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data/retrieval_battle-f36c9f97-e795-4522-8eb7-7dee254b42c7.jsonl CHANGED
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  {"tstamp": 1723746096.2088, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "b12478cb353241f8a67fa56e6b709e01", "0_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "0_prompt": "when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "0_output": [["when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "Triple point\n\nIn thermodynamics, the triple point of a substance is the temperature and pressure at which the three phases (gas, liquid, and solid) of that substance coexist in thermodynamic equilibrium. It is that temperature and pressure at which the sublimation, fusion, and vaporisation curves meet. For example, the triple point of mercury occurs at a temperature of and a pressure of 0.165 mPa."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "c316a9a16b324dc090e90be5cc248cf3", "1_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "1_prompt": "when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "1_output": [["when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "Three-point field goal\n\nThree years later in June 1979, the NBA adopted the three-point line (initially on a one-year trial) for the despite the view of many that it was a gimmick. Chris Ford of the Boston Celtics is credited with making the first three-point shot in NBA history on October 12, 1979. The season opener at Boston Garden was more remarkable for the debut of Larry Bird (and two new Rick Barry of the Houston Rockets, in his final season, also made one in the same game, and Kevin Grevey of the Washington Bullets made one that Friday night Barry would later set the original 3-point record at 8 in a single game on February 9, 1980 against the Utah Jazz. The three-point field goal was slow to be adopted by teams in the NBA. In the 1980 NBA Finals, Julius Erving made the only three of the series (and first in Finals history) in Game 3, and in Game 4, neither team attempted a single shot beyond the arc. Danny Ainge was the first player to make over 100 three-pointers in a season in 1988, draining 148 that season.\nThe sport's international governing body, FIBA, introduced the three-point line in 1984, and it made its Olympic debut in 1988 in Seoul, South Korea.\nThe NCAA's Southern Conference became the first collegiate conference to use the three-point rule, adopting a line for the 1980–81 season. Ronnie Carr of Western Carolina was the first to score a three-point field goal in college basketball history on November 29, 1980. Over the following five years, NCAA conferences differed in their use of the rule and distance required for a three-pointer. The line was as close as in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and as far away as in the"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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  {"tstamp": 1723746141.7943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "be1edeb0d6c94547bcfe682b745d4589", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "0_output": [["A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "Title: Far-Infrared Line Imaging of the Starburst Ring in NGC 1097 with the Herschel/PACS Spectrometer\n\nAbstract: NGC 1097 is a nearby SBb galaxy with a Seyfert nucleus and a bright starburst ring. We study the physical properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) in the ring using spatially resolved far-infrared spectral maps of the circumnuclear starburst ring of NGC 1097, obtained with the PACS spectrometer on board the Herschel Space Telescope. In particular, we map the important ISM cooling and diagnostic emission lines of [OI] 63 $\\mu$m, [OIII] 88 $\\mu$m, [NII] 122 $\\mu$m, [CII] 158 $\\mu$m and [NII] 205 $\\mu$m. We observe that in the [OI] 63 $\\mu$m, [OIII] 88 $\\mu$m, and [NII] 122 $\\mu$m line maps, the emission is enhanced in clumps along the NE part of the ring. We observe evidence of rapid rotation in the circumnuclear ring, with a rotation velocity of ~220$ km s$^{-1}$ (inclination uncorrected) measured in all lines. The [OI] 63 $\\mu$m/[CII] 158 $\\mu$m ratio varies smoothly throughout the central region, and is enhanced on the northeastern part of the ring, which may indicate a stronger radiation field. This enhancement coincides with peaks in the [OI] 63 $\\mu$m and [OIII] 88 $\\mu$m maps. Variations of the [NII] 122 $\\mu$m/[NII] 205 $\\mu$m ratio correspond to a range in the ionized gas density between 150 and 400 cm$^{-3}$."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "5a415e5e5fcc4382ac937a6efdd43204", "1_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "1_prompt": "A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "1_output": [["A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "Title: RankT5: Fine-Tuning T5 for Text Ranking with Ranking Losses\n\nAbstract: Recently, substantial progress has been made in text ranking based on pretrained language models such as BERT. However, there are limited studies on how to leverage more powerful sequence-to-sequence models such as T5. Existing attempts usually formulate text ranking as classification and rely on postprocessing to obtain a ranked list. In this paper, we propose RankT5 and study two T5-based ranking model structures, an encoder-decoder and an encoder-only one, so that they not only can directly output ranking scores for each query-document pair, but also can be fine-tuned with \"pairwise\" or \"listwise\" ranking losses to optimize ranking performances. Our experiments show that the proposed models with ranking losses can achieve substantial ranking performance gains on different public text ranking data sets. Moreover, when fine-tuned with listwise ranking losses, the ranking model appears to have better zero-shot ranking performance on out-of-domain data sets compared to the model fine-tuned with classification losses."