diff --git "a/WikiContradict_dataset.json" "b/WikiContradict_dataset.json" deleted file mode 100644--- "a/WikiContradict_dataset.json" +++ /dev/null @@ -1,3977 +0,0 @@ -[ - { - "title": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nymphaea_nouchali_var._caerulea", - "paragraph_A": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present{{Inconsistent|date=September 2021}}. Other compounds include nuciferine.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present. Other compounds include nuciferine.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=September 2021", - "tagDate": "September 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "Inconsistent with other part of the article (introduction).", - "paragraphA_article": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present.", - "paragraphA_information": "Chemical Composition Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present. Other compounds include nuciferine.", - "paragraphB_article": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea", - "paragraphB_information": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea, is a water lily in the genus Nymphaea, a botanical variety of Nymphaea nouchali. It is an aquatic plant of freshwater lakes, pools and rivers, naturally found throughout most of the eastern half of Africa, as well as parts of southern Arabia, but has also been spread to other regions as an ornamental plant. It was grown by the Ancient Egyptian civilization, and had significance in their religion. It can tolerate the roots being in anoxic mud in nutritionally poor conditions, and can become a dominant plant in deeper water in such habitats. It is associated with a species of snail, which is one of the main hosts of the pathogen causing human schistosomiasis. The underwater rhizomes are edible. Like other species in the genus, the plant contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine[inconsistent] (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Like other species in the genus, Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present in Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "question1": "Which of the following are present in Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea: apomorphine, aporphine, or neither?", - "question1_answer1": "Apomorphine", - "question1_answer2": "Aporphine" - }, - { - "title": "P-700 Granit", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-700_Granit", - "paragraph_A": "The P-700 was derived from the P-500 Bazalt missile with a turbojet. {{Inconsistent|date=November 2022}} The P-700 was in turn developed into the P-800 Oniks, which uses ramjet propulsion, and the BrahMos missile, a joint Indian/Russian modernization of the P-800.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The P-700 was derived from the P-500 Bazalt missile with a turbojet. The P-700 was in turn developed into the P-800 Oniks, which uses ramjet propulsion, and the BrahMos missile, a joint Indian/Russian modernization of the P-800.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=November 2022", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "The P-700 was derived from the P-500 Bazalt missile with a turbojet. The P-700 was in turn developed into the P-800 Oniks, which uses ramjet propulsion, and the BrahMos missile, a joint Indian/Russian modernization of the P-800.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The P-700 was derived from the P-500 Bazalt missile with a turbojet.", - "paragraphB_information": "The P-700 was designed in the 1970s to replace the P-70 Ametist and P-120 Malakhit, both effective missiles but with too short a range in the face of improving weapons of U.S. Navy carrier battle groups. The missile was partially derived from the P-500 Bazalt.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The missile was partially derived from the P-500 Bazalt.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The P-700 was derived from the P-500 Bazalt missile with a turbojet.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The missile was partially derived from the P-500 Bazalt.", - "question1_answer1": "No.", - "question1_answer2": "Yes.", - "question1": "Are there any other missiles besides the P-500 Bazalt that influenced the design of P-700 Granit missile?", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - FAC (Buildings, airports, highways, bridges, etc.)", - "paragraphA_article": "P-700 Granit", - "paragraphB_article": "P-700 Granit" - }, - { - "title": "Phobos (moon)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phobos_(moon)", - "paragraph_A": "Phobos's grooves were long thought to be fractures caused by the impact that formed the Stickney crater. Other modelling suggested since the 1970s support the idea that the grooves are more like \"stretch marks\" that occur when Phobos gets deformed by tidal forces, but in 2015 when the tidal forces were calculated and used in a new model, the stresses were too weak to fracture a solid moon of that size, unless Phobos is a rubble pile surrounded by a layer of powdery regolith about thick. Stress fractures calculated for this model line up with the grooves on Phobos. The model is supported with the discovery that some of the grooves are younger than others, implying that the process that produces the grooves is ongoing.Hurford, Terry A.; Asphaug, Erik; Spitale, Joseph; Hemingway, Douglas; et al.; \"Surface Evolution from Orbital Decay on Phobos\", Division of Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society meeting #47, National Harbor, MD, November 2015{{Inconsistent|date=June 2019|reason=Chapter 'Physical characteristics' says the grooves were caused by rolling boulders}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Phobos's grooves were long thought to be fractures caused by the impact that formed the Stickney crater. Other modelling suggested since the 1970s support the idea that the grooves are more like \"stretch marks\" that occur when Phobos gets deformed by tidal forces, but in 2015 when the tidal forces were calculated and used in a new model, the stresses were too weak to fracture a solid moon of that size, unless Phobos is a rubble pile surrounded by a layer of powdery regolith about thick. Stress fractures calculated for this model line up with the grooves on Phobos. The model is supported with the discovery that some of the grooves are younger than others, implying that the process that produces the grooves is ongoing.Hurford, Terry A.; Asphaug, Erik; Spitale, Joseph; Hemingway, Douglas; et al.; \"Surface Evolution from Orbital Decay on Phobos\", Division of Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society meeting #47, National Harbor, MD, November 2015", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=June 2019|reason=Chapter 'Physical characteristics' says the grooves were caused by rolling boulders", - "tagDate": "June 2019", - "tagReason": "Chapter 'Physical characteristics' says the grooves were caused by rolling boulders", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphB_article": "Phobos (moon)", - "paragraphB_information": "Many grooves and streaks also cover the oddly shaped surface. The grooves are typically less than 30 meters (98 ft) deep, 100 to 200 meters (330 to 660 ft) wide, and up to 20 kilometers (12 mi) in length, and were originally assumed to have been the result of the same impact that created Stickney. Analysis of results from the Mars Express spacecraft, however, revealed that the grooves are not radial to Stickney, but are centered on the leading apex of Phobos in its orbit (which is not far from Stickney). Researchers suspect that they have been excavated by material ejected into space by impacts on the surface of Mars. The grooves thus formed as crater chains, and all of them fade away as the trailing apex of Phobos is approached. They have been grouped into 12 or more families of varying age, presumably representing at least 12 Martian impact events. However, in November 2018, following further computational probability analysis, astronomers concluded that the many grooves on Phobos were caused by boulders, ejected from the asteroid impact that created Stickney crater. These boulders rolled in a predictable pattern on the surface of the moon.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In November 2018, following further computational probability analysis, astronomers concluded that the many grooves on Phobos were caused by boulders, ejected from the asteroid impact that created Stickney crater. These boulders rolled in a predictable pattern on the surface of the moon.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The model designed in 2015 supported the discovery that some of the grooves are younger than others, implying that the process that produces the grooves is ongoing.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "boulders from asteroid impact rolled in a predictable pattern on the surface of the moon.", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "the process that produces the grooves is ongoing.", - "question1_answer1": "No.", - "question1": "Did the formation of the grooves on Phobos occur as a single event?", - "question1_answer2": "Yes.", - "paragraphA_article": "Phobos (moon)", - "paragraphA_information": "Phobos's grooves were long thought to be fractures caused by the impact that formed the Stickney crater. Other modelling suggested since the 1970s support the idea that the grooves are more like \"stretch marks\" that occur when Phobos gets deformed by tidal forces, but in 2015 when the tidal forces were calculated and used in a new model, the stresses were too weak to fracture a solid moon of that size, unless Phobos is a rubble pile surrounded by a layer of powdery regolith about 100 m (330 ft) thick. Stress fractures calculated for this model line up with the grooves on Phobos. The model is supported with the discovery that some of the grooves are younger than others, implying that the process that produces the grooves is ongoing." - }, - { - "title": "Charles D'Oyly", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_D'Oyly", - "paragraph_A": "He has been described as possessing \"the accomplishments of a man of taste, sketched cleverly in watercolours, and [...] the leading dilettante of Calcutta society at that time\" Hunter, W.W., Life of Brian Houghton Hodgson: British Resident at the Court of Nepal, Asian Educational Services, 1991, p. 281 and \u201cthe most prolific artist in India of his time\u201d.De Silva,P., Colonial Self-Fashioning in British India, c. 1785-1845: Visualising Identity and Difference, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018, p. 153 Bishop Heber, who visited Patna in the 1840s, described D\u2019Oyly as the \u201cbest gentleman artist I ever met\u201d.Partapaditya, P., Changing Visions, Lasting Images: Calcutta Through 300 Years, Marg Publications, 1990, p. 58{{Inconsistent|date=November 2021|reason=This contradicts the statement that D'Oyly wasn't in Patna in the 40s.}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "He has been described as possessing \"the accomplishments of a man of taste, sketched cleverly in watercolours, and [...] the leading dilettante of Calcutta society at that time\" Hunter, W.W., Life of Brian Houghton Hodgson: British Resident at the Court of Nepal, Asian Educational Services, 1991, p. 281 and \u201cthe most prolific artist in India of his time\u201d.De Silva,P., Colonial Self-Fashioning in British India, c. 1785-1845: Visualising Identity and Difference, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018, p. 153 Bishop Heber, who visited Patna in the 1840s, described D\u2019Oyly as the \u201cbest gentleman artist I ever met\u201d.Partapaditya, P., Changing Visions, Lasting Images: Calcutta Through 300 Years, Marg Publications, 1990, p. 58", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=November 2021|reason=This contradicts the statement that D'Oyly wasn't in Patna in the 40s.", - "tagDate": "November 2021", - "tagReason": "This contradicts the statement that D'Oyly wasn't in Patna in the 40s.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Charles D'Oyly", - "paragraphB_article": "Charles D'Oyly", - "paragraphA_information": "Bishop Heber, who visited Patna in the 1840s, described D\u2019Oyly as the \u201cbest gentleman artist I ever met\u201d.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Bishop Heber, who visited Patna in the 1840s, described Charles D'Oyly as the \u201cbest gentleman artist I ever met\u201d.", - "paragraphB_information": "After working for the Company for forty years, D'Oyly's failing health compelled him to retire and leave India in 1838", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "After working for the Company for forty years, Charles D'Oyly's failing health compelled him to retire and leave India in 1838", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Bishop Heber visited Patna and met D\u2019Oyly in the 1840s ## According to commen sense knowledge, Patna is a city in India.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Charles D'Oyly's retired and left India in 1838.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Did Bishop Heber meet D\u2019Oyly in the 1840s in Patna ?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Knickerbocker Ice Company", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knickerbocker_Ice_Company", - "paragraph_A": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City. The lack of workers had to do with the two dollars they were getting paid when small, independent companies were paying double what bigger companies like Knickerbocker were paying their employees. Oler took to the stand to tell the court he was paying his workers properly and was even paying them extra for the work they did on Sundays, but the workers rebelled.New York Times Article (1911). \"Low Wages Blamed for Ice Shortage.\" New York Times. When detectives dug deeper into the situation, they discovered Oler secretly made deals with other companies to purchase ice when they were suffering from deficiencies. Oler came up with numerous excuses why he was conducting the Knickerbocker Ice Company\u2019s business in such a way. He explained it was cheaper to transport ice in smaller quantities to meet the demands of clients than to purchase more rail cars and transport everything at once. Also, the 1890s{{inconsistent}} was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers. Oler told the court he searched for skilled workers to harvest ice during the warm season but was unsuccessful, which is the why these complications occurred while he was president of the company.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City. The lack of workers had to do with the two dollars they were getting paid when small, independent companies were paying double what bigger companies like Knickerbocker were paying their employees. Oler took to the stand to tell the court he was paying his workers properly and was even paying them extra for the work they did on Sundays, but the workers rebelled.New York Times Article (1911). \"Low Wages Blamed for Ice Shortage.\" New York Times. When detectives dug deeper into the situation, they discovered Oler secretly made deals with other companies to purchase ice when they were suffering from deficiencies. Oler came up with numerous excuses why he was conducting the Knickerbocker Ice Company\u2019s business in such a way. He explained it was cheaper to transport ice in smaller quantities to meet the demands of clients than to purchase more rail cars and transport everything at once. Also, the 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers. Oler told the court he searched for skilled workers to harvest ice during the warm season but was unsuccessful, which is the why these complications occurred while he was president of the company.", - "tag": "inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City. The lack of workers had to do with the two dollars they were getting paid when small, independent companies were paying double what bigger companies like Knickerbocker were paying their employees. Oler took to the stand to tell the court he was paying his workers properly and was even paying them extra for the work they did on Sundays, but the workers rebelled. When detectives dug deeper into the situation, they discovered Oler secretly made deals with other companies to purchase ice when they were suffering from deficiencies. Oler came up with numerous excuses why he was conducting the Knickerbocker Ice Company\u2019s business in such a way. He explained it was cheaper to transport ice in smaller quantities to meet the demands of clients than to purchase more rail cars and transport everything at once. Also, the 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers. Oler told the court he searched for skilled workers to harvest ice during the warm season but was unsuccessful, which is the why these complications occurred while he was president of the company.", - "paragraphA_article": "Knickerbocker Ice Company", - "paragraphB_article": "Knickerbocker Ice Company", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City. The lack of workers had to do with the two dollars they were getting paid when small, independent companies were paying double what bigger companies like Knickerbocker were paying their employees. Oler took to the stand to tell the court he was paying his workers properly and was even paying them extra for the work they did on Sundays, but the workers rebelled. When detectives dug deeper into the situation, they discovered Oler secretly made deals with other companies to purchase ice when they were suffering from deficiencies. Oler came up with numerous excuses why he was conducting the Knickerbocker Ice Company\u2019s business in such a way. Oler explained it was cheaper to transport ice in smaller quantities to meet the demands of clients than to purchase more rail cars and transport everything at once. Also, the 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers. Oler told the court he searched for skilled workers to harvest ice during the warm season but was unsuccessful, which is the why these complications occurred while he was president of the company.", - "paragraphB_information": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City. The lack of workers had to do with the two dollars they were getting paid when small, independent companies were paying double what bigger companies like Knickerbocker were paying their employees. Oler took to the stand to tell the court he was paying his workers properly and was even paying them extra for the work they did on Sundays, but the workers rebelled. When detectives dug deeper into the situation, they discovered Oler secretly made deals with other companies to purchase ice when they were suffering from deficiencies. Oler came up with numerous excuses why he was conducting the Knickerbocker Ice Company\u2019s business in such a way. He explained it was cheaper to transport ice in smaller quantities to meet the demands of clients than to purchase more rail cars and transport everything at once. Also, the 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers. Oler told the court he searched for skilled workers to harvest ice during the warm season but was unsuccessful, which is the why these complications occurred while he was president of the company.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City. The lack of workers had to do with the two dollars they were getting paid when small, independent companies were paying double what bigger companies like Knickerbocker were paying their employees. Oler took to the stand to tell the court he was paying his workers properly and was even paying them extra for the work they did on Sundays, but the workers rebelled. When detectives dug deeper into the situation, they discovered Oler secretly made deals with other companies to purchase ice when they were suffering from deficiencies. Oler came up with numerous excuses why he was conducting the Knickerbocker Ice Company\u2019s business in such a way. Oler explained it was cheaper to transport ice in smaller quantities to meet the demands of clients than to purchase more rail cars and transport everything at once. Also, the 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers. Oler told the court he searched for skilled workers to harvest ice during the warm season but was unsuccessful, which is the why these complications occurred while he was president of the company.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "President Oler took the stand in 1911.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "President Wesley M. Oler took the stand for the company in 1911 when detectives traveled to Rockland Lake to find the icehouses packed with ice but no workers to load the product onto barges to New York City.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Also, the 1890s was an exceptionally warm winter which was a major setback for the ice industry since there was not much ice to sell to consumers.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "What year did President Oler take the stand in court?", - "question1_answer1": "President Oler took the stand in 1911", - "question1_answer2": "President Oler appeard in court in the 1890s" - }, - { - "title": "Kodimunai", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodimunai", - "paragraph_A": "A significant number of the residents of Kodimunai do jobs related to fishing. This includes deep sea fishing, shallow water fishing, fishing from the shore (known as karamadi in the local language), fishing with mechanized boats, exporting fish, etc. Many of them work in a number of other fields like IT, medicine, education, engineering, trading, cargo shipping, etc. However, there is no noticeable local industry except for fishing{{Inconsistent}}. even most of the people discovered the passion towards fishing. of course they contribute certain percentage to Indian GDP even though it is not recognized. soon kodimunai is going to be thrived in economy comparing to other villages. kodimunai do have reliable sources like fishing, thodu and some local stocks which made this village incomparable with other places of kanyakumari. proud to say 80% of the people having high standard of living like USA.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "A significant number of the residents of Kodimunai do jobs related to fishing. This includes deep sea fishing, shallow water fishing, fishing from the shore (known as karamadi in the local language), fishing with mechanized boats, exporting fish, etc. Many of them work in a number of other fields like IT, medicine, education, engineering, trading, cargo shipping, etc. However, there is no noticeable local industry except for fishing. even most of the people discovered the passion towards fishing. of course they contribute certain percentage to Indian GDP even though it is not recognized. soon kodimunai is going to be thrived in economy comparing to other villages. kodimunai do have reliable sources like fishing, thodu and some local stocks which made this village incomparable with other places of kanyakumari. proud to say 80% of the people having high standard of living like USA.", - "tag": "Inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Kodimunai", - "paragraphA_information": "A significant number of the residents of Kodimunai do jobs related to fishing. This includes deep sea fishing, shallow water fishing, fishing from the shore (known as karamadi in the local language), fishing with mechanized boats, exporting fish, etc.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "A significant number of the residents of Kodimunai do jobs related to fishing. These jobs includes deep sea fishing, shallow water fishing, fishing from the shore (known as karamadi in the local language), fishing with mechanized boats, exporting fish, etc.", - "paragraphB_article": "Kodimunai", - "paragraphB_information": "Many of them work in a number of other fields like IT, medicine, education, engineering, trading, cargo shipping, etc. However, there is no noticeable local industry except for fishing", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Many of the residents of Kodimunai work in a number of other fields like IT, medicine, education, engineering, trading, cargo shipping, etc. However, there is no noticeable local industry except for fishing", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Most residents of Kodimunai have jobs related to fishing.