen startup skene", "0_output": [["Suomen startup skene", "Startup company\n\nA startup or start-up is a company or project undertaken by an entrepreneur to seek, develop, and validate a scalable business model. While entrepreneurship includes all new businesses including self-employment and businesses that do not intend to go public, startups are new businesses that intend to grow large beyond the solo-founder. During the beginning, startups face high uncertainty and have high rates of failure, but a minority of them do go on to become successful and influential.\nActions\nStartups typically begin by a founder (solo-founder) or co-founders who have a way to solve a problem. The founder of a startup will do the market validation by problem interview, solution interview, and building a minimum viable product (MVP), i.e. a prototype, to develop and validate their business models. The startup process can take a long period of time; hence, sustaining effort is required. Over the long term, sustaining effort is especially challenging because of the high failure rates and uncertain outcomes. Having a business plan in place outlines what to do and how to plan and achieve an idea in the future. Typically, these plans outline the first three to five years of your business strategy.\nDesign principles\nModels behind startups presenting as ventures are usually associated with design science. Design science uses design principles considered to be a coherent set of normative ideas and propositions to design and construct the company's backbone. For example, one of the initial design principles is affordable loss.\nHeuristics and biases in startup actions"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "7d2dccb966ad4902a22b492ec1a01a3b", "1_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "1_prompt": "Suomen startup skene", "1_output": [["Suomen startup skene", "Suseok\n\nHistory Suseok began as votive art over 3000 years ago and became a fixture of Korean society during the Joseon Dynasty, when Confucian scholars displayed them on their writing desks. From here is where the English name \"scholar's rock\" originates. Suseok regained popularity amongst nouveau riche businessmen in the 1980s during Korea's economic boom.\nThe art usually works on three scales: large installations of monumental shaped stones as ornamental gates; medium-sized shaped stones for landscape decoration within Korean gardens; and the smaller shaped stones for scholar's tables, the most important of these scales.\nChinese gongshi influenced the development of suseok in Korea.\nEvaluation\nEarly on, important sites within landscape were marked with shaped stones, similarly to distance markers on post roads. Burial sites were also given permanent marking by large scale tumuli or mounds, often surrounded by anthropomorphic shaped stones much akin to that of Inuit or First Nations' memory markers. The animistic belief of nature being alive, and large-scaled elements of nature having souls, has led to the continued use of massive sculpted stone in natural forms throughout Korean traditional entranceways, as the firstgrowth cedarwood traditionally used for gates is now rare.\nAs Confucian scholarship ascended into the golden age of the Joseon dynasty, scholar rocks became an essential fixture of the writing tables of the yangban class of scholars, and a brilliant example of Confucian art."]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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{"tstamp": 1722357673.547, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "tievote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "40adf2ecfae142f690cf15572d1c2a39", "0_model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "0_prompt": "A paper with a dataset and methods for Chinese LFQA including real-time web search interaction ", "0_output": [["A paper with a dataset and methods for Chinese LFQA including real-time web search interaction ", "Title: WebCPM: Interactive Web Search for Chinese Long-form Question Answering\n\nAbstract: Long-form question answering (LFQA) aims at answering complex, open-ended questions with detailed, paragraph-length responses. The de facto paradigm of LFQA necessitates two procedures: information retrieval, which searches for relevant supporting facts, and information synthesis, which integrates these facts into a coherent answer. In this paper, we introduce WebCPM, the first Chinese LFQA dataset. One unique feature of WebCPM is that its information retrieval is based on interactive web search, which engages with a search engine in real time. Following WebGPT, we develop a web search interface. We recruit annotators to search for relevant information using our interface and then answer questions. Meanwhile, the web search behaviors of our annotators would be recorded. In total, we collect 5,500 high-quality question-answer pairs, together with 14,315 supporting facts and 121,330 web search actions. We fine-tune pre-trained language models to imitate human behaviors for web search and to generate answers based on the collected facts. Our LFQA pipeline, built on these fine-tuned models, generates answers that are no worse than human-written ones in 32.5% and 47.5% of the cases on our dataset and DuReader, respectively."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "5b7d23084cf84e698b8ae3ef7e10bdc3", "1_model_name": "embed-english-v3.0", "1_prompt": "A paper with a dataset and methods for Chinese LFQA including real-time web search interaction ", "1_output": [["A paper with a dataset and methods for Chinese LFQA including real-time web search interaction ", "Title: WebCPM: Interactive Web Search for Chinese Long-form Question Answering\n\nAbstract: Long-form question answering (LFQA) aims at answering complex, open-ended questions with detailed, paragraph-length responses. The de facto paradigm of LFQA necessitates two procedures: information retrieval, which searches for relevant supporting facts, and information synthesis, which integrates these facts into a coherent answer. In this paper, we introduce WebCPM, the first Chinese LFQA dataset. One unique feature of WebCPM is that its information retrieval is based on interactive web search, which engages with a search engine in real time. Following WebGPT, we develop a web search interface. We recruit annotators to search for relevant information using our interface and then answer questions. Meanwhile, the web search behaviors of our annotators would be recorded. In total, we collect 5,500 high-quality question-answer pairs, together with 14,315 supporting facts and 121,330 web search actions. We fine-tune pre-trained language models to imitate human behaviors for web search and to generate answers based on the collected facts. Our LFQA pipeline, built on these fine-tuned models, generates answers that are no worse than human-written ones in 32.5% and 47.5% of the cases on our dataset and DuReader, respectively."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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