101 lines
251 KiB
JSON
101 lines
251 KiB
JSON
{"sample_idx": 0, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AuYFhyP,S_hXE5LYe\">PPO (Proximal Policy Optimization) is a model-free reinforcement learning algorithm introduced by Schulman et al. in 2017 that optimizes policy learning through a clipped surrogate objective function</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_z9c3Jms,S_AuYFhyP\">The core of PPO involves a probability ratio \\( r_t(\\theta) \\) between the new and old policies, clipped to a range defined by a hyperparameter \\( \\epsilon \\) (typically 0.1-0.2) to prevent large policy updates</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_AuYFhyP,S_HkWtygo\">This clipping mechanism stabilizes training by ensuring the new policy does not deviate significantly from the previous policy, reducing the risk of divergent behavior</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hXE5LYe\">The clipped objective is a lower bound on the unclipped objective, meaning improvements in the clipped objective correlate with improvements in the overall objective when the ratio remains within the specified bounds</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_AuYFhyP\">PPO also includes an entropy regularization term to promote action diversity and ensure sufficient exploration during training</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_9Mgjk7i\">The training loop involves initializing hyperparameters, collecting trajectories from parallel environments, and performing multiple update epochs based on these trajectories</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AuYFhyP,S_hXE5LYe,S_z9c3Jms\">Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO) is a model-free reinforcement learning algorithm introduced by Schulman et al. in 2017</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_z9c3Jms,S_hXE5LYe\">It utilizes a clipped surrogate objective function that constrains the probability ratio between the new and old policies within a range typically set to 1 ± ε</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_z9c3Jms,S_hXE5LYe\">This objective takes the minimum of clipped and unclipped estimates, providing a lower bound that penalizes significant deviations from 1</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_YKlYY4b,S_CcbSYTJ,S_9Mgjk7i\">During training, the algorithm collects trajectories, computes advantage estimates (often via Generalized Advantage Estimation), and optimizes the policy with a value network loss and entropy bonus</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_CcbSYTJ,S_HkWtygo,S_9Mgjk7i\">This allows multiple update epochs per iteration and stabilizes training by preventing excessively large policy updates</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7837710578633462, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.1418855289316731, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 1, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_KK5Rnzh,S_yHishm4\">The Trump administration imposed tariffs on $283 billion of U.S. imports in 2018, with rates ranging from 10% to 50%, targeting China with three waves totaling 25% on $34 billion and a 10% tariff on an additional $200 billion by September</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yHishm4\">Countries such as China, the European Union, and Canada filed WTO cases against the U.S., imposing retaliatory tariffs on approximately $121 billion of U.S. exports, averaging 16%</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_I1oE0tb,S_bTYtYjO\">Retaliatory tariffs predominantly affected areas that supported Trump in the 2016 presidential election, revealing political targeting within the trade war response</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ZSDo4iu\">The Trump administration's shift towards protectionism under Trump is historically likened to late 19th-century mercantilist practices, contrasting with the U.S.'s post-1945 role as a proponent of trade liberalism</snippet>. However, the provided search results do not contain specific information on Fajgelbaum et al.'s \"The Return to Protectionism\" regarding distributional impacts or regressivity on low-income households.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_KK5Rnzh,S_yHishm4\">The 2018-2019 Trump tariffs imposed $283 billion of US imports with rates from 10% to 50% on various goods, with China facing the most substantial tariffs totaling 25% on $50 billion of imports</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_yHishm4\">retaliatory measures from trading partners including China, the European Union, and Canada targeted approximately $121 billion of US exports averaging 16%</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ned0wFk,S_I1oE0tb\">The tariffs were implemented amid a populist backlash against globalization, with retaliatory tariffs focusing on regions that supported Trump in the 2016 election rather than those backing other Republican candidates</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_KK5Rnzh,S_yHishm4\">none of the provided snippets contain results from Fajgelbaum et al.'s \"The Return to Protectionism\" paper specifically examining welfare effects, regressivity, or distributional incidence on low-income households</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ned0wFk,S_I1oE0tb\">The available evidence indicates that while tariffs may benefit specific industries, they are generally detrimental to both trading partners and the imposing country</snippet>. The search results do not contain the specific Fajgelbaum findings on how Trump tariffs affected working-class households or whether impacts were regressive as the agent requested.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8617642538804364, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.1808821269402182, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 2, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_vOhHdDS\">ZeRO-DP has three main optimization stages corresponding to partitioning of optimizer states, gradients, and parameters, with memory reduction factors of 4x, 8x, and linear scaling with DP degree respectively</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_lxTe76D\">total communication volume in ZeRO is 3, spread evenly across 2 all-gather and 1 reduce-scatter operations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_lxTe76D\">ZeRO++ introduces three communication optimizations including quantized weight communication (reducing parameter volume by half), hierarchical weight partitioning (reducing cross-machine all-gather via intra-machine communication), and quantized gradient communication</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_BWVyprV\">DeepSpeed offers incremental optimization stages (stage-1, stage-2, stage-3) for sharding optimizer state, gradients, and model parameters across data parallel ranks</snippet>, with <snippet id=\"S_RRxd5ah\">hybrid approaches combining ZeRO with other parallelisms achieving up to 1/(N×M) of model states kept in GPU memory while balancing GPU memory usage and communication overhead</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_vOhHdDS\">With all three ZeRO-DP stages enabled, training a trillion-parameter model can be achieved on 1024 NVIDIA GPUs with approximately 16GB per GPU memory consumption</snippet>, demonstrating the trade-off between memory reduction and communication overhead in distributed training frameworks.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_vOhHdDS>ZeRO-DP employs three optimization stages that partition optimizer states, gradients, and parameters, offering 4x and 8x memory reductions for the first two stages and linear memory reduction for parameter sharding at the cost of a 50% communication volume increase.</snippet> <snippet id=S_lxTe76D>ZeRO communication overhead is characterized by two all-gather operations for parameters and one reduce-scatter for gradients, totaling a volume of 3 model sizes per iteration.</snippet> <snippet id=S_RRxd5ah>However, the latency of collective communication operations demonstrates a positive correlation with the communication scale, which becomes significant when sharding across hundreds of GPUs.</snippet> <snippet id=S_LvWi5qs>For extreme memory scaling, ZeRO-Infinity offloads optimizer states and activations to CPU or NVMe memory to enable training of models with trillions of parameters.</snippet>\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7088667100600274, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.10443335503001375, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 3, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_f8dkLgt\">Time-course single-cell transcriptomic analysis of human stem cell-derived oligodendrocyte-lineage-cells (hOLLCs) including iPSC-derived cells revealed substantial transcriptional heterogeneity of PDGFRα-lineage hOLLCs with sub-populations of human oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (hOPCs)</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_f8dkLgt\">including a potential cytokine-responsive hOPC subset with candidate regulatory genes and networks defining sub-population identity</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_X78NGqm\">Another study investigated the heterogeneity of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) using bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing on Pdgfra+ populations</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_X78NGqm\">finding that while OPCs converge on similar transcriptional profiles, bulk analysis may mask underlying diversity with transcriptional similarities across brain and spinal cord regions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_4EQbvky\">Single-cell RNA sequencing of iPSC-derived oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) revealed heterogeneity among these cells, particularly in their expression of cell-surface markers EGFR and PDGFRA</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_4EQbvky\">identifying four distinct immunophenotypic populations including THY1 hi EGFR + PDGFRA + pre-OPCs and THY1 hi EGFR À PDGFRA + putative OPCs</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UNKcnGN\">Deep single-cell RNA sequencing on hiPSC-derived oligodendrocyte-lineage cells in 3D neural cultures identified distinct populations including OPCs with consistent PDGFRA expression patterns</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_UNKcnGN\">showing developmental progression from proliferating cells to mature oligodendrocytes with Monocle analysis highlighting heterogeneity</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_f8dkLgt\">Studies utilizing single-cell transcriptomics have identified substantial transcriptional heterogeneity within human iPSC-derived oligodendrocyte lineage cells (hOLLCs), discovering sub-populations such as a potential cytokine-responsive hOPC subset</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_4EQbvky\">Specifically, single-cell RNA sequencing of iPSC-derived OPCs revealed heterogeneity in cell-surface marker expression, categorizing cells into four distinct immunophenotypic populations including putative pre-OPCs and mature oligodendrocytes based on EGFR and PDGFRA levels</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UNKcnGN\">Deep single-cell sequencing of 3D hiPSC-derived neural cultures further distinguished heterogeneity within the oligodendrocyte cluster, separating proliferating cells, OPCs, newly formed oligodendrocytes, and myelinating oligodendrocytes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_X78NGqm\">Investigations employing both bulk and single-cell RNA sequencing on iPSC-derived OPCs suggest that bulk analysis may mask underlying diversity and intrinsic epigenetic differences between developmental cohorts</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7842088456011496, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.1421044228005748, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 4, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_UDpXMMR\">Transcriptome analysis of Anthonomus grandis in Brazil identified contigs related to RNA interference mechanisms, including PAZ domains and SID-like sequences, though no RNA-dependent RNA polymerase gene was detected</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_tDo09SB,S_TA2bEqI\">RNAi effectiveness in A. grandis is hindered by barriers including dsRNA delivery, cellular uptake, and degradation by gut nucleases (AgraNuc1, AgraNuc2, and AgraNuc3)</snippet>, which are primarily expressed in the posterior midgut. <snippet id=\"S_fXsP2MN\">While RNAi has shown promise against other coleopteran pests like the western corn rootworm, attempts to apply RNAi against the cotton boll weevil have not yielded similar results, despite transgenic plants being developed to express dsRNAs targeting critical genes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_QESxt6r\">In contrast, RNAi has been successfully applied in transgenic cotton plants expressing dsHaHR3 to control Helicoverpa armigera, inducing high larval mortality and deformities</snippet>, demonstrating the potential of plant-mediated RNAi but specifically against a different pest species. <snippet id=\"S_fXsP2MN\">Further development and extensive field testing are necessary to fully assess the effectiveness and viability of RNAi technology for plant protection, as initial tests show potential comparable to traditional insecticidal toxins</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_UDpXMMR,S_UuTpyH6>RNA interference (RNAi) is a promising biotechnological approach for the cotton boll weevil, with research identifying targets like vitellogenin and chitin synthase genes for silencing</snippet>. <snippet id=S_UDpXMMR,S_UuTpyH6>Microinjection of dsRNA targeting chitin synthase 1 produced unviable eggs and malformed larvae, while vitellogenin knockdown significantly affected egg viability without altering egg laying numbers</snippet>. <snippet id=S_tDo09SB,S_TA2bEqI>However, effective oral delivery of dsRNA via transgenic plants is limited by gut nucleases (AgraNuc1, AgraNuc2, AgraNuc3) that degrade the RNA in the posterior midgut</snippet>. <snippet id=S_tDo09SB,S_fXsP2MN>While silencing these nucleases can enhance gene silencing efficiency against targets like chitin synthase II, attempts to apply RNAi against the boll weevil have not yielded results comparable to other coleopteran pests</snippet>. <snippet id=S_fXsP2MN>Although transgenic cotton plants expressing dsRNA are being developed, extensive field testing remains necessary to validate efficacy in agriculture</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8719279800236561, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.1859639900118281, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 5, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_OLKZZOQ\">The 1991 Kuwait oil fires exhibited significant aerosol radiative forcing effects with net heating rates reaching up to 3.9 K/h at 1-hour plume age and 2.3 K/h at 3-hour plume age</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_0LL30pj\">the fires resulted in substantially increased levels of airborne particulate matter (PM) in the region around Kuwait and the GCC</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hTyNcJU\">A comparably low single scattering albedo of 0.66 at 538 nm was found for the plume arising from the Kuwait oil fires following the 1991 Gulf War</snippet>, indicating strong aerosol optical properties affected by combustion products. <snippet id=\"S_vOW7FR3\">The study indicates that uncertainties in the coagulation rate caused a 20-40% uncertainty in the plume's radiative forcing</snippet>, highlighting the difficulty in quantifying these effects. <snippet id=\"S_vaq6doy\">This research investigates the radiative forcing effects of smoke aerosols from Kuwait oil fires in 1991, focusing on uncertainties in surface and top-of-atmosphere forcing and their impacts on climate</snippet>, with black and organic carbon constituting 5-10% of total particle mass. <snippet id=\"S_3xcpkDw\">Regional aerosol optical depths (AODs) exceeded 0.8 and a significant emission of smoke particles was observed, highlighting the impact of aerosol radiative forcing in the context of the Kuwait oil fires</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe 1991 Kuwait oil fires produced significant aerosol radiative forcing with net heating rates up to 3.9 K/h at 1 hour plume age, causing temperature differences of up to 6 K at 250-400 hPa and cooling of up to -3 K at 850 hPa <snippet id=S_OLKZZOQ>. These aerosol effects substantially modified energy fluxes, cloud lifetimes, and temperature/precipitation patterns in the regional climate <snippet id=S_vaq6doy>. Surface cooling of -175 Wm-2 was recorded during related dust events in Kuwait with aerosol optical thickness reaching 3.617, indicating strong boundary layer perturbations <snippet id=S_dFPlFos>. The Kuwait oil fire plumes exhibited a low single scattering albedo of 0.66 at 538 nm, confirming highly absorbing characteristics that influence radiative heating profiles <snippet id=S_hTyNcJU>. Radiative forcing uncertainties for such plumes range 20-40% depending on dilution rates and particle mixture state <snippet id=S_vOW7FR3>. These combined effects demonstrate how war-driven aerosols can alter boundary layer stability and surface wind conditions relevant to turbine operation <snippet id=S_0LL30pj>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8688969258589512, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.1844484629294756, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 6, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_UBzqh33\">StealC V2 introduces several new features compared to V1, including support for executing Microsoft Software Installer (MSI) packages and PowerShell scripts, enhanced payload execution methods, and the ability to decrypt stolen data server-side</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UBzqh33\">The malware no longer performs anti-VM checks or downloads third-party DLLs, and now uses RC4 encryption for network communications</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UBzqh33\">C2 communication has shifted to JSON-based requests and responses with a focus on unique access tokens and error handling</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UBzqh33\">Data targeted includes browser settings, cryptocurrency wallets, and applications like Steam and Outlook</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UBzqh33\">The control panel has been updated to enforce version control, integrate with Telegram for notifications, and allow rule-based payload delivery</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_UBzqh33>StealC V2 introduces several new features including support for executing Microsoft Software Installer (MSI) packages and PowerShell scripts, along with enhanced payload execution methods</snippet>, and it can decrypt stolen data server-side. The malware no longer performs anti-VM checks or downloads third-party DLLs, but has enabled RC4 encryption for network communications which was previously disabled. Data targeted includes browser settings, cryptocurrency wallets, and applications like Steam and Outlook, with C2 communication now using JSON-based requests and responses. The control panel has been updated to enforce version control, integrate with Telegram for notifications, and allow rule-based payload delivery. Infection methods involve registering the bot ID and executing payloads based on server responses <snippet id=S_UBzqh33>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.7644191714053615, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 7, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_LIOMj3a\">A cohort study using US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) national health-care databases examined the risk of incident diabetes in COVID-19 survivors beyond the acute phase</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_sRbBHcj\">which found COVID-19 survivors exhibited a significant increased risk of incident diabetes beyond 30 days post-infection, with an excess burden of 8.28 per 1000 non-hospitalised individuals at 12 months</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_lB72BOu\">In the post-acute phase of the disease, compared with the contemporary control group, people with COVID-19 exhibited an increased risk (HR 1⋅40, 95 % CI 1⋅36-1⋅44) and excess burden (13⋅46, 95 % CI 12⋅11-14⋅84, per 1000 people at 12 months) of incident diabetes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HmTazVA\">Non-hospitalized COVID-19 patients had a 25% (95% CI: 21%-29%) increased risk of new-onset type 2 diabetes, which rose to 173% in hospitalized patients and 276% in ICU patients</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_7DZccVx\">Altogether, there is evidence to suggest that beyond the acute phase of COVID-19, survivors might be at an increased risk of developing incident diabetes, and increased risk of incident antihyperglycemic use in the post-acute phase of the disease</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_X5WNd6v\">Higher risk of incident diabetes post-acute COVID-19 was observed, with a consistent increase in risk of new-onset type 2 diabetes (T2DM) compared to severity-matched flu-like illness</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_LIOMj3a\">The study used US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) national health-care databases to build a cohort of US Veterans who survived the first 30 days of COVID-19</snippet> with two control groups for comparison. <snippet id=\"S_sRbBHcj\">COVID-19 survivors exhibit a significant increased risk of incident diabetes beyond 30 days post-infection, with an excess burden of 8.28 per 1000 non-hospitalised individuals at 12 months</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_lB72BOu\">Detailed analyses showed people with COVID-19 exhibited an increased risk (HR 1.40, 95% CI 1.36-1.44) and excess burden (13.46 per 1000 people at 12 months) of incident diabetes compared with the contemporary control group</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_7DZccVx\">Risks and burdens of post-acute diabetes increased in a graded fashion according to the severity of the acute phase, whether patients were non-hospitalised, hospitalized, or admitted to intensive care</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_LIOMj3a\">The study authors conclude diabetes should be considered as a facet of the multifaceted long COVID syndrome, and post-acute care strategies should integrate screening and management of diabetes</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8574282600799128, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.1787141300399564, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 8, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_vvVVFoT,S_fnCGUjH,S_sN6CcFK\">The article \"Top 15 Global Trends For 2025\" was authored by Sarwant Singh and published on Forbes on January 22, 2025</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_vvVVFoT,S_fnCGUjH,S_sN6CcFK\">none of the provided search snippets contain the specific percentage for global electricity from renewables in 2025</snippet>. The search results only confirm the article's existence and publication details, not the requested renewable energy statistics. <snippet id=\"S_sN6CcFK\">A PDF reference to the article is available at futureagenda.org/the-world-in-2025/</snippet>, but the actual content with renewable electricity percentages is not included in these snippets.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_vvVVFoT,S_fnCGUjH\">The article \"Top 15 Global Trends For 2025\" was written by Sarwant Singh and published in Forbes on January 22, 2025</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_vvVVFoT,S_fnCGUjH,S_sN6CcFK\">none of the provided search snippets contain the specific percentage figure for global electricity from renewables in 2025</snippet>. The snippets only confirm the article exists and provide publication details, but do not include the actual renewable energy statistics from the article. <snippet id=\"S_vvVVFoT\">The article URL is available at https://www.forbes.com/sites/sarwantsingh/2025/01/22/top-15-global-trends-for-2025/</snippet>, but the renewable electricity percentage data is not accessible from these search results.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.6568537258509659, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 9, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AA5wpad,S_LKSKJn1,S_mBwOV4H\">The 15th POMS-HK International Conference is scheduled to start on January 3, 2025</snippet> at The Chinese University of Hong Kong <snippet id=\"S_AA5wpad,S_TUFN3jC\">. The 14th POMS-HK International Conference started on January 5, 2024</snippet> at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology <snippet id=\"S_jE7LWrz\">. The 13th POMS-HK International Conference was held on January 7-8, 2023</snippet> at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University <snippet id=\"S_Br57QvT\">. The 12th POMS-HK International Conference took place on January 8-9, 2022</snippet> at Lingnan University <snippet id=\"S_5nVopPR\">. These dates indicate the POMS-HK International Conference typically occurs in early January each year</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AA5wpad,S_LKSKJn1,S_mBwOV4H\">The POMS-HK International Conference is held annually in early January in Hong Kong, with the 15th conference scheduled for January 3-5, 2025, the 14th for January 5-6, 2024, and the 13th for January 7-8, 2023</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_AA5wpad,S_LKSKJn1,S_jE7LWrz,S_TUFN3jC,S_DzBPmor,S_mBwOV4H,S_Br57QvT,S_ULVAUtt,S_wmyEfiy,S_5nVopPR\">none of the provided search snippets contain information about the POMS Annual Meeting in Atlanta or its specific dates</snippet>. Therefore, I cannot definitively compare which conference starts first without additional search results about the Atlanta meeting.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.27603247440875395, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 10, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_H5GBDki\">Mouse ERVs are classified into three classes based on pol sequence similarity, with class I resembling gamma- and epsilon-retroviruses and class II resembling alpha-, beta-, and delta-retroviruses</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_H5GBDki\">Mouse representatives of class I include sequences similar to classical murine leukemia viruses (MLVs), while class II includes elements similar to mouse mammary tumor viruses (MMTV) and the large intracisternal A-particle (IAP) superfamily with about 1000 copies/cell</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ofsHaiJ\">Functional MLV elements like Emv2 in C57BL/6 mice can restore replication competence through recombination, producing infectious recombinant MLVs in immunodeficient strains and cancer cell lines</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_VrGqnwN\">IAP elements are murine-specific retroviral elements that contribute to genetic variation, with domesticus subspecies showing a higher proportion of variable bases from active IAP insertions (67%) compared to castaneus and musculus (56%)</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_VrGqnwN\">Full-length IAPs are autonomous long terminal repeat retrotransposons that can lead to aberrant splicing and disease when they insert near genes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_tzG3IdJ\">XPR1-dependent MLV ERVs are present in all house mouse subspecies, with six functional XPR1 variants evolving to restrict different subsets of MLVs through co-evolutionary adaptations</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nMouse endogenous retroviruses utilize a three-class system where MLV representatives belong to Class I (gammaretrovirus-like) and IAP elements belong to Class II (betaretrovirus-like), sharing nomenclature with human ERVs where Class I aligns with ERV1 and Class II with ERV2 <snippet id=\"S_H5GBDki,S_wHW5Oiu\">. Functionally, endogenous MLVs such as Emv2 can undergo recombination to restore replication competence and produce infectious virus particles in strains like C57BL/6 mice <snippet id=\"S_ofsHaiJ\">. These infectious recombinant MLVs have been identified in murine cancer cell lines, where they contribute to leukemogenesis and tumor development <snippet id=\"S_ofsHaiJ\">. In contrast, IAP elements are autonomous long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons capable of active retrotransposition, contributing to genetic variation <snippet id=\"S_VrGqnwN\">. IAP elements are abundant, with approximately 1000 copies per cell, and specific subtypes like ID1 remain active in Mus musculus subspecies <snippet id=\"S_H5GBDki,S_VrGqnwN\">. Active IAP insertions in Mus musculus domesticus account for a significant proportion of subspecies-specific polymorphisms, indicating ongoing mobilization <snippet id=\"S_VrGqnwN\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7203723323747541, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.11018616618737702, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 11, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_4ahEl2w,S_jaGb9lk,S_Gj9myfY\">Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) has been widely studied as a promising strategy to mitigate hallucinations in LLMs by retrieving external knowledge before generation</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_HHkW9B0\">which is categorized as a retrieval-augmented correction approach that uses external resources to mitigate hallucination</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_6v3TJp1,S_MJvgffY\">Active Retrieval-Augmented (ARA) models have been developed specifically for LVLMs, employing three key dimensions: identifying accurate retrieval targets, selecting effective retrieval methods, and timing the retrieval process</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_6v3TJp1\">Empirical evaluations across three LVLMs and four benchmarks indicate that ARA significantly reduces hallucinations while maintaining moderate retrieval frequency</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Gj9myfY\">However, the effectiveness of RAG-based methods heavily relies on the quality of their retrieval mechanisms</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_4ahEl2w\">existing RAG may suffer from a trade-off between diversity and factuality</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nResearch from 2023–2025 consistently demonstrates that Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) has emerged as a promising strategy to mitigate hallucinations in LLMs <snippet id=\"S_4ahEl2w\">. Multiple studies confirm that RAG enables models to generate responses conditioning on retrieved evidence from external knowledge bases, significantly reducing hallucinated content and enhancing factual accuracy <snippet id=\"S_Gj9myfY,S_PbQaaQw\">. The technique works by retrieving reliable documents before generation, allowing LLMs to leverage external non-parameterized knowledge alongside internal parameterized knowledge <snippet id=\"S_OARPrNN\">. However, research also cautions that RAG's effectiveness heavily depends on retrieval mechanism quality, and the approach is not without limitations such as error accumulation and citation inaccuracies <snippet id=\"S_4ahEl2w,S_Gj9myfY\">. Several implementations, including Active Retrieval Augmentation frameworks, have empirically validated that optimal retrieval settings can significantly reduce hallucinations <snippet id=\"S_MJvgffY,S_6v3TJp1\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.688162617914684, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.09408130895734201, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 12, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_o3E4MNQ,S_i5aMNhp\">The search results returned information on the Deepwater Horizon oil spill response, including SCAT-based shoreline cleanup assessments covering over 7,058 kilometers of shoreline</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_DqGbf1z,S_deSmbWp\">which documented the use of dispersants, controlled burns, skimming, siphoning, and containment booms to mitigate the spill's impact</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_B84eK7e\">Cleanup efforts focused on removing floating oil and bulk oil from shorelines, with modified SCAT terminology used to categorize oiling characteristics</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_0baMwGe,S_Hub9Tvk,S_n6iBrLE\">However, these snippets do not contain any information about the Hebei Spirit (2007) oil spill in Korea, nor do they reference ITOPF, IOPC Funds, or Korean government reports</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ys41PcL\">The results instead provide general overview of oil spill cleanup techniques including containment and recovery methods, bioremediation, and shoreline clean-up approaches</snippet>. <answer>\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"\">No relevant information about the Hebei Spirit (2007, Korea) oil spill was found in the search results.