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Many of the residents work in a number of other fields.", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) NP-related ", - "question1": "What is the most common occupation for the residents of Kodimunai?", - "question1_answer1": "Fishing", - "question1_answer2": "IT, medicine, engineering, trading" - }, - { - "title": "Lake Maracaibo", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Maracaibo", - "paragraph_A": "Lake Maracaibo is deep in the south and shallow in the north. The northern half of the lake, which looks like a bottleneck, is 55 kilometers long. The southeastern edge of the lake basin with a flat bottom is steep and the northwestern edge is gentle. It is slightly salty due to the influence of tides, and the overall salinity is between 1.5 and 3.8%.{{Inconsistent|date=December 2023|reason=Further in this paragraph the salinity is given as 10 times lower. Possibly parts per thousand (\u2030) here.}} The Catatumbo River forms a bird-foot-shaped delta in the southwest of the lake basin, and the surface lake water in the delta has a salinity of only 0.13%. However, the intrusion of seawater from the mouth of the lake makes the salinity of the bottom lake water higher, reaching 0.2-0.3%. The north is connected with the Gulf of Venezuela, and the spit at the mouth of the lake extends for about 26 kilometers.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Lake Maracaibo is deep in the south and shallow in the north. The northern half of the lake, which looks like a bottleneck, is 55 kilometers long. The southeastern edge of the lake basin with a flat bottom is steep and the northwestern edge is gentle. It is slightly salty due to the influence of tides, and the overall salinity is between 1.5 and 3.8%. The Catatumbo River forms a bird-foot-shaped delta in the southwest of the lake basin, and the surface lake water in the delta has a salinity of only 0.13%. However, the intrusion of seawater from the mouth of the lake makes the salinity of the bottom lake water higher, reaching 0.2-0.3%. The north is connected with the Gulf of Venezuela, and the spit at the mouth of the lake extends for about 26 kilometers.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=December 2023|reason=Further in this paragraph the salinity is given as 10 times lower. Possibly parts per thousand (\u2030) here.", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "Further in this paragraph the salinity is given as 10 times lower. Possibly parts per thousand (\u2030) here.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Lake Maracaibo", - "paragraphA_information": "Lake Maracaibo is deep in the south and shallow in the north. The northern half of the lake, which looks like a bottleneck, is 55 kilometers long. The southeastern edge of the lake basin with a flat bottom is steep and the northwestern edge is gentle. It is slightly salty due to the influence of tides, and the overall salinity is between 1.5 and 3.8%.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Lake Maracaibo is deep in the south and shallow in the north. The northern half of Lake Maracaibo, which looks like a bottleneck, is 55 kilometers long. The southeastern edge of Lake Maracaibo basin with a flat bottom is steep and the northwestern edge is gentle. Lake Maracaibo is slightly salty due to the influence of tides, and the overall salinity of Lake Maracaibo is between 1.5 and 3.8%.", - "paragraphB_article": "Lake Maracaibo", - "paragraphB_information": "The Catatumbo River forms a bird-foot-shaped delta in the southwest of the lake basin, and the surface lake water in the delta has a salinity of only 0.13%. However, the intrusion of seawater from the mouth of the lake makes the salinity of the bottom lake water higher, reaching 0.2-0.3%.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Catatumbo River forms a bird-foot-shaped delta in the southwest of Lake Maracaibo basin, and the surface lake water in the delta has a salinity of only 0.13%. However, the intrusion of seawater from the mouth of Lake Maracaibo makes the salinity of the bottom lake water higher, reaching 0.2-0.3%.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Lake Maracaibo salinity is between 1.5 and 3.8%", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Lake Maracaibo salinity reaches 0.2 - 0.3%", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is the salinity of Lake Maracaibo?", - "question1_answer1": "The salinity of Lake Maracaibo is between 1.5% and 3.8%", - "question1_answer2": "The salinity of Lake Maracibo is between 0.2% and 0.3%" - }, - { - "title": "List of defunct newspapers of the United States", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_defunct_newspapers_of_the_United_States", - "paragraph_A": "This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.{{Inconsistent|date=January 2018|reason=The list contains very many non-notable, small-town papers, some published for far less than 10 years.}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=January 2018|reason=The list contains very many non-notable, small-town papers, some published for far less than 10 years.", - "tagDate": "January 2018", - "tagReason": "The list contains very many non-notable, small-town papers, some published for far less than 10 years.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.", - "paragraphA_article": "List of defunct newspapers of the United States", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Hoover Gazette was a weekly newspaper that served the city of Hoover, Alabama. The Hoover Gazette was owned by Eagle Publishing Company LLC. The Hoover Gazette was first published on June 5, 2006. The last edition of Hoover Gazette was on August 15, 2007. The newspaper Hoover Gazette was published each Wednesday.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Hoover Gazette is a small, non-notable newspaper published for less than a year.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Lists only notable newspapers published for 10 years or more.", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) NP-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "What are examples of defunct newspapers in the United States?", - "question1_answer1": "The Daily Worker", - "question1_answer2": "The Hoover Gazette", - "paragraphB_article": "The Hoover Gazette", - "paragraphB_information": "The Hoover Gazette was a weekly newspaper that served the city of Hoover, Alabama. It was owned by Eagle Publishing Company LLC, published its first edition on June 5, 2006, and its last edition on August 15, 2007. The newspaper was published each Wednesday." - }, - { - "title": "Little America (exploration base)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_America_(exploration_base)", - "paragraph_A": "In a later expedition to Antarctica, Byrd's expedition spotted Little America's towers still standing, including the Jacobs Wind plant installed in 1933.Robert Righter, Wind Energy in America, p.95{{Inconsistent}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In a later expedition to Antarctica, Byrd's expedition spotted Little America's towers still standing, including the Jacobs Wind plant installed in 1933.Robert Righter, Wind Energy in America, p.95", - "tag": "Inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Little America (exploration base)", - "paragraphA_information": "Little America II was established in 1934, some thirty feet (ten meters) above the site of the original base, with some of the original base accessed via tunnel. This base was briefly set adrift in 1934, but the iceberg fused to the main glacier.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Little America II was established in 1934, some thirty feet (ten meters) above the site of the original base Little America I, with some of the original base accessed via tunnel. The Little America II base was briefly set adrift in 1934, but the iceberg fused to the main glacier.", - "paragraphB_article": "Little America (exploration base)", - "paragraphB_information": "In a later expedition to Antarctica, Byrd's expedition spotted Little America's towers still standing, including the Jacobs Wind plant installed in 1933.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In a later expedition to Antarctica, Byrd's expedition spotted Little America's towers still standing, including the Jacobs Wind plant installed in 1933.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Jacobs Wind plant was installed at the Little America base in 1933.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "When was Little America II base established?", - "question1_answer1": "1934", - "question1_answer2": "1933", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Little America II base was established in 1934." - }, - { - "title": "Imidazoline receptor", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imidazoline_receptor", - "paragraph_A": "*Moxonidine{{Inconsistent|date=December 2023|reason=Moxonidine is listed as both a selective I1 receptor agonist and a non-selective agonist.}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "*Moxonidine", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=December 2023|reason=Moxonidine is listed as both a selective I1 receptor agonist and a non-selective agonist.", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "Moxonidine is listed as both a selective I1 receptor agonist and a non-selective agonist.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "I1 receptors include Agonists such as AGN 192403, and Moxonidine", - "valid_comment": "Moxonidine is listed as both a selective I1 receptor agonist and a non-selective agonist. (December 2023)", - "paragraphA_article": " Imidazoline receptor", - "paragraphA_information": "I1 receptors Agonists AGN 192403 Moxonidine", - "paragraphB_article": " Imidazoline receptor", - "paragraphB_information": "Nonselective ligands Agonists Agmatine (putative endogenous ligand at I1; also interacts with NMDA, nicotinic, and \u03b12 adrenoceptors) Apraclonidine (\u03b12 adrenoceptor agonist) 2-BFI (I2 agonist, NMDA antagonist) Cimetidine (I1 agonist, H2 receptor antagonist) Clonidine (I1 agonist, \u03b12 adrenoceptor agonist) LNP-509 LNP-911 7-Me-marsanidine Dimethyltryptamine mCPP Moxonidine", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Nonselective ligands include Agonists such as Agmatine (putative endogenous ligand at I1; also interacts with NMDA, nicotinic, and \u03b12 adrenoceptors), Apraclonidine (\u03b12 adrenoceptor agonist), 2-BFI (I2 agonist, NMDA antagonist), Cimetidine (I1 agonist, H2 receptor antagonist), Clonidine (I1 agonist, \u03b12 adrenoceptor agonist), LNP-509, LNP-911, 7-Me-marsanidine, Dimethyltryptamine, mCPP, and Moxonidine", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "question1": "Is Moxonidine selective or non-selective Agonist?", - "question1_answer1": "selective", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Moxonidine is listed an agonist I1 receptor", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Moxonidine is a non-selective agonist I1 receptor", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "I1 receptors Agonists AGN 192403 Moxonidine", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Nonselective ligands Agonists Agmatine (putative endogenous ligand at I1; also interacts with NMDA, nicotinic, and \u03b12 adrenoceptors) Apraclonidine (\u03b12 adrenoceptor agonist) 2-BFI (I2 agonist, NMDA antagonist) Cimetidine (I1 agonist, H2 receptor antagonist) Clonidine (I1 agonist, \u03b12 adrenoceptor agonist) LNP-509 LNP-911 7-Me-marsanidine Dimethyltryptamine mCPP Moxonidine", - "qa_comment": "note the answer from chatGPT Moxonidine is considered a selective agonist. It primarily targets the imidazoline I1 receptors in the central nervous system, particularly in the rostral ventrolateral medulla of the brainstem. By selectively activating these receptors, Moxonidine exerts its antihypertensive effects by reducing sympathetic nervous system activity, ultimately leading to a decrease in blood pressure. While Moxonidine's primary action is selective for the imidazoline I1 receptors, it may also have some affinity for alpha-2 adrenergic receptors. However, its affinity for these receptors is lower compared to its selectivity for imidazoline receptors, and it is primarily known for its action on the I1 receptors. Therefore, it is commonly categorized as a selective agonist rather than a non-selective agonist.", - "question1_answer2": "non-selective" - }, - { - "title": "Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institute_of_Psychology_of_the_University_of_Paris", - "paragraph_A": "In 1965, Paul Fraisse becomes the institute's director.{{Inconsistent|date=April 2022|reason=The dates in the Directors section don't match}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In 1965, Paul Fraisse becomes the institute's director.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=April 2022|reason=The dates in the Directors section don't match", - "tagDate": "April 2022", - "tagReason": "The dates in the Directors section don't match", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_information": "In 1965, Paul Fraisse becomes the institute's director", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In 1965, Paul Fraisse becomes the Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris director", - "paragraphB_article": "Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris", - "paragraphB_information": "1952 : Paul Fraisse replaces Henri Pi\u00e9ron with a director board including Daniel Lagache (Sorbonne, lettres), Jean Delay (Facult\u00e9 de m\u00e9decine), and Pierre-Paul Grass\u00e9 (Sorbonne, Sciences). 1960 : Daniel Lagache steps back from co-directorship. 1961 : Paul Fraisse becomes the only director.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "1952 : Paul Fraisse replaces Henri Pi\u00e9ron with a director board of the Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris including Daniel Lagache (Sorbonne, lettres), Jean Delay (Facult\u00e9 de m\u00e9decine), and Pierre-Paul Grass\u00e9 (Sorbonne, Sciences). 1960 : Daniel Lagache steps back from co-directorship. 1961 : Paul Fraisse becomes the only director of the Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris.", - "paragraphA_article": "Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "In 1965, Paul Fraisse becomes the institute's director", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1952 : Paul Fraisse replaces Henri Pi\u00e9ron with a director board ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "In 1952 Paul Fraisse became a director on the board board and that in 1961 Paul Fraisse becomes the only director.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "In 1965, Paul Fraisse becomes the institute's director", - "question1": "What year did Paul Fraisse become a director of the Institute of Psychology of the University of Paris?", - "question1_answer1": "1965", - "question1_answer2": "1952" - }, - { - "title": "Julian Lewis Jones", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Lewis_Jones", - "paragraph_A": "Julian Lewis Jones (born 21 August 1968{{Inconsistent|date=September 2023}}) is a Welsh actor. He is best known for his work in Invictus and the Justice League.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Julian Lewis Jones (born 21 August 1968) is a Welsh actor. He is best known for his work in Invictus and the Justice League.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=September 2023", - "tagDate": "September 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Julian Lewis Jones Born\t27 August 1968", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Julian Lewis Jones (born 21 August 1968", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Julian Lewis Jones was born August 27th 1968", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Julian Lewis Jones was born August 21st 1968", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Julian Lewis Jones Born\t27 August 1968", - "paragraphB_information": "Julian Lewis Jones Born\t27 August 1968", - "paragraphB_article": "Julian Lewis Jones", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Julian Lewis Jones (born 21 August 1968", - "paragraphA_information": "Julian Lewis Jones (born 21 August 1968", - "paragraphA_article": "Julian Lewis Jones", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What date was Julian Lewis Jones born?", - "question1_answer1": "August 21st 1968", - "question1_answer2": " 27 August 1968" - }, - { - "title": "Liu Zhi (ROC)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liu_Zhi_(ROC)", - "paragraph_A": "Liu first fled to British Hong Kong, and later on made a living in Indonesia as a Chinese language teacher. In 1953, he was ordered to return to Kuomingtang-controlled Taiwan as a political adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. He was decorated with the Order of Blue Sky and White Sun. He died in Taiwan in 1972.{{Inconsistent|date=April 2020|reason=contradicted in infobox}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Liu first fled to British Hong Kong, and later on made a living in Indonesia as a Chinese language teacher. In 1953, he was ordered to return to Kuomingtang-controlled Taiwan as a political adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. He was decorated with the Order of Blue Sky and White Sun. He died in Taiwan in 1972.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=April 2020|reason=contradicted in infobox", - "tagDate": "April 2020", - "tagReason": "contradicted in infobox", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "valid_comment": "In Infobox date of dead is January 1971.", - "paragraphA_article": "Liu Zhi (ROC)", - "paragraphA_information": "Liu first fled to British Hong Kong, and later on made a living in Indonesia as a Chinese language teacher. In 1953, he was ordered to return to Kuomingtang-controlled Taiwan as a political adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. He was decorated with the Order of Blue Sky and White Sun. He died in Taiwan in 1972.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Liu Zhi first fled to British Hong Kong, and later on made a living in Indonesia as a Chinese language teacher. In 1953, he was ordered to return to Kuomingtang-controlled Taiwan as a political adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. He was decorated with the Order of Blue Sky and White Sun. He died in Taiwan in 1972.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "He died in Taiwan in 1972.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Died\t15 January 1971 (aged 78)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "in 1972", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "15 January 1971", - "question1": "When did Liu Zhi die?", - "question1_answer1": "Liu Zhi died in 1972.", - "question1_answer2": "Liu Zhi died on the 15 January 1971.", - "paragraphB_article": "Liu Zhi (ROC)", - "paragraphB_information": "Died\t15 January 1971 (aged 78) Taichung, Taiwan", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Liu Zhi died on the 15 January 1971 (aged 78) in Taichung, Taiwan" - }, - { - "title": "Loretto Chapel", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loretto_Chapel", - "paragraph_A": "The staircase lacks the newel or central pole usually used to support and stabilize a spiral staircase, and therefore the means of supporting the weight is not obvious. However, the staircase is supported by its stringers just like a conventional (straight) staircase, although in this case each stringer is twisted into a helix. Observers have also noted that the inside stringer has such a tight radius that it is able to function similarly to a straight center support. According to an analysis by a professional carpenter in Mysterious New Mexico, the assembly of the stringers from overlapping segments joined by wood glue{{Inconsistent|date=December 2023|reason=A prior section states neither nails or glue were used in the construction.}} creates a laminate that is actually stronger than the wood alone. Additionally, the use of wooden pegs rather than nails prevents degradation of the joints due to compression set as the wood swells against the nails due to changes in humidity or temperature.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The staircase lacks the newel or central pole usually used to support and stabilize a spiral staircase, and therefore the means of supporting the weight is not obvious. However, the staircase is supported by its stringers just like a conventional (straight) staircase, although in this case each stringer is twisted into a helix. Observers have also noted that the inside stringer has such a tight radius that it is able to function similarly to a straight center support. According to an analysis by a professional carpenter in Mysterious New Mexico, the assembly of the stringers from overlapping segments joined by wood glue creates a laminate that is actually stronger than the wood alone. Additionally, the use of wooden pegs rather than nails prevents degradation of the joints due to compression set as the wood swells against the nails due to changes in humidity or temperature.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=December 2023|reason=A prior section states neither nails or glue were used in the construction.", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "A prior section states neither nails or glue were used in the construction.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Loretto Chapel", - "paragraphB_article": "Loretto Chapel", - "paragraphA_information": "The staircase lacks the newel or central pole usually used to support and stabilize a spiral staircase, and therefore the means of supporting the weight is not obvious. However, the staircase is supported by its stringers just like a conventional (straight) staircase, although in this case each stringer is twisted into a helix. Observers have also noted that the inside stringer has such a tight radius that it is able to function similarly to a straight center support. According to an analysis by a professional carpenter in Mysterious New Mexico, the assembly of the stringers from overlapping segments joined by wood glue[inconsistent] creates a laminate that is actually stronger than the wood alone. Additionally, the use of wooden pegs rather than nails prevents degradation of the joints due to compression set as the wood swells against the nails due to changes in humidity or temperature", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Loretto Chapel staircase lacks the newel or central pole usually used to support and stabilize a spiral staircase, and therefore the means of supporting the weight is not obvious. However, the staircase is supported by its stringers just like a conventional (straight) staircase, although in this case each stringer is twisted into a helix. Observers have also noted that the inside stringer has such a tight radius that it is able to function similarly to a straight center support. According to an analysis by a professional carpenter in Mysterious New Mexico, the assembly of the stringers from overlapping segments joined by wood glue creates a laminate that is actually stronger than the wood alone. Additionally, the use of wooden pegs rather than nails prevents degradation of the joints due to compression set as the wood swells against the nails due to changes in humidity or temperature", - "paragraphB_information": "Loretto Chapel is best known for its helix-shaped staircase (nicknamed \"Miraculous Stair\"), which rises 20 feet (6.1 m) to the choir loft while making two full turns, all without the support of a newel or central pole. The staircase is built mostly out of wood and is held together by wooden pegs, with no glue, nails or other hardware used. The inner stringer consists of seven wooden segments joined together with pegs, while the longer outer stringer has nine segments. The exact wood used to build the staircase has been confirmed to be a type of spruce which is not native to New Mexico and scientifically not identified anywhere else in the world.