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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  {"tstamp": 1723746175.1632, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "1e563a28a5b74247874fa87902ff9fbd", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "0_output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainability\n\nIn the past, sustainability referred to environmental sustainability. It meant using natural resources so that people in the future could continue to rely on them in the long term. The concept of sustainability, or Nachhaltigkeit in German, goes back to Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1645–1714), and applied to forestry. The term for this now would be sustainable forest management. He used this term to mean the long-term responsible use of a natural resource. In his 1713 work Silvicultura oeconomica, he wrote that \"the highest art/science/industriousness [...] will consist in such a conservation and replanting of timber that there can be a continuous, ongoing and sustainable use\". The shift in use of \"sustainability\" from preservation of forests (for future wood production) to broader preservation of environmental resources (to sustain the world for future generations) traces to a 1972 book by Ernst Basler, based on a series of lectures at M.I.T.\nThe idea itself goes back a very long time: Communities have always worried about the capacity of their environment to sustain them in the long term. Many ancient cultures, traditional societies, and indigenous peoples have restricted the use of natural resources.\nComparison to sustainable development\nThe terms sustainability and sustainable development are closely related. In fact, they are often used to mean the same thing. Both terms are linked with the \"three dimensions of sustainability\" concept. One distinction is that sustainability is a general concept, while sustainable development can be a policy or organizing principle. Scholars say sustainability is a broader concept because sustainable development focuses mainly on human well-being.\nSustainable development has two linked goals. It aims to meet human development goals. It also aims to enable natural systems to provide the natural resources and ecosystem services needed for economies and society. The concept of sustainable development has come to focus on economic development, social development and environmental protection for future generations.\nDimensions"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "01ce705051244319b81038a310907f0c", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "1_output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainable design\n\nThese activities are an indication that the concept of sustainable design is being supported on a global and interprofessional scale and that the ultimate goal is to become more environmentally responsive. The world needs facilities that are more energy-efficient and that promote conservation and recycling of natural and economic resources.\nEconomically and socially sustainable design\nEnvironmentally sustainable design is most beneficial when it works hand-in-hand with the other two counterparts of sustainable design – the economic and socially sustainable designs. These three terms are often coined under the title \"triple bottom line.\" In addition to financial terms, value can also be measured in relation to natural capital (the biosphere and earth's resources), social capital (the norms and networks that enable collective action), and human capital (the sum total of knowledge, experience, intellectual property, and labor available to society).\nIn some countries the term sustainable design is known as ecodesign, green design or environmental design. Victor Papanek, embraced social design and social quality and ecological quality, but did not explicitly combine these areas of design concern in one term. Sustainable design and design for sustainability are more common terms, including the triple bottom line (people, planet and profit). Advocates like Ecothis.EU campaign urge all three considerations be taken into account when designing a circular economy.\nAspects of environmentally sustainable design"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
 
 
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  {"tstamp": 1723746096.2088, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "b12478cb353241f8a67fa56e6b709e01", "0_model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "0_prompt": "when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "0_output": [["when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "Triple point\n\nIn thermodynamics, the triple point of a substance is the temperature and pressure at which the three phases (gas, liquid, and solid) of that substance coexist in thermodynamic equilibrium. It is that temperature and pressure at which the sublimation, fusion, and vaporisation curves meet. For example, the triple point of mercury occurs at a temperature of and a pressure of 0.165 mPa."]