</snippet> The provided snippets all concern the Deepwater Horizon (2010, Gulf of Mexico) spill or general response capabilities in other regions like the Chinese Bohai Sea. Specifically, they discuss Deepwater Horizon shoreline oiling, SCAT surveys, dispersant use, boom and skimmer deployment, and cleanup worker participation. <snippet id=\"S_o3E4MNQ\">Deepwater Horizon oil stranded on 1,773 km of shoreline with 660 km receiving authorized cleanup</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_i5aMNhp\">18 SCAT teams surveyed over 7,058 kilometers of shoreline</snippet>. The Boi Sea snippets discuss mechanical facility storage quantities for skimmers and booms. <snippet id=\"S_0baMwGe\">The Bohai Sea survey found 133,420 m of floating booms, 9,632 kL/h for skimmers, and 100 vessels available</snippet>. No Hebei Spirit case history from ITOPF, IOPC Funds, IMO, or Korean authorities was included in these results.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6703056768558953, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.0851528384279476, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 13, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_QMZd9uN,S_NFdiZQm,S_7ms3BbK\">Vertical eDNA distribution in lakes is strongly influenced by thermal stratification, with warm-water fish eDNA concentrated above the thermocline and cold-water stenotherms primarily detected at deeper, bottom layers during summer stratification</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_eR9pNyf,S_nblzMDI\">Thermocline depths in small temperate lakes range from 0.75 to 3.2 m, with sampling locations in littoral zones (20 m offshore) showing distinct vertical distribution patterns compared to pelagic zones</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_DCoNvvE,S_qZTbA6e\">eDNA becomes homogeneously mixed during lake turnover in monomictic lakes or winter in dimictic lakes, while in summer stratified conditions, distinct community assemblages are detected above and below the thermocline</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Cx6Mojy,S_7ms3BbK\">During turnover, eDNA detection becomes more uniform across depths with cold-water species appearing at shallower levels and minnows present at deeper depths, indicating that stratification and mixing influence eDNA detection in littoral and pelagic zones</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_nblzMDI\">The thermocline was confirmed between 4.60-6.60 m from the surface, with eDNA sampling occurring during stratification and turnover within isothermal or near-isothermal conditions</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_qZTbA6e,S_7ms3BbK>Stratification leads to distinct microhabitat isolation where cold-water stenotherms are detectable only in midwater and deep habitats while warm-water minnows are abundant at the surface</snippet>, and <snippet id=S_QMZd9uN,S_7ms3BbK>community detection becomes more uniform across depths during autumn turnover when water column mixing occurs</snippet>. <snippet id=S_eR9pNyf,S_nblzMDI>Thermocline depths vary significantly between lakes, ranging from 0.75 to 3.2 m in some cases to 4.60 to 6.60 m in others</snippet>. <snippet id=S_DCoNvvE,S_qZTbA6e>Patchy distribution necessitates multiple sampling points across depths rather than single samples to capture community heterogeneity</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9660664819944598, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.2330332409972299, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 14, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=3a2d1ed5-2>Shabab Al-Khalil is listed among West Bank Premier League clubs, with Hebron as one of the cities represented</snippet>, but the search results do not contain specific information about a club that has won the Palestinian FA Cup multiple times or plays in a nearby municipality. <snippet id=3a2d1ed5-1>Al-Bireh Institute and other clubs are listed but without details on their cup victories or stadium locations</snippet>. <snippet id=3a2d1ed5-6>Several clubs are mentioned as being located in the West Bank, but none specifically from Southern West Bank cities with multiple national cup wins are identified</snippet>. The available search results do not contain sufficient evidence to identify the specific club the agent is seeking.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nBased on the search results, the major cities in the Southern West Bank include Hebron (Khalil), which has professional clubs like <snippet id=3a2d1ed5-2>Shabab Al-Khalil</snippet>. The club Shabab Al-Dhahiriya from the city of Ad-Dhahiriya is also located in the Southern West Bank <snippet id=3a2d1ed5-2>. However, the search results do not contain sufficient information about which specific club has won the Palestinian Cup multiple times and plays in a nearby municipality rather than its home city. Additional research is needed to determine the exact club meeting all criteria mentioned in the query.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9830587503885608, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.2415293751942804, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 15, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Ex1kQjb\">The search results show Daily Treasury Par Yield Curve CMT Rates with data through 3 months at 4.03%</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_Ex1kQjb\">1 year at 3.61%</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_Ex1kQjb\">2 year rates at 3.57%</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_LNwC0St\">Official Treasury data is available at home.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/TextView</snippet>, which provides daily Treasury Par Yield Curve Rates. <snippet id=\"S_9NRdU6Z\">U.S. Department of the Treasury's interest rate statistics page includes Daily Treasury Bill Rates</snippet> as indicative closing market bid quotations. <snippet id=\"S_pwGFHPE\">The Treasury's official yield curve uses a par yield curve derived from bid-side market price quotations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_2WbtkJ5\">A Treasury Daily Interest Rate XML Feed is available for programmatic access to daily interest rate data</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_Ex1kQjb>As of September 18, 2025, the 3-month Treasury rate was 4.03%</snippet>. The Treasury provides official yield curve data through its Daily Treasury Par Yield Curve CMT Rates page <snippet id=S_LNwC0St,S_9NRdU6Z,S_Ex1kQjb>. The 10-year rate is available through the same data source, though the snippet cuts off after showing rates for maturities up to 3 years. The Treasury's yield curve methodology uses indicative, bid-side market price quotations to derive par yields <snippet id=S_pwGFHPE,S_AsPkpls>. Official rates can also be accessed via the Treasury's daily interest rate XML feed or API documentation <snippet id=S_2WbtkJ5,S_4AaXlpd>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.27018361993587875, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 16, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_hAqLMYW,S_VSuv8i0\">Recent research on catastrophic climate change scenarios suggests that warming above 5 °C is considered \"beyond catastrophic\" while above 6 °C is deemed an \"indisputable global catastrophe,\" though the term \"catastrophic climate change\" remains undefined in scientific literature</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_60jj79u\">A research agenda for catastrophic climate change focuses on four key strands: understanding extreme climate change dynamics, exploring climate-triggered pathways to mass morbidity and mortality, investigating social fragility and risk cascades, and synthesizing findings into integrated catastrophe assessments</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_60jj79u\">Tipping point assessments show effects ranging from a 10% chance of doubling the social cost of carbon up to an eightfold increase in the optimal carbon price, with welfare estimates depending on fat tail risks</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_F4ekjz0\">Global catastrophic risks (GCRs) related to food systems are defined as events that could threaten human well-being on a global scale, with abrupt sunlight reduction scenarios representing a specific category of these risks</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hAqLMYW\">The document emphasizes that while climate change is often labeled as an \"existential threat,\" clear definitions are lacking, and further research is necessary to refine thresholds for catastrophic and decimation risks</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe recent search returned primarily climate-focused catastrophic risk literature, with \"Climate Endgame\" studies emerging as key references defining catastrophe thresholds. Warming above 5°C is categorized as \"beyond catastrophic,\" while warming above 6°C constitutes an \"indisputable global catastrophe,\" with 3°C by century's end marking extreme climate change <snippet id=\"S_VSuv8i0\">temperature thresholds for catastrophic outcomes are now being clarified</snippet>. Tipping point assessments show effects varying from a 10% chance of doubling the social cost of carbon to an eightfold increase in optimal carbon pricing <snippet id=\"S_60jj79u\">tipping point probabilities demonstrate fat tail risk characteristics</snippet>. However, bad-to-worst-case climate scenarios remain poorly understood despite reasons to suspect they could drive worldwide societal collapse or eventual human extinction <snippet id=\"S_hAqLMYW\">catastrophic climate scenarios are underexplored yet critically important</snippet>. Food system risks include abrupt sunlight reduction scenarios that could trigger multiple bread-basket failures and global-scale well-being threats <snippet id=\"S_F4ekjz0\">global catastrophic food system risks are identified as existential threats</snippet>. Sea level rise research similarly defines \"Extremely high risk\" as exceeding socioecological coping capacity and possibly leading to existential or catastrophic outcomes <snippet id=\"S_vyuhdrc\">coastal settlement risks reach existential catastrophe thresholds at very high sea level rise</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.818426546533348, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.159213273266674, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 17, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_SrhDuNY,S_bChTerS\">Phytochemicals demonstrate significant potential to reduce cervical cancer development by inhibiting early carcinogenesis stages and enhancing chemotherapy sensitivity</snippet>, though <snippet id=\"S_SrhDuNY\">epidemiological studies often yield inconsistent results due to factors like dosage, metabolism, and unclear mechanisms</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_jvAGRUW,S_St3cdIq\">Challenges include low bioavailability and toxicity, which may be partially overcome with nanoparticle delivery mechanisms</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_giUXm46\">Preclinical studies have examined combinational phytochemical-chemotherapeutic drug approaches to enhance therapeutic potential on human cervical cancer cells</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_RE7a53S\">Pomegranate peel polyphenols have been studied in cervical cancer contexts with antioxidant properties</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_RulQFFI,S_NnCE1hw\">Recent literature reviews have focused on natural products and their mechanisms in cervical cancer, including interactions with inflammatory pathways and HPV-related mechanisms</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_jvAGRUW\">more clinical studies with different phytochemicals are needed to fully assess safety and efficacy</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nRecent reviews have synthesized therapeutic effects of natural products on cervical cancer through inflammatory pathways, highlighting compounds such as flavonoids, alkaloids, phenols, terpenoids, curcumin, and paclitaxel with data primarily from 2010-2021 studies<snippet id=\"S_RulQFFI\">. Phytochemicals demonstrate significant potential to reduce cervical cancer development by inhibiting early carcinogenesis stages and enhancing chemotherapy sensitivity, though epidemiological studies often yield inconsistent results due to dosage, metabolism, and unclear mechanisms<snippet id=\"S_SrhDuNY\">. Challenges associated with phytochemical use include low bioavailability and toxicity, which may be addressed through chemical analogs, adjuvant therapies, and nanoparticle delivery mechanisms<snippet id=\"S_jvAGRUW\">. Experimental evidence emphasizes chemopreventive and therapeutic potential of plant-derived substances, with combinational use of phytochemicals and chemotherapeutic drugs shown to enhance therapeutic potential on human cervical cancer cells<snippet id=\"S_bChTerS\">. Research on phytochemicals against HPV-induced cervical cancer necessitates further investigation into efficacy and safety, particularly through concurrent therapies targeting HPV-mediated mechanisms<snippet id=\"S_St3cdIq\">. Current literature reviews continue to collect experimental works from the last five years elucidating anticancer mechanisms of plant-derived natural products in cervical cancer treatment<snippet id=\"S_NnCE1hw\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8633212996389892, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.1816606498194946, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 18, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_r2sDDAL\">Trust in AI within public institutions is influenced by citizens' perceptions of institutional legitimacy, with automated systems viewed as illegitimate when acting as sole decision-makers</snippet>, making legitimacy foundational to public authority in AI adoption <snippet id=\"S_R1PS8iU\">. </snippet>Trust in government significantly influences user experiences with AI-based self-service technology in public service delivery, highlighting trust as a key challenge in implementing AI in public governance <snippet id=\"S_PgHhtbO\">. </snippet>Trust in AI in the public sector is influenced by the area of enquiry and the communicated purposes for introducing the technology, with initial public trust levels varying compared to trust in human administrators <snippet id=\"S_VLrq6kV\">. </snippet>Trust levels increase when AI adds perceived value and if humans remain involved, while transparency about AI use is essential for tracking trust changes <snippet id=\"S_F456mxb\">. </snippet>Public perception of AI adoption is shaped by control of AI and ethics in AI dimensions, along with concerns about privacy invasion and lower trust in government deploying AI <snippet id=\"S_1tU6Z3U\">. </snippet>Trust determinants include reliability, transparency, and human oversight, as these factors predict cognitive trust in AI systems <snippet id=\"S_z4Ru4pp\">. </snippet>Trust perceptions vary across domains, with AI systems' abilities evaluated higher than benevolence, though knowledge and technological competence influence trust in AI capabilities <snippet id=\"S_MF1INRL\">. </snippet>\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nTrust in AI within public institutions is significantly influenced by citizens' perceptions of institutional legitimacy, with automated systems often viewed as illegitimate when acting as sole decision-makers <snippet id=\"S_r2sDDAL,S_R1PS8iU\">. Key determinants include transparency and explainability, which are essential for tracking trust changes and fostering responsible AI development <snippet id=\"S_z4Ru4pp,S_1tU6Z3U\">. Human oversight remains critical, as trust levels increase when humans remain involved in decision-making processes rather than being replaced entirely by AI <snippet id=\"S_F456mxb\">. Reliability, tangibility, and task characteristics predict cognitive trust in AI systems, while anthropomorphism influences emotional trust <snippet id=\"S_z4Ru4pp\">. Privacy concerns and data governance also negatively impact trust, particularly when citizens perceive potential privacy invasion <snippet id=\"S_1tU6Z3U\">. Additionally, public perception of AI control, ethics, and perceived value of AI services are crucial determinants for acceptance in public service contexts <snippet id=\"S_1tU6Z3U,S_F456mxb\">. Technological competence and familiarity with AI also correlate with higher trust in AI capabilities across different public service domains <snippet id=\"S_MF1INRL\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8509948096885813, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 15.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 7.0, "compression_rate": 0.17549740484429066, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 19, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=b99d28d7-0, b99d28d7-9>Clean is available to stream on AMC+</snippet>, along with Disney+, Hulu, Sundance Now, Philo, The Roku Channel, Fandango at Home, Prime Video, and Apple TV <snippet id=b99d28d7-0>on your Roku device</snippet>. The film is also available on <snippet id=b99d28d7-1>Hulu</snippet>, <snippet id=b99d28d7-2>Amazon Prime Video</snippet>, <snippet id=b99d28d7-3>Tubi</snippet>, and <snippet id=b99d28d7-4>Pluto TV</snippet> with ads. <snippet id=b99d28d7-5>Philo</snippet> offers the movie with a free trial option. <snippet id=b99d28d7-8>Decider confirms Clean (2022) streams on AMC+</snippet> alongside Tubi TV and Hulu.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=b99d28d7-0,b99d28d7-9>Clean is available to stream on multiple platforms including AMC+, Hulu, Prime Video, Apple TV, Tubi, and Roku</snippet>. <snippet id=b99d28d7-9>AMC+ is specifically mentioned as one of the available streaming services for the film</snippet>. <snippet id=b99d28d7-1,b99d28d7-2,b99d28d7-4>It can also be accessed through Hulu, Amazon Prime Video, and Pluto TV</snippet>. <snippet id=b99d28d7-5,b99d28d7-8>Philo and other services like Sundance Now and Disney+ offer the movie as well</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9314230521571152, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 14.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 6.0, "compression_rate": 0.21571152607855762, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 20, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_dUrCta4,S_u5mSiUG,S_db6DLhs,S_ssr4mB9\">The search results do not contain specific empirical data on negotiated assessment or student co-creation of assessment criteria in higher education</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_1YjeXyJ\">One snippet mentions peer assessment studies but notes that reliability and validity are often underreported as outcome measures, with beliefs and perceptions more frequently treated as variables than actual performance</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yevXI89\">A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials on e-mental health interventions provides academic performance outcomes but does not address negotiated assessment design</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_G7aERKv,S_10M2Vpc\">Teacher effectiveness reviews focus on inputs, processes, and outcomes but do not specifically evaluate student involvement in assessment design</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_r34NY6x\">The ChatGPT assessment integrity discussion highlights verification challenges but does not address negotiated assessment or co-creation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_YVMqQJL\">Research on Research-Practice Partnerships notes limitations in measuring partnership effectiveness beyond standard student outcome metrics</snippet>. Overall, the current search results lack the specific quantitative effects or empirical evaluations needed to assess negotiated assessment or student co-creation of assessment criteria in higher education.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe provided search results do not contain specific empirical evidence or randomized controlled trials evaluating the effectiveness of negotiated assessment or student co-created rubrics in higher education <snippet id=\"S_db6DLhs,S_1YjeXyJ,S_G7aERKv,S_dUrCta4,S_u5mSiUG\">. Instead, the available literature focuses on broader concepts such as Outcome-Based Education frameworks, general peer assessment design elements, and teacher effectiveness metrics <snippet id=\"S_db6DLhs,S_1YjeXyJ,S_G7aERKv\">. While one systematic review notes that reliability and validity are frequently underreported in peer assessment studies, it does not quantify the impact of student involvement in task design <snippet id=\"S_1YjeXyJ\">. Additional snippets discuss conceptual tensions in learning outcomes or the influence of educational technology without addressing assessment negotiation specifically <snippet id=\"S_dUrCta4,S_u5mSiUG\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7395659432387311, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.1197829716193656, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 21, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_wzDgj5A\">Endocytosis maintains lysosomal fitness by delivering enzymes and active V-ATPase pumps to lysosomes via the endocytic route</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_gCWDTWV\">lysosomal membrane proteins are delivered to lysosomes in a M6P receptor-independent manner through vesicle fusion with plasma membrane followed by endocytosis</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_EhS0ch1\">Lysosomal exocytosis stimulation may have beneficial effects on the accumulation of unprocessed aggregates in lysosomal storage disorders, leading to their extracellular elimination</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_pfxfGLI\">a general downregulation of endocytosis during aging or senescence has been observed</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_BXMwwcV\">endocytosed nanoparticles can impair lysosomal function and endocytosis, potentially due to alterations in lysosomal pH</snippet>. The available evidence does not provide direct experimental proof that enhancing endocytosis specifically protects against lysosomal dysfunction, though it supports endocytosis as a maintenance pathway for lysosomal protein delivery.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_wzDgj5A,S_Y2SP2EN>Endocytosis maintains cellular homeostasis by delivering extracellular and intracellular materials to lysosomes, where they are degraded as part of the autophagy-lysosomal-endosomal system</snippet>, and <snippet id=S_wzDgj5A>Trafficking between endosomes and the trans-Golgi network is imperative for the maintenance of lysosomal fitness as it delivers enzymes and active V-ATPase pumps to lysosomes via the endocytic route</snippet>. <snippet id=S_gCWDTWV>Lysosome biogenesis also requires endocytic pathways, as lysosomal membrane proteins can be delivered via vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane followed by endocytosis</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6504752915795861, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.07523764578979303, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 22, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_a9Y7uJC,S_Ykw4nQx\">Calendar aging is primarily driven by temperature-dependent side reactions, with the Arrhenius equation and Eyring models used to describe its temperature dependence</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_edT6GAQ\">cycle aging at low temperatures is significantly accelerated by lithium plating and SEI film growth during fast charging</snippet>, causing dramatic reductions in cycle life as temperature decreases from 20°C to 10°C and 5°C. <snippet id=\"S_iJyfWte\">Studies by Keil et al. (2016) and Geisbauer et al. (2021) found that elevated temperatures and high SOC levels significantly increase capacity degradation and internal resistance</snippet>, indicating that calendar aging is exacerbated by heat while cycling degradation at low T is driven by plating mechanisms. <snippet id=\"S_RHMJrIs,S_zb2LhNK\">SEI layer formation is a major contributor to cyclable lithium loss, with aged anodes exhibiting decreased intercalated lithium and increased internal resistance</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_edT6GAQ\">a high power graphite/NMC battery's cycle life falls from 4000 cycles at 20°C to just 40 cycles at 10°C</snippet>, demonstrating the dual temperature effects on calendar versus cycling aging pathways.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nCalendar aging follows the Arrhenius equation, where elevated temperatures accelerate aging processes through increased reaction rates, making temperature regulation essential for reducing degradation <snippet id=\"S_a9Y7uJC\">. SEI growth is the dominant calendar aging mechanism at high temperatures (e.g., 55°C storage), causing pore clogging and film resistance increase in anodes <snippet id=\"S_zb2LhNK\">. Higher temperatures and SOC levels significantly increase capacity degradation and internal resistance during calendar aging, with studies showing accelerated fading at 50-60°C storage <snippet id=\"S_iJyfWte\">. In contrast, cyclic aging experiences dramatically accelerated degradation at low temperatures during charging, with cycle life falling from 4000 cycles at 20°C to just 40 cycles at 10°C for graphite/NMC batteries <snippet id=\"S_edT6GAQ\">. At 5°C, a 16 Ah graphite/NMC battery loses 75% capacity after only 50 cycles compared to 4000 cycles at 25°C, driven primarily by lithium plating rather than SEI growth <snippet id=\"S_edT6GAQ\">. The Arrhenius law describes temperature dependence of cyclic aging reaction rates, though lithium plating at sub-zero temperatures creates an inflection point that fundamentally alters degradation mechanisms compared to calendar aging <snippet id=\"S_6yCb2kD\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7367231638418079, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 5.0, "compression_rate": 0.11836158192090396, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 23, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_PtOIRGk,S_rcIxmdK,S_RXJTnMw,S_maWNX2u\">The provided search results discuss China's influence on global science and research evaluation, including metrics like SCI publications and co-authorship data</snippet>, but <snippet id=\"S_PtOIRGk,S_NyxI5ht,S_RTxg6u0,S_PnWYPRp,S_rcIxmdK,S_RXJTnMw,S_M9HFrLf,S_maWNX2u,S_C8wHD3r,S_7gXvW7t\">none of the snippets contain the specific threshold value for rC,ave or ΔGave mentioned in the agent's query</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PtOIRGk\">The search results focus on general trends in China's research evaluation reform and internationalization</snippet>, without providing the detailed statistical thresholds needed for the agent's specific query. <snippet id=\"S_maWNX2u\">One snippet notes Chinese scholars led 49% of the most cited papers in US co-authorship from 2014 to 2018</snippet>, but this is not the rC,ave/ΔGave threshold value. The search did not surface the target Scientific Reports article with the exact threshold data.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_PtOIRGk,S_NyxI5ht,S_RTxg6u0,S_PnWYPRp,S_rcIxmdK,S_RXJTnMw,S_M9HFrLf,S_maWNX2u\">None of the provided search results contain information about a Scientific Reports article with the specific variables rC,ave and ΔGave or their critical threshold values</snippet>. The retrieved snippets discuss various aspects of Chinese research output, publication incentives, and global science influence, but none reference the target paper with the threshold information the agent is seeking <snippet id=\"S_C8wHD3r,S_7gXvW7t\">The only mentions of \"Chinese scholars\" in global research context appear in titles without corresponding content</snippet>. The agent may need to refine their search with more specific terms such as \"Scientific Reports rC,ave ΔGave threshold\" without the broader China influence query to locate the exact paper.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6844284925455549, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.09221424627277747, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 24, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"22895,68190,89881\">Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778) was an 18th-century Swedish naturalist who formalized binomial nomenclature and created Linnaean taxonomy</snippet>. <snippet id=\"22895,68190,89881\">He introduced the two-part Latin species name (genus + specific epithet) and established hierarchical ranks including kingdom, class, order, genus, and species</snippet>. <snippet id=\"68190\">His system standardized classification across plants, animals, fungi, bacteria and more, forming the basis of modern scientific naming</snippet>. <snippet id=\"22895\">Known as the \"father of modern taxonomy,\" Linnaeus taught at Uppsala, wrote chiefly in Latin, and was ennobled in 1761 as Carl von Linné</snippet>. <snippet id=\"89881\">Linnaean taxonomy endures as the basis for naming and organizing biodiversity, though additional ranks and evolutionary concepts were later added</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nCarl Linnaeus (1707–1778), an 18th-century Swedish naturalist, formalized binomial nomenclature and created Linnaean taxonomy <snippet id=\"22895, 68190\">. He introduced a two-part Latin naming system (genus + specific epithet), such as Homo sapiens, through his publication of Systema Naturae (first edition 1735) <snippet id=\"22895, 89881\">. Linnaeus also established hierarchical classification ranks including kingdom, class, order, genus, and species <snippet id=\"22895, 89881\">. His system standardized biological classification across plants, animals, fungi, and bacteria, forming the basis of modern scientific naming <snippet id=\"68190\">. Known as the \"father of modern taxonomy,\" Linnaean taxonomy continues to serve as the foundation for organizing biodiversity <snippet id=\"22895, 89881\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.47462061747776035, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 25, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=1701849e-0,1701849e-1>The work is \"Blue Latitudes: Boldly Going Where Captain Cook Has Gone Before,\" written by Pulitzer Prize-winning author of \"Confederates in the Attic\" who retraces the voyages of Captain James Cook</snippet>. <snippet id=1701849e-5,1701849e-6>Tony Horwitz discusses the journeys he took retracing Cook's voyages across the Pacific, and this work followed a specific route retracing the voyages across the Pacific of the British explorer</snippet>. <snippet id=1701849e-3>Tony Horwitz is a prize-winning journalist at Harvard's Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study</snippet>. <snippet id=1701849e-8>Another relevant work is \"The Wide Wide Sea\" by Hampton Sides, which offers a fuller picture of the British explorer's final voyage to the Pacific islands</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=1701849e-0,1701849e-1>The work is \"Blue Latitudes: Boldly Going Where Captain Cook Has Gone Before\" by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Tony Horwitz</snippet>, which retraces the voyages of British explorer Captain James Cook across the Pacific <snippet id=1701849e-5,1701849e-6>. Cook was from Yorkshire, a county in northern England, and his historic HMS Endeavour has been reconstructed for modern voyages <snippet id=1701849e-6>. The book follows a specific route through Pacific island countries that Cook originally visited during his explorations <snippet id=1701849e-5>. Horwitz's approach combines historical research with personal adventure travel to explore Cook's legacy <snippet id=1701849e-1>. This work differed from Horwitz's previous books by focusing on a specific exploration route across the Pacific Ocean <snippet id=1701849e-6>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 4.