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Loretto Chapel is best known for its helix-shaped staircase (nicknamed \"Miraculous Stair\"), which rises 20 feet (6.1 m) to the choir loft while making two full turns, all without the support of a newel or central pole. The staircase is built mostly out of wood and is held together by wooden pegs, with no glue, nails or other hardware used. The inner stringer consists of seven wooden segments joined together with pegs, while the longer outer stringer has nine segments. The exact wood used to build the staircase has been confirmed to be a type of spruce which is not native to New Mexico and scientifically not identified anywhere else in the world.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "According to an analysis by a professional carpenter in Mysterious New Mexico, the assembly of the stringers from overlapping segments joined by wood glue creates a laminate that is actually stronger than the wood alone", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The staircase is built mostly out of wood and is held together by wooden pegs, with no glue, nails or other hardware used", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "with no glue", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "overlapping segments joined by wood glue", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How is the Loretto Chapel staircase held together?", - "question1_answer1": "It is held together by overlapping segments joined by wood glue.", - "question1_answer2": "It is held together by wooden pegs, with no glue." - }, - { - "title": "Alonso del Castillo Maldonado", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alonso_del_Castillo_Maldonado", - "paragraph_A": "In the spring of 1528, thirteen of the fifteen survivors decided to leave the island, abandoning Cabeza de Vaca (because he was sick and unable to travel) and two other members of the expedition.{{inconsistent|date=November 2016}} In April 1529, this group, led by Dorantes and Castillo, reached the coast and landed at Matagorda Bay. However, most of the members of this expedition were killed by Native Americans. Only three survived: Dorantes de Carranza, Castillo and Estevanico.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In the spring of 1528, thirteen of the fifteen survivors decided to leave the island, abandoning Cabeza de Vaca (because he was sick and unable to travel) and two other members of the expedition. In April 1529, this group, led by Dorantes and Castillo, reached the coast and landed at Matagorda Bay. However, most of the members of this expedition were killed by Native Americans. Only three survived: Dorantes de Carranza, Castillo and Estevanico.", - "tag": "inconsistent|date=November 2016", - "tagDate": "November 2016", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Alonso del Castillo Maldonado", - "paragraphB_article": "Alonso del Castillo Maldonado", - "paragraphA_information": "In the spring of 1528, thirteen of the fifteen survivors decided to leave the island, abandoning Cabeza de Vaca (because he was sick and unable to travel) and two other members of the expedition. In April 1529, this group, led by Dorantes and Castillo, reached the coast and landed at Matagorda Bay. However, most of the members of this expedition were killed by Native Americans. Only three survived: Dorantes de Carranza, Castillo and Estevanico.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In the spring of 1528, during the P\u00e1nfilo de Narv\u00e1ez's 1527 expedition, thirteen of the fifteen survivors decided to leave the Galveston island, abandoning Cabeza de Vaca (because he was sick and unable to travel) and two other members of the expedition. In April 1529, this group, led by Dorantes and Castillo, reached the coast and landed at Matagorda Bay. However, most of the members of this expedition were killed by Native Americans. Only three survived: Dorantes de Carranza, Castillo and Estevanico.", - "paragraphB_information": "Alonso del Castillo Maldonado (died after 1547) was an early Spanish explorer in the Americas. He was one of the last four survivors of the P\u00e1nfilo de Narv\u00e1ez expedition, along with \u00c1lvar N\u00fa\u00f1ez Cabeza de Vaca, Andr\u00e9s Dorantes de Carranza and his African slave Estevanico. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Alonso del Castillo Maldonado (died after 1547) was an early Spanish explorer in the Americas. He was one of the last four survivors of the P\u00e1nfilo de Narv\u00e1ez expedition, along with \u00c1lvar N\u00fa\u00f1ez Cabeza de Vaca, Andr\u00e9s Dorantes de Carranza and his African slave Estevanico. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "However, most of the members of this expedition were killed by Native Americans. Only three survived: Dorantes de Carranza, Castillo and Estevanico.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Alonso del Castillo Maldonado (died after 1547) was an early Spanish explorer in the Americas. He was one of the last four survivors of the P\u00e1nfilo de Narv\u00e1ez expedition, along with \u00c1lvar N\u00fa\u00f1ez Cabeza de Vaca, Andr\u00e9s Dorantes de Carranza and his African slave Estevanico.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Only three survived", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "He was one of the last four survivors", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "question1": "How many people were survivors of the P\u00e1nfilo de Narv\u00e1ez expedition?", - "question1_answer1": "Three survived.", - "question1_answer2": "Four survived." - }, - { - "title": "Tyler Mane", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyler_Mane", - "paragraph_A": "In 2007, he played Michael Myers in Rob Zombie's remake of Halloween. After winning the role, he noted that he consecutively watched seven of the eight Halloween films (excluding the third because Michael Myers does not appear apart from in an ad for the first movie) to better understand his character.EXCL: Tyler Mane on Halloween. ShockTillYouDrop.com (August 5, 2007). Retrieved on 2013-03-30. He is the tallest actor (6' 8\") to portray the character.Rob Zombies Halloween Vision. Moviesonline.ca (October 25, 1978). Retrieved on 2013-03-30.{{Inconsistent}} In 2009, he reprised the role again in Rob Zombie's H2, being only the second actor to play Michael Myers more than once, and the first actor to play the role in consecutive films.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In 2007, he played Michael Myers in Rob Zombie's remake of Halloween. After winning the role, he noted that he consecutively watched seven of the eight Halloween films (excluding the third because Michael Myers does not appear apart from in an ad for the first movie) to better understand his character.EXCL: Tyler Mane on Halloween. ShockTillYouDrop.com (August 5, 2007). Retrieved on 2013-03-30. He is the tallest actor (6' 8\") to portray the character.Rob Zombies Halloween Vision. Moviesonline.ca (October 25, 1978). Retrieved on 2013-03-30. In 2009, he reprised the role again in Rob Zombie's H2, being only the second actor to play Michael Myers more than once, and the first actor to play the role in consecutive films.", - "tag": "Inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Tyler Mane", - "paragraphB_article": "Tyler Mane", - "paragraphA_information": "In 2007, he played Michael Myers in Rob Zombie's remake of Halloween. After winning the role, he noted that he consecutively watched seven of the eight Halloween films (excluding the third because Michael Myers does not appear apart from in an ad for the first movie) to better understand his character. He is the tallest actor (6' 8\") to portray the character", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In 2007, Tayler Mane played Michael Myers in Rob Zombie's remake of Halloween. After winning the role, he noted that he consecutively watched seven of the eight Halloween films (excluding the third because Michael Myers does not appear apart from in an ad for the first movie) to better understand his character. He is the tallest actor (6' 8\") to portray the character", - "paragraphB_information": "Billed height\t6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Tayler Mane height is 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m).", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Tyler Mane is the tallest actor (6' 8\") to portray the character.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Billed height\t6 ft 9 in (2.06 m)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "6' 8\"", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "6 ft 9 in", - "question1": "How tall is Tyler Mane?", - "question1_answer1": "6 ft 8 in", - "question1_answer2": "6 ft 9 in" - }, - { - "title": "Heinrich Marx", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinrich_Marx", - "paragraph_A": "Heinrich Marx (born Herschel HaLevi,{{inconsistent|reason=See Talk page}} ; 15 April 1777 \u2013 10 May 1838) was the father of the revolutionary leader and influential socialist thinker Karl Marx. He was a lawyer, and had eight children including Karl Marx and Louise Juta.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Heinrich Marx (born Herschel HaLevi, ; 15 April 1777 \u2013 10 May 1838) was the father of the revolutionary leader and influential socialist thinker Karl Marx. He was a lawyer, and had eight children including Karl Marx and Louise Juta.", - "tag": "inconsistent|reason=See Talk page", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "See Talk page", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Heinrich Marx", - "paragraphA_information": "Heinrich Marx (born Herschel HaLevi, Yiddish: \u05d4\u05d9\u05e8\u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05dc\u05d5\u05d9; 15 April 1777 \u2013 10 May 1838) was a German lawyer who fathered the communist philosopher Karl Marx, as well as seven other children, including Louise Juta.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Heinrich Marx (born Herschel HaLevi, Yiddish: \u05d4\u05d9\u05e8\u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05dc\u05d5\u05d9; 15 April 1777 \u2013 10 May 1838) was a German lawyer who fathered the communist philosopher Karl Marx, as well as seven other children, including Louise Juta.", - "paragraphB_information": "Heinrich Marx was born in Saarlouis into an Ashkenazi Jewish family with the name Herschel Levi, the son of Rabbi Marx Levi Mordechai ben Samuel HaLevi von R\u00f6delheim (1743\u20131804) and Eva Lwow (1753\u20131823)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Heinrich Marx was born in Saarlouis into an Ashkenazi Jewish family with the name Herschel Levi, the son of Rabbi Marx Levi Mordechai ben Samuel HaLevi von R\u00f6delheim (1743\u20131804) and Eva Lwow (1753\u20131823)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Heinrich Marx (born Herschel HaLevi, Yiddish: \u05d4\u05d9\u05e8\u05e9\u05dc \u05d4\u05dc\u05d5\u05d9; 15 April 1777 \u2013 10 May 1838) was a German lawyer who fathered the communist philosopher Karl Marx, as well as seven other children, including Louis", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Heinrich Marx was born in Saarlouis into an Ashkenazi Jewish family with the name Herschel Levi, the son of Rabbi Marx Levi Mordechai ben Samuel HaLevi von R\u00f6delheim (1743\u20131804) and Eva Lwow (1753\u20131823)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1_answer2": "Herschel Levi", - "question1_answer1": "Herschel HaLevi", - "question1": "What is Heinrich Mark birth name?", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": " with the name Herschel Levi", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "born Herschel HaLevi", - "paragraphB_article": "Heinrich Marx" - }, - { - "title": "Sleep in animals", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleep_in_animals", - "paragraph_A": "Sleep in fish is the subject of ongoing scientific research.Reebs, S. (1992) Sleep, inactivity and circadian rhythms in fish. pp. 127\u2013135 in: Ali, M.A. (ed.), Rhythms in Fish, New York: Plenum Press. Typically fish exhibit periods of inactivity but show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition.{{inconsistent}} Some species that always live in shoals or that swim continuously (because of a need for ram ventilation of the gills, for example) are suspected never to sleep. There is also doubt about certain blind species that live in caves. Other fish seem to sleep, however. For example, zebrafish,; third party discussion of Yokogawa: tilapia, tench, brown bullhead, and swell shark become motionless and unresponsive at night (or by day, in the case of the swell shark); Spanish hogfish and blue-headed wrasse can even be lifted by hand all the way to the surface without evoking a response.Tauber, E.S., 1974, The phylogeny of sleep, pp. 133\u2013172 in: Advances in sleep research, vol. 1 (E.D. Weitzman, ed.), Spectrum Publications, New York. Studies show that some fish (for example rays and sharks) have unihemispheric sleep, which means they put half their brain to sleep while the other half still remains active and they swim while they are sleeping. A 1961 observational study of approximately 200 species in European public aquaria reported many cases of apparent sleep. On the other hand, sleep patterns are easily disrupted and may even disappear during periods of migration, spawning, and parental care.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Sleep in fish is the subject of ongoing scientific research.Reebs, S. (1992) Sleep, inactivity and circadian rhythms in fish. pp. 127\u2013135 in: Ali, M.A. (ed.), Rhythms in Fish, New York: Plenum Press. Typically fish exhibit periods of inactivity but show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition. Some species that always live in shoals or that swim continuously (because of a need for ram ventilation of the gills, for example) are suspected never to sleep. There is also doubt about certain blind species that live in caves. Other fish seem to sleep, however. For example, zebrafish,; third party discussion of Yokogawa: tilapia, tench, brown bullhead, and swell shark become motionless and unresponsive at night (or by day, in the case of the swell shark); Spanish hogfish and blue-headed wrasse can even be lifted by hand all the way to the surface without evoking a response.Tauber, E.S., 1974, The phylogeny of sleep, pp. 133\u2013172 in: Advances in sleep research, vol. 1 (E.D. Weitzman, ed.), Spectrum Publications, New York. Studies show that some fish (for example rays and sharks) have unihemispheric sleep, which means they put half their brain to sleep while the other half still remains active and they swim while they are sleeping. A 1961 observational study of approximately 200 species in European public aquaria reported many cases of apparent sleep. On the other hand, sleep patterns are easily disrupted and may even disappear during periods of migration, spawning, and parental care.", - "tag": "inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "valid_comment": "This contradiction is quite interesting as it goes back to inconsistencies caused by ongoing research on sleep in fish.", - "paragraphA_article": "Sleep in animals", - "paragraphA_information": "Sleep in fish is the subject of ongoing scientific research.Typically fish exhibit periods of inactivity but show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Sleep in fish is the subject of ongoing scientific research.Typically fish exhibit periods of inactivity but show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition.", - "paragraphB_article": "Sleep in animals", - "paragraphB_information": "If sleep were not essential, one would expect to find - Animal species that do not sleep at all - Animals that do not need recovery sleep after staying awake longer than usual - Animals that suffer no serious consequences as a result of lack of sleep. Hence sleep is essential for all complex animals.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "If sleep were not essential in animals, one would expect to find - Animal species that do not sleep at all - Animals that do not need recovery sleep after staying awake longer than usual - Animals that suffer no serious consequences as a result of lack of sleep. Hence sleep is essential for all complex animals.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Sleep in fish is the subject of ongoing scientific research.Typically fish exhibit periods of inactivity but show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "If sleep were not essential in animals, one would expect to find - Animal species that do not sleep at all - Animals that do not need recovery sleep after staying awake longer than usual - Animals that suffer no serious consequences as a result of lack of sleep. Hence sleep is essential for all complex animals.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "If sleep were not essential in animals, one would expect to find - Animals that suffer no serious consequences as a result of lack of sleep", - "contradict_comment": "Essentially the text says that sleep is essential to animals and this is proved by the fact that animals suffer consequences from the lack of sleep. On the other side it says that fish do not suffer consequence from the lack of sleep, so this brings to the conclusion that either fish are not complex animals (false) or sleep is not a necessity for complex animals (false as stated in the text). From here it comes the contradiciton.", - "question1": "Is sleep is essential for all complex animals?", - "question1_answer1": "Not for all types of complex animals, typically fish exhibit periods of inactivity but show no significant reactions to deprivation of this condition.", - "question1_answer2": "Yes as if sleep were not essential in animals, one would expect to find - Animal species that do not sleep at all - Animals that do not need recovery sleep after staying awake longer than usual - Animals that suffer no serious consequences as a result of lack of sleep. Hence sleep is essential for all complex animals." - }, - { - "title": "St Eunan's GAA", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Eunan's_GAA", - "paragraph_A": "2014\u2013 2018{{inconsistent|see below}}\tMaxi Curran", - "paragraph_A_clean": "2014\u2013 2018\tMaxi Curran", - "tag": "inconsistent|see below", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Infobox/table - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "St Eunan's GAA", - "paragraphA_information": "c. 2014\u2013c. 2018\tMaxi Curran", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The manager of St Eunan's GAA in the period c2014-c.2018 was Maxi Curran.", - "paragraphB_article": "St Eunan's GAA", - "paragraphB_information": "c. 2017\tBarry Meehan/Eddie Brennan", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The managers of St Eunan's GAA in 2017 were Barry Meehan and Eddie Brennan.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "c. 2014\u2013c. 2018\tMaxi Curran", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "c. 2017\tBarry Meehan/Eddie Brennan", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "c. 2014\u2013c. 2018\tMaxi Curran", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "c. 2017\tBarry Meehan/Eddie Brennan", - "question1": "Who was the manager of St Eunan's GAA in 2017?", - "question1_answer1": "The manager of St Eunan's GAA in 2017 was Maxi Curran.", - "question1_answer2": "The managers of St Eunan's GAA in 2017 were Barry Meehan and Eddie Brennan." - }, - { - "title": "Maria Stevens", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Stevens", - "paragraph_A": "Maria Stevens (died after 1707) was an English woman who was executed for witchcraft.{{Inconsistent}}Gregory J Durston, Crimen Exceptum: The English Witch Prosecution in Context ", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Maria Stevens (died after 1707) was an English woman who was executed for witchcraft.Gregory J Durston, Crimen Exceptum: The English Witch Prosecution in Context ", - "tag": "Inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Maria Stevens", - "paragraphA_information": "Maria Stevens (died after 1707) was an English woman who was executed for witchcraft.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Maria Stevens (died after 1707) was an English woman who was executed for witchcraft.", - "paragraphB_article": "Maria Stevens", - "paragraphB_information": "She was accused of having bewitched an acquaintance, Dorothy Reeves. The trial was held at Taunton Castle. Stevens was acquitted and released after judge and jury failed to believe the evidence given against her.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Maria Stevens was accused of having bewitched an acquaintance, Dorothy Reeves. The trial was held at Taunton Castle. Stevens was acquitted and released after judge and jury failed to believe the evidence given against her.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Maria Stevens (died after 1707) was an English woman who was executed for witchcraft.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Stevens was acquitted and released after judge and jury failed to believe the evidence given against her.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "executed for witchcraft", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Stevens was acquitted and released", - "question1": "Was Maria Stevens executed for witchcraft?", - "question1_answer1": "Maria Stevens was an English woman who was executed for witchcraft.", - "question1_answer2": "Maria Stevens was acquitted and released after judge and jury failed to believe the evidence given against her." - }, - { - "title": "Stop Child Trafficking Now", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_Child_Trafficking_Now", - "paragraph_A": "The first walk took place in September 2011 in Augusta, Georgia, United States.{{Inconsistent|date=October 2021|reason=Tara Herrschaft (cited above) reported on a walk in 2009.}} SCTNow events have been held in more than 35 cities in the United States.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The first walk took place in September 2011 in Augusta, Georgia, United States. SCTNow events have been held in more than 35 cities in the United States.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=October 2021|reason=Tara Herrschaft (cited above) reported on a walk in 2009.", - "tagDate": "October 2021", - "tagReason": "Tara Herrschaft (cited above) reported on a walk in 2009.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Stop Child Trafficking Now", - "paragraphA_information": "The first walk took place in September 2011 in Augusta, Georgia, United States.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The first walk of the Stop Child Trafficking Now organization took place in September 2011 in Augusta, Georgia, United States.", - "paragraphB_article": "Stop Child Trafficking Now", - "paragraphB_information": "The organization organized annual walks to raise funds and awareness about the issue. In 2009, organizers claimed to have organized walks in 41 cities nationwide and hoped to raise over a million dollars. The group organized a protest at Phillips Square, Montreal, Quebec, Canada in September 2009.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Stop Child Trafficking Now organization organized annual walks to raise funds and awareness about the issue. In 2009, organizers claimed to have organized walks in 41 cities nationwide and hoped to raise over a million dollars. The group organized a protest at Phillips Square, Montreal, Quebec, Canada in September 2009.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The first walk took place in September 2011 in Augusta, Georgia, United States.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "In 2009, organizers claimed to have organized walks in 41 cities nationwide and hoped to raise over a million dollars. The group organized a protest at Phillips Square, Montreal, Quebec, Canada in September 2009.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "September 2011", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "In 2009", - "question1": "When the first walk of the organization Stop Child Trafficking Now took place?", - "question1_answer1": "The first walk of the organization Stop Child Trafficking Now took place in September 2011.", - "question1_answer2": "The Stop Child Trafficking Now group organized a protest at Phillips Square, Montreal, Quebec, Canada in September 2009." - }, - { - "title": "Synthetic chord", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synthetic_chord", - "paragraph_A": "In music theory and harmonic analysis, a synthetic chord is a made-up or non-traditional (synthetic) chord (collection of pitches) which cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures,{{inconsistent|date=September 2011}} such as the triad or seventh chord.