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "c316a9a16b324dc090e90be5cc248cf3", "1_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "1_prompt": "when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "1_output": [["when did they start 3 pointers in basketball", "Three-point field goal\n\nThree years later in June 1979, the NBA adopted the three-point line (initially on a one-year trial) for the despite the view of many that it was a gimmick. Chris Ford of the Boston Celtics is credited with making the first three-point shot in NBA history on October 12, 1979. The season opener at Boston Garden was more remarkable for the debut of Larry Bird (and two new Rick Barry of the Houston Rockets, in his final season, also made one in the same game, and Kevin Grevey of the Washington Bullets made one that Friday night Barry would later set the original 3-point record at 8 in a single game on February 9, 1980 against the Utah Jazz. The three-point field goal was slow to be adopted by teams in the NBA. In the 1980 NBA Finals, Julius Erving made the only three of the series (and first in Finals history) in Game 3, and in Game 4, neither team attempted a single shot beyond the arc. Danny Ainge was the first player to make over 100 three-pointers in a season in 1988, draining 148 that season.\nThe sport's international governing body, FIBA, introduced the three-point line in 1984, and it made its Olympic debut in 1988 in Seoul, South Korea.\nThe NCAA's Southern Conference became the first collegiate conference to use the three-point rule, adopting a line for the 1980–81 season. Ronnie Carr of Western Carolina was the first to score a three-point field goal in college basketball history on November 29, 1980. Over the following five years, NCAA conferences differed in their use of the rule and distance required for a three-pointer. The line was as close as in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and as far away as in the"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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  {"tstamp": 1723746141.7943, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "rightvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "be1edeb0d6c94547bcfe682b745d4589", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "0_output": [["A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "Title: Far-Infrared Line Imaging of the Starburst Ring in NGC 1097 with the Herschel/PACS Spectrometer\n\nAbstract: NGC 1097 is a nearby SBb galaxy with a Seyfert nucleus and a bright starburst ring. We study the physical properties of the interstellar medium (ISM) in the ring using spatially resolved far-infrared spectral maps of the circumnuclear starburst ring of NGC 1097, obtained with the PACS spectrometer on board the Herschel Space Telescope. In particular, we map the important ISM cooling and diagnostic emission lines of [OI] 63 $\\mu$m, [OIII] 88 $\\mu$m, [NII] 122 $\\mu$m, [CII] 158 $\\mu$m and [NII] 205 $\\mu$m. We observe that in the [OI] 63 $\\mu$m, [OIII] 88 $\\mu$m, and [NII] 122 $\\mu$m line maps, the emission is enhanced in clumps along the NE part of the ring. We observe evidence of rapid rotation in the circumnuclear ring, with a rotation velocity of ~220$ km s$^{-1}$ (inclination uncorrected) measured in all lines. The [OI] 63 $\\mu$m/[CII] 158 $\\mu$m ratio varies smoothly throughout the central region, and is enhanced on the northeastern part of the ring, which may indicate a stronger radiation field. This enhancement coincides with peaks in the [OI] 63 $\\mu$m and [OIII] 88 $\\mu$m maps. Variations of the [NII] 122 $\\mu$m/[NII] 205 $\\mu$m ratio correspond to a range in the ionized gas density between 150 and 400 cm$^{-3}$."]], "0_corpus": "arxiv", "1_conv_id": "5a415e5e5fcc4382ac937a6efdd43204", "1_model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "1_prompt": "A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "1_output": [["A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "Title: RankT5: Fine-Tuning T5 for Text Ranking with Ranking Losses\n\nAbstract: Recently, substantial progress has been made in text ranking based on pretrained language models such as BERT. However, there are limited studies on how to leverage more powerful sequence-to-sequence models such as T5. Existing attempts usually formulate text ranking as classification and rely on postprocessing to obtain a ranked list. In this paper, we propose RankT5 and study two T5-based ranking model structures, an encoder-decoder and an encoder-only one, so that they not only can directly output ranking scores for each query-document pair, but also can be fine-tuned with \"pairwise\" or \"listwise\" ranking losses to optimize ranking performances. Our experiments show that the proposed models with ranking losses can achieve substantial ranking performance gains on different public text ranking data sets. Moreover, when fine-tuned with listwise ranking losses, the ranking model appears to have better zero-shot ranking performance on out-of-domain data sets compared to the model fine-tuned with classification losses."]], "1_corpus": "arxiv"}