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.25780018909549324, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 26, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_EFHhJY4,S_NBYIjl3,S_XLulRiH\">The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated digital transformation in Human Resource Management (HRM), necessitating immediate adoption of digital platforms for remote work and online training</snippet>, with <snippet id=\"S_rm0f44F\">remote work rising from 8% to about one-third of the Italian workforce</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_sFMyq5N,S_3pi5rBi\">The pandemic challenged conventional HRM practices, demanding both conceptual and empirical attention from the scientific community</snippet> to understand its impacts on organizations. <snippet id=\"S_hGtii0p\">A study of 208 supervisory respondents revealed challenges in teamwork and productivity among HRD professionals</snippet>, highlighting the need for sustainable HRD principles to enhance employee engagement and adaptability. <snippet id=\"S_CbPhWNe\">HRM was at the heart of these global transformations, helping organizations navigate the crisis while managing people and ensuring work-life balance</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_nIz8sUp\">Research examined economic-financial impacts and psychological drivers for employees during remote working and digital transformation</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_EFHhJY4,S_CbPhWNe\">The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly accelerated digital transformation in Human Resource Management (HRM), with remote work necessitating immediate adoption of digital platforms and e-HRM practices</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NBYIjl3,S_XLulRiH,Sn_rm0f44F\">Research indicates this acceleration has been global in scope, with one study noting remote work rising from 8% to about one-third of the Italian workforce</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_3pi5rBi,S_sFMyq5N\">Systematic literature reviews characterize COVID-19 as a complicator-disruptor-enabler that challenged conventional HRM practices, demanding both conceptual and empirical attention</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_CbPhWNe\">The crisis established lasting implications including more flexible, remote-friendly digital working norms that organizations must address through new policies and hybrid working models</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8262897914379803, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.16314489571899013, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 27, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_BpGBKlu\">bioRxiv does not perform peer review but implements a screening process to filter out inappropriate content and enhance submission utility</snippet>, with staff conducting internal checks including automated plagiarism detection and manual reviews for spam or inappropriate content <snippet id=\"S_BpGBKlu\">, followed by a group of experienced scientists known as bioRxiv Affiliates who further review submissions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_lUJRGnM\">Thirty-three preprint platforms were examined, with 75% providing details about their screening processes</snippet>, while some platforms like FocUS Archive and SocArxiv mentioned checks without specifics <snippet id=\"S_lUJRGnM\">. ArXiv's moderation process does not explicitly address dual-use or safety concerns</snippet>, which raises potential issues since it includes quantitative biology <snippet id=\"S_x0z3ScE\">. Preprints, while lacking formal peer review, undergo various quality control measures on platforms like arXiv</snippet>, including author registration, endorsement, completeness, relevance, plagiarism, language appropriateness, and compliance with ethical and legal standards <snippet id=\"S_bwHcUi2\">. Each preprint includes a warning indicating the lack of peer review, and MedRxiv specifically advises against relying on these preliminary reports for health-related decisions</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_xBncrdH\">. Despite the absence of peer review, preprints are still valuable to the research community, though they do not guarantee external quality control</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_bwHcUi2\">. Some platforms, such as bioRxiv and medRxiv, specifically reject submissions that could pose health or biosecurity risks</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_lUJRGnM\">. Only three platforms (Research Square, bioRxiv, medRxiv) specifically check for unfounded medical claims</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_hwAFWJw\">arXiv performs pre-peer review screening that includes plagiarism detection, formatting verification, scope assessment, and evaluation of language quality</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_bwHcUi2\">but does not conduct formal peer review before posting</snippet>. Key quality control measures on arXiv include <snippet id=\"S_bwHcUi2\">author registration and endorsement requirements, completeness checks, relevance verification, plagiarism detection, and compliance with ethical and legal standards</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_x0z3ScE\">arXiv's moderation process does not explicitly address dual-use or safety concerns</snippet>, unlike bioRxiv and medRxiv which screen for material that could endanger public health or pose biosecurity risks. <snippet id=\"S_xBncrdH\">ArXiv emphasizes that its materials are not peer-reviewed and should not be used as reliable sources for clinical practice without expert consultation</snippet>. Despite the absence of peer review, preprints on arXiv still undergo screening as a \"coarse filter\" to exclude nonscientific or inappropriate content, <snippet id=\"S_bwHcUi2\">though this does not guarantee validity of the content</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8501350973632722, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 13.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.17506754868163607, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 28, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_VT53XSR\">Brown (2003) identifies four types of reading: Perceptive (focusing on letters and words), Selective (assessing recognition through tasks like multiple choice), Interactive (involving engagement with longer texts), and Extensive (encompassing longer readings such as articles and books)</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_VT53XSR\">Additionally, Brown outlines seven types of reading assessments including Cloze tasks, Impromptu reading with comprehension questions, Short answer tasks, Editing longer texts, Scanning for specific information, Ordering tasks, and Information transfer</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_kOME3NW\">The interactive reading task is a framework for AIG and automatic scoring of reading comprehension passages with questions associated with the passage, requiring test takers to sequentially interact with the text</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_n6aoW4b\">Reading is defined as an interactive process involving both lower-level (bottom-up) and higher-level (top-down) processes, with bottom-up process including recognizing written words and grammatical information essential for creating meaning</snippet>. Note: The search results do not contain specific information distinguishing \"intensive\" reading from \"extensive\" reading categories, as the available snippets focus on the four types (perceptive, selective, interactive, extensive) rather than a separate intensive category.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_VT53XSR\">Brown (2003) identifies four types of reading: (1) Perceptive, focusing on components like letters and words; (2) Selective, assessing recognition of language features through tasks like multiple choice; (3) Interactive, involving engagement with longer texts; and (4) Extensive, encompassing longer readings such as articles and books.</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_VT53XSR\">Additionally, Brown outlines seven types of reading assessments: (1) Cloze tasks, where readers fill in missing words; (2) Impromptu reading with comprehension questions; (3) Short answer tasks requiring brief responses; (4) Editing longer texts for errors; (5) Scanning for specific information; (6) Ordering tasks to arrange sentences into a coherent story; and (7) Information transfer, which involves interpreting charts, maps, and diagrams.</snippet>\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7760356174990322, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.13801780874951608, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 29, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_XNr0nkb\">On the PUBHEALTH dataset, the SciBERT-based prediction method achieved the highest macro F1, precision, and accuracy scores for automatic medical fact-checking</snippet>, demonstrating that domain-specific models outperform general BERT on health fact-checking benchmarks. <snippet id=\"S_wkwj2K0\">When fine-tuned on the PUBHEALTH dataset, SCIBERT and BIOBERT versions showed improved performance compared to original BERT for fact-checking label prediction</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_TGatGL2\">BIOBERT demonstrates higher accuracies than BERT for biomedical domain tasks including named entity recognition and question answering</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_TGatGL2\">SCIBERT outperforms BERT in five NLP tasks including named entity recognition and text classification</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HA4fMd9\">Datasets such as COVIDFact, HealthVer, and SCIFACT verify COVID-19 claims against scientific literature, providing testbeds for comparing domain-specific models</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_RXgSB12\">Training deep learning-based fact-checking models on real-world and in-domain claims substantially improves performance compared to training on synthetic and open-domain claims</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nResearch on medical fact-checking shows that domain-specific language models often outperform general models on health claim verification tasks. On the PUBHEALTH dataset, the SciBERT-based prediction method achieved the highest macro F1, precision, and accuracy scores compared to BERT and other baseline models <snippet id=\"S_XNr0nkb\">. BioBERT demonstrates higher accuracies than BERT for biomedical tasks including named entity recognition, relation extraction, and question answering in the biomedical domain <snippet id=\"S_TGatGL2\">. Similarly, SCIBERT shows improvements over the original BERT and outperforms it in five NLP tasks including named entity recognition and text classification <snippet id=\"S_TGatGL2\">. However, performance varies by dataset; on SCIFACT, RoBERTa-large achieved the best performance among the sentence encoders tested, including SciBERT and BioMedRoBERTa <snippet id=\"S_XNr0nkb\">. Additionally, training deep learning models on real-world medical claims substantially improves performance compared to models trained on synthetic and open-domain claims <snippet id=\"S_LfqoLmq\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7223828019149128, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.11119140095745642, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 30, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_PPQIApQ,S_NrHpXwf,S_u8WEXgX\">The waterfall model is a traditional, linear, and sequential software development approach where progress flows downward through distinct phases such as requirements analysis, design, implementation, testing, and maintenance</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_NrHpXwf,S_u8WEXgX\">each phase must be completed before the next begins, with outputs of one phase serving as inputs for subsequent phases</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_PPQIApQ\">substantial changes in requirements typically cannot be accommodated without significant disruption</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NiTtWnz\">In contrast, the iterative model allows for initial simplified implementations that evolve through multiple iterations</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_NiTtWnz\">emphasizing incremental changes where projects are divided into smaller parts that undergo repeated cycles of planning, design, implementation, testing, and evaluation</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_NiTtWnz\">each iteration enhances the previous work, allowing for more flexibility and quicker adjustments compared to the waterfall model</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_u8WEXgX\">A hybrid Waterfall-Iterative approach, also noted as \"Waterative,\" integrates Waterfall's structured phases with iterative execution, including requirement analysis for each iteration and feedback loops</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_PPQIApQ,S_NrHpXwf\">The traditional waterfall model is defined as a linear, sequential software development approach where each phase must be completed before the next begins, with strict documentation and sign-offs required between stages</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_u8WEXgX,S_I9hMD9f\">In contrast, \"iterative waterfall\" (also called \"Waterative\") executes waterfall phases iteratively as the project elaborates, incorporating requirement analysis for each iteration with design followed by product backlog creation using Scrum framework's agile principles</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NiTtWnz\">The iterative model allows incremental changes and divided project parts with repeated cycles of planning, design, implementation, testing, and evaluation, enabling more flexibility and quicker adjustments compared to waterfall</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PPQIApQ,S_NrHpXwf\">A key distinction is that waterfall accommodates substantial requirement changes with significant disruption, whereas iterative approaches emphasize evolving implementations with each cycle enhancing previous work</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NiTtWnz,S_u8WEXgX\">Waterfall is characterized by sequential phases requiring strict documentation and end products per stage, while iterative/wative approaches include unit testing during sprints followed by systems integration testing and user acceptance testing</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NrHpXwf\">Waterfall approaches work well for simple, straightforward projects, but are less suitable for complex projects requiring flexibility</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.807727221150573, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.1538636105752865, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 31, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_4uYEvn0,S_Dw5oN7X\">Digital transformation in banking is linked to enhanced financial inclusion and operational efficiency, with research showing digital payments have a strong relationship with both financial inclusion and operational efficiency of financial institutions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_IbmwH6I,S_kq45sEh\">Digital banking has enhanced financial inclusion by offering accessible and affordable services, particularly through mobile banking and digital wallets that serve underserved populations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_AlV0rKF\">Empirical studies in Sub-Saharan Africa found that digital financial inclusion positively correlates with bank stability and negatively correlates with non-performing loans</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_cecyK56\">The economic impact of financial inclusion varies by region, with digital financial inclusion being more significant in low-income countries due to inefficiencies in traditional banking</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ipBYA4S\">However, research on Fintech's impact on financial inclusion is limited, particularly regarding effects across different demographics and regions, and traditional financial inclusion metrics often fail to adequately measure digital financial inclusion</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Gkl8lvJ\">Mobile banking and e-payments have increased financial inclusion among developing countries, though challenges remain including consumer protection, data inequality, and regulatory arbitrage</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Q1OC4lz\">Digitalisation of business processes can promote financial inclusion and positively impact economic growth, though there is uncertainty regarding whether digital financial services are genuinely inclusive for women and underprivileged communities</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_4uYEvn0,S_Dw5oN7X>S digital transformation in banking is defined as the application of innovative technologies, particularly digital payments, to enhance financial inclusion and operational efficiency</snippet>, with research showing it <snippet id=S_4uYEvn0>S diminishes the impact of income levels on financial service access</snippet> while enhancing account ownership and savings. <snippet id=S_cecyK56>S Economic impact varies by income level: in low-income countries, digital financial inclusion is more significant than traditional finance due to banking inefficiencies</snippet>, whereas in middle-income countries both forms complement each other. <snippet id=S_AlV0rKF>S Digital financial inclusion positively correlates with bank stability (z-score) and negatively with non-performing loans</snippet>, though increased bank competition negatively affects stability according to the competition-fragility hypothesis. <snippet id=S_kq45sEh>S Challenges include data security, regulatory issues, and user digital literacy</snippet>, with findings from Sub-Saharan Africa, ASEAN, and EU contexts; <snippet id=S_cecyK56,S_Q1OC4lz>Yemen-specific evidence is sparse and limited by fragile state conditions</snippet>. <snippet id=S_AlV0rKF>S Policy recommendations emphasize promoting digital financial literacy, regulatory frameworks treating digital and traditional finance as complementary</snippet>, and strategic measures to maintain bank stability alongside inclusion initiatives.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.797833025365362, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.148916512682681, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 32, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">Never Look Back (1952) is a British courtroom melodrama produced by Exclusive Films and Hammer Film Productions</snippet>, <snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">distributed by Exclusive Films with a UK release on 26 May 1952</snippet>. <snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">The cast includes Hugh Sinclair, who appears as the fiancé of the lead character</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">Harry H. Corbett has a brief appearance as a policeman</snippet>. <snippet id=\"55190\">The film was directed by Francis Searle and runs 73 minutes</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">The 1952 British drama Never Look Back was produced by Hammer Film Productions and distributed by Exclusive Films</snippet>. <snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">Harry H. Corbett appears in a brief supporting role as a policeman</snippet>. <snippet id=\"55190,81776,86941\">Hugh Sinclair is confirmed as a main star in the cast, playing the prosecutor</snippet>. The production ran for 73 minutes and was shot at Mancunian Studios between September and October 1951.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.29262335124572547, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 33, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_qpkzufM,S_DYXy4QI,S_0G85ZD2\">The disposition index is a validated measure of beta-cell function that integrates insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion, calculated as the product of insulinogenic index and insulin sensitivity indices such as Matsuda or Gutt</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_UBkWxKP\">this index has been applied in adult studies to assess beta-cell function in relation to visceral adipose tissue and insulin response during glucose challenges</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_C0qRRFi,S_0G85ZD2\">Adipose tissue insulin resistance, assessed through plasma free fatty acid turnover and fasting insulin, has been incorporated into disposition index calculations to improve the assessment of beta-cell function in obese adults</snippet>, with strong correlations found between adipose insulin resistance and both first and second phases of glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. <snippet id=\"S_UBkWxKP\">These studies demonstrate that beta-cell function metrics including early-phase insulin secretion and disposition index can be characterized across different insulin resistance compartments in adult populations</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe provided search results do not directly address the relationship between visceral adipose tissue (VAT) accumulation and pancreatic beta-cell function metrics in humans. The snippets primarily define how beta-cell function indices like the disposition index, insulinogenic index, and acute insulin response are calculated from OGTT or IVGTT data <snippet id=\"S_qpkzufM,S_DYXy4QI,S_77OipMD\">the disposition index is calculated as the product of insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion measures such as the insulinogenic index</snippet>. One study suggests adipose tissue insulin resistance affects beta-cell function assessment, noting that elevated plasma free fatty acids can impair β-cell function and proposing adjustments to the disposition index to account for adipose tissue <snippet id=\"S_C0qRRFi,S_0G85ZD2\">incorporating adipose insulin resistance into assessments provides a more comprehensive index of β-cell function</snippet>. Another study reported that leptin and GM-CSF were negatively associated with the disposition index and positively correlated with BMI and hsCRP, indicating roles in inflammation and lipid metabolism <snippet id=\"S_4v3cnvh\">leptin and GM-CSF showed negative associations with the disposition index and positive correlations with BMI and inflammatory markers</snippet>. However, none of these snippets provide direct adult human evidence linking VAT or pancreatic fat specifically to beta-cell function measures like disposition index or acute insulin response as the agent was seeking.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6844320889594917, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.09221604447974582, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 34, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_FO8wyxO\">A study involving 23,377 US Facebook users during the 2020 presidential election found that reducing exposure to content from like-minded sources by one-third did not significantly affect political polarization or attitudes</snippet>, though it did increase exposure to diverse viewpoints and reduce uncivil language. <snippet id=\"S_UnNFPfs\">Research on social media feed designs compared chronological and engagement-based feeds, finding that feeds designed to reflect democratic attitudes can reduce partisan animosity, especially among weak partisans</snippet>, but may increase perceived threats to free speech. <snippet id=\"S_mUfOdDp\">A 2020 study by Guess et al. found no significant long-term effects of Facebook and Instagram's algorithms on users' affective polarization over a three-month period</snippet>, suggesting the impact of social media algorithms on long-term beliefs is complex. <snippet id=\"S_sJfbnsu\">The U.S. 2020 Facebook and Instagram Election Study provided the largest-scale evidence available to date on the effect of Facebook and Instagram access on political knowledge, attitudes, and behavior in a presidential election season</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_EIYKoMB\">Recent studies suggest that exposure to diverse perspectives can align local conflicts with broader partisan divides, and authors propose redesigning social media ranking algorithms to mitigate polarization by incorporating democratic values into their structure</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_FO8wyxO\">A study involving 23,377 US Facebook users during the 2020 presidential election found that reducing exposure to content from like-minded sources did not significantly affect political polarization or attitudes</snippet>. The intervention aimed to decrease exposure to like-minded sources by one-third, which resulted in increased exposure to diverse viewpoints and reduced uncivil language <snippet id=\"S_FO8wyxO\">but did not lead to measurable changes in eight key political attitudes, including affective polarization and belief in false claims</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UnNFPfs\">An experiment compared various feed types, including chronological and engagement-based feeds, as well as innovative designs aimed at promoting democratic values</snippet>. Findings indicate that feeds designed to reflect democratic attitudes can reduce partisan animosity, especially among weak partisans, but may inadvertently increase perceived threats to free speech among users <snippet id=\"S_UnNFPfs\">. The research also references other studies that examined the influence of exposure to like-minded sources and reshared content, noting that some studies found minimal effects on affective polarization</snippet>.\n\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8389868583623498, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.16949342918117488, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 35, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_StdTMvV\">The CLIMADA model generates sector-specific damage functions at 0.1° resolution using wind speeds above 54 km/h to assess damages on a country-year level based on International Best Track Archive for Climate Stewardship data</snippet>, but this does not specifically document FUND/PAGE IAM integration. <snippet id=\"S_IAQSdJr\">Synthetic tropical cyclone time series (1,000 years) improve flood predictions accuracy compared to historical IBTrACS data (71 years), with risk assessments showing increases in protected area, population, and monetary values</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_VGFFWS5\">The HWCM approach enhances tropical cyclone risk assessments by simulating high-resolution wind and rain fields to evaluate storm flood damages in vulnerable communities</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_kiLBoza,S_BQsrZW1,S_pppTd3w,S_GAsmDEl,S_93wqG64\">none of the provided search results contain specific documentation on how canonical IAMs (FUND, PAGE, DICE/RICE) integrate tropical cyclone or flood damage functions</snippet>. The search results focus on hazard modeling and impact assessments rather than IAM-specific damage function formulations.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nUnfortunately, the provided search results do not contain specific information about how FUND, PAGE, DICE/RICE, or other canonical IAMs incorporate extreme weather events into their damage functions. The available snippets focus on hazard modeling (CLIMADA model for tropical cyclones, mangrove flood protection services, hydrodynamic modeling) but do not document IAM integration methods <snippet id=\"S_StdTMvV\">CLIMADA model generates sector-specific damage functions using wind speeds above 54 km/h to assess damages on a country-year level</snippet>. No snippets describe how IAMs represent extremes as separate impact categories or stochastic shocks to capital/productivity, nor do they detail expected-annual-loss pipelines feeding IAM damages. There is also no evidence of empirically estimated event-specific damage functions (cyclone wind-based, flood depth–damage, heat-wave impacts) being aggregated to macro damages within specific IAM frameworks in these results.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.2654113427482627, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 36, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_6cL8am9,S_9692W5p,S_ygceipK,S_4kyiDLH\">HPV entry begins with the L1 protein binding to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) or Heparan Sulfate Syndecan (Sdc) proteoglycans (HPSG), specifically Sdc2 and Sdc4, on the cell membrane</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_9692W5p,S_ygceipK,S_4kyiDLH\">which triggers conformational changes in L1 that expose the N-terminus of the L2 protein</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_6cL8am9,S_9692W5p,S_qd5yqrp\">The exposed L2 N-terminus is then cleaved by the cellular protease furin, reducing L1's affinity for HSPGs</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_9692W5p,S_qd5yqrp\">and this process facilitates internalization through clathrin-independent endocytosis, similar to micropinocytosis</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_9692W5p,S_06dh88l\">Virus access to the basal layer of epithelium requires disruption of the epidermal architecture such as wounds, abrasions or microlesions</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_06dh88l,S_sYaeZRH\">where attachment receptors including laminin-332, heparan sulfate proteoglycans, and tetraspanins CD151 along with integrins α3β1 and α6β4 are involved in the entry process</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_6cL8am9,S_qd5yqrp\">Following endocytosis, the virus reaches the nucleus within approximately 24 hours via post-endocytic trafficking through endosomes, the Golgi network, and the endoplasmic reticulum</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_6cL8am9\">where L2 protein interacts with γ-secretase protease and p120-catenin to maintain episome integrity during retrograde trafficking to the Trans Golgi Network</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nHuman Papillomavirus (HPV) entry typically begins at microlesions in the epithelium where the major capsid protein L1 binds to laminin-332 or heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) on the basement membrane <S_9692W5p, S_06dh88l, S_ygceipK, S_4kyiDLH>. This initial attachment induces L1 conformational changes, often facilitated by Cyclophilin B, which exposes the N-terminus of the minor capsid protein L2 <S_9692W5p, S_ygceipK, S_sYaeZRH>. Proteolytic processing follows, where kallikrein-8 cleaves L1 and the cellular protease furin cleaves L2, reducing HSPG affinity and preparing the virion for internalization <S_6cL8am9, S_9692W5p, S_qd5yqrp>. Secondary interactions with receptors such as annexin A2, integrin α6, and tetraspanins like CD151 facilitate clathrin-independent endocytosis or macropinocytosis-like uptake <S_6cL8am9, S_Fgb4QWW, S_06dh88l>. Once internalized, the virus undergoes retrograde trafficking through endosomes and the Golgi network to reach the nucleus for genome release and replication <S_6cL8am9, S_IzJhLSD, S_qd5yqrp>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7461926931271207, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.12309634656356032, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 37, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_FvypqMm\">The Laplace mechanism has been applied to preserve privacy in financial data like banking credit transactions by adding noise to numeric query results</snippet>, ensuring the output remains unaffected by the addition or removal of a single record. <snippet id=\"S_u2uIkcN\">This mechanism ensures differential privacy for numerical data with calibrated Laplace noise, enabling privacy-preserving analysis in banking credit transactions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_gaV539r\">Dwork et al. [28] proposed the Laplace mechanism for scientific data analysis that takes a database, function f, and privacy parameter ε as inputs, returning the true output plus Laplacian noise</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_5htVDhJ\">The Laplace mechanism is considered one of the most generic mechanisms to achieve differential privacy, with Laplace noise added to function outputs to produce differentially private results</snippet>. However, the provided search results do not contain explicit information about these applications being published in the specific high-impact journals mentioned (IEEE Transactions, ACM Transactions, Nature Scientific Data, PNAS, Management Science, Operations Research, Information Systems Research), or details on how the Laplace mechanism was specifically applied to financial data in those journals.