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In music theory and harmonic analysis, a synthetic chord is a made-up or non-traditional (synthetic) chord (collection of pitches) which cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures, such as the triad or seventh chord.", - "tag": "inconsistent|date=September 2011", - "tagDate": "September 2011", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "It's stated that a synthetic chord cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures, and later in the article, it's stated that some synthetic chords can be analyzed as such. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Synthetic chord", - "paragraphA_information": "In music theory and harmonic analysis, a synthetic chord is a made-up or non-traditional (synthetic) chord (collection of pitches) which cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures, such as the triad or seventh chord.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In music theory and harmonic analysis, a synthetic chord is a made-up or non-traditional (synthetic) chord (collection of pitches) which cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures, such as the triad or seventh chord.", - "paragraphB_article": "Synthetic chord", - "paragraphB_information": "Some synthetic chords may be analyzed as traditional chords, including the Prometheus chord, which may be analyzed as an altered dominant chord.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Some synthetic chords may be analyzed as traditional chords, including the Prometheus chord, which may be analyzed as an altered dominant chord.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Some synthetic chords may be analyzed as traditional chords", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "A synthetic chords cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "a synthetic chord is a made-up or non-traditional (synthetic) chord (collection of pitches) which cannot be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Some synthetic chords may be analyzed as traditional chords", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) NP-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Can any synthetic chord be analyzed in terms of traditional harmonic structures/chords?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Tauhinukorokio / Mount Pleasant", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tauhinukorokio_/_Mount_Pleasant", - "paragraph_A": "Edward Ward, the eldest brother of Crosbie Ward, was one of the Pilgrims. On his first day in New Zealand, having arrived on the Charlotte Jane, he climbed Mount Pleasant to get a view of the Canterbury Plains. He stood by the hut built by Charles Crawford,{{Inconsistent|date=February 2021|reason=The article says Greenwood built the hut in 1846, or were there are 2 different huts built by different people at different times, for some reason? Explain this, or was Crawford occupying Greenwood's hut.}} who was managing Mount Pleasant for the Rhodes brothers, when he remarked the following:", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Edward Ward, the eldest brother of Crosbie Ward, was one of the Pilgrims. On his first day in New Zealand, having arrived on the Charlotte Jane, he climbed Mount Pleasant to get a view of the Canterbury Plains. He stood by the hut built by Charles Crawford, who was managing Mount Pleasant for the Rhodes brothers, when he remarked the following:", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=February 2021|reason=The article says Greenwood built the hut in 1846, or were there are 2 different huts built by different people at different times, for some reason? Explain this, or was Crawford occupying Greenwood's hut.", - "tagDate": "February 2021", - "tagReason": "The article says Greenwood built the hut in 1846, or were there are 2 different huts built by different people at different times, for some reason? Explain this, or was Crawford occupying Greenwood's hut.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that a hut was built on Mount Pleasant by Joseph Greenwood. In the same article, it's suggested that the hut was built by Charles Crawford.", - "paragraphA_article": "Tauhinukorokio / Mount Pleasant", - "paragraphB_article": "Tauhinukorokio / Mount Pleasant", - "paragraphA_information": "The first European to farm on the mountain was Joseph Greenwood of Purau, who took up land in 1846 and built a stockman's hut near the peak.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The first European to farm on the Mount Pleasant was Joseph Greenwood of Purau, who took up land in 1846 and built a stockman's hut near the peak.", - "paragraphB_information": "He stood by the hut built by Charles Crawford ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Edward Ward, the eldest brother of Crosbie Ward stood by the hut on Mount Pleasant built by Charles Crawford ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "the hut on Mount Pleasant was built by Joseph Greenwood", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "the hut on Mount Pleasant was build by Charles Crawford", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "The first European to farm on the mountain was Joseph Greenwood of Purau, who took up land in 1846 and built a stockman's hut near the peak.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "He stood by the hut on Mount Pleasant built by Charles Crawford ", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "In the 1840s, who built the stockman's hut near the peak of Mount Pleasant?", - "question1_answer1": "Joseph Greenwood", - "question1_answer2": "Charles Crawford" - }, - { - "title": "Tobolsk Viceroyalty", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobolsk_Viceroyalty", - "paragraph_A": "According to Catherine II's regional reform (1785), which transformed provincial governments into viceroyalties, for a population to be considered a city, it had to have a special letter from Catherine II\u2014which created a self-governing city society with the right of a legal entity\u2014as well as the highest approved coat of arms and city plan. From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine{{Inconsistent|reason=Says 9 cities but only 8 are listed. Which number is correct?}} cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty: Tobolsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Tara, Turukhansk, Yeniseisk, Narym, and Omsk.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "According to Catherine II's regional reform (1785), which transformed provincial governments into viceroyalties, for a population to be considered a city, it had to have a special letter from Catherine II\u2014which created a self-governing city society with the right of a legal entity\u2014as well as the highest approved coat of arms and city plan. From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty: Tobolsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Tara, Turukhansk, Yeniseisk, Narym, and Omsk.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=Says 9 cities but only 8 are listed. Which number is correct?", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "Says 9 cities but only 8 are listed. Which number is correct?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that from 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty but only lists eight", - "paragraphA_information": "From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty in which general city dumas were organized from 1788 until the early 1790s: Tobolsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Tara, Turukhansk, Yeniseisk, Narym, and Omsk.", - "paragraphB_information": "Tobolsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Tara, Turukhansk, Yeniseisk, Narym, and Omsk.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty.", - "paragraphA_article": "Tobolsk Viceroyalty", - "paragraphB_article": "Tobolsk Viceroyalty", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Implies that From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in eight cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty, as only eight cities are listed", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in nine cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Tobolsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Tara, Turukhansk, Yeniseisk, Narym, and Omsk", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "From 1788 until the early 1790s, general city dumas were organized in how many cities of the Tobolsk Viceroyalty?", - "question1_answer1": "Nine", - "question1_answer2": "Eight" - }, - { - "title": "Torpedo", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpedo", - "paragraph_A": "Whitehead faced competition from the American Lieutenant Commander John A. Howell, whose design, driven by a flywheel, was simpler and cheaper. It was produced from 1885 to 1895, and it ran straight, leaving no wake. A Torpedo Test Station was set up in Rhode Island in 1870. The Howell torpedo was the only United States Navy model until Whitehead torpedoes produced by Bliss and Williams entered service in 1894. Five varieties were produced, all 18-inch diameter. The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892 after an American company, E.W. Bliss, secured manufacturing rights.{{Inconsistent|date=November 2016|reason=redundant but dualling statements re Bliss: 1892 vs 1894?}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Whitehead faced competition from the American Lieutenant Commander John A. Howell, whose design, driven by a flywheel, was simpler and cheaper. It was produced from 1885 to 1895, and it ran straight, leaving no wake. A Torpedo Test Station was set up in Rhode Island in 1870. The Howell torpedo was the only United States Navy model until Whitehead torpedoes produced by Bliss and Williams entered service in 1894. Five varieties were produced, all 18-inch diameter. The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892 after an American company, E.W. Bliss, secured manufacturing rights.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=November 2016|reason=redundant but dualling statements re Bliss: 1892 vs 1894?", - "tagDate": "November 2016", - "tagReason": "redundant but dualling statements re Bliss: 1892 vs 1894?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that whitehead torpedoes entered service in 1894, but then states that The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892.", - "paragraphA_article": "Torpedo", - "paragraphA_information": "The Howell torpedo was the only United States Navy model until Whitehead torpedoes produced by Bliss and Williams entered service in 1894.", - "paragraphB_article": "Torpedo", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Howell torpedo was the only United States Navy model until Whitehead torpedoes produced by Bliss and Williams entered service in 1894.", - "paragraphB_information": "The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892 after an American company, E.W. Bliss, secured manufacturing rights.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892 after an American company, E.W. Bliss, secured manufacturing rights.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "whitehead torpedoes entered service in 1894", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Whitehead torpedoes produced by Bliss and Williams entered service in 1894.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "The United States Navy started using the Whitehead torpedo in 1892", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "In what year did the Whitehead Torpedo enter service?", - "question1_answer1": "1894", - "question1_answer2": "1892 or before" - }, - { - "title": "Toyota Supra", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toyota_Supra", - "paragraph_A": "Again using subframe, suspension, and drivetrain assemblies from the Z30 Soarer (Lexus SC300/400), pre-production of the test models started in December 1992 with 20 units made, and official mass production began in April 1993.{{Inconsistent|date=August 2020|reason=production in Motomachi plant did not start until May 1993}} The fourth-generation Supra again shared its platform with the upscale Soarer coupe, sold in the U.S. as the Lexus SC. Although the two cars looked similar dimension-wise, the new Supra was more than 13 inches (340\u00a0mm) shorter than its luxurious cousin.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Again using subframe, suspension, and drivetrain assemblies from the Z30 Soarer (Lexus SC300/400), pre-production of the test models started in December 1992 with 20 units made, and official mass production began in April 1993. The fourth-generation Supra again shared its platform with the upscale Soarer coupe, sold in the U.S. as the Lexus SC. Although the two cars looked similar dimension-wise, the new Supra was more than 13 inches (340\u00a0mm) shorter than its luxurious cousin.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=August 2020|reason=production in Motomachi plant did not start until May 1993", - "tagDate": "August 2020", - "tagReason": "production in Motomachi plant did not start until May 1993", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that official mass production of the Fourth Generation (A80) Toyota Supra began in April 1993, but elsewhere in the article, it's stated that it began in May 1993. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Toyota Supra", - "paragraphB_article": "Toyota Supra", - "paragraphA_information": "official mass production began in April 1993.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "official mass production of the Fourth Generation (A80) Toyota Supra began in April 1993.", - "paragraphB_information": "Production: May 1993 \u2013 August 2002", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Production of the Fourth Generation (A80) Toyota Supra: May 1993 \u2013 August 2002", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "official mass production of the Fourth Generation (A80) Toyota Supra began in April 1993.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "mass production of the Fourth Generation (A80) Toyota Supra began in May 1993.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "official mass production began in April 1993.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Production: May 1993 \u2013 August 2002", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "In what year and month did mass production of the Fourth Generation (A80) Toyota Supra begin?", - "question1_answer1": "April 1993", - "question1_answer2": "May 1993" - }, - { - "title": "Two penny blue", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two_penny_blue", - "paragraph_A": "The Two Penny Blue or The Two Pence Blue was the world's second official postage stamp,{{inconsistent|date=May 2020}} produced in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and issued after the Penny Black.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Two Penny Blue or The Two Pence Blue was the world's second official postage stamp, produced in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and issued after the Penny Black.", - "tag": "inconsistent|date=May 2020", - "tagDate": "May 2020", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that The Two Penny Blue or The Two Pence Blue was the world's second official postage stamp, having first been printed on 1 May 1840, yet in another wikipedia article, for \"The Penny Black\", which is supposedly the world's first postage stamp, it's stated that that stamp was also first printed on 1 May 1840.", - "paragraphA_article": "Two penny blue", - "paragraphB_article": "Penny black", - "paragraphA_information": "The Two Penny Blue or The Two Pence Blue was the world's second official postage stamp, produced in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and issued after the Penny Black. [...] Initial printing took place from 1 May 1840. [...] Officially the stamps were valid for postage from 6 May.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Two Penny Blue or The Two Pence Blue was the world's second official postage stamp, produced in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and issued after the Penny Black. [...] Initial printing took place from 1 May 1840. [...] Officially the stamps were valid for postage from 6 May.", - "paragraphB_information": "The Penny Black was the world's first adhesive postage stamp used in a public postal system. It was first issued in the United Kingdom on 1 May 1840 but was not valid for use until 6 May. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Penny Black was the world's first adhesive postage stamp used in a public postal system. It was first issued in the United Kingdom on 1 May 1840 but was not valid for use until 6 May. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Two Penny Blue was the world's second postage stamp.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Penny Black was the world's first postage stamp despite entering use on. the same date as The Two Penny Blue", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Officially the stamps were valid for postage from 6 May.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "It was first issued in the United Kingdom on 1 May 1840 but was not valid for use until 6 May. ", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Which postage stamp was issued first: \"Two Penny Blue\" or \"Penny Black\"?", - "question1_answer1": "The Penny Black", - "question1_answer2": "Same date" - }, - { - "title": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ndat\u00e9_Yalla_Mbodj", - "paragraph_A": "After several skirmishes, Maroso Tass\u00e9 and his wife refused to submit to French invasion and mobilized more forces in order to repulse the French army. In February 1855, Faidherbe departed from Saint-Louis with a force of 450 French soldiers and 400 armed volunteers in order to march on Nder, Ndat\u00e9's capital. On 25 February at the Battle of Dioubouldy, the French defeated the combined Waalo and Trarza armies. The French then entered Nder, which had been deserted by the Queen and her followers, and burned it down. Maroso Tass\u00e9 and his warriors still held firm and refused to submit. The Queen who was receiving updates still remained defiant. On 31 January 1855{{Inconsistent|date=April 2021}}, Faidherbe finally defeated the Queen and gained control of Waalo.Seye, El Hadji Amadou, Walo Brack, Les \u00e9ditions Maguilen (Dakar, 2007), p. 204 Having been defeated, the Queen gave the following speech in front of her dignitaries:", - "paragraph_A_clean": "After several skirmishes, Maroso Tass\u00e9 and his wife refused to submit to French invasion and mobilized more forces in order to repulse the French army. In February 1855, Faidherbe departed from Saint-Louis with a force of 450 French soldiers and 400 armed volunteers in order to march on Nder, Ndat\u00e9's capital. On 25 February at the Battle of Dioubouldy, the French defeated the combined Waalo and Trarza armies. The French then entered Nder, which had been deserted by the Queen and her followers, and burned it down. Maroso Tass\u00e9 and his warriors still held firm and refused to submit. The Queen who was receiving updates still remained defiant. On 31 January 1855, Faidherbe finally defeated the Queen and gained control of Waalo.Seye, El Hadji Amadou, Walo Brack, Les \u00e9ditions Maguilen (Dakar, 2007), p. 204 Having been defeated, the Queen gave the following speech in front of her dignitaries:", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=April 2021", - "tagDate": "April 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj", - "paragraphA_information": "In February 1855, Faidherbe departed from Saint-Louis with a force of 450 French soldiers and 400 armed volunteers in order to march on Nder, Ndat\u00e9's capital. On 25 February at the Battle of Dioubouldy, the French defeated the combined Waalo and Trarza armies. The French then entered Nder, which had been deserted by the Queen and her followers, and burned it down. Maroso Tass\u00e9 and his warriors still held firm and refused to submit. The Queen who was receiving updates still remained defiant.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In February 1855, General Louis Faidherbe (French general and colonial administrator) departed from Saint-Louis with a force of 450 French soldiers and 400 armed volunteers in order to march on Nder, Waalo's (a Jolof kingdom located in what is now northwest Senegal) capital. On 25 February at the Battle of Dioubouldy, the French defeated the combined Waalo and Trarza (region in what is now southwest Mauritania) armies. The French then entered Nder, which had been deserted by Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj and her followers, and burned it down. Maroso Tass\u00e9 and his warriors still held firm and refused to submit. Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj who was receiving updates still remained defiant.", - "paragraphB_information": "On 31 January 1855, Faidherbe finally defeated the Queen and gained control of Waalo.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "On 31 January 1855, Faidherbe finally defeated Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj and gained control of Waalo.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "On 31 January 1855, Faidherbe (French general and colonial administrator) finally defeated the Queen and gained control of Waalo.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "On 25 February at the Battle of Dioubouldy, the French defeated the combined Waalo and Trarza armies. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "31 January 1855", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "In which year and month did the French general Louis Faidherbe defeat the Queen of Waalo, Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj?", - "question1_answer1": "February 1855", - "question1_answer2": "January 1855", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "February 1855", - "paragraphB_article": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj", - "question2": "In which year and month did France defeat the Queen of Waalo?", - "question2_answer1": "February 1855", - "question2_answer2": "January 1855" - }, - { - "title": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ndat\u00e9_Yalla_Mbodj", - "paragraph_A": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj, is regarded as a heroine in Senegambian history, and one of the most famous women of 19th century Senegambia. Along with several other African heroines, she played a crucial role in the struggle for African liberation. Oral historians (also known as griots) have recorded her bravery, and she remains a symbol of female empowerment and resistance against French colonialism. Queen Ndate Yalla Mbodj died in Dagana, where a statue erected in her honor still stands.{{Inconsistent|date=December 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj, is regarded as a heroine in Senegambian history, and one of the most famous women of 19th century Senegambia. Along with several other African heroines, she played a crucial role in the struggle for African liberation. Oral historians (also known as griots) have recorded her bravery, and she remains a symbol of female empowerment and resistance against French colonialism. Queen Ndate Yalla Mbodj died in Dagana, where a statue erected in her honor still stands.