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  {"tstamp": 1723746175.1632, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "leftvote", "models": ["", ""], "ip": "", "0_conv_id": "1e563a28a5b74247874fa87902ff9fbd", "0_model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "0_prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "0_output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainability\n\nIn the past, sustainability referred to environmental sustainability. It meant using natural resources so that people in the future could continue to rely on them in the long term. The concept of sustainability, or Nachhaltigkeit in German, goes back to Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1645–1714), and applied to forestry. The term for this now would be sustainable forest management. He used this term to mean the long-term responsible use of a natural resource. In his 1713 work Silvicultura oeconomica, he wrote that \"the highest art/science/industriousness [...] will consist in such a conservation and replanting of timber that there can be a continuous, ongoing and sustainable use\". The shift in use of \"sustainability\" from preservation of forests (for future wood production) to broader preservation of environmental resources (to sustain the world for future generations) traces to a 1972 book by Ernst Basler, based on a series of lectures at M.I.T.\nThe idea itself goes back a very long time: Communities have always worried about the capacity of their environment to sustain them in the long term. Many ancient cultures, traditional societies, and indigenous peoples have restricted the use of natural resources.\nComparison to sustainable development\nThe terms sustainability and sustainable development are closely related. In fact, they are often used to mean the same thing. Both terms are linked with the \"three dimensions of sustainability\" concept. One distinction is that sustainability is a general concept, while sustainable development can be a policy or organizing principle. Scholars say sustainability is a broader concept because sustainable development focuses mainly on human well-being.\nSustainable development has two linked goals. It aims to meet human development goals. It also aims to enable natural systems to provide the natural resources and ecosystem services needed for economies and society. The concept of sustainable development has come to focus on economic development, social development and environmental protection for future generations.\nDimensions"]], "0_corpus": "wikipedia", "1_conv_id": "01ce705051244319b81038a310907f0c", "1_model_name": "BM25", "1_prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "1_output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainable design\n\nThese activities are an indication that the concept of sustainable design is being supported on a global and interprofessional scale and that the ultimate goal is to become more environmentally responsive. The world needs facilities that are more energy-efficient and that promote conservation and recycling of natural and economic resources.\nEconomically and socially sustainable design\nEnvironmentally sustainable design is most beneficial when it works hand-in-hand with the other two counterparts of sustainable design – the economic and socially sustainable designs. These three terms are often coined under the title \"triple bottom line.\" In addition to financial terms, value can also be measured in relation to natural capital (the biosphere and earth's resources), social capital (the norms and networks that enable collective action), and human capital (the sum total of knowledge, experience, intellectual property, and labor available to society).\nIn some countries the term sustainable design is known as ecodesign, green design or environmental design. Victor Papanek, embraced social design and social quality and ecological quality, but did not explicitly combine these areas of design concern in one term. Sustainable design and design for sustainability are more common terms, including the triple bottom line (people, planet and profit). Advocates like Ecothis.EU campaign urge all three considerations be taken into account when designing a circular economy.\nAspects of environmentally sustainable design"]], "1_corpus": "wikipedia"}
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data/retrieval_individual-f36c9f97-e795-4522-8eb7-7dee254b42c7.jsonl CHANGED
@@ -416,3 +416,5 @@
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  {"tstamp": 1723746162.7402, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746161.7284, "finish": 1723746162.7402, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e563a28a5b74247874fa87902ff9fbd", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainability\n\nIn the past, sustainability referred to environmental sustainability. It meant using natural resources so that people in the future could continue to rely on them in the long term. The concept of sustainability, or Nachhaltigkeit in German, goes back to Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1645–1714), and applied to forestry. The term for this now would be sustainable forest management. He used this term to mean the long-term responsible use of a natural resource. In his 1713 work Silvicultura oeconomica, he wrote that \"the highest art/science/industriousness [...] will consist in such a conservation and replanting of timber that there can be a continuous, ongoing and sustainable use\". The shift in use of \"sustainability\" from preservation of forests (for future wood production) to broader preservation of environmental resources (to sustain the world for future generations) traces to a 1972 book by Ernst Basler, based on a series of lectures at M.I.T.\nThe idea itself goes back a very long time: Communities have always worried about the capacity of their environment to sustain them in the long term. Many ancient cultures, traditional societies, and indigenous peoples have restricted the use of natural resources.