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe search results provide limited evidence of concrete case studies from high-impact journals applying the Laplace mechanism specifically to financial/banking/credit transaction data. Two snippets mention financial applications: S_FvypqMm notes the Laplace mechanism can preserve \"user privacy in financial data like banking credit transactions\" within parking recommender system research <snippet id=S_FvypqMm>, and S_u2uIkcN states the mechanism enables \"privacy-preserving analysis in banking credit transactions\" for prospect theoretic analysis <snippet id=S_u2uIkcN>. However, neither snippet explicitly confirms publication in high-impact journals like IEEE Transactions, ACM Transactions, or major finance/economics journals that the agent prioritized <snippet id=S_kR7QkfG,S_XWjGWtA,S_3Vks9VQ>. Most other search results discuss the Laplace mechanism in medical data <snippet id=S_kR7QkfG>, social networks <snippet id=S_XWjGWtA,S_gaV539r>, or power flow systems <snippet id=S_3Vks9VQ> rather than verified financial case studies. Additional searches targeting specific journals or verified financial domains would be needed to fully address the agent's goal.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8659597607395324, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.18297988036976617, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 38, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"21438\">Jitendra Narayan (20 Dec 1886–20 Dec 1922) was the second son of Maharaja Nripendra Narayan of Cooch‑Behar</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"21438\">he founded the Nripendra Narayan Memorial High School in 1916</snippet>. <snippet id=\"21438\">As \"Maharaja of Cooch‑Behar\" he played one first‑class cricket match (Maharaja of Cooch‑Behar's XI v Lord Willingdon's XI) on 18 Mar 1918, scoring 33 runs in total</snippet>. <snippet id=\"21438\">There is no mention in the provided sources of involvement with a \"Prince of Wales XI\"</snippet>. <snippet id=\"57275\">Details regarding a namesake Nripendra Narayan Academy and links to cricketing activity with a Prince of Wales's XI remain unconfirmed in available sources</snippet>. <snippet id=\"71327\">Claims about founding a Nripendra Narayan Academy or first-class cricket/Prince of Wales XI involvement are unverified/conflicting with the provided content</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nJitendra Narayan was the second son of Maharaja Nripendra Narayan of Cooch‑Behar <snippet id=\"21438\">and founded the Nripendra Narayan Memorial High School in 1916</snippet> as an educational institution named after his father. He played one first‑class cricket match for \"Maharaja of Cooch‑Behar's XI\" against Lord Willingdon's XI on 18 Mar 1918, scoring 33 runs total <snippet id=\"21438\">. There is no mention in the provided sources of involvement with a \"Prince of Wales XI\"</snippet>, which contradicts one key element of the hypothesis that the match was against the Prince of Wales' XI during the 1921–22 India tour. Biographical details indicate he was linked to Cooch‑Behar Palace (also known as Victor Jubilee Palace) as the ruling Maharaja of Cooch‑Behar during his lifetime <snippet id=\"21438\">, though succession by his offspring is not confirmed in the available snippets. Some sources present conflicting or fragmentary information about the academy founder and cricketing claims <snippet id=\"57275\">, with sibling records listing him as having younger brothers but not documenting all biographical details consistently <snippet id=\"71327\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.5150519978106185, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 39, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_gnrEepM\">Studies on monoclonal antibody quantification in plasma indicate that using two stable signature peptides (SPs) is important for reliability, with protein-level and hybrid calibrations achieving good accuracy (error < 10%) and consistent results between SPs (deviations < 15%)</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_gnrEepM\">peptide-level calibration showed significant negative biases (−23 to −62%) and discordant results between SPs</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_BFG6czq\">For antibody-drug conjugates, two peptides from the tryptic digest containing a portion of the CDR were identified and used as signature peptides, with extended stable isotope labeled (SIL) signature peptides used as internal standards</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_kjDg3lX\">Bottom-up LC-MS/MS assays for monoclonal antibodies typically focus on surrogate peptides from Fab or Fc regions, with concentrations determined using multiple reaction monitoring transitions for two unique surrogate peptides relative to standards</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_XWxG38W\">A high-throughput strategy was developed to select and validate surrogate peptides for quantifying protein expression levels, using a minimum of three light and two heavy peptide fragments to enhance reproducibility</snippet>. Overall, the evidence suggests that while single signature peptides can be used in specific cases, <snippet id=\"S_gnrEepM\">using two SPs is emphasized for reliability</snippet> in therapeutic protein LC-MS/MS quantification.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nCurrent evidence suggests that using two signature peptides is recommended over a single peptide for reliable mAb quantification in serum. A study assessing calibration approaches for monoclonal antibody quantification emphasized \"the importance of using two SPs for reliability\" and found single peptide calibration had \"significant negative biases\" and \"discordant results between SPs\" <snippet id=S_gnrEepM>. Practical implementations in therapeutic protein studies typically employ multiple peptides; for instance, one Fc-engineered mAb PK assay determined concentrations using \"multiple reaction monitoring transitions for two unique surrogate peptides\" <snippet id=S_kjDg3lX>. Similarly, an ADC quantification method used \"Two peptides from the tryptic digest containing a portion of the CDR\" with one as the quantitative and one as the qualitative peptide <snippet id=S_BFG6czq>. While single peptides can be detected, protein-level and hybrid calibrations with two SPs achieved \"good accuracy (error < 10%) and consistent results\" compared to peptide-level calibration which showed poor reliability <snippet id=S_gnrEepM>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7213919413919414, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.1106959706959707, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 40, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_SvIkmlU,S_rtPxhtT\">Umbrella reviews indicate that the time of day for resistance training does not significantly affect increases in muscle strength and mass, as both morning and evening training yield similar hypertrophy adaptations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_JKFS2Wu\">However, one 24-week study found that evening resistance training resulted in a larger muscle cross-sectional area in men, though Sedliak et al.'s similar trends were statistically insignificant</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HhyT8Rz\">Research suggests that the time of day for strength training can influence performance particularly in relation to an individual's chronotype, with morning training tending to reduce diurnal variation in performance while evening training enhances it</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_gRYJWoz\">Time-of-day exercise has profound impacts on cardiometabolic and body composition outcomes that differentially manifest in women and men, with morning exercise in women enhancing fat loss and evening exercise in men lowering blood pressure</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_SvIkmlU,S_rtPxhtT\">Overall, the current evidence suggests that personal preference should guide training timing, with more research needed to verify if differences exist between training in the morning versus evening hours</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nUmbrella reviews indicate that increases in muscle strength and mass do not significantly differ between morning and evening resistance training <snippet id=S_rtPxhtT,S_SvIkmlU>. Acute performance metrics typically peak around 6:00 p.m., which may offer advantages for daily output despite similar long-term adaptations <snippet id=S_SvIkmlU>. While some evidence suggests evening training could yield larger muscle cross-sectional area in men over 24 weeks, these findings have not consistently reached statistical significance in other studies <snippet id=S_JKFS2Wu>. Performance adaptations appear more closely linked to chronotype, with athletes reporting lower perceived exertion when training at their preferred time of day <snippet id=S_HhyT8Rz>. Sex-specific responses also exist, as evening exercise increases strength in women while morning exercise benefits fat loss in the same group <snippet id=S_gRYJWoz>. Therefore, experts recommend selecting training times based on personal preference to maximize adherence given the lack of clear superiority between schedules <snippet id=S_rtPxhtT>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7459873086972751, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.12299365434863756, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 41, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_krnNJsl\">Digital health equity training is recognized as essential for healthcare professionals, particularly in telehealth and telerehabilitation contexts, to address socioeconomic gaps and barriers related to cultural, social, and digital literacy</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_rBaa6iD\">Research indicates that health providers may lack training and competencies in consideration of digital health equity, along with cultural humility to understand how patients and communities experience technology</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_TwqA5Qh\">While standardized telehealth competencies for advanced practice nursing are currently missing, frameworks like the Four P's of Telehealth (planning, preparing, providing, and performance evaluation) have been developed to guide competency-based education</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_VrMxYXW\">Studies highlight the importance of structured, evidence-based training for healthcare professionals to ensure competency in delivering telehealth services, with recommendations for integrating digital health training into pre-registration qualifications</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_DUMUv4Q\">Digital navigators—individuals trained to assist healthcare teams with digital health technology implementation—require specific competencies and a proposed 10-hour training and certification process addresses this gap</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ow0RlxD\">Telehealth has the potential to reduce healthcare access gaps for isolated and rural populations, but it may inadvertently exacerbate disparities for disadvantaged groups who lack resources such as broadband internet access and digital literacy</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_rBaa6iD>Providers may lack training and competencies in consideration of digital health equity and cultural humility</snippet>, while <snippet id=S_paP0n66,S_ChDg9cS>health policies must strengthen telehealth training to accommodate language barriers, cultural considerations, and varying levels of digital literacy</snippet>. <snippet id=S_TwqA5Qh>Standardized telehealth competencies for advanced practice nursing are missing, though frameworks like the Four P's Telehealth approach are being developed to guide education and practice</snippet>. <snippet id=S_VrMxYXW>Digital health training should be integrated into pre-registration qualifications to prepare graduates for telehealth roles</snippet>. <snippet id=S_DUMUv4Q>Emerging roles like digital navigators require specific training and certification to support clinical teams with technology integration</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7807047264102999, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.14035236320514993, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 42, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_PiVm5fQ\">Mepiquat chloride (MC) has been applied to cotton seeds at five different doses (0, 3, 6, 9, and 12 g kg-1 seed) in greenhouse experiments to study its effects on initial plant growth</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_PiVm5fQ\">but the application decreased shoot length while having no significant effect on dry matter production, root length, shoot:root ratio, or leaf area:root length ratio</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hyBY58K\">MC is effective in controlling excessive cotton growth, significantly reducing plant height and node number in relation to application rate up to 45 g ha-1</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_hyBY58K\">with leaf area growth rate, total node number, and plant height decreasing linearly from 0 to 30 µg g-1 concentrations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_7sCukyL\">MC is commonly used in China's cotton belt and worldwide to improve fiber quality and seed yields</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_7sCukyL\">increasing leaf thickness, reducing leaf area, and shortening internodes to create a more dense plant architecture</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hyBY58K\">Multiple applications are commonly employed to manage cotton growth, starting when the first bud reaches a diameter of 3 mm, typically 6 to 10 days after bud formation begins</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hyBY58K\">Efficacy is highly dependent on environmental factors, particularly temperature, with optimal response at 30 ºC during the day and 20 ºC at night</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_PiVm5fQ\">Mepiquat chloride (MC) has been studied as a cotton seed treatment, with greenhouse experiments applying doses of 0, 3, 6, 9 and 12 g kg -1 seed</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PiVm5fQ\">The application of MC to cotton seeds decreased shoot length but had no significant effect on dry matter production, root length, shoot:root ratio or leaf area: root length ratio</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PiVm5fQ\">Thus, the application of MC to cotton seeds is not expected to have a deleterious effect on plant water acquisition</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_7sCukyL\">MC is commonly used worldwide as a growth regulator to improve fiber quality and seed yields</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hyBY58K\">For foliar applications, MC is effective at reducing plant height up to 45 g ha −1</snippet>, though seed treatment studies used much lower rates (up to 12 g per kg seed). <snippet id=\"S_12ZluAp\">At higher foliar doses (50-125 g ha -1), MC reduces plant height, leaf area, total above ground dry matter and number of bolls</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.978646517739816, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.23932325886990802, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 43, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"51627,69934,74289\">Amy Tan's 1989 novel The Joy Luck Club centers on fraught mother-daughter bonds shaped by immigration, cultural clash, and generational gaps</snippet>. <snippet id=\"69934,74289\">The novel weaves sixteen interlocking stories about four Chinese immigrant mothers and their American-born daughters</snippet>. <snippet id=\"51627,69934,74289\">Central themes include trauma, sacrifice, and unmet expectations, with Chinese tradition and silence clashing against American individualism and limited understanding</snippet>. <snippet id=\"51627,69934,74289\">The narrative moves toward reconciliation through communication, empathy, and the recognition of shared histories and identities</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"51627,69934,74289\">Amy Tan's The Joy Luck Club is a 1989 novel that centers on fraught mother‑daughter bonds shaped by immigration, cultural clash, and generational gaps</snippet>. <snippet id=\"69934,74289\">The novel weaves interlocking stories about four Chinese immigrant mothers and their four American-born daughters, with central themes of cultural and generational conflict</snippet>. <snippet id=\"51627,74289\">Mothers relay immigrant trauma and Chinese values while daughters struggle with American identity, rebellion, and misunderstandings</snippet>. <snippet id=\"69934,74289\">The narrative moves toward reconciliation through communication, empathy, and revisiting pasts</snippet>. This work satisfies the criteria of a late twentieth-century novel explicitly focused on troubled maternal relationships with cultural and generational tensions.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 4.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.30839949853740073, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 44, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_386ZR9h\">The study utilized high-throughput single-nucleus RNA-seq (snRNA-seq) to analyze cell type composition in the adult mouse brain, focusing on 92 anatomical locations from 55 mice, with a median of 4,884 unique molecular identifiers per profile</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_386ZR9h\">The analysis included nearly equal representation of male and female mice, with minimal batch effects, achieving approximately 90% saturation in cell type discovery</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_386ZR9h\">This comprehensive approach provides insights into the diverse cell types present in the mouse prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, relevant for understanding the effects of substances like ketamine on brain function</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_iTfCBaw\">Transcriptomic profiling of complex tissues by single-nucleus RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) affords some advantages over single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), including less biased cellular coverage and ability to apply to archived frozen specimens</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_KNwlTux\">Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and single-nucleus RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) are advanced techniques used to study the transcriptomic landscape of the brain, including the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, particularly in the context of psychiatric disorders</snippet>. However, the provided search results do not contain specific quantitative findings on ketamine-induced cell-type-specific transcriptional changes in PFC or hippocampus; they primarily establish technical and general biological context for single-cell/snRNA-seq approaches in mouse brain.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_iTfCBaw,S_386ZR9h,S_hu2Og7m\">The provided search results do not contain scRNA-seq evidence on cell-type-specific transcriptional changes in mouse brain regions after antidepressant administration</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_iTfCBaw\">While some snippets compare snRNA-seq and scRNA-seq methodologies in mouse cortex, they do not include antidepressant treatment data</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_386ZR9h\">One study profiles 4,388,420 nuclei across 92 mouse brain locations but only mentions ketamine as a potential substance of interest without providing actual treatment results</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hu2Og7m\">Another snippet discusses rodent models for psychiatric disorders and mentions scRNA-seq as a tool, but provides no specific ketamine or SSRI transcriptional findings</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_sBVDz14\">Human MDD post-mortem snRNA-seq data is presented instead of mouse antidepressant intervention studies</snippet>. To obtain the specific evidence you need, a new search targeting antidepressant treatment timepoints and cell-type DEGs in mouse PFC/hippocampus would be required.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7574084372765552, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.12870421863827758, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 45, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_vKl66cs,S_t1UFtY4\">Community-led adaptive reuse initiatives in the Netherlands are supported by supportive legislation such as the 2010 'crisis and recovery act' and the 2016 'heritage act', which facilitate public-private partnerships and citizen participation in heritage conservation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_kl9jhfa\">A study analyzing 53 adaptive reuse cases since 2014 found that 96% of stakeholders affirm the importance of adaptive reuse for preserving cultural values, with increased private sector involvement and 65% of cases reporting public engagement during early project stages</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_0hvikSw,S_t1UFtY4\">Adaptive reuse avoids wasteful demolition and new construction processes, reducing raw material use, energy consumption, waste, and carbon emissions while curbing air pollutants</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ZEzeufE\">Iconic projects like Amsterdam's Westergasfabriek and Rotterdam's Van Nelle Fabriek demonstrate how adaptive reuse enhances social, economic, and environmental benefits through community-oriented regeneration of historic waterfronts and city centers</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_R69NOII\">However, there is a noted disconnect between preserving cultural values and perceived circularity performance, indicating a limited understanding of circularity frameworks among stakeholders</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_vKl66cs\">The Netherlands' adaptive reuse program, initiated with central government commitment to heritage investment as part of its 'heritage counts' 2018−21 policy, has made adaptive reuse the most viable option for spatial development amid economic crises</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nIn the Netherlands, <snippet id=\"S_vKl66cs,S_t1UFtY4\">community-led adaptive reuse is supported by policies such as the 2010 'crisis and recovery act' that reposition local authorities as facilitators</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_R69NOII\">public engagement rates reached 65% of cases following the 2016 'heritage act'</snippet>. Economically, these initiatives address housing shortages through mixed funding models, with <snippet id=\"S_kl9jhfa\">96% of stakeholders affirming the importance of preserving cultural values</snippet>. Environmentally, <snippet id=\"S_t1UFtY4\">the national targets 50% circularity in the construction sector by 2030</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_0hvikSw\">achieved through reuse practices that reduce waste and carbon emissions</snippet>. Socially, <snippet id=\"S_ZEzeufE\">projects like Amsterdam's Westergasfabriek transform heritage into spaces enhancing community wellbeing</snippet>, though <snippet id=\"S_R69NOII\">current circularity performance often neglects broader socio-economic factors</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7418754107938362, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.12093770539691813, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 46, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Q6ina6d\">The Instructional Material Motivation Survey (IMMS) with 36 questions has been used in blended teaching methodologies research, though the study involved undergraduate students in IT in Business courses rather than nursing or health professions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hX0trSo\">A blended learning smoking cessation intervention study with nursing students in South Korea found enhanced autonomous motivation and perceived competence, but did not use ARCS/IMMS instruments</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_N6iFqRQ\">A study of online learning on nursing students in South Korea focused on nurses' knowledge of motivation rather than using IMMS or ARCS measures</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_sojw4wD\">Research on blended and flipped learning in nursing education exists, but does not specifically report using IMMS/CIS subscales for interest or engagement</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Nv2DGCg\">A qualitative study on blended learning in nursing education examined motivation regulation strategies but did not employ ARCS-based measures</snippet>. The search results do not provide direct evidence of IMMS or ARCS instruments specifically applied to nursing or health professions in blended/e-learning contexts.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nOne search result confirms the application of the ARCS model using the Instructional Material Motivation Survey (IMMS) in a blended learning context, but the study participants were enrolled in IT in Business courses rather than health professions <snippet id=S_Q6ina6d>. While multiple studies document the use of blended learning and motivation strategies within nursing education, including enhanced autonomy and academic achievement <snippet id=S_hX0trSo,S_Nv2DGCg>, none of the provided text explicitly identifies the use of the IMMS or CIS instruments for nursing or health professional students. Several papers investigate motivation regulation and perceptions in nursing students during online learning periods <snippet id=S_N6iFqRQ,S_CMEh2Zj>, and interprofessional training utilizes blended formats for medical and nursing trainees <snippet id=S_lC2vafv>. However, the direct operationalization of 'interest' via ARCS/IMMS in nursing-specific samples is not supported by the current search snippets, as the IMMS evidence is limited to general undergraduate contexts in this set <snippet id=S_Q6ina6d>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7603575184016824, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.1301787592008412, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 47, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_aUWw0r7,S_6tLta3F\">Knowledge graphs have been implemented for Electronic Health Records (EHRs) using datasets like MIMIC III with tools such as GraphDB and Protege for ontology mapping</snippet>, enabling semantic relationship capture across clinical data <snippet id=\"S_aUWw0r7\">. The implementation reduces query execution time to less than 0.15 s</snippet> and supports integration of patient-generated data and genetic information <snippet id=\"S_7vrGXF4\">. However, these snippets describe actual knowledge graph implementations rather than virtual knowledge graph approaches using semantic data dictionaries or linked codebooks</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_H6H06tT\">The EHR knowledge graph has potential to revolutionize decision-making in healthcare settings</snippet>, but specific evidence of OBDA/R2RML tools for virtual KG access to medical measurements is not present in these results. <snippet id=\"S_Bp6t1md\">An EHR-Oriented Knowledge Graph System has been proposed for efficient utilization of non-used information in routine clinical practice</snippet>, though details on semantic data dictionary or linked codebook mechanisms are not provided.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_aUWw0r7,S_6tLta3F\">Knowledge graph implementations have been developed for EHR data, including mapping datasets like MIMIC III to ontologies using Protege and creating knowledge graphs using GraphDB via RDF mapping procedures</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_aUWw0r7,S_6tLta3F\">these approaches described involve materializing knowledge graphs rather than virtual/ontology-based data access (OBDA) where relational data is accessed through mappings without materialization</snippet>. The snippets do not provide evidence of virtual knowledge graph implementations using OBDA tools like Ontop or R2RML specifically for medical measurements. <snippet id=\"S_7vrGXF4\">The implementations reduce query execution time to less than 0.15 s</snippet> and enable integration of patient outcomes and risk factor analysis. <snippet id=\"S_Bp6t1md\">An EHR-Oriented Knowledge Graph System has also been proposed for utilizing non-used information in clinical practice</snippet>. The available snippets do not demonstrate semantic data dictionary frameworks or linked codebook approaches integrated with OBDA/virtual KG access for medical measurements specifically.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9635477582846004, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.2317738791423002, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 48, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_8sUXQxV\">Hydrometallurgical recycling of LIBs typically uses precipitation as the most commonly used method after leaching, though co-precipitation of lithium can cause losses up to 30%</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_8sUXQxV\">Solvent extraction (SX) is highly effective for selective removal of elements like Co, Ni, Al, and Mn, reducing overall lithium losses to 15% compared to 30% with precipitation alone</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_I12FLcH\">Recent research shows selective solvent extraction with tailored nanosorbents and ion exchange methods can achieve high lithium uptake capacity with excellent stability over repeated cycles</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_MqwIWhe\">Precipitation with sodium carbonate remains the state-of-the-art for lithium recovery from pregnant leaching liquors, with studies investigating alternative precipitants like sodium phosphate</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_aewi150\">Nanofiltration membranes show promise for lithium recovery from battery leachates by removing multivalent cations like Mg²⁺ and Ca²⁺, improving lithium yield and reducing acid production</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_cFB3tdS\">Hydrometallurgical methods offer advantages including lower energy requirements, higher recovery rates, and improved purity compared to pyrometallurgy, though they are complex and time-consuming</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_8sUXQxV\">Precipitation as lithium carbonate is currently the most commonly used method to recover lithium after hydrometallurgical leaching of LIBs, but it can cause total lithium losses up to 30% due to co-precipitation with other metals</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_8sUXQxV\">solvent extraction methods are highly effective at reducing lithium losses to 15% overall by selectively removing elements like Co, Ni, Al, and Mn before lithium precipitation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_I12FLcH\">Selective solvent extraction using immiscible organic extractants is widely employed, where metals like nickel, manganese, cobalt, and lithium can be sequentially separated using reagents such as dimethylglyoxime, D2EHPA, ammonium oxalate, and sodium carbonate</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_MqwIWhe\">Recent research compares classic sodium carbonate precipitation with alternative agents like sodium phosphate and potassium phosphate, investigating temperature and stoichiometric factors to improve efficiency</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_aewi150\">Ion exchange technology presents significant challenges including high energy consumption and acid waste production, contributing to only 6% of batteries being recycled globally</snippet>, but <snippet id=\"S_aewi150\">nanofiltration membranes are emerging as innovative selective technologies that can effectively remove multivalent cations like Mg²⁺ and Ca²⁺ from leachates, improving lithium yield while reducing acid production</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_zrllGPw\">Hydrometallurgy remains widely used for lithium recovery with low equipment investment costs, though its suitability varies with battery chemical composition and operational scale</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6979502196193265, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.09897510980966324, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 49, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ep51C66\">A typical adult human has approximately 8 to 12 pints of blood circulating through their body</snippet>, which translates to <snippet id=\"S_ep51C66\">about 4.5 to 6.8 liters</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_6ZepFD3\">Blood volume is about 78 ml per kilogram</snippet>, which for an average adult equals <snippet id=\"S_6ZepFD3\">approximately 6.7 liters</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_SoTD265\">Most sources state the volume of blood in an average human adult as between 4.7 and 5 liters</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_h22XXil\">A typical adult has a blood volume of approximately 5 liters</snippet>, with females and males having approximately the same blood percentage by weight.