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=December 2023", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj", - "paragraphA_information": "In light of their crushing defeat, with the advice of the Jogomay, Jawdin and Maalo (the three powerful noble council of electors responsible for electing the kings and queens of Waalo from the ruling family) and Maaroso Tass\u00e9's relatives in the royal family of Cayor, requested that the royal couple move to Cayor for refuge and protection. They left for Cayor, and received protection from their relatives. The French demanded that the royal family of Cayor hand them over as their prisoners, and if they refuse to do so Cayor would be deemed an enemy. The royal family of Cayor refused to do so and offered them protection. The Queen remained in Cayor until her death in 1860.", - "paragraphB_article": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In light of their crushing defeat, with the advice of the Jogomay, Jawdin and Maalo (the three powerful noble council of electors responsible for electing the kings and queens of Waalo from the ruling family) and Maaroso Tass\u00e9's (Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj's husband) relatives in the royal family of Cayor, requested that the royal couple move to Cayor for refuge and protection. They left for Cayor, and received protection from their relatives. The French demanded that the royal family of Cayor hand them over as their prisoners, and if they refuse to do so Cayor would be deemed an enemy. The royal family of Cayor refused to do so and offered them protection. Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj remained in Cayor until her death in 1860.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj died in 1860 in Dagana, Wolof Kingdom of Waalo. Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj, is regarded as a heroine in Senegambian history, and one of the most famous women of 19th century Senegambia. Along with several other African heroines, she played a crucial role in the struggle for African liberation. Oral historians (also known as griots) have recorded her bravery, and she remains a symbol of female empowerment and resistance against French colonialism. Queen Ndate Yalla Mbodj died in Dagana, where a statue erected in her honor still stands.", - "paragraphB_information": "Died 1860 Dagana, Wolof Kingdom of Waalo. Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj, is regarded as a heroine in Senegambian history, and one of the most famous women of 19th century Senegambia. Along with several other African heroines, she played a crucial role in the struggle for African liberation. Oral historians (also known as griots) have recorded her bravery, and she remains a symbol of female empowerment and resistance against French colonialism. Queen Ndate Yalla Mbodj died in Dagana, where a statue erected in her honor still stands.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Queen remained in Cayor until her death in 1860. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj died in 1860 in Dagana, Wolof Kingdom of Waalo. Queen Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj died in Dagana.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Cayor", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Dagana", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Where did Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj die?", - "question2_answer1": "Cayor", - "question2_answer2": "Dagana", - "question1": "Did Ndat\u00e9 Yalla Mbodj die in Cayor?" - }, - { - "title": "Paul McCole", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_McCole", - "paragraph_A": "Paul McCole (born 10{{Inconsistent|date=March 2023}} February 1972) is a Scottish actor, comedian and musician. He is perhaps best known for his role as Limmy's pal and also in the dark comedy series High Times along with his brother Stephen. He has appeared in television shows such as Limmy's Show, Taggart, Rab C. Nesbitt, and Still Game. McCole also performed in The Strange Undoing of Prudencia Heart from 2013 to 2014, (this was the longest touring show from the National Theatre of Scotland). He spends his time in an irreverent comedy duo/band with his writing partner Gordon Munro, Dignitas.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Paul McCole (born 10 February 1972) is a Scottish actor, comedian and musician. He is perhaps best known for his role as Limmy's pal and also in the dark comedy series High Times along with his brother Stephen. He has appeared in television shows such as Limmy's Show, Taggart, Rab C. Nesbitt, and Still Game. McCole also performed in The Strange Undoing of Prudencia Heart from 2013 to 2014, (this was the longest touring show from the National Theatre of Scotland). He spends his time in an irreverent comedy duo/band with his writing partner Gordon Munro, Dignitas.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=March 2023", - "tagDate": "March 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Paul McCole was born on 1 February 1972 (age 52) in Castlemilk, Scotland.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Paul McCole (born 10 February 1972) is a Scottish actor, comedian and musician. He is perhaps best known for his role as Limmy's pal and also in the dark comedy series High Times along with his brother Stephen. He has appeared in television shows such as Limmy's Show, Taggart, Rab C. Nesbitt, and Still Game. McCole also performed in The Strange Undoing of Prudencia Heart from 2013 to 2014, (this was the longest touring show from the National Theatre of Scotland). He spends his time in an irreverent comedy duo/band with his writing partner Gordon Munro, Dignitas.", - "paragraphA_information": "Born 1 February 1972 (age 52) Castlemilk, Scotland.", - "paragraphB_information": "Paul McCole (born 10 February 1972) is a Scottish actor, comedian and musician. He is perhaps best known for his role as Limmy's pal and also in the dark comedy series High Times along with his brother Stephen. He has appeared in television shows such as Limmy's Show, Taggart, Rab C. Nesbitt, and Still Game. McCole also performed in The Strange Undoing of Prudencia Heart from 2013 to 2014, (this was the longest touring show from the National Theatre of Scotland). He spends his time in an irreverent comedy duo/band with his writing partner Gordon Munro, Dignitas.", - "paragraphA_article": "Paul McCole", - "paragraphB_article": "Paul McCole", - "valid_comment": "The introduction and the infobox give two different birth dates.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Paul McCole was born on 1 February 1972 (age 52) in Castlemilk, Scotland.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Paul McCole (born 10 February 1972) is a Scottish actor, comedian and musician.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Born 1 February 1972", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "born 10 February 1972", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "When was Paul McCole born?", - "question1_answer1": "1 February 1972", - "question1_answer2": "10 February 1972", - "question2": "Was Paul McCole born on the 1st February?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Mediterranean seas", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediterranean_seas", - "paragraph_A": "*The Baltic Sea is a brackish inland sea, alleged to be the largest body of brackish water in the world (other possibilities include the Black Sea).{{Inconsistent|date=October 2019|reason=Baltic Sea is listed as a mediterranean sea in a section above. The Exceptions section seems to be meant to list seas that meet most criteria of mediterranean sea and yet are not considered so. Why is Baltic Sea listed in both exception and non-exception lists?}} It occupies a basin formed by glacial erosion.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "*The Baltic Sea is a brackish inland sea, alleged to be the largest body of brackish water in the world (other possibilities include the Black Sea). It occupies a basin formed by glacial erosion.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=October 2019|reason=Baltic Sea is listed as a mediterranean sea in a section above. The Exceptions section seems to be meant to list seas that meet most criteria of mediterranean sea and yet are not considered so. Why is Baltic Sea listed in both exception and non-exception lists?", - "tagDate": "October 2019", - "tagReason": "Baltic Sea is listed as a mediterranean sea in a section above. The Exceptions section seems to be meant to list seas that meet most criteria of mediterranean sea and yet are not considered so. Why is Baltic Sea listed in both exception and non-exception lists?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "Baltic Sea is listed as a mediterranean sea in a section above. The Exceptions section seems to be meant to list seas that meet most criteria of mediterranean sea and yet are not considered so. Why is Baltic Sea listed in both exception and non-exception lists?", - "paragraphA_information": "List of mediterranean seas The mediterranean seas of the Atlantic Ocean \u2022 The Baltic Sea Types of mediterranean seas Dilution basin \u2022\tA dilution basin has a lower salinity due to freshwater gains such as rainfall and rivers, and its water exchange consists of outflow of the fresher mediterranean water in the upper layer and inflow of the saltier oceanic water in the lower layer of the channel. Renewal of deep water may not be sufficient to supply oxygen to the bottom. o\tThe Baltic Sea ", - "paragraphA_article": "Mediterranean seas", - "paragraphB_article": "Mediterranean seas", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Baltic Sea is a mediterranean sea of the Atlantic Ocean. An example of a mediterranean sea which is a dilution basin is the Baltic Sea. A dilution basin has a lower salinity due to freshwater gains such as rainfall and rivers, and its water exchange consists of outflow of the fresher mediterranean water in the upper layer and inflow of the saltier oceanic water in the lower layer of the channel. Renewal of deep water may not be sufficient to supply oxygen to the bottom.", - "paragraphB_information": "Exceptions The Baltic Sea is a brackish inland sea, alleged to be the largest body of brackish water in the world (other possibilities include the Black Sea). It occupies a basin formed by glacial erosion.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Baltic Sea is not a mediterranean sea because is a brackish inland sea, alleged to be the largest body of brackish water in the world (other possibilities include the Black Sea). It occupies a basin formed by glacial erosion.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Baltic Sea is a mediterranean sea of the Atlantic Ocean. The Baltic Sea is a type of mediterranean sea.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Baltic Sea is an exception: it is not a mediterranean sea.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "The mediterranean seas of the Atlantic Ocean The Baltic Sea Types of mediterranean seas The Baltic Sea", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Exceptions The Baltic Sea", - "question1": "Is the Baltic Sea considered a type of mediterranean sea?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) NP-related " - }, - { - "title": "Microsoft Office 2013", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_2013", - "paragraph_A": "On June 9, 2018, Microsoft announced that its forums would no longer include Office 2013 or other products in extended support among its products for discussions involving support. On August 27, 2021, Microsoft announced that Microsoft Outlook 2013 SP1 with all subsequent updates will be required to connect to Microsoft 365 Exchange servers by November 1, 2021; Outlook 2013 without SP1 will no longer be supported. Later on, Microsoft claimed that Office 2013 would no longer be supported on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022. Nevertheless, it still runs on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022.{{Inconsistent|reason=The article's summary said earlier that it was not confirmed Office 2013 could run on Windows Server 2022.|date=September 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "On June 9, 2018, Microsoft announced that its forums would no longer include Office 2013 or other products in extended support among its products for discussions involving support. On August 27, 2021, Microsoft announced that Microsoft Outlook 2013 SP1 with all subsequent updates will be required to connect to Microsoft 365 Exchange servers by November 1, 2021; Outlook 2013 without SP1 will no longer be supported. Later on, Microsoft claimed that Office 2013 would no longer be supported on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022. Nevertheless, it still runs on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=The article's summary said earlier that it was not confirmed Office 2013 could run on Windows Server 2022.|date=September 2023", - "tagDate": "September 2023", - "tagReason": "The article's summary said earlier that it was not confirmed Office 2013 could run on Windows Server 2022.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article's summary said earlier that it was not confirmed Office 2013 could run on Windows Server 2022.", - "paragraphB_article": "Microsoft Office 2013", - "paragraphA_article": "Microsoft Office 2013", - "paragraphB_information": "Operating system Windows Server 2022. Nevertheless, it still runs on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022.", - "paragraphA_information": "A version of Office 2013 comes included on Windows RT devices. It has been confirmed to work on Windows 11 on March 4, 2023, but not Windows Server 2022. Later on, Microsoft claimed that Office 2013 would no longer be supported on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "A version of Microsoft Office 2013 comes included on Windows RT devices. It has been confirmed to work on Windows 11 on March 4, 2023, but not Windows Server 2022. Later on, Microsoft claimed that Microsoft Office 2013 would no longer be supported on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Microsoft Office 2013 is available for Windows Server 2022. Microsoft Office 2013 still runs on Windows 11 and Windows Server 2022.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Microsoft Office 2013 has been confirmed to not work on Windows Server 2022.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Microsoft Office 2013 still runs on Windows Server 2022.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "not work on Windows Server 2022", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "runs on Windows Server 2022", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Does Microsoft Office 2013 work on Windows Server 2022?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Mint stamp", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mint_stamp", - "paragraph_A": "In practice{{Inconsistent|date=December 2021|reason=If a mint stamp is \"as issued\", any deviation from that cannot be \"mint\" any more.}}, the term is used within philately to refer to any stamp that appears to be unused, including those without gum, or previously hinged.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In practice, the term is used within philately to refer to any stamp that appears to be unused, including those without gum, or previously hinged.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=December 2021|reason=If a mint stamp is \"as issued\", any deviation from that cannot be \"mint\" any more.", - "tagDate": "December 2021", - "tagReason": "If a mint stamp is \"as issued\", any deviation from that cannot be \"mint\" any more.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "If a mint stamp is \"as issued\", any deviation from that cannot be \"mint\" any more. However, such a stamp can still be unused.", - "paragraphA_information": "In philately, a mint stamp is one which is in its original state of issue, is unused, has never been mounted and has full gum, if issued with gum. The term applies equally to postage stamps and revenue stamps.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In philately, a mint stamp is one which is in its original state of issue, is unused, has never been mounted and has full gum, if issued with gum. The term applies equally to postage stamps and revenue stamps.", - "paragraphB_article": "Mint stamp", - "paragraphA_article": "Mint stamp", - "paragraphB_information": "In practice, the term is used within philately to refer to any stamp that appears to be unused, including those without gum, or previously hinged. Variations of the term mint include: \u2022\tMint hinged (MH) \u2013 the stamp is unused but has been previously hinged. Remains of the hinge or gum disturbance are visible. \u2022\tMounted mint (MM) \u2013 the same as Mint hinged. \u2022\tMint no gum (MNG) \u2013 the stamp appears to be unused but has no gum. It might have been used but not cancelled, or have been issued without gum. \u2022\tUnmounted mint (UM) \u2013 the stamp is unused and appears never to have been mounted. \u2022\tMint never hinged (MNH) \u2013 the same as unmounted mint but with an assertion that the stamp is not a formerly mounted stamp that has been tampered with to remove traces of mounting. The hinging referred to in these terms is mounting of the stamp in a stamp album by the application of a stamp hinge to the back of the stamp. The highest grade is unmounted mint or mint never hinged. The term mint never hinged has developed to provide reassurance to buyers that the stamp has not been tampered with to remove traces of mounting, as the term unmounted mint was thought to be ambiguous. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In practice, the term of mint stamp is used within philately to refer to any stamp that appears to be unused, including those without gum, or previously hinged. Variations of the term mint include: \u2022\tMint hinged (MH) \u2013 the stamp is unused but has been previously hinged. Remains of the hinge or gum disturbance are visible. \u2022\tMounted mint (MM) \u2013 the same as Mint hinged. \u2022\tMint no gum (MNG) \u2013 the stamp appears to be unused but has no gum. It might have been used but not cancelled, or have been issued without gum. \u2022\tUnmounted mint (UM) \u2013 the stamp is unused and appears never to have been mounted. \u2022\tMint never hinged (MNH) \u2013 the same as unmounted mint but with an assertion that the stamp is not a formerly mounted stamp that has been tampered with to remove traces of mounting. The hinging referred to in these terms is mounting of the stamp in a stamp album by the application of a stamp hinge to the back of the stamp. The highest grade is unmounted mint or mint never hinged. The term mint never hinged has developed to provide reassurance to buyers that the stamp has not been tampered with to remove traces of mounting, as the term unmounted mint was thought to be ambiguous. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "a mint stamp is one which is in its original state of issue, is unused, has never been mounted and has full gum, if issued with gum.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "the term is used within philately to refer to any stamp that appears to be unused, including those without gum, or previously hinged. Variations of the term mint include: the stamp is unused but has been previously hinged (remains of the hinge or gum disturbance are visible); the stamp appears to be unused but has no gum (it might have been used but not cancelled, or have been issued without gum); the stamp is unused and appears never to have been mounted; the stamp is not a formerly mounted stamp that has been tampered with to remove traces of mounting.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "original state of issue, is unused, has never been mounted and has full gum, if issued with gum.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "appears to be unused, including those without gum, or previously hinged. unused but has been previously hinged. appears to be unused but has no gum. might have been used but not cancelled, or have been issued without gum. unused and appears never to have been mounted. is not a formerly mounted stamp that has been tampered with to remove traces of mounting.", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question1": "Is a mint stamp hinged?", - "question2": "Is a mint stamp always unused?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)" - }, - { - "title": "Mitta Mitta River", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitta_Mitta_River", - "paragraph_A": "The river flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns: Mitta Mitta, Eskdale, Dartmouth.{{Inconsistent|reason=text says 'four' but lists only 3}} Mitta Mitta is a small hamlet at the confluence of the River and Snowy Creek.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The river flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns: Mitta Mitta, Eskdale, Dartmouth. Mitta Mitta is a small hamlet at the confluence of the River and Snowy Creek.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=text says 'four' but lists only 3", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "text says 'four' but lists only 3", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "text says 'four' but lists only 3", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Mitta Mitta River flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns: Mitta Mitta, Eskdale, Dartmouth.", - "paragraphB_information": "The river flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns: Mitta Mitta, Eskdale, Dartmouth.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Mitta Mitta River flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns: Mitta Mitta, Eskdale, Dartmouth.", - "paragraphA_information": "The river flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns: Mitta Mitta, Eskdale, Dartmouth.", - "paragraphA_article": "Mitta Mitta River", - "paragraphB_article": "Mitta Mitta River", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Mitta Mitta River flows through a magnificent valley that contains four small towns.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Mitta Mitta River flows through a magnificent valley that contains three small towns.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "four small towns", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "three small towns", - "question1_answer1": "four", - "question1_answer2": "three", - "question2": "Does the valley in which the Mitta Mitta river flows contain four small towns?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How many small towns does the valley in which the Mitta Mitta river flows contain?" - }, - { - "title": "Karl Weyprecht", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_Weyprecht", - "paragraph_A": "Karl Weyprecht, also spelt Carl Weyprecht, (8 September 1838 \u2013 2 March 1881{{inconsistent}}) was an Austro-Hungarian explorer. He was an officer (k.u.k. Linienschiffsleutnant) in the Austro-Hungarian Navy. He is most famous as an Arctic explorer, and an advocate of international cooperation for scientific polar exploration. Although he did not live to see it occur, he is associated with the organisation of the first International Polar Year.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Karl Weyprecht, also spelt Carl Weyprecht, (8 September 1838 \u2013 2 March 1881) was an Austro-Hungarian explorer. He was an officer (k.u.k. Linienschiffsleutnant) in the Austro-Hungarian Navy. He is most famous as an Arctic explorer, and an advocate of international cooperation for scientific polar exploration. Although he did not live to see it occur, he is associated with the organisation of the first International Polar Year.", - "tag": "inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This statement is inconsistent with other parts of the article. Death date is inconsistent (also inconsistent with the French and German Wikipedias and Wikidata).", - "paragraphA_information": "Karl Weyprecht, also spelt Carl Weyprecht, (8 September 1838 \u2013 2 March 1881) was an Austro-Hungarian explorer.", - "paragraphA_article": "Karl Weyprecht", - "paragraphB_article": "Karl Weyprecht", - "paragraphB_information": "Died 3 March 1881 (aged 42)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Karl Weyprecht died on 3 March 1881 (aged 42).", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Karl Weyprecht, also spelt Carl Weyprecht, (8 September 1838 \u2013 2 March 1881) was an Austro-Hungarian explorer.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "2 March 1881", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "3 March 1881", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Karl Weyprecht died on 3 March 1881.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Karl Weyprecht died on 2 March 1881.