\nComparison to sustainable development\nThe terms sustainability and sustainable development are closely related. In fact, they are often used to mean the same thing. Both terms are linked with the \"three dimensions of sustainability\" concept. One distinction is that sustainability is a general concept, while sustainable development can be a policy or organizing principle. Scholars say sustainability is a broader concept because sustainable development focuses mainly on human well-being.\nSustainable development has two linked goals. It aims to meet human development goals. It also aims to enable natural systems to provide the natural resources and ecosystem services needed for economies and society. The concept of sustainable development has come to focus on economic development, social development and environmental protection for future generations.\nDimensions"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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  {"tstamp": 1723746162.7402, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746161.7284, "finish": 1723746162.7402, "ip": "", "conv_id": "01ce705051244319b81038a310907f0c", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainable design\n\nThese activities are an indication that the concept of sustainable design is being supported on a global and interprofessional scale and that the ultimate goal is to become more environmentally responsive. The world needs facilities that are more energy-efficient and that promote conservation and recycling of natural and economic resources.\nEconomically and socially sustainable design\nEnvironmentally sustainable design is most beneficial when it works hand-in-hand with the other two counterparts of sustainable design – the economic and socially sustainable designs. These three terms are often coined under the title \"triple bottom line.\" In addition to financial terms, value can also be measured in relation to natural capital (the biosphere and earth's resources), social capital (the norms and networks that enable collective action), and human capital (the sum total of knowledge, experience, intellectual property, and labor available to society).\nIn some countries the term sustainable design is known as ecodesign, green design or environmental design. Victor Papanek, embraced social design and social quality and ecological quality, but did not explicitly combine these areas of design concern in one term. Sustainable design and design for sustainability are more common terms, including the triple bottom line (people, planet and profit). Advocates like Ecothis.EU campaign urge all three considerations be taken into account when designing a circular economy.\nAspects of environmentally sustainable design"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
 
 
 
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  {"tstamp": 1723746131.0942, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746130.9754, "finish": 1723746131.0942, "ip": "", "conv_id": "5a415e5e5fcc4382ac937a6efdd43204", "model_name": "intfloat/multilingual-e5-large-instruct", "prompt": "A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "output": [["A model leveraging T5 for text ranking with direct output ranking scores", "Title: RankT5: Fine-Tuning T5 for Text Ranking with Ranking Losses\n\nAbstract: Recently, substantial progress has been made in text ranking based on pretrained language models such as BERT. However, there are limited studies on how to leverage more powerful sequence-to-sequence models such as T5. Existing attempts usually formulate text ranking as classification and rely on postprocessing to obtain a ranked list. In this paper, we propose RankT5 and study two T5-based ranking model structures, an encoder-decoder and an encoder-only one, so that they not only can directly output ranking scores for each query-document pair, but also can be fine-tuned with \"pairwise\" or \"listwise\" ranking losses to optimize ranking performances. Our experiments show that the proposed models with ranking losses can achieve substantial ranking performance gains on different public text ranking data sets. Moreover, when fine-tuned with listwise ranking losses, the ranking model appears to have better zero-shot ranking performance on out-of-domain data sets compared to the model fine-tuned with classification losses."]], "corpus": "arxiv"}
417
  {"tstamp": 1723746162.7402, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746161.7284, "finish": 1723746162.7402, "ip": "", "conv_id": "1e563a28a5b74247874fa87902ff9fbd", "model_name": "sentence-transformers/all-MiniLM-L6-v2", "prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainability\n\nIn the past, sustainability referred to environmental sustainability. It meant using natural resources so that people in the future could continue to rely on them in the long term. The concept of sustainability, or Nachhaltigkeit in German, goes back to Hans Carl von Carlowitz (1645–1714), and applied to forestry. The term for this now would be sustainable forest management. He used this term to mean the long-term responsible use of a natural resource. In his 1713 work Silvicultura oeconomica, he wrote that \"the highest art/science/industriousness [...] will consist in such a conservation and replanting of timber that there can be a continuous, ongoing and sustainable use\". The shift in use of \"sustainability\" from preservation of forests (for future wood production) to broader preservation of environmental resources (to sustain the world for future generations) traces to a 1972 book by Ernst Basler, based on a series of lectures at M.I.T.\nThe idea itself goes back a very long time: Communities have always worried about the capacity of their environment to sustain them in the long term. Many ancient cultures, traditional societies, and indigenous peoples have restricted the use of natural resources.