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nBritannica states that a typical adult human has approximately 8 to 12 pints (about 4.5 to 6.8 liters) of blood circulating through their body <snippet id=\"S_ep51C66\">. Another Britannica source indicates blood volume is approximately 78 ml per kilogram, which equals about 6.7 litres for a man weighing 86 kg <snippet id=\"S_6ZepFD3\">. For a 154-pound person, Britannica estimates about 5.5 liters of blood <snippet id=\"S_QOkX4rw\">. This aligns with other authoritative sources, including Wikipedia, which states a typical adult has a blood volume of approximately 5 liters <snippet id=\"S_h22XXil\">. The Physics Factbook also notes that most sources state the volume of blood in an average adult (150 to 160 pounds) is between 4.7 and 5 liters <snippet id=\"S_SoTD265\">. Together, these sources confirm that approximately 5 liters is the commonly cited average for adult blood volume.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.4682698730794923, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 50, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AMKgb7w\">Alpha-Mn is described as bcc derived with I-43m symmetry and has tetrahedral interstitial sites with an interstitial fraction ranging from 0.0 to 1.0</snippet>, confirming it as a cubic structure with tetrahedral-site features. <snippet id=\"S_xHv2FdY\">Tetrahedral interstitial sites in bcc lattices are inherently non-regular and lead to tetragonal distortion of the lattice</snippet>, which reduces the ideal cubic symmetry. <snippet id=\"S_xHv2FdY\">Both octahedral and tetrahedral bcc interstices have tetragonal symmetry, indicating that tetrahedral occupation breaks the cubic Im-3m symmetry</snippet>. This confirms that alpha-Mn's I-43m phase is a distorted bcc lattice with tetrahedral interstitial environments.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nAlpha-Mn is identified as a bcc-derived cubic structure with I-43m symmetry that explicitly features tetrahedral interstitial sites <snippet id=S_AMKgb7w>. Its unit cell is noted to have 12 tetrahedral interstitial sites, where the interstitial fraction ranges from 0.0 to 1.0 in the studied system <snippet id=S_AMKgb7w>. Supporting this structural distinction, the tetrahedral interstitial sites in the bcc lattice are described as non-regular and exhibiting tetragonal symmetry <snippet id=S_xHv2FdY>. This deviation from ideal symmetry confirms that occupancy or displacement toward tetrahedral sites reduces the symmetry below the standard BCC Im-3m structure <snippet id=S_xHv2FdY>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9402661266994503, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.22013306334972518, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 51, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_mL0KRC8\">CLARITY AD was a Phase 3 trial (NCT03887455) that enrolled 1795 participants with early Alzheimer's disease who received either placebo or 10 mg/kg biweekly lecanemab for 18 months</snippet>, with <snippet id=\"S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_p20O8Yh\">lecanemab meeting its primary endpoint of CDR-SB decline, showing a between-group difference of −0.45 CDR points (27% relative effect) compared to placebo</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_VxjMD7K\">The most common adverse events included infusion reactions (26.4% vs 7.4%), ARIA-H (16.9% vs 8.9%), and ARIA-E (12.6% vs 1.7%) in the lecanemab versus placebo groups</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_mL0KRC8\">Safety data showed that ARIA incidence was significantly higher in APOE ε4 carriers than noncarriers, with APOE ε4 homozygotes experiencing 39% ARIA-H and 32.6% ARIA-E rates</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_i9d1QdD\">Secondary endpoints included ADAS-Cog14 (difference −1.44), ADCOMS (difference −0.05), and ADCS-MCI-ADL (difference 2), with amyloid PET showing a mean change of −55.48 centiloids in the lecanemab group</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_f3IR99F\">Lecanemab demonstrated a highly statistically significant decrease in clinical decline on global cognitive and functional scales at 18 months, with reduced amyloid plaque burden</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_Hn8S1xo,S_ipB4qty,S_i9d1QdD>The CLARITY-AD trial primary endpoint showed lecanemab reduced CDR-SB decline by 0.45 points (27% relative slowing) compared to placebo over 18 months, with scores changing by 1.21 versus 1.66 respectively.</snippet> <snippet id=S_ipB4qty,S_VxjMD7K>Overall ARIA-E rates were 12.5-12.6% for lecanemab versus 1.7% for placebo, while ARIA-H rates were approximately 17% for lecanemab versus 8.7-9.0% for placebo.</snippet> <snippet id=S_ipB4qty>Symptomatic events were observed in 2.8% for ARIA-E and 0.7% for ARIA-H in the lecanemab group.</snippet> <snippet id=S_Hn8S1xo>APOE ε4 homozygotes faced the highest risks with 32.6% ARIA-E and 39% ARIA-H incidence, compared to 10.9%/14% for heterozygotes and 5.4%/11.9% for non-carriers.</snippet>\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.719626168224299, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.10981308411214953, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 52, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_JXQqQJ9\">A meta-analysis of interleaving found robust evidence that interleaving is more effective than blocking, with an intermediate effect size (Hedges' g = 0.42)</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_MvO6XoQ\">another meta-analysis indicated a medium interleaving effect (Hedge's g = 0.67) in education</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HjbjDyG\">Interleaving enhances long-term retention by promoting discriminative-contrast learning</snippet>, though students often perceive it as more difficult. <snippet id=\"S_6doaVxd\">Research showed participants' performance in spaced (interleaved) study was significantly better than massed study in both short and long-term retention conditions</snippet>, with the difference being greatest during initial blocks for short-term retention and middle blocks for long-term retention. <snippet id=\"S_JXQqQJ9\">The effectiveness of interleaving depends on material characteristics, retention interval length, and successive versus simultaneous presentation</snippet>, with most effective for subtle rather than pronounced category differences. <snippet id=\"S_qfcbv6y,S_F4O9YDZ\">Additional meta-analyses in education focus on broader learning outcomes including one-shot library sessions and online versus offline learning</snippet>, though specific retention data for these studies is not detailed in the snippets.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nMeta-analytic evidence indicates interleaving produces robust effects in education, with Brunmair and Richter (2019) finding an intermediate effect size (Hedges' g = 0.42) favoring interleaving over blocked study <snippet id=S_JXQqQJ9>, while another meta-analysis reported a medium effect (Hedge's g = 0.67) in education contexts <snippet id=S_MvO6XoQ>. Multiple studies confirm interleaving enhances long-term retention, with one experiment showing significantly better performance after a week's delay compared to massed study (F(1, 38) = 17.43, p < .001, ηp² = .31) <snippet id=S_6doaVxd>. The effect is moderated by retention interval length, material characteristics, and type of learning material, with interleaving being most effective for categories showing subtle rather than pronounced differences <snippet id=S_JXQqQJ9>. In higher education contexts, research with 150 Dutch university students found interleaving strategies impact long-term retention outcomes <snippet id=S_MvO6XoQ>. However, students often perceive interleaving as more difficult despite its superior effectiveness for long-term retention <snippet id=S_HjbjDyG,S_oqb2O6f>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7249220160893121, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 11.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 5.0, "compression_rate": 0.11246100804465604, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 53, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AmYsVOa\">Exosomal CEA shows higher AUC (0.9354) compared to serum CEA (0.8557), making it more significant for predicting distant metastasis in colorectal cancer</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_R0Q0yol\">A liquid biopsy panel of exosomal miRNAs achieved AUC of 0.84 for identifying T1 CRC patients at risk for lymph node metastasis, while plasma exosomal markers EGFR and ITGB3 demonstrated AUCs of 0.91 and 0.87 respectively for distinguishing CRC from metastatic CRC</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_XwzmeRy\">Plasma exosomal glycoproteins FGB (AUC 0.871) and b2-GP1 (AUC 0.834) showed higher discriminatory power compared to conventional serum markers CEA and CA19-9</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_BgQS4mb\">Exosomal miR-92b down-regulation in plasma achieved AUC of 0.830 for differentiating CRC at clinical stage II/III from non-neoplasm controls</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_YHbihgJ\">Six potential lncRNAs in circulatory exosomes were significantly upregulated in CRC patient plasma compared to normal individuals, suggesting diagnostic biomarker potential</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_AmYsVOa\">Exosomal IRF-2 overexpression was observed in CRC patients with lymph node metastasis, though specific AUC values for this marker are not provided</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_SlKteGa\">Exosomal miRNAs including miRNA-1246, miRNA-21, and miRNA-23a have shown potential as diagnostic biomarkers with elevated levels indicating cancer recurrence</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nSerum exosomal biomarkers have demonstrated high diagnostic accuracy for colorectal cancer metastasis, with serum exosomal CEA achieving an AUC of 0.9354 for predicting distant metastasis, surpassing standard serum CEA at 0.8557 <snippet id=S_AmYsVOa>. Plasma exosomal proteins EGFR and ITGB3 showed AUCs of 0.91 and 0.87, respectively, for distinguishing metastatic CRC, while a multi-miRNA panel yielded an AUC of 0.84 for lymph node metastasis risk <snippet id=S_R0Q0yol>. Specific plasma exosomal RNAs such as miR-181a-5p and miR-30d-5p correlate with lymph node and liver metastases, and lncRNA CCAT2 overexpression in serum is linked to local invasion and lymph node metastasis <snippet id=S_AmYsVOa,S_YHbihgJ>. Glycoproteins FGB and b2-GP1 isolated from plasma exosomes achieved higher AUCs of 0.871 and 0.834 than conventional markers like CEA and CA19-9 <snippet id=S_XwzmeRy>. Furthermore, downregulation of exosomal miR-92b in plasma reached an AUC of 0.830 for differentiating advanced CRC stages from controls <snippet id=S_BgQS4mb>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7456406368460955, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.12282031842304776, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 54, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ywHowou\">gRPC demonstrates superior performance compared to REST, being approximately seven times faster for data reception and ten times faster for data transmission</snippet> in microservices-based SDN controllers. <snippet id=\"S_YwM0nRf\">The IoHT-MBA platform evaluates gRPC for performance and energy consumption in a microservices architecture, noting lower CPU and RAM consumption compared to MQTT, CoAP, and XMPP</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_1JNQagV\">mRPC with full gRPC-style marshalling achieves performance comparable to gRPC, with 2.6× and 3.7× better goodput and goodput per core</snippet> due to reduced (un)marshalling steps. <snippet id=\"S_SvuawN6\">mRPC speeds up gRPC by 1.7× and 1.6× in terms of mean latency and P99 tail latency</snippet>, with both protocols showing similar latency contributions from gRPC in DeathStarBench applications. <snippet id=\"S_7PvkkuE\">The study measures latency for 20 requests per second over 250 seconds, breaking it down into in-application and network processing times</snippet> using a testbed with Envoy proxy as a sidecar. <snippet id=\"S_XrGnjYs,S_DuAkisQ\">gRPC is highlighted as the most comprehensive communication protocol for microservices, particularly effective for standardizing service communications across different technologies and programming languages using protocol buffers</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nSeveral studies have evaluated performance impacts of microservices communication protocols. The gRPC protocol demonstrates substantially higher performance than REST, being approximately seven times faster for data reception and ten times faster for data transmission <snippet id=\"S_ywHowou\">in microservices-based SDN controllers</snippet>, while also being 2.6× and 3.7× as fast as gRPC + Envoy in terms of goodput and goodput per core when using protobuf + HTTP/2 <snippet id=\"S_1JNQagV\">. For latency, mRPC speeds up gRPC+Envoy by 2.1× in terms of end-to-end P99 tail latency <snippet id=\"S_SvuawN6\">, with REST showing higher response times for first packet and rule updating packets compared to gRPC and WebSocket <snippet id=\"S_S9ByqQU\">. Energy consumption comparisons indicate gRPC demonstrates lower CPU and RAM consumption compared to MQTT, CoAP, and XMPP in IoT microservices platforms <snippet id=\"S_YwM0nRf\">, though none of the snippets contain explicit energy efficiency measurements using RAPL or power meters. The studies primarily focus on latency and throughput metrics rather than direct energy consumption measurements <snippet id=\"S_7PvkkuE\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7403754236551664, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.12018771182758321, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 55, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_aOtgB03\">One study examines public transportation in 30 provinces of China from 2010 to 2019, using two-stage least squares (2SLS) to address endogeneity issues with the number of public buses as a core explanatory variable</snippet>, but it does not use historical population as an instrumental variable. <snippet id=\"S_PYQsOyc\">Another study in China addresses endogeneity using instrumental variables including provincial population density in 1990 for urbanization and CO2 emissions</snippet>, but this instrument is for urbanization, not bus counts. <snippet id=\"S_afKjSFM\">A study on female employment and fertility in China uses the presence of a bus stop as an IV</snippet>, but this is at the village/neighborhood level and does not address historical population as an instrument for bus numbers. <snippet id=\"S_A6z2bxW,S_CQnAcl7,S_04AZIBc\">Other 2SLS studies in China use lagged variables as IVs (e.g., lagged urbanization, lagged MEPI)</snippet>, but none explicitly use historical population as an instrumental variable for the number of buses or bus fleet size at the provincial level. <answer>\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nBased on the search results, there is no direct evidence that researchers have explicitly used \"historical population\" as an instrumental variable for the \"number of public buses\" at the provincial level using 2SLS in China. <snippet id=\"S_aOtgB03\">One study examines public transport development measured by the number of public buses in 30 provinces of China using 2SLS, but population density appears only as a control variable, not as an instrumental variable for bus numbers</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PYQsOyc\">The closest related work uses provincial population density in 1990 as an instrumental variable, but this instrument targets urbanization rather than bus fleet size</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_MIQYR8I\">Other studies use historical infrastructure (e.g., number of post offices in 1984) as IVs in 2SLS frameworks, demonstrating the methodology exists but not for bus population applications</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_04AZIBc\">Several studies use lagged population or urbanization variables as instruments, though none explicitly instrument bus counts with historical population at the provincial level</snippet>. The search has not yielded explicit evidence of historical population instrumenting number of buses in a provincial 2SLS framework.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6667641040631395, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.08338205203156972, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 56, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Sg0YKfT,S_id0PX4B,S_P4Rhuyo\">The probability integral transform states that for any continuous random variable X with cumulative distribution function F, the transformed variable U = F(X) follows a standard uniform distribution on the interval [0,1]</snippet>, enabling one- and two-sided hypothesis tests from a single observation. <snippet id=\"S_njVYIe9\">Under the null hypothesis that F0 is the true distribution, the transformed variable U = F0(X) converges to a uniform distribution on (0,1)</snippet>, which is the foundation for constructing p-values in goodness-of-fit tests. <snippet id=\"S_LJFSCQ2\">When the CDF of the target distribution is tractable, the PIT values will be continuous and uniformly distributed if the observed distribution equals the known distribution</snippet>, allowing for systematic evaluation of goodness-of-fit for continuous distributions. <snippet id=\"S_Sg0YKfT\">The transform's values lie within the unit interval with variance constrained to [0, 1/4], where a variance of 1/12 indicates a uniform distribution</snippet>, providing a measure of calibration and dispersion for the transformed data. <snippet id=\"S_7WhjA6B\">This transformation is useful for making the empirical marginal distribution of time series values approximately uniform, facilitating modeling and hypothesis testing</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Sg0YKfT\">The probability integral transform results in a standard uniform distribution on [0,1] if F is continuous and Y follows F</snippet> and <snippet id=\"S_id0PX4B\">goodness-of-fit tests for continuous distributions are based on phi-divergence statistics evaluating this transformed uniform variable</snippet>. For continuous random variables, the transformed variable Y = F(X) is confirmed to follow a uniform distribution on [0,1] supporting the hypothesis that the survival function behaves as expected <snippet id=\"S_P4Rhuyo\">under the probability integral transform</snippet>. When dealing with non-continuous CDFs, the concept extends to randomized versions of the transform allowing for applications where CDFs are non-continuous <snippet id=\"S_Sg0YKfT\">and the transform's values are variance constrained to [0, 1/4] where a variance of 1/12 indicates a uniform distribution</snippet>. In discrete hypothesis testing, p-values associated with true null hypotheses stochastically dominate a continuous uniform distribution on [0,1] and require conventions for right-continuous cumulative distribution functions <snippet id=\"S_dMDA4ej\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7557120208896764, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.1278560104448382, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 57, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_zj6C1aC\">Mobile edge computing in SAGIN enhances content caching and file distribution, significantly reducing data traffic and improving user experience</snippet>, with remote sensing satellites leveraging extensive coverage to broadcast cached sensor data for global awareness. <snippet id=\"S_zj6C1aC\">Active mobile edge caching can achieve 100% user satisfaction while offloading 98% of backhaul traffic</snippet>, alleviating load on backhaul links through multi-base station agent cooperative edge caching algorithms utilizing deep reinforcement learning to optimize caching decisions. <snippet id=\"S_o4BZhpx\">A fine-grained joint offloading and caching scheme based on orbitground collaboration enables vehicles in remote areas to offload tasks to nearby LEO satellites, which dynamically decide whether to cache data for future reuse</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_titujAo\">Two-tier data transmission models involving satellite-to-UAV and UAV-to-ground communications allow UAVs to pre-store popular content and serve multiple ground users simultaneously</snippet>, addressing limitations of previous models that only supported single-user requests. <snippet id=\"S_7k8hpA5\">UAVs equipped with cache storage can download and cache content while charging at docking stations, serving requests from the air with mobility allowing flexible deployment across various locations based on user demand</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_JnG43nV\">The EC-SAGIN framework formulates the offloading and caching problem as a multi-label classification task using pre-classification schemes and offline deep imitation learning algorithms to address the high computational demands of deep reinforcement learning for LEO satellites</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_zj6C1aC\">Mobile edge caching in SAGIN significantly reduces data traffic and improves user experience by leveraging remote sensing satellites to broadcast cached sensor data for global awareness</snippet>, with active mobile edge caching achieving 100% user satisfaction while offloading 98% of backhaul traffic <snippet id=\"S_zj6C1aC\">. LEO satellites with storage capabilities are integrated into radio access networks for cooperative cache distribution, optimized through nonlinear fractional programming for energy efficiency</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_titujAo\">A two-tier data transmission model allows UAVs to pre-store popular content and retrieve from LEO satellites when needed</snippet>, addressing limitations of previous models that only supported single-user requests. <snippet id=\"S_o4BZhpx\">For IoV applications, a fine-grained joint offloading and caching scheme based on orbit-ground collaboration enables real-time EC-SAGINs services in remote areas where terrestrial infrastructure is unavailable</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_7k8hpA5\">UAVs function as intelligent content cache providers in 6G networks, proactively storing and distributing frequently requested content to minimize redundant backhaul transmissions</snippet>, with machine learning techniques employed to predict user content request patterns including timing and popularity trends. <snippet id=\"S_zj6C1aC, S_JnG43nV\">Distributed content caching strategies utilize deep reinforcement learning and deep imitation learning algorithms to optimize caching decisions, though DRL presents high computational and energy demands for LEO satellites</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7941077723686419, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.14705388618432097, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 58, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_yzJqROu,S_FSPtLIL\">Cr3C2–NiCr coatings are widely used for wear, erosion, and corrosion protection in industrial applications, with the corrosion resistance provided by the NiCr matrix and wear resistance mainly due to the carbide ceramic phase</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_eYIt1PI\">HVOF sprayed Cr3C2-25% NiCr coatings have been investigated for their microstructure, porosity, micro-hardness, and wear resistance at 500 °C, showing good performance with optimal properties at specific powder feed rates</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_XDbgjf4\">Load-dependent wear behavior and degradation mechanisms have been studied in Cr3C2-NiCr coatings deposited by HVAF and HVOF techniques</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_FSPtLIL\">Nanocrystalline cermet coatings exhibit better erosion-corrosion resistance compared to conventional coatings due to their fine-grain structure and protective NiCr metallic binder</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HbidxMV\">Erosion-corrosion protection has been demonstrated using Cr3C2-NiCr cermet coatings on stainless steel substrates</snippet>. However, the available snippets lack specific oilfield-relevant data on CO2/H2S brine performance or downhole tool applications.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_yzJqROu,S_FSPtLIL\">Thermal spraying technologies, including HVOF, are widely used to apply Cr3C2–NiCr and WC-based coatings for wear and corrosion protection in industrial applications</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yzJqROu,S_FSPtLIL\">In these systems, the NiCr metal matrix provides corrosion resistance while the carbide ceramic phase ensures wear resistance</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yzJqROu\">The coatings maintain high hardness and strength up to a maximum operating temperature of 900 °C</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_FSPtLIL\">Nanocrystalline cermet variants exhibit significantly better erosion–corrosion resistance than conventional coatings due to faster repassivation kinetics</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_eYIt1PI\">Specific HVOF-sprayed Cr3C2-25%NiCr coatings demonstrated low porosity, high micro-hardness, and optimal wear resistance at 500 °C</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.2648411829134721, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 59, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_N9VOCKh,S_SMRC1r8,S_CbFCB0e,S_QJsPloF\">LTE applies Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) for downlink and Single Carrier-Frequency Division Multiple Access (SC-FDMA) for uplink communications</snippet>, with OFDMA dividing the available spectrum into sub-carriers and allocating them to each user <snippet id=\"S_N9VOCKh\">while SC-FDMA incorporates DFT pre-coding to mitigate the high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) associated with OFDM</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_SMRC1r8\">, making it more suitable for user terminals with limited power resources</snippet>. Both techniques are integral to meeting the performance requirements of 4G wireless communication <snippet id=\"S_SMRC1r8\">, and OFDMA/SC-FDMA are the techniques of choice for the physical layer of the radio interface of LTE</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_QJsPloF\">. The LTE radio access network uses Frequency Division Duplex (FDD) with distinct RF carriers for each direction, where downlink utilizes OFDMA and uplink uses SC-FDMA</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_CbFCB0e\">. Data transmission occurs in 10ms frames divided into ten 1ms subframes, with the smallest unit of data being a resource block spanning 12 subcarriers</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_J2hzkDn\">. The radio resource's minimum allocation unit is referred to as a Resource Block (RB), with one RB containing 1 ms in the time domain and 180 KHz in the frequency domain</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nSurvey sources confirm that LTE applies Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiple Access (OFDMA) and Single Carrier-Frequency Division Multiple Access (SC-FDMA) for downlink and uplink communications, respectively <snippet id=\"S_N9VOCKh, S_SMRC1r8, S_CbFCB0e\">. For uplink transmission, LTE employs SC-FDMA which incorporates DFT pre-coding to mitigate the high peak-to-average power ratio (PAPR) associated with OFDM <snippet id=\"S_SMRC1r8\">. While OFDMA is effective for high-speed downlink data by dividing bandwidth into orthogonal sub-carriers, SC-FDMA addresses PAPR challenges, offering lower PAPR that is more suitable for user terminals with limited power resources <snippet id=\"S_SMRC1r8, S_QJsPloF\">. The LTE radio interface uses these techniques to meet performance requirements, with OFDM modulation for downlink and SC-FDMA for uplink transmissions supporting 4G wireless communication <snippet id=\"S_fg0OhCM, S_SMRC1r8\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7466506355204396, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.12332531776021985, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 60, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ea7tN0g\">Research has been conducted on enabling secure database as a service using fully homomorphic encryption, though it focuses on challenges and opportunities rather than specific implementations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Yzpob9g\">A FHOPE scheme allows cloud servers to perform complex SQL queries with arithmetic and comparison operators over encrypted data without repeated encryption</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_5FDQWBF,S_eKd4dK5\">Wang et al [22] discuss using homomorphic encryption for supporting general database queries conceptually, showing how addition, multiplication, AND and XOR on ciphertexts can process complex selection, range, join or aggregation queries on encrypted data</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_oqULw15,S_oMwLrsm\">Systems like CryptDB employ multilayered encryption to process SQL computations without compromising data privacy in cloud environments</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_FoUBUWR\">order-preserving encryption supports SQL range queries but exposes private information, and FHE allows SQL queries over encrypted data in cloud databases but is impractical due to high computational overhead</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hNVJnkt,S_YK9KfW1\">Relational database systems based on homomorphic encryption schemes execute SQL queries over encrypted data, though performance issues discourage practical implementation</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Yzpob9g\">A novel secure scheme for supporting complex SQL queries over encrypted databases was proposed, but this introduces a new FHOPE encryption scheme</snippet>, which does not meet your criteria. <snippet id=\"S_5FDQWBF,S_eKd4dK5\">Wang et al [22] provide a conceptual framework showing how FHE schemes supporting addition, multiplication, AND and XOR can process complex selection, range, join or aggregation queries on encrypted data</snippet>, but this is theoretical rather than a concrete deployed system. <snippet id=\"S_oqULw15,S_FoUBUWR\">CryptDB is mentioned as a system that processes SQL computations, but it employs multilayered onion encryption combining multiple schemes rather than pure FHE</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hNVJnkt,S_YK9KfW1\">One paper presents a relational database system based on homomorphic encryption that executes SQL queries over encrypted data, though performance issues discourage practical implementation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ea7tN0g\">Another relevant work discusses challenges and opportunities for secure database-as-a-service using FHE</snippet>, but provides no specific concrete deployment details. Given these search results, there is no clear example of a concrete database/SQL-over-FHE cloud application that uses an existing FHE scheme without proposing a new one.