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What day did Karl Weyprecht die?", - "question1_answer1": "2 March 1881", - "question1_answer2": "3 March 1881", - "question2": "Did Karl Weyprecht die on 2 March 1881?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Wolfoo", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfoo", - "paragraph_A": "* Scout Skunk, a 34-year-old skunk who is a badger{{Inconsistent|date=June 2023|reason=When is a skunk a badger?}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "* Scout Skunk, a 34-year-old skunk who is a badger", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=June 2023|reason=When is a skunk a badger?", - "tagDate": "June 2023", - "tagReason": "When is a skunk a badger?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "When is a skunk a badger?", - "paragraphA_article": "Wolfoo", - "paragraphA_information": "Scout Skunk, a 34-year-old skunk who is a badger", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Scout Skunk, a 34-year-old skunk who is a badger", - "paragraphB_article": "Wolfoo", - "paragraphB_information": "Scout Skunk, a 34-year-old skunk who is a badger", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Scout Skunk, a 34-year-old skunk who is a badger", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "skunk", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "badger", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Scout Skunk is a badger", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Scout Skunk is a skunk", - "question1": "What kind of animal is Scout Skunk?", - "question1_answer1": "skunk", - "question1_answer2": "badger", - "question2": "Is Scout Skunk a skunk?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)" - }, - { - "title": "Moscow Peace Treaty", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_Peace_Treaty", - "paragraph_A": "The treaty was signed on the evening of 12 March, Moscow Time, or 1 hour on 13 March, Finnish time. The protocol appended to the treaty stipulated that the fighting should end at noon, Leningrad time (11:00 Finnish time),{{Inconsistent|date=March 2020|reason=This sentence states that Russian time is ahead of Finnish time. The sentence previous to this sentence states the opposite.}} and the fighting continued until then.\u0421\u0442\u0435\u043f\u0430\u043a\u043e\u0432, \u0412\u0438\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0440, \u0415\u0432\u0433\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0411\u0430\u043b\u0430\u0448\u043e\u0432. \u0412 \u00ab\u041d\u043e\u0432\u044b\u0445 \u0440\u0430\u0439\u043e\u043d\u0430\u0445\u00bb: \u0418\u0437 \u0438\u0441\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0438 \u043e\u0441\u0432\u043e\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u043a\u0430\u0440\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0448\u0435\u0439\u043a\u0430, 1940\u20131941, 1944\u20131950 . Saint Petersburg: \u041d\u043e\u0440\u0434\u043c\u0435\u0434\u0438\u0437\u0434\u0430\u0442, 2001. p. 5", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The treaty was signed on the evening of 12 March, Moscow Time, or 1 hour on 13 March, Finnish time. The protocol appended to the treaty stipulated that the fighting should end at noon, Leningrad time (11:00 Finnish time), and the fighting continued until then.\u0421\u0442\u0435\u043f\u0430\u043a\u043e\u0432, \u0412\u0438\u043a\u0442\u043e\u0440, \u0415\u0432\u0433\u0435\u043d\u0438\u0439 \u0411\u0430\u043b\u0430\u0448\u043e\u0432. \u0412 \u00ab\u041d\u043e\u0432\u044b\u0445 \u0440\u0430\u0439\u043e\u043d\u0430\u0445\u00bb: \u0418\u0437 \u0438\u0441\u0442\u043e\u0440\u0438\u0438 \u043e\u0441\u0432\u043e\u0435\u043d\u0438\u044f \u043a\u0430\u0440\u0435\u043b\u044c\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0433\u043e \u043f\u0435\u0440\u0435\u0448\u0435\u0439\u043a\u0430, 1940\u20131941, 1944\u20131950 . Saint Petersburg: \u041d\u043e\u0440\u0434\u043c\u0435\u0434\u0438\u0437\u0434\u0430\u0442, 2001. p. 5", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=March 2020|reason=This sentence states that Russian time is ahead of Finnish time. The sentence previous to this sentence states the opposite.", - "tagDate": "March 2020", - "tagReason": "This sentence states that Russian time is ahead of Finnish time. The sentence previous to this sentence states the opposite.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "One sentence incorrectly implies that Finnish time is ahead of Russian time. Another sentence correctly implies the opposite. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Moscow Peace Treaty", - "paragraphB_article": "Moscow Peace Treaty", - "paragraphA_information": "The treaty was signed on the evening of 12 March, Moscow Time, or 1 hour on 13 March, Finnish time.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Moscow Peace Treaty was signed on the evening of 12 March, Moscow Time, or 1 hour on 13 March, Finnish time.", - "paragraphB_information": "The protocol appended to the treaty stipulated that the fighting should end at noon, Leningrad time (11:00 Finnish time), and the fighting continued until then.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The protocol appended to the Moscow Peace Treaty stipulated that the fighting should end at noon, Leningrad time (11:00 Finnish time), and the fighting continued until then.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The treaty was signed on the evening of 12 March, Moscow Time, or 1 hour on 13 March, Finnish time.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "the fighting should end at noon, Leningrad time (11:00 Finnish time).", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "the evening of 12 March, Moscow Time, or 1 hour on 13 March, Finnish time.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "noon, Leningrad time (11:00 Finnish time)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "question1": "Is Finland's timezone earlier than all of Russia's timezones?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "List of most visited palaces and monuments", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_visited_palaces_and_monuments", - "paragraph_A": "This is a list of the most visited national monuments, including palaces, historical monuments and historic sites. It does not include churches, religious shrines and pilgrimage sites {{Inconsistent|reason=There are churches in the list.}}. Sources used to compile the list include an annual survey of the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (ALVA) in the United Kingdom; the U.S. National Park Service list of National Monuments, Patrimonio Nacional of Spain, and the French and Russian Ministries of Culture.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "This is a list of the most visited national monuments, including palaces, historical monuments and historic sites. It does not include churches, religious shrines and pilgrimage sites . Sources used to compile the list include an annual survey of the Association of Leading Visitor Attractions (ALVA) in the United Kingdom; the U.S. National Park Service list of National Monuments, Patrimonio Nacional of Spain, and the French and Russian Ministries of Culture.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=There are churches in the list.", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "There are churches in the list.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article titles states that there are no churches in the list but there are indeed churches in the list. ", - "paragraphA_information": "It does not include churches, religious shrines and pilgrimage sites.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "This article does not include churches, religious shrines and pilgrimage sites.", - "paragraphA_article": "List of most visited palaces and monuments", - "paragraphB_article": "List of most visited palaces and monuments", - "paragraphB_information": "Name: Forbidden City, St. Peter's Basilica, Palace of Versailles, Lincoln Memorial, Colosseum, Parthenon, Eiffel Tower, Taj Mahal, Cologne Cathedral, Peterhof Palace, \u0141azienki Palace, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, World War II Memorial, Independence National Historical Park, Sagrada Fam\u00edlia, Statue of Liberty National Monument, Teotihuac\u00e1n, Mysore Palace, Tsarskoe Selo State Museum-Reserve, Pompeii, Wilan\u00f3w Palace, Sch\u00f6nbrunn Palace, Kazan Kremlin, Tower of London, Alhambra, Chich\u00e9n Itz\u00e1, Topkap\u0131 Palace, Chapultepec Castle, Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias, Statue of Unity, Moscow Kremlin, Battle of Stalingrad, Tulum, Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, Edinburgh Castle, Mosque\u2013Cathedral of C\u00f3rdoba, Royal Alc\u00e1zar of Seville, Wawel Castle, Arc de Triomphe, Royal Palace of Madrid, Neuschwanstein, Machu Picchu, Castillo San Felipe del Morro", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Name of site: Forbidden City, St. Peter's Basilica, Palace of Versailles, Lincoln Memorial, Colosseum, Parthenon, Eiffel Tower, Taj Mahal, Cologne Cathedral, Peterhof Palace, \u0141azienki Palace, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, World War II Memorial, Independence National Historical Park, Sagrada Fam\u00edlia, Statue of Liberty National Monument, Teotihuac\u00e1n, Mysore Palace, Tsarskoe Selo State Museum-Reserve, Pompeii, Wilan\u00f3w Palace, Sch\u00f6nbrunn Palace, Kazan Kremlin, Tower of London, Alhambra, Chich\u00e9n Itz\u00e1, Topkap\u0131 Palace, Chapultepec Castle, Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias, Statue of Unity, Moscow Kremlin, Battle of Stalingrad, Tulum, Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, Edinburgh Castle, Mosque\u2013Cathedral of C\u00f3rdoba, Royal Alc\u00e1zar of Seville, Wawel Castle, Arc de Triomphe, Royal Palace of Madrid, Neuschwanstein, Machu Picchu, Castillo San Felipe del Morro", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "there are no chuches in the list. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "includes some churches in the list", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "It does not include churches, religious shrines and pilgrimage sites.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Forbidden City, St. Peter's Basilica, Palace of Versailles, Lincoln Memorial, Colosseum, Parthenon, Eiffel Tower, Taj Mahal, Cologne Cathedral, Peterhof Palace, \u0141azienki Palace, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, World War II Memorial, Independence National Historical Park, Sagrada Fam\u00edlia, Statue of Liberty National Monument, Teotihuac\u00e1n, Mysore Palace, Tsarskoe Selo State Museum-Reserve, Pompeii, Wilan\u00f3w Palace, Sch\u00f6nbrunn Palace, Kazan Kremlin, Tower of London, Alhambra, Chich\u00e9n Itz\u00e1, Topkap\u0131 Palace, Chapultepec Castle, Ciudad de las Artes y las Ciencias, Statue of Unity, Moscow Kremlin, Battle of Stalingrad, Tulum, Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum, Edinburgh Castle, Mosque\u2013Cathedral of C\u00f3rdoba, Royal Alc\u00e1zar of Seville, Wawel Castle, Arc de Triomphe, Royal Palace of Madrid, Neuschwanstein, Machu Picchu, Castillo San Felipe del Morro", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - FAC (Buildings, airports, highways, bridges, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Does the list contain churches?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Munsee language", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munsee_language", - "paragraph_A": "Currently, the Munsee language has eight native speakers{{Inconsistent|date=August 2021 |reason=\"different from the lede which says there are only two speakers\"}} whose personal dialects vary from each other. Extensive details about how the language differs between all eight speakers have been cataloged in a paper by Ives Goddard titled \"The Personal Dialects of Moraviantown Delaware\" which was published in Anthropological Linguistics volume 52.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Currently, the Munsee language has eight native speakers whose personal dialects vary from each other. Extensive details about how the language differs between all eight speakers have been cataloged in a paper by Ives Goddard titled \"The Personal Dialects of Moraviantown Delaware\" which was published in Anthropological Linguistics volume 52.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=August 2021 |reason=\"different from the lede which says there are only two speakers\"", - "tagDate": "August 2021 ", - "tagReason": "\"different from the lede which says there are only two speakers\"", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that the Munsee language is spoken only by two people. It later states that the Munsee language is spoken by eight people. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Munsee language", - "paragraphB_article": "Munsee language", - "paragraphA_information": "As of 2018, Munsee was spoken only on the Moraviantown Reserve in Ontario, Canada, by two elderly individuals, aged 77 and 90, making it critically endangered. The language that the individuals speak differs between speakers, each having a personal dialect. There has been interest in learning the language by younger individuals.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "As of 2018, Munsee was spoken only on the Moraviantown Reserve in Ontario, Canada, by two elderly individuals, aged 77 and 90, making it critically endangered. The language that the individuals speak differs between speakers, each having a personal dialect. There has been interest in learning the language by younger individuals.", - "paragraphB_information": "Currently, the Munsee language has eight native speakers whose personal dialects vary from each other. Extensive details about how the language differs between all eight speakers have been cataloged in a paper by Ives Goddard titled \"The Personal Dialects of Moraviantown Delaware\" which was published in Anthropological Linguistics volume 52.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Currently, the Munsee language has eight native speakers whose personal dialects vary from each other. Extensive details about how the language differs between all eight speakers have been cataloged in a paper by Ives Goddard titled \"The Personal Dialects of Moraviantown Delaware\" which was published in Anthropological Linguistics volume 52.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "As of 2018, Munsee was spoken only on the Moraviantown Reserve in Ontario, Canada, by two elderly individuals, aged 77 and 90, making it critically endangered.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Currently, the Munsee language has eight native speakers whose personal dialects vary from each other.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "As of 2018, Munsee was spoken only on the Moraviantown Reserve in Ontario, Canada, by two elderly individuals", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Currently, the Munsee language has eight native speakers ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Language (Any named language)", - "question1": "How many speakers are there of the Munsee Language?", - "question1_answer1": "Two", - "question1_answer2": "Eight" - }, - { - "title": "Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nemzeti_Bajnoks\u00e1g_I_(men's_handball)", - "paragraph_A": "* 110{{Inconsistent|date=February 2017}} seasons: Ferencv\u00e1ros", - "paragraph_A_clean": "* 110 seasons: Ferencv\u00e1ros", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=February 2017", - "tagDate": "February 2017", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "It is stated in the article that the league started in 1950, but later on it is implied that there have been as many as 110 seasons, meaning the league has been around for at least 110 years.", - "paragraphA_article": "Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball)", - "paragraphB_article": "Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's handball)", - "paragraphA_information": "Running since 1951, the Hungarian championship is among the strongests (sic) in Europe.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Running since 1951, the Hungarian championship is among the strongest in Europe.", - "paragraphB_information": "Below the list of Hungarian League clubs who have participated in the first division: 110 seasons: Ferencv\u00e1ros, 41 seasons: SC Pick Szeged, 19 seasons: V\u00f6r\u00f6s Meteor, 17 seasons: Csepel SC", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Below the list of Hungarian League clubs who have participated in the first division: 110 seasons: Ferencv\u00e1ros, 41 seasons: SC Pick Szeged, 19 seasons: V\u00f6r\u00f6s Meteor, 17 seasons: Csepel SC", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Hungarian Handball League has been running since 1951", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "implies that is has been running for at least 110 years.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Running since 1951, the Hungarian championship is among the strongests (sic) in Europe.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "110 seasons: Ferencv\u00e1ros", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Event (Named hurricanes, battles, wars, sports events, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "How long ago did the Hungarian Handball League start?", - "question1_answer1": "73 years ago", - "question1_answer2": "At least 110 years ago" - }, - { - "title": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nymphaea_nouchali_var._caerulea", - "paragraph_A": "The underwater rhizomes are edible. Like other species in the genus, the plant contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine{{Inconsistent|date=September 2021}} (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The underwater rhizomes are edible. Like other species in the genus, the plant contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=September 2021", - "tagDate": "September 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The flagged statement suggests that the plant contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine, yet later on in the article, it's stated that apomorphine is the main psychoactive compound present.", - "paragraphA_article": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea", - "paragraphB_article": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea", - "paragraphA_information": "The underwater rhizomes are edible. Like other species in the genus, the plant contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The underwater rhizomes of nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea are edible. Like other species in the genus, nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine (not to be confused with apomorphine, a metabolic product of aporphine).", - "paragraphB_information": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present. Other compounds include nuciferine.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present in nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea. Other compounds include nuciferine.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine which is distinct from apomorphine.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present in nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "contains the psychoactive alkaloid aporphine", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Apomorphine is said to be main psychoactive compound present", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "question1": "What is the main psychoactive compound found in Nymphaea nouchali var. caerulea?", - "question1_answer1": "aporphine", - "question1_answer2": "apomorphine" - }, - { - "title": "HMS Royal George (1756)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Royal_George_(1756)", - "paragraph_A": "Because of problems encountered during the War of the Austrian Succession (1740\u201348), the Admiralty attempted to modernise British ship designs with the 1745 Establishment. On 29 August 1746, the Admiralty ordered construction of a 100-gun first rate of the new design, to be named Royal Anne. She was laid down at Woolwich Dockyard in 1746{{inconsistent|infobox says Jan 1747}} but was unfinished when the war ended in 1748, causing construction to slow. The ship was renamed Royal George while under construction. She was not completed until 1756, during the Diplomatic Revolution, a few months before the outbreak of the Seven Years' War (1756\u201363). The ship was commissioned in October 1755, before she was ready to launch, with her first commander being Captain Richard Dorrill. She was launched on 18 February 1756. The largest warship in the world at the time, she displaced more than 2,000 tons and was the \"eighteenth-century equivalent of a weapon of mass destruction\".", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Because of problems encountered during the War of the Austrian Succession (1740\u201348), the Admiralty attempted to modernise British ship designs with the 1745 Establishment. On 29 August 1746, the Admiralty ordered construction of a 100-gun first rate of the new design, to be named Royal Anne. She was laid down at Woolwich Dockyard in 1746 but was unfinished when the war ended in 1748, causing construction to slow. The ship was renamed Royal George while under construction. She was not completed until 1756, during the Diplomatic Revolution, a few months before the outbreak of the Seven Years' War (1756\u201363). The ship was commissioned in October 1755, before she was ready to launch, with her first commander being Captain Richard Dorrill. She was launched on 18 February 1756. The largest warship in the world at the time, she displaced more than 2,000 tons and was the \"eighteenth-century equivalent of a weapon of mass destruction\".", - "tag": "inconsistent|infobox says Jan 1747", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "paragraphA_article": "HMS Royal George (1756)", - "paragraphA_information": "She was laid down at Woolwich Dockyard in 1746 but was unfinished when the war ended in 1748, causing construction to slow.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "HMS Royal George was laid down at Woolwich Dockyard in 1746 but was unfinished when the war ended in 1748, causing construction to slow.", - "paragraphB_article": "HMS Royal George (1756)", - "paragraphB_information": "Laid down 8 January 1747", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "HMS Royal George was laid down on the 8th of January 1747.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "She was laid down at Woolwich Dockyard in 1746", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Laid down 8 January 1747", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "in 1746", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "8 January 1747", - "question1": "When the HMS Royal George was laid down?", - "question1_answer1": "1746", - "question1_answer2": "8 January 1747" - }, - { - "title": "Russian Constituent Assembly", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Constituent_Assembly", - "paragraph_A": "==Election results (12/25 November 1917)=={{self-contradictory|reason=Vote percentage of SRs listed in table (40.4%) does not match the percentage given in the succeeding paragraph (57-58%) |date=September 2020}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "==Election results (12/25 November 1917)==", - "tag": "self-contradictory|reason=Vote percentage of SRs listed in table (40.4%) does not match the percentage given in the succeeding paragraph (57-58%) |date=September 2020", - "tagDate": "September 2020", - "tagReason": "Vote percentage of SRs listed in table (40.4%) does not match the percentage given in the succeeding paragraph (57-58%) ", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Russian Constituent Assembly", - "paragraphA_information": "Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs)\t17,943,000\t40.4%", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "During the election results for the Russian Constituent Assembly on the 12/25 November 1917 , the Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs) got 17,943,000 corresponding to 40.4%.", - "paragraphB_article": "Russian Constituent Assembly", - "paragraphB_information": "While losing the urban vote, the Socialist-Revolutionary Party received around 57\u201358% (62% with their social democratic allies), having won the massive support of the rural peasantry who constituted 80% of the Russian population.