\nComparison to sustainable development\nThe terms sustainability and sustainable development are closely related. In fact, they are often used to mean the same thing. Both terms are linked with the \"three dimensions of sustainability\" concept. One distinction is that sustainability is a general concept, while sustainable development can be a policy or organizing principle. Scholars say sustainability is a broader concept because sustainable development focuses mainly on human well-being.\nSustainable development has two linked goals. It aims to meet human development goals. It also aims to enable natural systems to provide the natural resources and ecosystem services needed for economies and society. The concept of sustainable development has come to focus on economic development, social development and environmental protection for future generations.\nDimensions"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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  {"tstamp": 1723746162.7402, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "BM25", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746161.7284, "finish": 1723746162.7402, "ip": "", "conv_id": "01ce705051244319b81038a310907f0c", "model_name": "BM25", "prompt": "when did the term sustainability start to be used", "output": [["when did the term sustainability start to be used", "Sustainable design\n\nThese activities are an indication that the concept of sustainable design is being supported on a global and interprofessional scale and that the ultimate goal is to become more environmentally responsive. The world needs facilities that are more energy-efficient and that promote conservation and recycling of natural and economic resources.\nEconomically and socially sustainable design\nEnvironmentally sustainable design is most beneficial when it works hand-in-hand with the other two counterparts of sustainable design – the economic and socially sustainable designs. These three terms are often coined under the title \"triple bottom line.\" In addition to financial terms, value can also be measured in relation to natural capital (the biosphere and earth's resources), social capital (the norms and networks that enable collective action), and human capital (the sum total of knowledge, experience, intellectual property, and labor available to society).\nIn some countries the term sustainable design is known as ecodesign, green design or environmental design. Victor Papanek, embraced social design and social quality and ecological quality, but did not explicitly combine these areas of design concern in one term. Sustainable design and design for sustainability are more common terms, including the triple bottom line (people, planet and profit). Advocates like Ecothis.EU campaign urge all three considerations be taken into account when designing a circular economy.\nAspects of environmentally sustainable design"]], "corpus": "wikipedia"}
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+ {"tstamp": 1723746232.6656, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746232.4735, "finish": 1723746232.6656, "ip": "", "conv_id": "fb5fdf9bd50b4685862c6c611836cbaa", "model_name": "mixedbread-ai/mxbai-embed-large-v1", "prompt": "what does 3 2 in music mean?", "output": [["what does 3 2 in music mean?", "English Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does \"count off\" mean as a noun? I looked up Webster, Oxford and some other sources and fund nothing for the meaning of \"count off\" in the followig sentence.\n\nEach track on the CDs that accompanies the book is presented with an intro, count off, occasional instructions and piano part. The track is immediately followed by a version without count offs, instructions, or piano.\n\n\nA: Before starting a piece of music, musicians often start by counting so they can set the rhythm. This can take various forms, but \"one two three four\" is quite common. This is what is meant here by \"count off.\" Here you can see that musicians actually do use this phrase.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}
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+ {"tstamp": 1723746232.6656, "task_type": "retrieval", "type": "chat", "model": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "gen_params": {}, "start": 1723746232.4735, "finish": 1723746232.6656, "ip": "", "conv_id": "ada49703307c4847b0223365e73b6410", "model_name": "jinaai/jina-embeddings-v2-base-en", "prompt": "what does 3 2 in music mean?", "output": [["what does 3 2 in music mean?", "Stackoverflow Stackexchange\n\nQ: What does ` UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY extraneous` mean? I understand that UNMET PEER DEPENDENCY means I need to npm install one of my peerDependencies. I believe that extraneous means the package exists but is not listed in package.json (presumably because it's installed globally?).\nWhat does it mean to have the two of them together?\nAnd why am I seeing this error even though I see these packages in node_modules, at the correct versions?\n\nA: It means that you have a module installed in your local npm repo that is \"extraneous\" (meaning you have no dependency on it) that has an \"unmet peer dependency\" on a library you also do not have installed (or if you do have it installed locally or globally, it is also extraneous so it's not in your dependency tree). If you run npm prune it should remove the extraneous dependency and this message.\n"]], "corpus": "stackexchange"}