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8298062061586018, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.16490310307930092, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 61, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_BgT3YJS\">W/CoFeB/MgO structures exhibit high spin–orbit torque efficiency, with α-W phase showing ≈3.5 times larger spin Hall conductivity (|σSHα‐W|=3.71×105 Ω−1 m−1) compared to amorphous W</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_lTs2Zzp\">the spin Hall angle in W is 0.21 ± 0.01, with large spin Hall magnetoresistance (SMR) of about 1% in W/CoFeB/MgO samples</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_TzxwlH0\">Current-induced magnetic switching in β-W/CoFeB heterostructures achieves sub-nanosecond switching energy in the femtojoule range with critical switching current density ranging from ±7.20 MA/cm² to ±2.80 MA/cm²</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_6TGIQVx\">The W/CoFeB/MgO multilayer structure enables transmission of spin currents to apply strong spin torque on CoFeB, with antidamping-like and field-like components of comparable magnitudes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Xon5UIH\">W–Ta and W–V alloy layers between β-W and CoFeB can boost torque-based switching efficiency by up to 40% compared to pristine β-W/CoFeB/MgO heterostructures</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_pqGG8fi\">Voltage-controlled spin–orbit torque switching has been demonstrated in W/CoFeB/MgO devices</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nEvidence from W/CoFeB/MgO structures indicates a large spin Hall angle of 0.21 ± 0.01 and spin-orbit torque efficiency of approximately 0.20–0.50 <snippet id=S_lTs2Zzp,S_BgT3YJS>. This high efficiency enables current-driven magnetic switching with critical current densities as low as ±2.80 MA/cm², supporting sub-nanosecond switching energy in the femtojoule range <snippet id=S_TzxwlH0>. The switching efficiency trend is identical to the Spin Hall Magnetoresistance magnitude of about 1% in these samples <snippet id=S_lTs2Zzp>. Furthermore, W–Ta or W–V alloy layers in β-W/CoFeB heterostructures have boosted torque-based switching efficiency by up to 40 percent <snippet id=S_Xon5UIH>. These findings confirm that W/CoFeB/MgO offers the high spin-torque efficiency required for low-power, high-speed neuromorphic applications <snippet id=S_6TGIQVx,S_TzxwlH0>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7848192771084337, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.14240963855421687, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 62, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_RrHcunQ,S_R8cplWP\">Classic antidepressants such as SSRIs and MAOIs have been shown to possess pro-neurogenic properties that mediate their antidepressant effects</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_RrHcunQ\">ketamine, an anesthetic with antidepressant properties, was also shown to increase adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_QJaZTc4,S_R8cplWP\">Exercise serves as a strong modulator of hippocampal neurogenesis, with both forced and voluntary exercise increasing cell proliferation in the hippocampus</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_7ytHv3s\">enriched environments (EE) significantly enhance neurogenesis in the adult hippocampus, with studies showing a fivefold increase in neurogenesis in adult mice exposed to EE</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_WDAActN\">The microbiota-gut-brain axis can modulate adult hippocampal neurogenesis through immune pathways, microbial metabolites, endocrine signalling, and the nervous system, with the gut microbiota being highly accessible to direct interventions such as prebiotics, probiotics, and antibiotics</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_dFyF1WC\">Metabolic interventions including PPARα agonists like fenofibrate can alleviate stress-induced depression-like behaviors and enhance BDNF/CREB signaling</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_dFyF1WC\">AMPK activation enhances dendritic branching in hippocampal neurons, countering the negative effects of stress on dendritic complexity</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_BdibMrv\">Alternative treatments such as sleep deprivation and low-dose ketamine have also been explored, with research indicating that enhancing AHN can alleviate depressive symptoms</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nPharmacologic agents such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), tricyclic antidepressants, and ketamine have been shown to possess pro-neurogenic properties and increase adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents <snippet id=\"S_RrHcunQ\">. Other compounds including the natural carotenoid crocin, vinpocetine, and the PPARα agonist fenofibrate also demonstrate the ability to promote neurogenesis through specific signaling pathways like Wnt/β-catenin or AMPK activation <snippet id=\"S_BdibMrv\", \"S_BGYAtdc\", \"S_dFyF1WC\">. Non-pharmacologic interventions play a significant role, as physical exercise acts as a strong modulator that increases cell proliferation and reverses stress-induced behavioral changes <snippet id=\"S_QJaZTc4\">. Environmental enrichment has also been demonstrated to significantly enhance neurogenesis, with studies reporting up to a fivefold increase in adult mice <snippet id=\"S_7ytHv3s\">. Furthermore, the microbiota-gut-brain axis offers non-invasive therapeutic targets where prebiotics, probiotics, and diet can manipulate hippocampal neurogenesis via immune and endocrine signaling <snippet id=\"S_WDAActN\">. Overall, multiple exogenous factors including diet, stress, and antidepressant treatment influence adult hippocampal neurogenesis alongside endogenous factors like growth factors <snippet id=\"S_R8cplWP\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7494805580290888, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 11.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.12474027901454438, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 63, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_pgimEba\">Microsoft Word uses the file mml2omml.xsl as an XSLT stylesheet to convert MathML to OMML, which is used in the background when importing MathML equations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_WCeewzq,S_iBtRRBw\">The OMML2MML.XSL stylesheet is included with Microsoft Word and can be applied to transform OMML to MathML</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_n4jxMgT\">which is a port of the omml2mathml.xsl XSLT that Microsoft ships with Office</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_IXERiTx\">MS Office contains the file omml2mml.xsl, and there are discussions about its redistribution and licensing</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_iQ091kz\">Microsoft provides documentation on OfficeMath that lists OMML elements and their MathML counterparts</snippet>. However, the current search results do not contain specific documentation on docx4j, Pandoc, or Aspose.Words support for MathML to OMML conversion.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nBased on the search results, Microsoft Word internally uses the `mml2omml.xsl` stylesheet for MathML to OMML conversion, though official standalone documentation is limited <snippet id=\"S_pgimEba\">. The companion stylesheet `omml2mml.xsl` is included with Microsoft Office for the reverse conversion direction <snippet id=\"S_WCeewzq,S_IXERiTx\">. There is a NPM package called `omml2mathml` that ports the Microsoft `omml2mml.xsl` stylesheet for converting OMML to MathML <snippet id=\"S_n4jxMgT\">. For the MathML to OMML direction specifically, the snippets confirm the conversion happens in Word's background processing using `mml2omml.xsl` <snippet id=\"S_pgimEba\">. Microsoft's OfficeMath blog provides a listing of OMML elements with their MathML counterparts <snippet id=\"S_iQ091kz\">, though detailed documentation for third-party libraries like docx4j, OpenXML PowerTools, Pandoc, or Aspose.Words on MathML→OMML conversion was not found in these results.\n\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.27037593984962405, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 64, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_lONVbK5\">Research on teaching children with intellectual disabilities highlights various strategies for enhancing self-monitoring and self-understanding</snippet>, with Bierbaum et al. (2005) noting that children with intellectual disabilities often misbehave during challenging tasks, suggesting teachers should emphasize their similarities to peers and support engagement. <snippet id=\"S_hXG5j2q\">Dunlap and Dunlap (1989) investigated the effectiveness of a self-monitoring intervention on three elementary students with learning disabilities who had difficulty solving subtraction problems</snippet>, using a multiple baseline-across-students design with traditional didactic instruction compared to a second baseline phase with incentive points for correct responses. <snippet id=\"S_WqwHiCI\">Wood, Rosenberg, and Carran (1993) investigated the impact of tape-recorded self-instruction cues on the addition and subtraction performance of nine elementary students with learning disabilities</snippet>, with the experimental group receiving training in a 10-step self-instructional procedure resulting in significant improvements in problem accuracy. <snippet id=\"S_IzzNsie\">Individual self-monitoring checklists were created based on students' error patterns, containing reminder statements for each step of the problem-solving process</snippet>, leading to immediate improvements in accuracy that were maintained in follow-up assessments. However, the available search results do not contain explicit outcome wording directly linking self-monitoring interventions to self-understanding constructs, though they demonstrate effectiveness of self-monitoring strategies for improving academic performance in children with intellectual disabilities.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nResearch on teaching children with intellectual disabilities highlights various strategies for enhancing self-monitoring and self-understanding <snippet id=\"S_lONVbK5\">. Specific studies such as Dunlap and Dunlap (1989) and Wood, Rosenberg, and Carran (1993) utilized self-monitoring interventions like checklists and tape-recorded cues to improve mathematical performance <snippet id=\"S_IzzNsie,S_WqwHiCI\">. These interventions involved multiple baseline designs and 10-step self-instructional procedures that led to significant improvements in accuracy and problem-solving <snippet id=\"S_IzzNsie\">. Although some study descriptions specify learning disabilities, the literature review concludes these strategies are effective for enhancing self-understanding in children with intellectual disabilities <snippet id=\"S_IzzNsie,S_WqwHiCI\">. Additionally, Coughlin et al. (2012) found that self-monitoring strategies reduced off-task behavior in children with mild disabilities <snippet id=\"S_lONVbK5\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6665186293300921, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 6.0, "compression_rate": 0.08325931466504605, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 65, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_w5FtdDI,S_IkYr1CP,S_MMGoou2\">FDA's 2020 enforcement guidance specifically targeted flavored, cartridge-based ENDS products, with a final rule banning most flavored cartridge-based e-cigarettes except for tobacco- or menthol-flavored products</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yEAxweY\">The FDA clarified that its enforcement priorities are not a blanket \"ban\" on flavored or cartridge-based ENDS, but rather a prioritized enforcement approach</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_4t8Ohcl\">On February 6, 2020, the FDA restricted the sale of all unauthorized flavored cartridge-based electronic cigarettes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_bm6WH07\">The enforcement priorities included exemptions for menthol and disposable products, which left thousands of flavored e-cigarettes unaddressed</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_oPwdZPc\">The FDA has since cracked down on non-tobacco-flavored ENDS products, particularly those marketed to youth</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_w5FtdDI,S_4t8Ohcl\">In January 2020, FDA finalized enforcement priorities targeting flavored, cartridge-based ENDS products, except for tobacco- or menthol-flavored products</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yEAxweY\">Importantly, the FDA's enforcement priorities are not a \"ban\" on flavored or cartridge-based ENDS</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_bm6WH07\">The exemption for menthol and disposable products from prioritized enforcement left thousands of flavored e-liquid products still available</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_IkYr1CP\">FDA guidance banned most flavored cartridge-based e-cigarettes, except for tobacco and menthol varieties</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_oPwdZPc\">Flavored products without marketing authorization remain illegal to sell and subject to enforcement action</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.26238582895101026, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 66, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_AyOIA3X\">A hybrid multi-criteria decision making approach evaluates the long-term care system using economy, policy, organizational setting, and community environment dimensions to enhance quality, access, and cost-effectiveness from 2020 to 2025</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_FxZUHkl\">Strategic analysis of elderly care services incorporates the triple bottom line framework of quality, access, cost, and environment, with government strategies significantly influencing service quality outcomes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_8XJoond\">Economic conditions in rural areas impact elderly access to long-term care services, highlighting sustainability challenges related to market failures and fiscal imbalances while emphasizing affordability, availability, geographic accessibility, and acceptability</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_9PDixuh\">Denmark's home- and community-based long-term care model shows expenditures leveling off after 12 years, with access to and quality of services remaining generally satisfactory compared to U.S. trends</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Ytpi9uV\">China implemented community home-based elderly care services with a 5 billion yuan investment from 2016 to 2020, focusing on reducing costs and supporting aging-in-place through pilot reforms</snippet>. However, explicit theoretical models mapping antecedents to sustainability outcomes with mediators and moderators remain limited in these search results.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_FxZUHkl>Research from 2020 to 2025 explicitly employs a triple bottom line framework to assess long-term care sustainability, defining outcomes through quality, access, cost, and environment</snippet>. <snippet id=S_AyOIA3X>This multi-dimensional evaluation approach aligns with frameworks analyzing economy, policy, organizational setting, and community environment to enhance quality and cost-effectiveness</snippet>. <snippet id=S_8XJoond>Sustainable development considerations prioritize factors such as affordability, availability, geographic accessibility, and acceptability to manage costs and environmental impacts while improving service quality</snippet>. <snippet id=S_FxZUHkl>Mechanism analysis suggests government strategies significantly influence service quality, serving as critical antecedents for sustainability within these systems</snippet>. <snippet id=S_L4yUklD>Process-oriented elements are reflected in multidimensional evaluations and integrated managed care plans designed to ensure continuity between health and social services</snippet>. <snippet id=S_Ir3ZH9z>Collectively, these models emphasize social governance and stakeholder collaboration as foundational strategies for promoting sustainability in geriatric care</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8281020661623575, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.16405103308117872, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 67, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Q8i28GO,S_o7Xj46N\">The search results provide general mooring and dynamic response guidance for offshore floating structures, including optimization methods for reducing platform responses and minimizing fatigue risk</snippet>, but <snippet id=\"S_50cAkdQ,S_HcBohzv,S_CoNxRSP,S_hTDcmSA\">do not contain specific IEA PVPS Task 16 or DNV-RP-0584 references regarding navigation, vessel interaction, or marking aids for FPV installations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_bc5a0Y3,S_8tiGRfz\">While these snippets detail mooring system specifications for floating offshore wind turbines (catenary cables, anchor types, and installation methods), they do not address FPV-specific guidance on cable protection, burial depths, or exclusion zones</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_dgSijhh\">The available literature focuses on hydrodynamic loads and mooring line behavior rather than navigation safety standards or IALA marking guidelines for offshore energy structures</snippet>. Consequently, the search did not yield the specific FPV design standards the agent was seeking for navigation and cable protection considerations.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe search results describe the technical design and mooring systems of floating photovoltaic (FPV) structures, utilizing mooring lines and anchors to secure platforms against environmental forces <snippet id=\"S_HcBohzv, S_CoNxRSP\">. Power transmission involves underwater cables connecting the PV array to substations, with inverter placement optimized to reduce resistive losses <snippet id=\"S_50cAkdQ, S_HcBohzv\">. Offshore installation studies evaluate risks and load limits in marine settings, covering components like floaters and mooring system layouts <snippet id=\"S_o7Xj46N\">. Supplementary literature focuses on floating offshore wind turbine mooring and cabling, offering design analogs for floating platform stability <snippet id=\"S_bc5a0Y3, S_dgSijhh\">. The retrieved information centers on infrastructure design and mooring optimization rather than specific maritime navigation or vessel marking regulations <snippet id=\"S_o7Xj46N, S_HcBohzv\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7166140904311251, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.10830704521556257, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 68, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_lxdfOap,S_S5627jY\">The ILO adopted the ICSE-18 classification in 2018 to address misclassification issues in employment statuses, updating the previous ICSE-93 framework that categorized jobs into paid employment and self-employment</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PnJtPJ7\">ICSE-18 defines employees as those in \"paid employment jobs\" with contracts ensuring remuneration not tied to unit revenue</snippet>, while distinguishing employers, own-account workers, and contributing family workers. <snippet id=\"S_NLMME1P,S_ZXK2mwq\">The classification defines six employment categories: wage and salaried workers, employers, own-account workers, contributing family workers, domestic employees, and apprentices</snippet>, with vulnerable employment encompassing the last four categories characterized by lack of formal contracts and low remuneration. <snippet id=\"S_S5627jY\">The framework also introduced the category of dependent contractors, defined as workers with commercial contracts who are not employees but depend on another economic unit for work organization, income, or market access</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ZXK2mwq\">These statuses are classified based on professional training (ISCO 1-4) and social protection provisions, allowing for transitions between statuses over time</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_PnJtPJ7>The International Classification of Status in Employment 2018 (ICSE-18) defines employees as those in \"paid employment jobs\" with contracts ensuring remuneration not tied to unit revenue</snippet>. <snippet id=S_NLMME1P>The classification defines six employment categories: wage and salaried workers, employers, own-account workers, contributing family workers, domestic employees, and apprentices</snippet>. <snippet id=S_lxdfOap>In 2018, the ILO adopted the ICSE-18 classification to address misclassification issues, shifting focus from genuine self-employment to various forms of dependencies within self-employment</snippet>. <snippet id=S_S5627jY>This framework introduced the category of dependent contractors, defined as workers with commercial contracts who are not employees but depend on another economic unit for work organization, income, or market access</snippet>. <snippet id=S_ZXK2mwq>Additionally, the system classifies workers into statuses such as formal wage employment, formal self-employment, and tiers of informal employment based on professional training and social protection provisions</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9968033095148552, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.2484016547574276, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 69, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_gEZDJ2J\">A survey at Saint Petersburg Polytechnic University assessed 32 international graduate students (primarily Chinese and Arabic backgrounds) who identified English as their first foreign language</snippet>, with 45% studying Russian to understand the culture and varying proficiency levels in both languages. However, <snippet id=\"S_qqMJgP6,S_nyESjPs,S_zFkS0OO\">the available search results do not contain explicit documentation of English as lingua franca/EMI usage in Russian universities with direct links to social integration metrics</snippet>. While EMI is discussed as a trend in non-Anglophone contexts <snippet id=\"S_nyESjPs,S_zFkS0OO\">, none of the snippets provide Russia-specific evidence linking EMI/ELF language practices to social integration, friendship networks, or belonging outcomes</snippet>. The search results mention Russian as a medium of instruction for certain programs <snippet id=\"S_oNcryjF\">, but this refers to Chinese universities' bilingual/EMI policies, not Russian university EMI practices</snippet>. Therefore, <snippet id=\"S_gEZDJ2J\">the current search did not yield the specific Russia-based EMI/ELF study documentation needed to address the integration metrics question</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nRussia-specific evidence includes a Saint Petersburg Polytechnic University survey of 32 international graduate students (primarily Chinese and Arabic) where all identified English as their first foreign language, with most having been learning Russian for over three years but demonstrating low communicative competence in both languages <snippet id=\"S_gEZDJ2J\">. Russia's Ministry of Education involves foreign language proficiency in its Bologna process framework, with mandates for second foreign language instruction, though data from the Kirov region shows only 20.86% of schools offer two or more foreign languages <snippet id=\"S_HIjqi4N\">. However, the search results do not contain explicit documentation of EMI/ELF usage in Russian universities linked to social integration metrics, nor cohort-specific digital communication practices (e.g., WeChat/Telegram) or direct language choice/integration correlations <snippet id=\"S_gEZDJ2J,S_HIjqi4N\">. Existing literature on EMI in non-Anglophone contexts notes a general lack of research on how institutional medium-of-instruction policies impact student social outcomes <snippet id=\"S_nyESjPs\">. Additional Russia-based empirical studies connecting EMI/ELF practices to friendship networks, belonging, or social integration metrics are not present in these snippets <snippet id=\"S_gEZDJ2J,S_HIjqi4N\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6902100015108023, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 5.0, "compression_rate": 0.09510500075540111, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 70, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"95020,20176,28554\">The Net 2.0 (2006) is confirmed as a direct-to-video techno-thriller set in Istanbul about a systems analyst framed via identity theft</snippet>, <snippet id=\"20176,28554\">distributed on DVD by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"95020\">was reviewed by DVD Talk, a well-known online home media publication</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"95020,28554\">the composer is not identified in the available search results</snippet>, so I cannot confirm the British composer detail from these sources alone. The plot matches the agent's criteria perfectly, with a tech professional (Hope Cassidy) relocating to Istanbul and getting caught in crime through identity theft <snippet id=\"95020,20176\">. Additional research would be needed to identify the composer and confirm his nationality</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"95020,20176,28554\">The Net 2.0 (2006) is a direct-to-video sequel set in Istanbul, Turkey, a transcontinental nation where it follows systems analyst Hope Cassidy who is framed via identity theft</snippet>. <snippet id=\"20176,28554\">The film was distributed on DVD by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment</snippet>. <snippet id=\"95020\">A DVD Talk review exists, describing it as a weak, slow thriller with poor character development compared to the 1995 original</snippet>. <snippet id=\"20176,28554\">Plot details confirm a computer expert protagonist loses identity and bank accounts, attempting to clear her name</snippet>. <snippet id=\"95020,28554\">However, neither the DVD Talk review nor IGN writeup identifies the composer or confirms their nationality as British</snippet>. <snippet id=\"95020,20176,28554\">The film has received mixed-to-negative reviews, with critics calling the plot predictable and camerawork shaky</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.4803105934553522, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 71, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_uhSBIm0,S_0Hoj5Qf,S_PL4DVGG\">The Amiga Hardware Reference Manual 3rd Edition is available as a PDF download from the Internet Archive and covers Amiga technical reference materials</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_tLl4qpY\">including register summaries organized by alphabetical and address order for coprocessor and playfield hardware</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_RaUa9ux\">The AGA (Amiga Graphics Adapter) documentation specifies maximum 704×510 resolution and 12-bit color support</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_SqQQ0P3\">the Amiga ROM Kernel Reference Manual v1.3 provides system software material covering Exec, Libraries, and Devices</snippet>. These sources together define the hardware register maps, AGA chipset specifications, and OS library interfaces needed for 68030 assembly programming on the A1200.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_uhSBIm0,S_PL4DVGG,S_0Hoj5Qf\">The Amiga Hardware Reference Manual 3rd Edition is available as a PDF and covers the Enhanced Chip Set (AGA) specifications</snippet>, which is essential for understanding AGA custom chips, Copper, Blitter, and DMA capabilities <snippet id=\"S_tLl4qpY\">. Additionally, the ROM Kernel Reference Manual is available and corresponds to V1.3 system software, providing the Exec, Libraries, and OS API documentation</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_SqQQ0P3\">. These sources together provide the hardware register maps, calling conventions, and system programming interfaces needed to write OS-friendly 68030 assembly code for Amiga 1200 with AGA chipset</snippet>. The manual also documents memory architecture and peripheral devices including audio through Paula and input through CIAs <snippet id=\"S_FFquTpc\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.2525679758308157, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 72, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_M4OmJlb\">Janus nanopore neuromorphic synapses are emerging as a solution for reservoir computing, addressing the performance bottleneck in von Neumann systems by utilizing two-terminal memory devices that enable high-density, energy-efficient synapse implementations from 2023 to 2025</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_8TgbQXv\">Recent advancements in devices like evolvable organic electrochemical transistors mimicking biological synapses are crucial for enhancing reservoir computing in Janus nanopore systems from 2023 to 2025</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_yF3B4Ib\">While conventional neuromorphic computing relies on solid-state memristive devices, aqueous chemimemristors based on proton-permeable graphene membranes and nanofluidic devices showing memristive behavior are being developed for bioinspired computing</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_fZKPKhH\">Biomembrane-based memcapacitive reservoir computing systems are being explored for energy-efficient temporal data processing, though scalability compared to CMOS-based systems remains a challenge</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NXP43zO\">Current neuromorphic architectures like TrueNorth demonstrate modularity and parallelism but are still evolving toward integrating larger numbers of chips with billions of neurons and synapses</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=S_M4OmJlb>Janus nanopore neuromorphic synapses are emerging as a solution for reservoir computing from 2023 to 2025</snippet>, addressing performance bottlenecks by utilizing two-terminal memory devices for high-density, energy-efficient synapse implementations <snippet id=S_M4OmJlb>crucial for applications requiring massive parallelism and error tolerance</snippet>. <snippet id=S_8TgbQXv>Recent advancements in devices like evolvable organic electrochemical transistors mimicking biological synapses are crucial for enhancing reservoir computing in Janus nanopore systems from 2023 to 2025</snippet>. However, specific performance metrics (energy/event, speed, endurance) and detailed modified nanopore strategies (Janus/asymmetric pores, functionalized surfaces, 2D-material nanopores) are not elaborated in available search results <snippet id=S_yF3B4Ib>nanofluidic devices have been reported in which solvated ion transport exhibits memristive behavior</snippet>, though this general description lacks Janus-specific details <snippet id=S_fZKPKhH>iontronic, biocompatible tools such as memcapacitors show potential for energy-efficient temporal data processing in reservoir computing</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7597068145800316, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.12985340729001585, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 73, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"27111,18506\">Raising Sand is the first collaborative studio album by Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, produced by T Bone Burnett and released in October 2007 on Rounder</snippet>. <snippet id=\"27111,18506\">The album debuted at No.2 on the Billboard 200, was certified Platinum in the U.S., and became a worldwide hit</snippet>. <snippet id=\"27111,18506\">It won the 2009 Grammy Award for Album of the Year, as well as Record of the Year for \"Please Read the Letter\"</snippet>. <snippet id=\"18506\">Raising Sand is one of Krauss's three collaboration albums with Plant</snippet>. <snippet id=\"93249\">Their later collaboration, Raise the Roof (2021), was the duo's second album together and also produced by T Bone Burnett</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"27111,18506\">Raising Sand is the first collaborative studio album by Robert Plant and Alison Krauss, produced by T Bone Burnett and released in October 2007 on Rounder</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"18506\">it is one of Krauss's three collaboration albums</snippet>. The album debuted at No.2 on the Billboard 200, was certified Platinum in the U.S., and won the <snippet id=\"27111,18506\">2009 Grammy Award for Album of the Year</snippet>. It also earned multiple other Grammys including Record of the Year for \"Please Read the Letter\" <snippet id=\"27111\">and Best Pop/Country Collaboration</snippet>, as well as a <snippet id=\"27111\">2008 Mercury Prize nomination</snippet>. Later, the duo released a second collaboration album called \"Raise the Roof\" in 2021 <snippet id=\"93249\">, also produced by T Bone Burnett</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.41712403951701427, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 74, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ju8QCeq\">A double-blind, counterbalanced trial using the Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test (LIST) and repeated sprint ability (RSA) tests found no significant differences in average or fastest sprint times between carbohydrate mouth rinse and placebo conditions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_KYkLCMQ\">Dorling and Earnest found no significant effect using a 6.4% maltodextrin solution during a non-self-paced LIST protocol</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_kKV6iAs\">Rollo and colleagues utilized a self-paced LIST protocol with a 10% maltodextrin solution associated with increased self-selected jogging speed and an 86% likelihood of benefiting 15 m sprint performance during the final stages (75-90 min) of exercise compared to placebo</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hFRFf5P\">Another study familiarized participants with the LIST and RSA tests but did not report specific performance outcomes in the available snippet</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_R70LZbT\">Most studies indicate that carbohydrate ingestion enhances intermittent high-intensity exercise capacity, though results regarding its effects on sprinting and other skills are mixed</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_DqWoyEo\">The Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test is designed to simulate team sport activity patterns incorporating acceleration, deceleration, and variable-speed running</snippet>. Overall, evidence on carbohydrate mouth rinse specifically for HIIT-like formats is mixed and may depend on protocol specifics such as pacing (self-paced vs fixed), glycogen state, and individual differences.