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "During the election results for the Russian Constituent Assembly on the 12/25 November 1917, while losing the urban vote, the Socialist-Revolutionary Party received around 57\u201358% (62% with their social democratic allies), having won the massive support of the rural peasantry who constituted 80% of the Russian population.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs) 17,943,000 40.4%", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "While losing the urban vote, the Socialist-Revolutionary Party received around 57\u201358% (62% with their social democratic allies), having won the massive support of the rural peasantry who constituted 80% of the Russian population.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "40.4%", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "57\u201358%", - "question1": "During the election results for the Russian Constituent Assembly on the 12/25 November 1917 , what percentage of votes the Socialist Revolutionaries (SRs) got?", - "question1_answer1": "40.4%", - "question1_answer2": "around 57-58 %" - }, - { - "title": "John Henry Seadlund", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Henry_Seadlund", - "paragraph_A": "Prosecutors said that Seadlund simply got greedy and had wanted to keep all of the ransom money for himself. Jurors deliberated for 90 minutes before recommending a death sentence. Seadlund was executed in the electric chair at the Cook County Jail in Chicago, Illinois. Seadlund asked Severin E. Koop, a Minnesota undertaker, to attend his execution, saying he was sorry for what he'd done. Koop took Seadlund's body back to Minnesota, burying him next to his father, Paul Seadlund,{{Inconsistent|date=May 2022|reason=Earlier, the article says the father's first name was Peter.}} at the Woodlawn Cemetery, two miles south of Ironton.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Prosecutors said that Seadlund simply got greedy and had wanted to keep all of the ransom money for himself. Jurors deliberated for 90 minutes before recommending a death sentence. Seadlund was executed in the electric chair at the Cook County Jail in Chicago, Illinois. Seadlund asked Severin E. Koop, a Minnesota undertaker, to attend his execution, saying he was sorry for what he'd done. Koop took Seadlund's body back to Minnesota, burying him next to his father, Paul Seadlund, at the Woodlawn Cemetery, two miles south of Ironton.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=May 2022|reason=Earlier, the article says the father's first name was Peter.", - "tagDate": "May 2022", - "tagReason": "Earlier, the article says the father's first name was Peter.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "John Henry Seadlund", - "paragraphA_information": "Prosecutors said that Seadlund simply got greedy and had wanted to keep all of the ransom money for himself. Jurors deliberated for 90 minutes before recommending a death sentence. Seadlund was executed in the electric chair at the Cook County Jail in Chicago, Illinois. Seadlund asked Severin E. Koop, a Minnesota undertaker, to attend his execution, saying he was sorry for what he'd done. Koop took Seadlund's body back to Minnesota, burying him next to his father, Paul Seadlund, at the Woodlawn Cemetery, two miles south of Ironton.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Prosecutors said that John Henry Seadlund simply got greedy and had wanted to keep all of the ransom money for himself. Jurors deliberated for 90 minutes before recommending a death sentence. Seadlund was executed in the electric chair at the Cook County Jail in Chicago, Illinois. Seadlund asked Severin E. Koop, a Minnesota undertaker, to attend his execution, saying he was sorry for what he'd done. Koop took Seadlund's body back to Minnesota, burying him next to his father, Paul Seadlund, at the Woodlawn Cemetery, two miles south of Ironton.", - "paragraphB_article": "John Henry Seadlund", - "paragraphB_information": "Seadlund's father, Peter Seadlund, died on March 23, 1933, at age of 51.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "John Henry Seadlund's father, Peter Seadlund, died on March 23, 1933, at age of 51.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Koop took Seadlund's body back to Minnesota, burying him next to his father, Paul Seadlund, at the Woodlawn Cemetery, two miles south of Ironton.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Seadlund's father, Peter Seadlund, died on March 23, 1933, at age of 51.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Paul Seadlund", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Peter Seadlund", - "question1": "What is the name of John Henry Seadlund's father?", - "question1_answer1": "Paul Seadlund", - "question1_answer2": "Peter Seadlund" - }, - { - "title": "Sinking of the RMS Lusitania", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinking_of_the_RMS_Lusitania", - "paragraph_A": "The Cunard liner was attacked by commanded by Kapit\u00e4nleutnant Walther Schwieger. After the single torpedo struck, a second explosion occurred inside the ship, which then sank in only 18 minutes. The U-20's mission was to torpedo warships and liners in the Lusitania\u2019s area. 761 people survived out of the 1,266 passengers and 696 crew aboard,{{Inconsistent|date=March 2023|reason=Numbers differ from those elswhere in this article, and the main article for the ship.}} and 128 of the casualties were American citizens. The sinking turned public opinion in many countries against Germany. It also contributed to the American entry into the War two years later; images of the stricken liner were used heavily in US propaganda and military recruiting campaigns.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Cunard liner was attacked by commanded by Kapit\u00e4nleutnant Walther Schwieger. After the single torpedo struck, a second explosion occurred inside the ship, which then sank in only 18 minutes. The U-20's mission was to torpedo warships and liners in the Lusitania\u2019s area. 761 people survived out of the 1,266 passengers and 696 crew aboard, and 128 of the casualties were American citizens. The sinking turned public opinion in many countries against Germany. It also contributed to the American entry into the War two years later; images of the stricken liner were used heavily in US propaganda and military recruiting campaigns.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=March 2023|reason=Numbers differ from those elswhere in this article, and the main article for the ship.", - "tagDate": "March 2023", - "tagReason": "Numbers differ from those elswhere in this article, and the main article for the ship.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Sinking of the RMS Lusitania", - "paragraphB_article": "Sinking of the RMS Lusitania", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "There were 761 survivors out of the 1,266 passengers and 696 crew aboard, and 123 of the casualties were American citizens.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_information": "The Cunard liner was attacked by U-20 commanded by Kapit\u00e4nleutnant Walther Schwieger. After the single torpedo struck, a second explosion occurred inside the ship, which then sank in only 18 minutes.\u200a The U-20's mission was to torpedo warships and liners in the Lusitania\u2019s area. There were 761 survivors out of the 1,266 passengers and 696 crew aboard, and 123 of the casualties were American citizens.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The RMS Lusitania Cunard liner was attacked by U-20 commanded by Kapit\u00e4nleutnant Walther Schwieger. After the single torpedo struck, a second explosion occurred inside the ship, which then sank in only 18 minutes.\u200a The U-20's mission was to torpedo warships and liners in the Lusitania\u2019s area. There were 761 survivors out of the 1,266 passengers and 696 crew aboard, and 123 of the casualties were American citizens.", - "paragraphB_information": "Outcome 1,195 of the 1,959 people aboard killed", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "1,195 of the 1,959 people aboard the RMS Lusitania were killed during the attack.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Outcome 1,195 of the 1,959 people aboard killed", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "761 survivors out of the 1,266 passengers and 696 crew aboard", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1,195 of the 1,959 people aboard killed", - "contradict_comment": "mathematical reasoning required. ", - "question1": "How many survivors there were after the Sinking of the RMS Lusitania?", - "question1_answer1": "761", - "question1_answer2": "764" - }, - { - "title": "14th Street bridges", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14th_Street_bridges", - "paragraph_A": "* The northbound span was originally named the 14th Street Bridge when it opened in 1950, renamed the Rochambeau Bridge eight years later, and renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge in 1983{{Inconsistent|date=June 2023}} for a passenger of Air Florida Flight 90 who died saving others from the freezing water.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "* The northbound span was originally named the 14th Street Bridge when it opened in 1950, renamed the Rochambeau Bridge eight years later, and renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge in 1983 for a passenger of Air Florida Flight 90 who died saving others from the freezing water.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=June 2023", - "tagDate": "June 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "The northbound span was originally named the 14th Street Bridge when it opened in 1950, renamed the Rochambeau Bridge eight years later, and renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge in 1983 for a passenger of Air Florida Flight 90 who died saving others from the freezing water.", - "paragraphB_information": "On January 13, 1982, the Williams Bridge was damaged by the crash of Air Florida Flight 90. The Boeing 737-222, which had accumulated ice while idling on the runway at National Airport, stalled soon after takeoff, fell on the bridge, and slammed into the iced-over Potomac River. The crash killed 74 passengers and crew, plus four people in cars on the bridge. The repaired span was renamed the Arland D. Williams, Jr. Memorial Bridge on March 13, 1985 \u2013 following a December 4, 1984 vote \u2013 after one of the passengers, who passed a lifeline to five survivors before permitting himself to be rescued. He succumbed to hypothermia and drowned while rescuers worked to rescue the last of the survivors. The name Rochambeau Bridge was then shifted to the Center Highway Bridge.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The northbound span of 14th Street bridges was originally named the 14th Street Bridge when it opened in 1950, renamed the Rochambeau Bridge eight years later, and renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge in 1983 for a passenger of Air Florida Flight 90 who died saving others from the freezing water.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1983", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "March 13, 1985", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The northbound span of 14th Street bridges was renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge in 1983.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The northbound span of 14th Street bridges was renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge on March 13, 1985.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "14th Street bridges", - "paragraphB_article": "14th Street bridges", - "question1": "When was the northbound span of the 14th Street Bridge renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge? ", - "question1_answer1": "1983", - "question1_answer2": "March 13, 1985" - }, - { - "title": "Pierre Albert-Birot", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Albert-Birot", - "paragraph_A": "His novel Grabinoulor appeared in 1919.{{inconsistent|date=October 2021}} Bernard Jourdan definitively established that the name of the hero of this stream of consciousness, from which all punctuation is banned, is a near-anagram of \"We Albert-Birot\"; Grabinoulour, a very modern man, has a host of adventures, some everyday, others fantastic, with nods to the heroes of Rabelais' and Lewis Caroll's works, but also, and above all, to the supermen of modern mythology, from Fant\u00f4mas to Tarzan, from Ars\u00e8ne Lupin to science fiction heroes traveling through the space and time.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "His novel Grabinoulor appeared in 1919. Bernard Jourdan definitively established that the name of the hero of this stream of consciousness, from which all punctuation is banned, is a near-anagram of \"We Albert-Birot\"; Grabinoulour, a very modern man, has a host of adventures, some everyday, others fantastic, with nods to the heroes of Rabelais' and Lewis Caroll's works, but also, and above all, to the supermen of modern mythology, from Fant\u00f4mas to Tarzan, from Ars\u00e8ne Lupin to science fiction heroes traveling through the space and time.", - "tag": "inconsistent|date=October 2021", - "tagDate": "October 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The tag was added in \"Revision as of 08:41, 11 October 2021\", below is the reason: FR:WP shows this title was used over a series of books, started in 1918.", - "paragraphA_article": "Pierre Albert-Birot", - "paragraphA_information": "His novel Grabinoulor appeared in 1919.", - "paragraphB_article": "Pierre Albert-Birot (French)", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Pierre Albert-Birot's novel Grabinoulor appeared in 1919.", - "paragraphB_information": "C'est cependant au-m\u00eame moment, \u00e0 partir de 1936, que Jean Follain l'am\u00e8ne \u00e0 r\u00e9unir ses anciens amis chaque quinzaine autour de d\u00eeners dits Grabinoulor, du nom de l'\u00e9pop\u00e9e commenc\u00e9e d\u00e8s 1918, du nom aussi du personnage \u00e9ponyme, double litt\u00e9raire d'Albert-Birot.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Pierre Albert-Birot's novel Grabinoulor appeared in 1919.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Pierre Albert-Birot's novel Grabinoulor appeared in 1918.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1919", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1918", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "contradict_comment": "across different languages", - "question1": "When did Pierre Albert-Birot's novel Grabinoulor first appear?", - "question1_answer1": "1919", - "question1_answer2": "1918" - }, - { - "title": "Alpha-v beta-5", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha-v_beta-5", - "paragraph_A": "\u03b1V\u03b25 is a type of integrin that binds to matrix macromolecules and proteinases and thereby stimulates angiogenesis. However, it inhibits angiogenesis.{{inconsistent|April 2019}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "\u03b1V\u03b25 is a type of integrin that binds to matrix macromolecules and proteinases and thereby stimulates angiogenesis. However, it inhibits angiogenesis.", - "tag": "inconsistent|April 2019", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Alpha-v beta-5", - "paragraphA_information": "\u03b1V\u03b25 is a type of integrin that binds to matrix macromolecules and proteinases and thereby stimulates angiogenesis. However, it inhibits angiogenesis.", - "paragraphB_article": "Alpha-v beta-5", - "paragraphB_information": "\u03b1V\u03b25 is a type of integrin that binds to matrix macromolecules and proteinases and thereby stimulates angiogenesis. However, it inhibits angiogenesis.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "\u03b1V\u03b25 stimulates angiogenesis.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "\u03b1V\u03b25 inhibits angiogenesis.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "stimulates", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": " inhibits", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Can \u03b1V\u03b25 stimulate angiogenesis?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2": "Can \u03b1V\u03b25 inhibits angiogenesis?", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Ancient Egyptian medicine", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egyptian_medicine", - "paragraph_A": "Iwti \tN/A \t19th dynasty c. 2500 BC{{Inconsistent|date=January 2017|reason=Dynasty and date give are incompatible}}\tThe Chief physician \tM \tMost likely worked or trained in Memphis (inscriptions on statue indicate sacrificial relations to Memphite city god)\tN/A \tA statue of him is displayed at the museum of Egyptology in Leiden \tN/A", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Iwti \tN/A \t19th dynasty c. 2500 BC\tThe Chief physician \tM \tMost likely worked or trained in Memphis (inscriptions on statue indicate sacrificial relations to Memphite city god)\tN/A \tA statue of him is displayed at the museum of Egyptology in Leiden \tN/A", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=January 2017|reason=Dynasty and date give are incompatible", - "tagDate": "January 2017", - "tagReason": "Dynasty and date give are incompatible", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Ancient Egyptian medicine", - "paragraphB_article": "Ancient Egyptian medicine", - "paragraphA_information": "Iwti N/A 19th dynasty c. 2500 BC The Chief physician M Most likely worked or trained in Memphis (inscriptions on statue indicate sacrificial relations to Memphite city god)[36] N/A A statue of him is displayed at the museum of Egyptology in Leiden[37] N/A", - "paragraphB_information": "Iwti N/A 19th dynasty c. 2500 BC The Chief physician M Most likely worked or trained in Memphis (inscriptions on statue indicate sacrificial relations to Memphite city god)[36] N/A A statue of him is displayed at the museum of Egyptology in Leiden[37] N/A", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Infobox/table - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Iwti served the King in 19th dynasty.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Iwti served the King in c. 2500 BC.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "19th dynasty", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "c. 2500 BC", - "question1": "When did the ancient physician named Iwti serve the king?", - "question1_answer1": "19th dynasty", - "question1_answer2": "c. 2500 BC", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Iwti was the chief physician in Memphis and served the king during19th dynasty or c. 2500 BC.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Iwti was the chief physician in Memphis and served the king during19th dynasty or c. 2500 BC." - }, - { - "title": "Antherina", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antherina", - "paragraph_A": "Antherina is a monotypic moth genus in the family Saturniidae erected by William Elford Leach in 1815. Its only species, Antherina suraka, the Suraka silk moth, was first described by Jean Baptiste Boisduval in 1833. It is found on Madagascar and Mayotte. Both larvae and pupae consumed in parts of Madagascar, but not to a great extent. The larvae feed on oleander, privet, willows, beech, Liquidambar, Crataegus (hawthorns), grapevine, lilac, cherry, laurel, Forsythia, Rhus, Pistacia, apple, pear, plum and peach leaves, but foodplants differ from species to species.{{Inconsistent|date=October 2021|reason=How can food plants vary \"from species to species\" if there's only one species? (The genus is monotypic)}} They start off black with yellow protrusions to eventually green with red and yellow on their bodies. Once they've finished growing they will be as thick as your finger and when they have reached their final days as a caterpillar they will develop a blue dorsal stripe and wander around looking for a place to pupate. ", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Antherina is a monotypic moth genus in the family Saturniidae erected by William Elford Leach in 1815. Its only species, Antherina suraka, the Suraka silk moth, was first described by Jean Baptiste Boisduval in 1833. It is found on Madagascar and Mayotte. Both larvae and pupae consumed in parts of Madagascar, but not to a great extent. The larvae feed on oleander, privet, willows, beech, Liquidambar, Crataegus (hawthorns), grapevine, lilac, cherry, laurel, Forsythia, Rhus, Pistacia, apple, pear, plum and peach leaves, but foodplants differ from species to species. They start off black with yellow protrusions to eventually green with red and yellow on their bodies. Once they've finished growing they will be as thick as your finger and when they have reached their final days as a caterpillar they will develop a blue dorsal stripe and wander around looking for a place to pupate. ", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=October 2021|reason=How can food plants vary \"from species to species\" if there's only one species? (The genus is monotypic)", - "tagDate": "October 2021", - "tagReason": "How can food plants vary \"from species to species\" if there's only one species? (The genus is monotypic)", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Antherina", - "paragraphA_information": "Antherina is a monotypic moth genus in the family Saturniidae erected by William Elford Leach in 1815", - "paragraphB_article": "Antherina", - "paragraphB_information": "The larvae feed on oleander, privet, willows, beech, Liquidambar, Crataegus (hawthorns), grapevine, lilac, cherry, laurel, Forsythia, Rhus, Pistacia, apple, pear, plum and peach leaves, but foodplants differ from species to species.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The larvae of Antherina feed on oleander, privet, willows, beech, Liquidambar, Crataegus (hawthorns), grapevine, lilac, cherry, laurel, Forsythia, Rhus, Pistacia, apple, pear, plum and peach leaves, but foodplants differ from species to species.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The foodplants for the larvae of Antherina differ from species to species.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "monotypic", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "species to species", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Antherina is a monotypic. ## Additional Explanation: According to the world knowledge, a monotypic species is one that does not include subspecies.", - "question1": "How many specials does Antherina have?", - "question1_answer1": "One", - "question1_answer2": "More than one", - "question2": "Does Antherina have more than one species?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "\u00c1satr\u00fa Alliance", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/\u00c1satr\u00fa_Alliance", - "paragraph_A": "Murray was involved with the American Nazi Party (ANP) into the late 1960s.. and learned of Odinism/Asatru through Elton Hall. He later became the Arizona organizer of the ANP. He has also been the spokesperson for the Arizona-based outlaw brotherhood Iron Cross MC.. In 1969, Murray worked with Else Christensen{{inconsistent}} to found the Odinist Fellowship, and served as vice president.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Murray was involved with the American Nazi Party (ANP) into the late 1960s.. and learned of Odinism/Asatru through Elton Hall. He later became the Arizona organizer of the ANP. He has also been the spokesperson for the Arizona-based outlaw brotherhood Iron Cross MC.. In 1969, Murray worked with Else Christensen to found the Odinist Fellowship, and served as vice president.", - "tag": "inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "\u00c1satr\u00fa Alliance", - "paragraphA_information": "In 1969, Murray worked with Else Christensen to found the Odinist Fellowship, and served as vice president.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In 1969, Valgard Murray worked with Else Christensen to found the Odinist Fellowship, and served as vice president.", - "paragraphB_information": "In the early 1970s Murray and Hall formed a kindred and made contact with Else Christensen.", - "paragraphB_article": "\u00c1satr\u00fa Alliance", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In the early 1970s Valgard Murray and Elton Hall formed a kindred and made contact with Else Christensen.