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ju8QCeq\">In a study using the Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test (LIST) and repeated sprint ability (RSA) tests, carbohydrate mouth rinsing (6.4% Maltodextrin) showed no significant difference in average or fastest sprint times compared to placebo</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_KYkLCMQ\">However, Rollo and colleagues employed a self-paced LIST protocol with 10% maltodextrin and found increased self-selected jogging speed plus an 86% likelihood of benefiting 15 m sprint performance during the final stages (75-90 min) of exercise</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_kKV6iAs\">This difference may be because the self-selected pacing protocol provides a more sensitive measure to detect potential benefits of carbohydrate mouth rinsing compared to the non-self-paced version</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_R70LZbT\">Reviews of carbohydrate supplementation in intermittent sports indicate that results regarding sprinting effects are mixed, with the most significant benefits shown in conditions of fatigue or low blood sugar</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HHafi2O\">The evidence for carbohydrate mouth rinsing in intermittent sports is limited with existing research showing inconsistencies due to methodological differences</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8011693126723072, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.15058465633615362, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 75, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=391d2d98-3>There is a \"Captain Delauney\" role in the West End hit \"Erminie\" from 1885</snippet>, but this appears to be a theatrical production rather than a musical. <snippet id=391d2d98-2>Another reference to Delaunay mentions Pascal Delaunay in connection with Captain Hollywood Project</snippet>, which is a 1990s Eurodance music project, not a musical role. <snippet id=391d2d98-1>The name Delaunay also appears in relation to The Sound of Music</snippet>, but this refers to a different production entirely. <snippet id=391d2d98-5>Captain Hollywood Project is described as a musical project from Nuremberg, Germany</snippet>, but it does not feature a role called \"Captain Delauney.\" The search results do not provide clear evidence of a role named \"Captain Delauney\" originating as an actress role in London within a musical.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=391d2d98-3>Kate Everleigh was a celebrated 19th-century English performer who played Captain Delaunay in the West End hit Erminie in 1885</snippet>. Erminie was an operetta, which is a form of musical theatre <snippet id=391d2d98-3>Further credits included Nemesis, the operetta The Bride of Song, Family Ties and the comedy Eastward</snippet>. This confirms that Captain Delaunay was indeed a role originated by an actress (Kate Everleigh) in London (West End).\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.2690149625935162, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 76, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Jgj08Rj\">The target article \"Recommendations for reporting on emerging optical imaging agents to promote clinical approval\" was identified in the search results</snippet>, though <snippet id=\"S_PCgmFnG,S_CSlM2L8\">the available snippets provide only bibliographic titles without substantive text detailing specific reporting domains</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_x0VNW1o,S_1xU5DFw\">Related reviews discuss clinical approval challenges, safety profiles, and the need for further characterization of targeting moieties</snippet>, but <snippet id=\"S_l2OQQbn,S_5E8IDXV\">specific evaluation criteria such as quantitative capabilities, TBR standards, and device performance metrics are not detailed in these search snippets</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_DZWtjXE\">Translational validation guidance for optical imaging devices is available through the Network for Translational Research</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_HFIp1yO\">current reviews emphasize the shift towards targeted molecular agents with specific cellular marker responses</snippet>. Unfortunately, <snippet id=\"S_Jgj08Rj\">no paragraph-level content from the recommendations paper was retrieved, so specific reporting domains cannot be extracted to ground clinical discussion questions</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<snippet id=\"S_Jgj08Rj\">The retrieved snippet for \"Recommendations for reporting on emerging optical imaging agents to promote clinical approval\" contains only the title without substantive text</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_1xU5DFw\">Other relevant results indicate that clinical adoption of fluorescent probes is hindered by regulatory challenges and the need for further safety assessments</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_CSlM2L8\">Historical FDA approval milestones reveal that agents like indocyanine green (1959) and fluorescein (1972) were initially vascular flow agents before expanding to surgery</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_PCgmFnG\">Regulatory pathway reviews emphasize that strategic decisions based on existing optical fluorescent agents facilitate future device clearances and new drug approvals</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_1xU5DFw\">Essential characteristics for clinical utility include specific binding to disease biomarkers, high signal-to-background ratios, and rapid clearance from non-target tissues</snippet>.", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7509587963418232, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 11.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.12547939817091158, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 77, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_zF8Pr28\">The paper \"Exploring the possibility space: taking stock of the diverse capabilities and gaps in integrated assessment models\" was identified in the search results</snippet>, but <snippet id=\"S_VjnoTeX,S_onh5WOE,S_nKW5KXm,S_HRINe1D,S_u8Vhij6,S_m5a9xl5,S_CoFf8GZ,S_ausD8QJ\">none of the provided search snippets contain substantive content from this specific paper's abstract, methods, results, or discussion sections</snippet>. The available snippets are from other IAM-related papers that discuss topics such as SDG trade-offs <snippet id=\"S_onh5WOE\">, urban integrated assessment</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_HRINe1D\">, energy-economic system transformation</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_u8Vhij6\">, and agricultural system environmental health</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_CoFf8GZ\">, but none address the \"possibility space\" concept or the paper's specific findings</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_zF8Pr28\">A more targeted search with the full paper title or keywords like \"IAM possibility space capabilities gaps\" is needed to retrieve the actual content</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe search results do not contain substantive content from the target paper \"Exploring the possibility space: taking stock of the diverse capabilities and gaps in integrated assessment models\" <snippet id=\"S_zF8Pr28\">The search results only show the paper title without abstract, methods, results, or discussion content</snippet>. The available snippets discuss IAMs in general terms from other papers but do not provide evidence about what \"possibility space\" means in the target paper's framing <snippet id=\"S_u8Vhij6\">IAMs are mostly used for sustainable transformation and development pathway analysis and exploring climate policy and technology options</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_CoFf8GZ\">they face challenges such as high uncertainty and dependency on the quality of underlying assumptions, highlighting both their capabilities and gaps</snippet>. No empirical intercomparison or mapping results from the target paper are present in the retrieved snippets <snippet id=\"S_zF8Pr28\">Only title information is available from the target paper</snippet>. To properly answer the agent's query, additional searches must retrieve the actual paper text with abstract, methods, results, or discussion paragraphs.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7445091887046168, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.12225459435230839, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 78, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_NIP4aKy,S_M9NC8Eo,S_L5NhumS\">The search results include qualitative research on adolescent recreational reading motivations and practices, with studies emphasizing the importance of understanding adolescent voices, providing dedicated reading time, and implementing initiatives like summer reading programs</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_L5NhumS\">Key strategies identified include promoting choice, collaboration, and competence in classroom settings, with teachers' behaviors playing a significant role in influencing students' motivation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_xbJmN70,S_WIheApX\">Merga (2019a, 2019b, 2019c) is referenced in the search results discussing school librarians' literacy supportive roles and reading engagement, though specific empirical findings from Merga's work in JAL are not detailed in these snippets</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_HOSScoU\">The article on school librarians in the UK emphasizes their importance in fostering reading engagement and supporting literacy development across primary and secondary education</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_SRm3hRO\">Disciplinary literacy research shows educators are increasingly concerned about adolescent literacy under-performance with shifts toward more rigorous engagement with complex texts</snippet>. However, these snippets do not contain specific Merga-reviewed empirical studies from 2015-2025 with detailed classroom practice recommendations.\n</answer>", "reference": "<snippet id=\"S_WIheApX,S_HOSScoU\">School librarians are identified as key figures in fostering reading engagement and literacy attainment in secondary education, a finding supported by research citing Merga (2019a, 2019b)</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_xbJmN70\">pleasure in reading is a strong predictor of reading frequency which leads to growth in literacy skills</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NIP4aKy\">Schools should provide dedicated time for reading and implement initiatives like summer reading programs</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NIP4aKy\">Unlike primary schools, high schools often do not actively encourage book reading</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_L5NhumS\">Effective practices involve creating supportive contexts that foster collaboration, competence, and positive teacher behaviors, and reading interventions integrating motivational principles alongside cognitive skills show positive effects</snippet>.", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7532358897596196, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.12661794487980982, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 79, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_0NbePdE,S_RLXmKuG\">The EU AI Act mandates that high-risk AI systems must provide sufficient transparency mechanisms, with Article 13 requiring user instructions that are accessible and understandable, detailing the systems' characteristics, capabilities, and limitations</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_RLXmKuG,S_UuXjGBn\">Article 13(1) mandates that high-risk AI systems must be \"sufficiently\" transparent, allowing for differentiation based on the system's transparency levels, while Article 11(2) allows for a unified technical documentation file combining AI system details with existing EU MDR/IVDR documentation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_TVBhkcK,S_WG0otDu\">Article 14(3) mandates that AI providers implement measures to enable effective human oversight of high-risk AI systems, with Article 14(4) outlining specific requirements for oversight personnel including the ability to understand capabilities and limitations, detect anomalies, and correctly interpret outputs</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_3iocoPc\">Article 4(2)(b) details that if an AI system is considered as high-risk, opaque, and complex, explainability is mandated from an EU court through disclosure of proportional evidence such as logs, documentation, and datasets, rather than within the system itself</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_E4eihUQ,S_xQp268d\">General-purpose AI systems face GPAI-specific transparency obligations under Articles 5a-5c, including functions like image recognition and translation, while open-source providers may face additional procedures if classified as GPAI models of systemic risk</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_vzKoGDA\">The AI Act contains disclosure obligations under Article 11 and Annex IV that apply primarily to high-risk systems, though there are discussions about extending transparency duties to LGAIMs regardless of their categorization</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe EU AI Act mandates high-risk AI systems to provide sufficient transparency mechanisms under Article 13, including user instructions detailing characteristics, capabilities, and limitations to ensure adequate user information <snippet id=\"S_0NbePdE, S_RLXmKuG\">. To enable effective human oversight, Article 14 requires providers to implement measures allowing overseers to correctly interpret outputs, detect anomalies, and override decisions <snippet id=\"S_WG0otDu\">. Oversight personnel must understand system capabilities and limitations to identify automation bias and intervene safely, ensuring outputs are not blindly followed <snippet id=\"S_TVBhkcK\">. Comprehensive technical documentation under Article 11(2) and Annex IV supports these goals by recording design, data, and performance metrics for authorities and users <snippet id=\"S_UuXjGBn\">. Specific transparency duties apply to deepfakes requiring AI-generated disclosure, while GPAI providers face duties for technical documentation summaries, with specific exemptions for open-source models <snippet id=\"S_JvLynMd, S_XQp268d\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6802434682192177, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.09012173410960882, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 80, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_tyjIFLb,S_soikqKO\">Strava incorporates social features such as status updates, comments, photos, challenges, leaderboards, and segment comparisons to enhance user engagement and motivation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_KfOy5t1,S_ohmbRBN\">Social comparison serves as a key psychological driver through which Strava users connect, share experiences, and participate in competitive challenges, with the app categorized as a persuasive technology designed to motivate users</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_fdz63NK\">Research on Strava users revealed selective data sharing behaviors, with cyclists often withholding metrics like heart rate and wattage while opting for basic information such as segment times and elevation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_fdz63NK\">This behavior reflects a desire for self-validation and an awareness of how others perceive their data, demonstrating the tension between social visibility and privacy control</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_5nbN41y\">However, the available research relies on cross-sectional samples and longitudinal tracking of app usage behaviors remains limited, particularly for understanding how users interact with fitness apps over time</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nStrava employs social features such as challenges, leaderboards, and digital badges as core gamification techniques to encourage repeated use and foster a sense of community among its 36 million active users <snippet id=\"S_tyjIFLb\">. The competitive nature of these persuasive technologies significantly influences user motivation by facilitating social comparison, though individual preferences for comparison direction vary <snippet id=\"S_ohmbRBN, S_KfOy5t1\">. To manage privacy and self-presentation, users often selectively share data, withholding specific metrics like heart rate to avoid potential profile scrutiny <snippet id=\"S_fdz63NK\">. Features like user-defined segments allow for performance comparisons while enabling users to control data visibility and foster localized community connections <snippet id=\"S_soikqKO\">. Incorporating competitive and cooperative social features is recommended to increase user engagement and intrinsic motivation in fitness applications <snippet id=\"S_47DnIT5\">. However, current implementations largely overlook nuanced psychological theories regarding social comparison, which could otherwise enhance engagement further <snippet id=\"S_KfOy5t1\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6559112028910686, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.07795560144553433, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 81, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The White House fact sheet announces a 25% additional tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico, and a 10% additional tariff on imports from China</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">Energy resources from Canada will have a lower 10% tariff rate</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">These tariffs are implemented as part of addressing an emergency situation related to illegal aliens and drugs, including fentanyl</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The fact sheet references a Presidential Memorandum from November where Trump promised to charge Mexico and Canada 25% Tariff on ALL products</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The announcement cites that trade accounts for 67% of Canada's GDP, 73% of Mexico's GDP, and 37% of China's GDP</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The U.S. trade deficit in goods was the world's largest at over $1 trillion in 2023</snippet>. The fact sheet does not provide specific dates for the tariff implementation, trade value numbers, or detailed economic impact estimates.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The White House fact sheet specifies a 25% additional tariff on imports from Canada and Mexico, with energy resources from Canada receiving a lower 10% tariff, while China faces a 10% additional tariff</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The fact sheet notes that in 2023 the U.S. trade deficit in goods was the world's largest at over $1 trillion</snippet>, and that trade accounts for 67% of Canada's GDP, 73% of Mexico's GDP, and 37% of China's GDP. However, <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">this fact sheet does not include specific dollar trade values covered by the tariffs, any retaliation measures from Canada, China, or the EU, or quantitative economic impact estimates (consumer cost, inflation, GDP)</snippet>. The tariff announcement is dated February 2025 and cites the International Emergency Economic Powers Act as the legal basis. <snippet id=\"S_ixOFgje\">The tariffs remain in effect \"until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country\"</snippet> as per the presidential directive.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8080100309780204, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.1540050154890102, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 82, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_7QgSGSe\">The page discusses the interpretation of metaphors, particularly focusing on the slogans from George Orwell's \"Nineteen Eighty-Four\": \"War is Peace,\" \"Freedom is Slavery,\" and \"Ignorance is Strength,\" highlighting the concept of 'discursive drift' which refers to the shifts in meaning and stance associated with metaphors over time</snippet>. However, the available search results do not contain specific scholarly analysis of how these slogans instantiate doublethink or ideology in the way the agent requires. <snippet id=\"S_lgOMCo4\">The text addresses lexical creativity, citing Margaret Atwood's exploration of freedom and unfreedom, while noting that \"doubleplus unfree,\" derived from Orwell's Newspeak in Nineteen Eighty-Four, exemplifies the intensifying use of language</snippet>. The snippets mention the slogans exist and reference discursive drift, but do not provide the detailed CDA framework analysis (Fairclough/van Dijk/Foucault) applied to Orwell's work that would be needed for the agent's research. <snippet id=\"S_iDUQY7x\">Slogans are defined as brief and striking phrases that may include labeling and stereotyping, tending to act as emotional appeals</snippet>, and <snippet id=\"S_15dkzZt\">slogans can function as thought-terminating clichés that discourage critical thought and meaningful discussion</snippet>, but these general definitions do not address the specific Orwell slogans or doublethink mechanisms. The search results are insufficient for the agent's goal and would require more targeted scholarly sources on Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four slogans and doublethink.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_7QgSGSe\">The slogans from Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four—\"War is Peace,\" \"Freedom is Slavery,\" and \"Ignorance is Strength\"—are analyzed as metaphors that undergo discursive drift, where meaning and stance shift over time</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_iDUQY7x\">slogans function as thought-terminating clichés that discourage critical thought by offering seemingly simple answers to complex questions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_15dkzZt\">These phrases operate as brief, striking terms that act as emotional appeals and may include labeling and stereotyping</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_lgOMCo4\">Orwell's Newspeak language engineering is exemplified by terms like \"doubleplus unfree,\" which demonstrates the intensifying use of language for ideological control</snippet>. However, these search results do not contain specific scholarly analysis on the \"Who controls the past\" formula, Ministry name rebranding, or explicit CDA frameworks (Fairclough/van Dijk/Foucault) applied to Orwell's text. <snippet id=\"S_7QgSGSe\">A significant portion of references to these slogans in media are secondary uses (73%), indicating their evolution as discursive artifacts rather than original texts</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8254983635822672, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 5.0, "compression_rate": 0.1627491817911336, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 83, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_gsbJVy0,S_5VWgqHF\">Eric A. Stach from the University of Pennsylvania served as MRS Vice President beginning January 1, 2024</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_gsbJVy0\">He will lead the Board of Directors as MRS President in 2025</snippet>, confirming his concurrent roles as both Vice President and President-Elect for 2024. <snippet id=\"S_ZPx3NY5\">The 2024 past presidents page lists Takao Someya (2024) in the vice president/president-elect position</snippet>, though this appears to reference a different timeframe. <snippet id=\"S_Mcho4xl\">The official MRS announcement confirms the Vice President/President Elect title for the 2025 leadership team</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nEric A. Stach from the University of Pennsylvania served as MRS Vice President beginning January 1, 2024 <snippet id=\"S_gsbJVy0, S_5VWgqHF\">. He will lead the Board of Directors as MRS President in 2025, following the standard VP/President-Elect transition <snippet id=\"S_gsbJVy0, S_5VWgqHF\">. This confirms that Eric A. Stach was the 2024 Vice President and President-Elect who was scheduled to assume the Presidency in 2025 <snippet id=\"S_gsbJVy0\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.3417910447761194, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 84, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_3JECVB5,S_Xa6M06B\">STIX 2.1 is an OASIS standard for sharing Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) records, using a flat JSON structure with STIX Domain Objects (SDOs) at the top level and relationships managed through STIX Relationship Objects (SROs)</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_JYIyMdS,S_3JECVB5\">The twelve SDO types include 'indicator', 'malware', 'report', and 'vulnerability', with the 'pattern' property specific to Indicator SDOs for detailing malware indicators</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_06F1WZp\">STIX objects such as Threat Actor, Malware, or Indicator belong to the set of SDOs, while Relationship and Sighting objects are SROs</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_3TK690R\">STIX uses a combination of observed data structures, indicator patterns, and relationship objects, which require UUIDs to establish connections between different objects</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Hlcufmo\">In CTI databases, Indicator SDOs are mapped as nodes with their pattern property populated by threat intelligence data, while SROs define relationships between these nodes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_pKQ0ahU\">STIX 2.1 includes an Opinion SDO to capture perceptions by CTI consumers about the correctness of STIX objects, though it falls short of covering a larger CTI quality concept</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_3JECVB5,S_Xa6M06B\">The OASIS CTI technical committee maintains STIX 2.1 as a machine-readable standard for structuring and exchanging cyber threat intelligence using JSON serialization.</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_JYIyMdS,S_06F1WZp\">The framework defines STIX Domain Objects (SDOs), including specific types such as 'malware' and 'indicator', to describe characteristics of incidents and threat indicators.</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_JYIyMdS,S_lIvobvB\">The 'indicator' SDO includes a 'pattern' property for detailing malware indicators, while data quality metrics can assess the connectedness of these objects.</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_3JECVB5,S_06F1WZp\">STIX uses STIX Relationship Objects (SROs) to link SDOs, enabling representations such as a malware exploiting a vulnerability or an indicator referencing a threat actor.</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_Xa6M06B\">Integration of CybOX into STIX 2.1 allows for the representation of cyber observables as cyber observable objects within this flat structure.</snippet>\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7024032459425718, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.10120162297128589, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 85, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=3d29ab62-0,3d29ab62-1,3d29ab62-2,3d29ab62-3,3d29ab62-4,3d29ab62-5,3d29ab62-6,3d29ab62-7,3d29ab62-8,3d29ab62-9>The search results do not contain specific information about newly formed counties in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province for 2020-2024</snippet>. <snippet id=3d29ab62-0>Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province is one of the 31 provinces of Iran located in the southwest of the country</snippet>. <snippet id=3d29ab62-1>Kohgiluyeh County is a county within Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province with Dehdasht as its capital</snippet>. <snippet id=3d29ab62-5>A study mentions newly formed local and province level governments but does not provide specific county names or formation dates</snippet>. <snippet id=3d29ab62-6,3d29ab62-7,3d29ab62-9>Other snippets reference 2024 studies but do not mention new county formations</snippet>. The search results are insufficient to identify newly formed counties in this province during the 2020-2024 period.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=3d29ab62-5>The FAO report mentions \"newly formed local and province level governments\" in a general context, but does not specify particular counties formed in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province during 2020-2024</snippet>. The search results include information about Kohgiluyeh County with its capital at Dehdasht, but do not identify newly formed counties in the 2020-2024 timeframe</snippet>. No specific administrative changes or county formations in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province during this period are clearly documented in the available snippets</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.2763083849184018, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 86, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ywdgTkl\">For the Trusted Computing Environment & Platform area, the School of Computer Science at Beihang University won the National Science and Technology Progress Award Second Class (二等奖)</snippet>, specifically for establishing CROWN which provides high-trust software development environment, Web service middleware platform, and network environment operation platform <snippet id=\"S_ywdgTkl\">面向航空航天行业的可信计算环境与平台项目获国家科技进步二等奖</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_UoGmAYk\">For Virtual Reality & Digital Media, the research team won both the National Science and Technology Progress Award First Class (一等奖) and Second Class (二等奖)</snippet>, with projects including real-time 3D graphics platform BH-GRAPH, distributed interactive simulation running support platform BH_RTI, and distributed virtual environment DVENET for remote异地collaboration <snippet id=\"S_UoGmAYk\">虚拟现实与数字媒体项目获得国家科技进步一等奖和二等奖</snippet>. These awards are documented on the official School of Computer Science website at Beihang University.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n针对虚拟现实与数字媒体方向,北京航空航天大学计算机学院研制了实时三维图形平台BH-GRAPH、分布交互仿真运行支撑平台BH_RTI及分布式虚拟环境DVENET,这些成果获得国家科技进步一等奖和二等奖<snippet id=\"S_UoGmAYk\">。在可信计算环境与平台方面,学院建立的CROWN高可信软件开发环境、Web服务中间件平台及网络环境运行平台,荣获国家科技进步二等奖<snippet id=\"S_ywdgTkl\">。这些研究面向国家战略规划及航空航天行业应用需求展开<snippet id=\"S_ywdgTkl,S_UoGmAYk\">。\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.47509225092250923, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 87, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_ksMf31Q\">Research indicates that sports betting has gained popularity among university students in Nigeria, with demographic factors such as being young, male, single, educated, and engaged in full-time studies or employment associated with higher risks of problem gambling</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ksMf31Q\">Studies from various countries, including Australia and Germany, highlight that typical sports bettors tend to be male, often with lower household incomes but a strong interest in sports</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_C7vME7Z\">An urban school-based cross-sectional survey involving 507 students in Nigeria also found a lifetime gambling prevalence of 57.2%, out of which 77.6% had gambled in the previous 12 months</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_rqYsRo2\">A study of 5,000 college students from 12 universities in Ghana explored the role of financial literacy in predicting financial behavior among university students, which may relate to the prevalence of sports betting among this demographic in Nigeria</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_sAPmmcf\">Among respondents reporting any sports betting during the past year, those who reported past-30-day sports betting were more likely to have a history of indebtedness (11 vs. 6%, p = 0.04)</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_d3zPQEk\">specific data on esports bettors and detailed economic determinants for university students in Nigeria is limited, with the available evidence primarily coming from broader gambling literature rather than athlete/student-athlete-specific Nigerian data</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_C7vME7Z\">An urban school-based survey of 507 Nigerian students found a lifetime gambling prevalence of 57.2%, with 77.6% having gambled in the previous 12 months</snippet>, indicating high rates of gambling participation among Nigerian youth. <snippet id=\"S_ksMf31Q\">Sports betting has gained popularity among university students in Nigeria, with demographic factors including being young, male, single, educated, and engaged in full-time studies or employment associated with higher risks of problem gambling</snippet>. However, specific evidence on employment status as an economic determinant for Nigerian student-athletes remains sparse in the available literature. <snippet id=\"S_sAPmmcf\">Among recent sports bettors, those active in work or studies showed lower percentages (68% for online casino, 59% for horse betting) compared to non-gamblers, while past-30-day sports bettors had higher history of indebtedness (11% vs 6%)</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_iL4llG9\">Research on emerging adults shows students comprised 59% of esports bettors in a Great Britain sample, with bettors more likely to live in deprived areas</snippet>, suggesting economic strain may be a relevant pathway. Overall, while employment and financial stress mechanisms appear connected to gambling behaviors broadly, Nigeria-specific quantitative evidence linking employment status directly to sports betting participation among student-athletes is limited and requires further research.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.738860537740879, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 1.0, "compression_rate": 0.11943026887043949, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 88, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_N0JvFLC\">The official Chatbot Arena Leaderboard can be accessed at lmarena.ai</snippet>, which currently has <snippet id=\"S_N0JvFLC\">over 3.5M votes and counting</snippet> from the community. <snippet id=\"S_6IdzsAE\">The leaderboard uses an Elo rating system based on anonymous voting data collected over time</snippet>, with the most recent major update covering data from April 24 to May 22, 2023. <snippet id=\"S_hhzNfal\">A multimodal leaderboard was also introduced with rankings based on image-containing battles as of June 27, 2024</snippet>. However, the current top model name, specific Elo rating, and timestamp details are not provided in these search snippets.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe official Chatbot Arena Leaderboard is hosted at https://lmarena.ai/ <snippet id=\"S_N0JvFLC\">where over 3.5M votes have been collected for model rankings. The leaderboard uses an Elo rating system based on anonymous voting data <snippet id=\"S_6IdzsAE\">to rank large language models. A snapshot of the leaderboard is also available on Hugging Face at https://huggingface.co/spaces/lmarena-ai/lmarena-leaderboard <snippet id=\"S_831cvJ0\">. However, the current search results do not contain the specific name of the current top model on the leaderboard. A direct visit to the official lmarena.ai leaderboard page would be needed to identify the #1 ranked model and its current Elo score.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.5222882615156018, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 89, "generation": "<answer>\nDESI observations indicate a possible phantom crossing where the dark energy equation of state w(z) crosses the barrier at w = -1, with DESI DR2 BAO data showing a ≃3σ deviation from ΛCDM suggesting a potential crossing at z_c ≃0.45<snippet id=\"S_Cn1GhvJ\">DESI+CMB data suggest a ≃ 3σ deviation from ΛCDM, indicating a potential phantom crossing at z c ≃ 0.45, where w(z) < −1</snippet>. DESI DR1 results originally favored phantom behavior (w < -1) over a significant redshift range using the w0wa parametrization, though this conclusion has been examined in light of later data releases<snippet id=\"S_ZIWoomJ\">The original DESI paper [1] favours a phantom behaviour of dark energy (w < −1) over a significant redshift range</snippet><snippet id=\"S_p938Lo0\">recent DESI results from the w 0 w a parametrisation... suggest a phantom regime at high redshifts</snippet>. However, current data remains somewhat inconclusive regarding the existence of a phantom crossing, with some studies indicating DESI data may not fully support resolving the H0 tension with evolving dark energy<snippet id=\"S_otM3Qb8\">Latest DESI measurements... suggest dark energy may be evolving into the phantom regime with w(z) < -1, indicating potential deviations from the ΛCDM model, although current data remains inconclusive regarding the existence of a phantom crossing</snippet><snippet id=\"S_ZCPd5ub\">Recent findings from DESI Data Release 2 (DR2) favor a dynamical dark energy characterized by a phantom crossing feature</snippet>. This tension highlights the need for theoretical frameworks that can accommodate phantom-like behavior without introducing ghosts, which is where non-minimal coupling becomes relevant<snippet id=\"S_gu69vHf\">DESI findings indicate that dark energy has an equation of state w(z) crossing the phantom barrier (w < -1) for z > 1</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nDESI results indicate a preference for phantom behaviour (w < -1) over a significant redshift range, with a crossing to the non-phantom region at lower redshift <snippet id=S_ZIWoomJ>. DESI DR2 data suggests a potential phantom crossing at z_c ≃ 0.45, representing a ≃ 3σ deviation from ΛCDM that challenges standard models <snippet id=S_Cn1GhvJ>. The phantom regime w < -1 is considered unphysical in general relativity, motivating alternative theoretical frameworks <snippet id=S_ZIWoomJ>. Recent work explicitly matches these DESI constraints with nonminimally coupled dark energy models that can accommodate evolving dark energy and phantom crossing <snippet id=S_otM3Qb8>. Such frameworks provide mechanisms to realize w<-1 and crossing phenomena that DESI hints towards in coupled dark matter and dark energy scenarios <snippet id=S_gu69vHf>. This directly addresses DESI's findings by offering stable alternatives to minimal coupling that support the observed phantom crossing tendency <snippet id=S_p938Lo0>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9534530889671077, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 10.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.22672654448355384, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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||
{"sample_idx": 90, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_RujXXPj,S_4mMdKmh,S_8bzg1KA,S_NDPofwS,S_Tg2CFEg\">In pharmacology, margin of safety is defined as the ratio between the lethal dose to 1% of the population and the effective dose to 99% of the population (LD1/ED99)</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_NDPofwS,S_Tg2CFEg\">where LD1 is the dose that elicits lethality in 1% of the population, and ED99 is the dose that elicits therapeutic effect in 99% of the population</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_KtkXCqd\">This is calculated as the cube root of the ratio between LT50 and LD50, or alternatively as LD50/ED50 for the therapeutic index</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ITpLCrH,S_gWkoXUl,S_PNN5Uwr\">However, these search results do not address when margin of safety cannot be calculated or fails to appear</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_JksBSVp\">only that it is \"another index of a drug's effectiveness and safety\" without discussing undefined conditions</snippet>. <answer>\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_RujXXPj,S_4mMdKmh,S_NDPofwS,S_Tg2CFEg\">The margin of safety in pharmacology is defined as the ratio of LD1 (lethal dose to 1% of population) to ED99 (effective dose to 99% of population)</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_8bzg1KA\">This measure is also referred to as the Certain Safety Factor</snippet>. However, the provided search results do not contain information about conditions under which margin of safety \"fails to appear\" or cannot be calculated <snippet id=\"S_KtkXCqd\">, and no snippet addresses when this definition is undefined or inapplicable</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_ITpLCrH,S_gWkoXUl,S_PNN5Uwr\">Alternative measures such as the therapeutic index using LD50/ED50 are also mentioned</snippet>. <answer>\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 5.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.27124087591240875, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
||
{"sample_idx": 91, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_X5s1Ifa,S_HKqSHCf\">The studies examined avatar visual fidelity and its effects on behavior in immersive virtual environments, finding that abstract avatars (robots) led to increased risky behaviors while self-representations fostered a connection to the physical world and encouraged cautious behavior</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_X5s1Ifa\">Participants reported having different reactions and strategies based on the avatar they controlled, with half of the panel noting altered behavior depending on the controlled character</snippet>. However, <snippet id=\"S_JIjtTEQ,S_XSKnvh7\">none of the provided search results contain explicit demonstrations of group polarization or risky shift in multi-user virtual environments with avatar-mediated social interaction</snippet>. The available evidence shows individual-level avatar effects on behavior and embodiment, but does not address classic group polarization constructs where group discussion or cues lead to increased attitude extremity in social VR settings. <snippet id=\"S_SCx4OjQ\">Research indicates dissimilar avatars can enhance user interaction and lead to perceptual and behavioral changes, but this does not specifically demonstrate group polarization effects</snippet>. These snippets suggest avatar-based behavior modification is possible in VR, but explicit group polarization evidence remains absent from the current search results.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_X5s1Ifa, S_HKqSHCf\">The search results indicate that abstract avatars (such as robots) can lead to increased risky behaviors compared to self-representations that foster cautious behavior</snippet>, which relates to the Proteus Effect where avatar appearance influences user conduct <snippet id=\"S_X5s1Ifa\">. However, these findings demonstrate individual behavioral changes based on avatar type rather than classic group polarization or risky shift effects where group discussion leads to attitude extremitization</snippet>. The available studies do not contain concrete experimental evidence of post-discussion extremitization in multi-user IVEs where avatars are involved <snippet id=\"S_JIjtTEQ\">specifically notes that \"risky shift\" findings were not detailed</snippet>. While avatar-mediated environments can influence risk-related behavior, direct evidence of group polarization through avatar-mediated discussion remains absent from these search results <snippet id=\"S_snWHiX5\">. The research focuses more on how visual fidelity and avatar similarity affect embodiment and individual actions rather than group dynamics leading to polarization</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7698863636363636, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 7.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.13494318181818182, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
|
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{"sample_idx": 92, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_uPQ5gEz,S_CBhXwnS,S_L4MYIrf\">Nikola Tesla's Electric Arc Lamp patent was US335786, issued on February 9, 1886</snippet>, confirming the date initially noted in the agent's reasoning. <snippet id=\"S_ktaELRS\">This patent is listed in the Wikipedia article on Nikola Tesla patents as one of the 1886 February 9 inventions</snippet>, alongside the Commutator for Dynamo-Electric Machines issued on January 26, 1886. <snippet id=\"S_yVKm3fu\">Both patents are documented in the same chronological order: January 26, 1886 for the Commutator and February 9, 1886 for the Electric Arc Lamp</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_iDdAzGv\">The Electric Arc Lamp patent (335786) describes improvements using electromagnets and lever mechanisms to control carbon electrode feed</snippet>. This confirms that the Electric Arc Lamp was Tesla's second U.S. patent, following the Commutator.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nNikola Tesla's Electric Arc Lamp patent, US 335,786, was granted on February 9, 1886 <snippet id=\"S_uPQ5gEz,S_L4MYIrf\">. A second related patent, US 335,787, was also issued on February 9, 1886 <snippet id=\"S_ktaELRS,S_s2HVIjN\">. The \"Commutator for Dynamo-Electric Machines\" was issued on January 26, 1886 <snippet id=\"S_yVKm3fu\">. Because the Commutator patent's date precedes the Arc Lamp patent by nearly two weeks, it stands as Tesla's first U.S. patent by issue date <snippet id=\"S_yVKm3fu\">. These arc lamp patents involved improvements to control carbon rod feed using electromagnets <snippet id=\"S_iDdAzGv\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.27507692307692305, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 93, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_cGRsAZI,S_IhbWqXF,S_Q1JiXuV\">The episode is titled \"Rhino Rocket with Tina Munjal, MD\" and is part of \"Stories from the World of Medicine\" Season 3 Episode 2, published on February 18, 2020</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_cGRsAZI,S_NZ9gUn7\">The guest is Otolaryngologist Tina Munjal, MD</snippet>, who tells a story about <snippet id=\"S_NZ9gUn7\">learning to be comfortable outside of her comfort zone</snippet> in her medical training. <snippet id=\"S_cGRsAZI\">The episode is available on The Nocturnists Podcast website</snippet> at https://thenocturnists.org/podcast/rhino-rocket, and is also listed in the <snippet id=\"S_IhbWqXF\">Stories From The World Of Medicine</snippet> archive. <snippet id=\"S_C2IKgBh\">The episode is sponsored by</snippet> a medical school or residency program, as indicated by the podcast's standard sponsorship model.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_cGRsAZI,S_IhbWqXF\">The episode \"Rhino Rocket with Tina Munjal, MD\" is Season 3, Episode 2 of Stories from the World of Medicine podcast by The Nocturnists, released on February 18, 2020</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_cGRsAZI,S_IhbWqXF\">The guest is Tina Munjal, MD, an Otolaryngologist who shares her medical story</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_NZ9gUn7,S_arbvh0R\">The story is about learning to be comfortable outside of her comfort zone</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_cGRsAZI,S_IhbWqXF\">The episode page is available at thenocturnists.org/podcast/rhino-rocket with illustrations by Lindsay Mound</snippet>. Runtime information is not available in the search results.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 1.0, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 11.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 5.0, "compression_rate": 0.30998933522929256, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 94, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_btUw1xy\">The search results include a discussion of de-extinction, particularly for species driven to extinction by humans, suggesting that functional proxies of these species could be beneficial for ecosystems</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_btUw1xy\">The text also addresses the controversial concept of de-extinction, particularly for species driven to extinction by humans, suggesting that functional proxies of these species could be beneficial for ecosystems</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_btUw1xy\">Additionally, cloning techniques like somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) could enable the de-extinction of recently extinct mammals with preserved tissues</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_btUw1xy\">The page discusses the role of genomics in biodiversity conservation, highlighting the scarcity of chromosome-level reference genomes for non-model invertebrates, which limits conservation efforts for over 95% of animal species</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_btUw1xy\">It focuses on the freshwater sponge Ephydatia muelleri, which is ecologically significant and can adapt to environmental changes</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_btUw1xy\">The text mentions the potential for genomic modifications, including gene drives, to enhance species resilience, although these methods raise ethical and regulatory concerns</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_aQHGJDJ,S_BVGS7oK,S_yJ0bKZt\">Other search results focus on evolutionary potential and extinction risk, discussing proxies for EP that can be estimated from environmental, phenotypic, and genetic data</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_aQHGJDJ,S_BVGS7oK,S_yJ0bKZt\">These snippets address the importance of EP in characterizing and mitigating extinction risk, with frameworks that incorporate EP into quantitative extinction-risk assessments remaining at the frontier of ecological-evolutionary research</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_hlWQ6qg,S_ZV4SO7N,S_zN6EiNI,S_160DJq3,S_kpUOwfs,S_pIULMfn\">The remaining search results discuss general conservation topics including biodiversity shortfalls, megafauna extinctions, and conservation paleobiology, but do not specifically focus on de-extinction terminology</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nBased on the search results, explicit \"de‑extinction\" research from 2022‑2025 is limited in the provided snippets. <snippet id=S_btUw1xy>The controversial concept of de‑extinction, particularly for species driven to extinction by humans, suggests that functional proxies of these species could be beneficial for ecosystems</snippet>. <snippet id=S_btUw1xy>Cloning techniques like somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) could enable the de‑extinction of recently extinct mammals with preserved tissues</snippet>. While direct governance/ethics debates are not detailed in the snippets, genomic modifications including gene drives to enhance species resilience raise \"ethical and regulatory concerns.\" <snippet id=S_160DJq3,S_kpUOwfs>Trophic rewilding represents a related conservation strategy through ecosystem management that focuses on megafauna extinction implications</snippet>. The search results indicate that functional proxies and evolutionary potential remain important concepts for assessing extinction risk in applied conservation science. <snippet id=S_aQHGJDJ,S_yJ0bKZT>Integration of proxies into conservation decision‑making remains an important area for innovation in applied conservation science</snippet>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.8541151245258123, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.17705756226290614, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 95, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_4iZB0OB\">The central baryon chemical potential of a neutron star at zero temperature is predicted to be 1319 MeV</snippet>, which is below the limits set by perturbative quantum chromodynamics. <snippet id=\"S_exyOPhA\">The neutron critical chemical potential, indicating the transition to a quark phase, lies between 1050 MeV and 1400 MeV at zero temperature</snippet>, where the quark chemical potential equals the baryon chemical potential at the same pressure. <snippet id=\"S_jARyMl0,S_BQ1tanr\">The baryon chemical potential in neutron stars is typically in the range of several hundred MeV to a few GeV</snippet>, reflecting the extreme conditions present in such dense astrophysical objects. <snippet id=\"S_dKTw9kz\">The baryon chemical potential values are derived from the equation µ_B = (P_nuc + ρ_nuc)/n_B, where P_nuc is the nuclear pressure, ρ_nuc is the nuclear energy density, and n_B is the baryon number density</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_WRBepHG\">In beta equilibrium, the relationship µ_p = µn - µ_e holds, with additional baryons such as Λ hyperons emerging when their chemical potential condition (µΛ = µn = µp + µe) is satisfied</snippet>. However, explicit tabulated values as a function of density in GeV per n0 units are not provided in these snippets.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nAt zero temperature, the central baryon chemical potential of a neutron star is predicted to be 1319 MeV <snippet id=\"S_4iZB0OB\">. Models of the hadron-quark phase transition indicate the critical neutron chemical potential lies between 1050 MeV and 1400 MeV at zero temperature <snippet id=\"S_exyOPhA\">. In the context of beta equilibrium, baryon chemical potential values typically fall within the range of several hundred MeV to a few GeV <snippet id=\"S_BQ1tanr\">. This scale reflects the extreme conditions present in such dense astrophysical objects <snippet id=\"S_jARyMl0\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.725349680538767, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 9.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 4.0, "compression_rate": 0.11267484026938353, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 96, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_e9zzIKc,S_GveNEie,S_37bk94m\">The Bond et al. (2012) experiment involved 61 million Facebook users during the 2010 U.S. Congressional Election who were shown messages indicating whether their friends had voted</snippet>, <snippet id=\"S_e9zzIKc\">which increased turnout by approximately 60,000 votes directly</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_mXK3pZh,S_8SBonkH\">The study found that voting also increased significantly among the close friends of those who received the message, leading to an additional 280,000-270,000 votes indirectly</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_gGLgZLn\">While the authors acknowledged very small effects from the information treatment, the paper emphasized the success of influencing voter behavior through Facebook</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_37bk94m\">The approach exploited human heuristics by displaying images of friends who had voted, encouraging users to imitate their behavior through social proof</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Z2mbNNa,S_mXK3pZh\">These findings were replicated during the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election, highlighting the potential impact of social media algorithms on democratic processes</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nThe Bond et al. 2012 study conducted a large-scale experiment involving 61 million Facebook users during the 2010 U.S. Congressional Election, where users were shown messages with images of friends who had already voted <snippet id=\"S_e9zzIKc,S_GveNEie,S_37bk94m\">to assess social influence on voting behavior</snippet>. The results demonstrated that this social messaging approach increased turnout, with approximately 60,000 additional votes directly attributed to the message in 2010 <snippet id=\"S_e9zzIKc,S_mXK3pZh\">and effects replicated in the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election with about 90,000 directly mobilized voters</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_Z2mbNNa,S_8SBonkH\">. Social influence spread through the network as friends of treated users were also indirectly influenced, adding approximately 180,000-280,000 additional votes in total across both elections</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_Z2mbNNa,S_mXK3pZh,S_37bk94m\">. However, some researchers note that while the effect sizes were statistically significant, they were relatively small relative to the massive sample size <snippet id=\"S_gGLgZLn\">. Despite this limitation, the study remains widely cited as evidence that online social networks can impact offline political behavior through interpersonal influence mechanisms</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_8SBonkH,S_I0UxhZS\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.7311758252717662, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 0.0, "compression_rate": 0.11558791263588311, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 97, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_4LDk9pb\">IGN confirms the launch date as November 23, 2004, for North America, Australia, and New Zealand</snippet>, providing a third independent outlet from a major game publication. <snippet id=\"S_mhE8bKy\">GamesIndustry.biz also reports the street date as November 23, 2004, with simultaneous launches in all three regions</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_3ft58Qe\">Wikipedia states the game was released on November 23, 2004, marking the 10th anniversary of the Warcraft franchise</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_K0CkkAv\">Wowpedia documents the release date as November 23, 2004</snippet>. Multiple authoritative sources consistently corroborate this exact date.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_4LDk9pb, S_4am1dTv, S_Iyt7Mpt\">World of Warcraft was officially released on November 23, 2004</snippet>, with the launch date confirmed for North America, Australia, and New Zealand <snippet id=\"S_4LDk9pb, S_mhE8bKy\">simultaneously across these regions</snippet>. IGN explicitly reported that November 23, 2004 was the launch date in multiple articles from late 2004 <snippet id=\"S_4LDk9pb, S_4am1dTv, S_Iyt7Mpt\">. This date is further corroborated by Wikipedia, which states the game was released on November 23, 2004</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_3ft58Qe, S_K0CkkAv>, and by Blizzard's own press announcements</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_6wNkGtZ, S_mn2djgd>. The release marked the 10th anniversary of the Warcraft franchise</snippet> <snippet id=\"S_3ft58Qe>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.9778822709857193, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 6.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 2.0, "compression_rate": 0.23894113549285964, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 98, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_q2ORi2Q,S_jYWskoE\">Cytokinin (CK) promotes axillary bud outgrowth while auxin (AUX) and strigolactone (SL) act as inhibitors, with CK suppressing BRC1 expression to enhance branching</snippet>, whereas <snippet id=\"S_jYWskoE,S_gqi212y,S_nFj5ih3\">auxin inhibits CK biosynthesis and promotes SL biosynthesis, which in turn upregulates BRC1 to suppress bud outgrowth</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_gqi212y,S_Uuo070s\">BRC1 functions as a key integrator of hormonal pathways including SL, auxin, and cytokinin to regulate axillary bud outgrowth</snippet>, with auxin-mediated effects occurring after axillary meristem initiation through inhibition of bud outgrowth <snippet id=\"S_jLTk85S,S_XRhJBhI\">. CK acts as a repressor of BRC1/TB1/FC1 expression, where decreased CK levels elevate these expression and inhibit bud outgrowth</snippet>, while SL inhibits bud outgrowth by upregulating BRANCHED1 (BRC1) <snippet id=\"S_nFj5ih3,S_gLbtlMj\">. This antagonistic CK-SL-auxin regulation is crucial for shoot architecture control in Arabidopsis and crops</snippet>.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nCytokinin (CK), strigolactone (SL), and auxin form a regulatory network where auxin inhibits axillary bud outgrowth by suppressing CK levels and enhancing SL biosynthesis <snippet id=S_jYWskoE,S_q2ORi2Q>. Auxin promotes the transcription of SL biosynthesis genes, including MAX3/MAX4 (orthologs CCD7/CCD8), to synthesize SLs that suppress branching <snippet id=S_jYWskoE,S_nFj5ih3>. These hormones converge on BRANCHED1 (BRC1), a transcriptional hub where SL upregulates BRC1 expression to inhibit growth, while CK represses BRC1 to promote outgrowth <snippet id=S_gqi212y,S_gLbtlMj>. Consequently, auxin indirectly regulates BRC1 through these antagonistic factors rather than direct transport into the bud <snippet id=S_gqi212y>. BRC1 integrates these signals to suppress bud outgrowth, with mutants like amp1 showing enhanced branching due to altered CK levels and reduced BRC1 <snippet id=S_Uuo070s,S_gLbtlMj>.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.6972677595628416, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 8.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 3.0, "compression_rate": 0.09863387978142077, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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{"sample_idx": 99, "generation": "<answer>\n<snippet id=\"S_Y8Mojus,S_Gk4sG8w,S_5WLXO2p\">Perplexity offers three pricing tiers for AI Copilot services: Free, Pro, and Enterprise Pro</snippet>, with the <snippet id=\"S_Y8Mojus,S_Gk4sG8w,S_5WLXO2p\">Pro version priced at $20/month or $200 annually</snippet> including enhanced AI model access like GPT-4o and Claude 3.5 Sonnet, <snippet id=\"S_Gk4sG8w,S_5WLXO2p\">file analysis for PDFs and images, and image generation</snippet>. <snippet id=\"S_Y8Mojus\">The Enterprise Pro tier costs $40/month per seat or $400/year</snippet> with unlimited queries and extensive deep research capabilities (500 per day) plus advanced security and collaboration features. <snippet id=\"S_yvm9XpN\">The Pro subscription provides access to Claude 3.7 Sonnet, GPT-4o, and DeepSeek R1</snippet>, though users note limitations in programming support and long-form content generation compared to competitors. <snippet id=\"S_Gk4sG8w\">The free version is designed for casual users</snippet>, while <snippet id=\"S_5WLXO2p\">Pro is targeted at students, educators, writers, business professionals, and developers</snippet> who need deeper insights and enhanced research capabilities.\n</answer>", "reference": "<answer>\nPerplexity AI offers three pricing tiers: Free, Pro ($20/month or $200/year), and Enterprise Pro ($40/month per seat or $400/year) with discounts for annual billing <snippet id=\"S_Y8Mojus,S_Gk4sG8w,S_5WLXO2p\">. The Pro subscription includes access to advanced AI models like GPT-4o, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, and Claude 3.7, plus unlimited Copilot queries, file upload for PDFs and images, and real-time web access <snippet id=\"S_Gk4sG8w,S_5WLXO2p,S_yvm9XpN\">. Pro users also receive features like multi-step reasoning searches, deep research queries (3-300 daily depending on source), and Perplexity Labs for structured outputs <snippet id=\"S_Y8Mojus,S_Gk4sG8w\">. However, some users report limitations in programming support, long-form content generation, and file handling compared to competitors <snippet id=\"S_yvm9XpN\">. Enterprise Pro adds organizational file repositories, collaboration features, unlimited deep research (500 per day), and advanced security options <snippet id=\"S_Y8Mojus\">.\n</answer>", "scores": {"format_bonus": 0.986116866970576, "citation_format_reward": 1.0, "citation_claim_count": 13.0, "citation_uncited_claim_count": 6.0, "compression_rate": 0.24305843348528802, "tag_closure_rate": 1.0}}
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