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "In 1969 Valgard Murray worked with Else Christensen to found the Odinist Fellowship.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "In the early 1970s Valgard Murray made contact with Else Christensen.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "In 1969", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "In the early 1970s", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Michael J. Murray (a.k.a. Valgard Murray) of Arizona, a former vice-president of Else Christensen's Odinist Fellowship. When did Valgard Murray make contact with Else Christensen?", - "question1_answer1": "1969 or before 1969", - "question1_answer2": "In the early 1970s", - "question2": "Michael J. Murray (a.k.a. Valgard Murray) of Arizona, a former vice-president of Else Christensen's Odinist Fellowship. Did Valgard Murray make contact with Else Christensen in 1969 or before 1969?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Back-to-back house", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back-to-back_house", - "paragraph_A": "By 1959, Leeds and Birmingham each had 60,000 back-to-back houses,{{Inconsistent|date=April 2022|reason=Discrepancy with opening paragraph of this section for Birmingham numbers.}} and Members of Parliament were calling for the demolition to be accelerated. William Wheeldon, a Labour and Co-operative MP, pointed out that \"the most distressing thing\" was that little had changed in generations:", - "paragraph_A_clean": "By 1959, Leeds and Birmingham each had 60,000 back-to-back houses, and Members of Parliament were calling for the demolition to be accelerated. William Wheeldon, a Labour and Co-operative MP, pointed out that \"the most distressing thing\" was that little had changed in generations:", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=April 2022|reason=Discrepancy with opening paragraph of this section for Birmingham numbers.", - "tagDate": "April 2022", - "tagReason": "Discrepancy with opening paragraph of this section for Birmingham numbers.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Back-to-back house", - "paragraphB_article": "Back-to-back house", - "paragraphA_information": "By 1959, Leeds and Birmingham each had 60,000 back-to-back houses, and Members of Parliament were calling for the demolition to be accelerated.", - "paragraphB_information": "Following the Second World War and the Blitz aerial bombing of industrial cities, Britain was ready for a new wave of slum demolition and construction of more suitable housing. For example, Birmingham had about 40,000 back-to-backs in 1931 but only 29,182 by September 1946.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "By 1959 Birmingham had 60,000 back-to-back houses, which is more than the number of back-to-back hourse in 1946.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Birmingham had about 40,000 back-to-backs in 1931 but only 29,182 by September 1946 as a result of slum demolition.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Did Birmingham have more than 29,182 back-to-back houses in 1959?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Did Birmingham have more than 40,000 back-to-back houses in 1959?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Marina Baker", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marina_Baker", - "paragraph_A": "Marina Augusta Pepper (n\u00e9e Baker; born 8 December 1967{{Inconsistent|reason=Inconsistent with the birth date given in the infobox. Please add a citation from a reliable source stating their date of birth.|date=May 2022}}) is an English Liberal Democrat local politician, journalist, children's book author and former model and actress. She was Playboy's Playmate of the Month for March 1987.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Marina Augusta Pepper (n\u00e9e Baker; born 8 December 1967) is an English Liberal Democrat local politician, journalist, children's book author and former model and actress. She was Playboy's Playmate of the Month for March 1987.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=Inconsistent with the birth date given in the infobox. Please add a citation from a reliable source stating their date of birth.|date=May 2022", - "tagDate": "May 2022", - "tagReason": "Inconsistent with the birth date given in the infobox. Please add a citation from a reliable source stating their date of birth.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Marina Baker", - "paragraphB_article": "Marina Baker", - "paragraphA_information": "Marina Augusta Pepper (n\u00e9e Baker; born 8 December 1967) is an English Liberal Democrat local politician, journalist, children's book author and former model and actress.", - "paragraphB_information": "Marina Baker Born\tMarina Augusta Baker 12 August 1967 (age 56)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Marina Augusta Baker was born on 12 August 1967 (age 56).", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Marina Baker was born on 8 December 1967.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Marina Baker was born on 8 December 1967.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Marina Augusta Baker was born on 12 August 1967.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "8 December 1967", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "12 August 1967", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Marina Augusta Pepper also called Marina Baker is an English Liberal Democrat local politician, journalist. When was Marina Baker born?", - "question1_answer1": "8 December 1967", - "question1_answer2": "12 August 1967", - "question2": "Marina Augusta Pepper also called Marina Baker is an English Liberal Democrat local politician, journalist. Was Marina Baker born on 8 December 1967?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Cesar Barone", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesar_Barone", - "paragraph_A": "In 1980, now under the name Cesar Francesco Barone,{{Inconsistent|date=November 2022|reason=Section later claims he did not change his name until 1987}} he was sentenced again for several burglaries and imprisoned. During his incarceration at Cross City Prison in Florida, he assaulted a female prison guard and tried to rape her: he was then transferred to the Florida State Prison in Starke, where he met Ted Bundy, a serial killer.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In 1980, now under the name Cesar Francesco Barone, he was sentenced again for several burglaries and imprisoned. During his incarceration at Cross City Prison in Florida, he assaulted a female prison guard and tried to rape her: he was then transferred to the Florida State Prison in Starke, where he met Ted Bundy, a serial killer.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=November 2022|reason=Section later claims he did not change his name until 1987", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "Section later claims he did not change his name until 1987", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "In 1980, now under the name Cesar Francesco Barone, Adolph James Rode was sentenced again for several burglaries and imprisoned.", - "paragraphA_article": "Cesar Barone", - "paragraphB_article": "Cesar Barone", - "paragraphB_information": "Released in 1987 after seven years in detention, he moved to Washington state with his girlfriend Kathi Scarbrough, whom he met in prison. Shortly after, Adolph James Rode decided to rename himself Cesar Francesco Barone.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Released in 1987 after seven years in detention, Adolph James Rode moved to Washington state with his girlfriend Kathi Scarbrough, whom he met in prison. Shortly after, Adolph James Rode decided to rename himself Cesar Francesco Barone.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "In 1980 Adolph James Rode was sentenced again under the name Cesar Francesco Barone.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Adolph James Rode rename himself Cesar Francesco Barone in or after 1987.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "When Adolph James Rode was sentenced again for several burglaries and imprisoned in 1980, was he under the name Cesar Francesco Barone?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "When did Adolph James Rode change his name to Cesar Francesco Barone? ", - "question2_answer2": "1987 or after 1987", - "question2_answer1": "1980 or before 1980" - }, - { - "title": "Belogradchik Rocks", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belogradchik_Rocks", - "paragraph_A": "The formation of the Belogradchik Rocks started during the Permian period, about 230 million years ago,{{Inconsistent|date=January 2017|reason=the Permian is 298.9\u2013252.17 million years ago, not 230 million}} when the tectonic cycle was folding to create the Balkan Mountains and elevating the region of Belogradchik.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The formation of the Belogradchik Rocks started during the Permian period, about 230 million years ago, when the tectonic cycle was folding to create the Balkan Mountains and elevating the region of Belogradchik.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=January 2017|reason=the Permian is 298.9\u2013252.17 million years ago, not 230 million", - "tagDate": "January 2017", - "tagReason": "the Permian is 298.9\u2013252.17 million years ago, not 230 million", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Belogradchik Rocks", - "paragraphA_information": "The formation of the Belogradchik Rocks started during the Permian period, about 230 million years ago, when the tectonic cycle was folding to create the Balkan Mountains and elevating the region of Belogradchik.", - "paragraphB_article": "Belogradchik Rocks", - "paragraphB_information": "The formation of the Belogradchik Rocks started during the Permian period, about 230 million years ago, when the tectonic cycle was folding to create the Balkan Mountains and elevating the region of Belogradchik.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The formation of the Belogradchik Rocks started during the Permian period", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The formation of the Belogradchik Rocks started about 230 million years ago. ## According to the common sense knowledge, 230 million years ago is not in the Permian period.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "the Permian period", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "about 230 million years ago", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Did the formation of the Belogradchik Rocks start during the Permian period?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "question2": "Did the formation of the Belogradchik Rocks start about 230 million years ago? ", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Blaster (flamethrower)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaster_(flamethrower)", - "paragraph_A": "The Blaster was a liquefied petroleum gas flamethrower installed along the sides of the vehicle under the doors. Should a group of carjackers suddenly attack the vehicle while it is stopped in traffic (the typical scenario), the occupant could flip a switch and direct {{Inconsistent|date=July 2023|reason= In the Infobox specs the maximum range is specified as 2 meters, not 5 meters.}} plumes of flame upward into the facial area of anyone trying to enter the vehicle through the doors or windows. Fourie claimed it was unlikely to kill but would \"definitely blind\" the assailant. In South Africa, it is legal to use lethal force in self-defence if in fear of one's life, and ownership of flamethrowers is unrestricted.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Blaster was a liquefied petroleum gas flamethrower installed along the sides of the vehicle under the doors. Should a group of carjackers suddenly attack the vehicle while it is stopped in traffic (the typical scenario), the occupant could flip a switch and direct plumes of flame upward into the facial area of anyone trying to enter the vehicle through the doors or windows. Fourie claimed it was unlikely to kill but would \"definitely blind\" the assailant. In South Africa, it is legal to use lethal force in self-defence if in fear of one's life, and ownership of flamethrowers is unrestricted.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=July 2023|reason= In the Infobox specs the maximum range is specified as 2 meters, not 5 meters.", - "tagDate": "July 2023", - "tagReason": " In the Infobox specs the maximum range is specified as 2 meters, not 5 meters.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Blaster (flamethrower)", - "paragraphB_article": "Blaster (flamethrower)", - "paragraphA_information": "The Blaster was a liquefied petroleum gas flamethrower installed along the sides of the vehicle under the doors. Should a group of carjackers suddenly attack the vehicle while it is stopped in traffic (the typical scenario), the occupant could flip a switch and direct 5-metre (16 ft) plumes of flame upward into the facial area of anyone trying to enter the vehicle through the doors or windows.", - "paragraphB_information": "Maximum firing range\t2 meters (6 ft 7 in) flame", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The maximum firing range of the Blaster (flamethrower) is 2 meters (6 ft 7 in) flame.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "the occupant of the Blaster could flip a switch and direct 5-metre (16 ft) plumes of flame", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The maximum firing range of the Blaster is 2 meters", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "5-metre (16 ft)", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "2 meters (6 ft 7 in)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is the maximum firing range of the Blaster (flamethrower)?", - "question1_answer1": "5-metre (16 ft)", - "question1_answer2": "2 meters (6 ft 7 in)", - "question2": "Is the maximum firing range of the Blaster (flamethrower) more than 2 meters (6 ft 7 in)?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Boeing\u2013Saab T-7 Red Hawk", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing\u2013Saab_T-7_Red_Hawk", - "paragraph_A": "In May 2023, the Government Accountability Office released a report on the T-7 program detailing problems with the software and safety systems and other delays that saw the USAF delay a production decision to February 2025.{{inconsistent}} The report said that a schedule provided by Boeing in January 2023 was optimistic and dependent on favorable assumptions. Notwithstanding the delayed production decision, the report noted that Boeing still planned to start producing the first T-7s in early 2024.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In May 2023, the Government Accountability Office released a report on the T-7 program detailing problems with the software and safety systems and other delays that saw the USAF delay a production decision to February 2025. The report said that a schedule provided by Boeing in January 2023 was optimistic and dependent on favorable assumptions. Notwithstanding the delayed production decision, the report noted that Boeing still planned to start producing the first T-7s in early 2024.", - "tag": "inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The tag was removed in the newest version as of Feb 2024. In the history, it was tagged for the reason \"other parts of the article state that it has entered production as early as 2022; needs clarification\"", - "paragraphA_article": "Boeing\u2013Saab T-7 Red Hawk", - "paragraphB_article": "Boeing\u2013Saab T-7 Red Hawk", - "paragraphA_information": "On 18 May 2023 the Government Accountability Office released a report on the T-7 program detailing problems with the software and safety systems and other delays that saw the USAF delay a production decision to February 2025.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "On 18 May 2023 the Government Accountability Office released a report on the Boeing-Saab T-7 program detailing problems with the software and safety systems and other delays that saw the USAF delay a production decision to February 2025", - "paragraphB_information": "The first production T-7 was rolled out on 28 April 2022.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The first production of Boeing-Saab T-7 was rolled out on 28 April 2022.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "On 18 May 2023 the USAF delay a production decision for Boeing-Saab T-7 to February 2025.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The first production of Boeing-Saab T-7 was rolled out on 28 April 2022.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "28 April 2022", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "February 2025", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Was the first production of Boeing-Saab T-7 rolled out before February 2025?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "When was the first production of Boeing-Saab T-7 rolled out?", - "question2_answer2": "28 April 2022", - "question2_answer1": "The production decision will be made on February 2025" - }, - { - "title": "David Brady", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Brady", - "paragraph_A": "Brady works as a medical sales rep.{{Inconsistent|date=March 2020|reason=Appreciate that it is possible for someone to be both a journalist and a sales rep at the same time. But the lead says he's a journalist and this says he's a sales rep. Which is it? Or is it both? Can we clarify? }} His wife is from Dublin; they have two children.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Brady works as a medical sales rep. His wife is from Dublin; they have two children.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=March 2020|reason=Appreciate that it is possible for someone to be both a journalist and a sales rep at the same time. But the lead says he's a journalist and this says he's a sales rep. Which is it? Or is it both? Can we clarify? ", - "tagDate": "March 2020", - "tagReason": "Appreciate that it is possible for someone to be both a journalist and a sales rep at the same time. But the lead says he's a journalist and this says he's a sales rep. Which is it? Or is it both? Can we clarify? ", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "David Brady", - "paragraphA_information": "Brady works as a medical sales rep.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "David Brady, an Irish former Gaelic footballer who played for the Mayo county team in midfield in the 1990s and 2000s, works as a medical sales rep in 2020.", - "paragraphB_article": "David Brady", - "paragraphB_information": "David Brady (born 1974) is an Irish former Gaelic footballer who played for the Mayo county team in midfield in the 1990s and 2000s. As of 2020, he works as a journalist.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "David Brady works as a medical sales rep in 2020.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "As of 2020, David Brady works as a journalist.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": " a medical sales rep", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "a journalist", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1_answer1": "medical sales rep", - "question1_answer2": "journalist", - "question1": "David Brady, an Irish former Gaelic footballer who played for the Mayo county team in midfield in the 1990s and 2000s. What was his job in 2020?" - }, - { - "title": "Tregaron Estate", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tregaron_Estate", - "paragraph_A": "After Davies's death in 1958, the Washington International School purchased of the ,{{inconsistent|reason=Is it 20 acres or 20.5??|date=February 2020}} and the Tregaron Limited Partnership, an Israeli corporation, purchased the remaining . Attempts to develop the space were opposed by the \"Friends of Tregaron\", a community group. In 2006, an agreement was reached whereby of the estate are to be conserved as open green space and managed by Tregaron Conservatory.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "After Davies's death in 1958, the Washington International School purchased of the , and the Tregaron Limited Partnership, an Israeli corporation, purchased the remaining . Attempts to develop the space were opposed by the \"Friends of Tregaron\", a community group. In 2006, an agreement was reached whereby of the estate are to be conserved as open green space and managed by Tregaron Conservatory.", - "tag": "inconsistent|reason=Is it 20 acres or 20.5??|date=February 2020", - "tagDate": "February 2020", - "tagReason": "Is it 20 acres or 20.5??", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Tregaron Estate", - "paragraphB_information": "The estate covers 20.5 acres (83,000 m2).", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Tregaron estate covers 20.5 acres (83,000 m2).", - "paragraphB_article": "Tregaron Estate", - "paragraphA_information": "After Davies's death in 1958, the Washington International School purchased 6 acres (24,000 m2) of the 20 acres (81,000 m2), and the Tregaron Limited Partnership, an Israeli corporation, purchased the remaining 14 acres (57,000 m2).", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Joseph E. Davies and his wife bought the Tregaron estate in 1940. After Davies's death in 1958, the Washington International School purchased 6 acres (24,000 m2) of the 20 acres (81,000 m2), and the Tregaron Limited Partnership, an Israeli corporation, purchased the remaining 14 acres (57,000 m2).", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Tregaron estate has 20 acres.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Tregaron estate covers 20.5 acres.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "20 acres (81,000 m2)", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "20.5 acres (83,000 m2)", - "question1": "How large is the Tregaron estate in both acres and square meters?", - "question1_answer1": "20 acres (81,000 m2)", - "question1_answer2": "20.5 acres (83,000 m2)", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question2": "Is Tregaron estate bigger than 20 acres?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "CD19", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CD19", - "paragraph_A": "CD19 is widely expressed during all phases of B cell development until terminal differentiation into plasma cells. During B cell lymphopoiesis, CD19 surface expression starts during immunoglobulin (Ig) gene rearrangement, which coincides during B lineage commitment from hematopoietic stem cell. Throughout development, the surface density of CD19 is highly regulated. CD19 expression in mature B cells is threefold higher than that in immature B cells. CD19 is expressed on all normal, mitogen-stimulated, and malignant B cells, excluding plasma cells{{Inconsistent|reason=Expression data in Plasma cells is inconsistent with first paragraph.}}. CD19 expression is even maintained in B lineage cells that undergo neoplastic transformation. Because of its ubiquity on all B cells, it can function as a B cell marker and a target for immunotherapies targeting neoplastic lymphocytes.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "CD19 is widely expressed during all phases of B cell development until terminal differentiation into plasma cells. During B cell lymphopoiesis, CD19 surface expression starts during immunoglobulin (Ig) gene rearrangement, which coincides during B lineage commitment from hematopoietic stem cell. Throughout development, the surface density of CD19 is highly regulated. CD19 expression in mature B cells is threefold higher than that in immature B cells. CD19 is expressed on all normal, mitogen-stimulated, and malignant B cells, excluding plasma cells. CD19 expression is even maintained in B lineage cells that undergo neoplastic transformation. Because of its ubiquity on all B cells, it can function as a B cell marker and a target for immunotherapies targeting neoplastic lymphocytes.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=Expression data in Plasma cells is inconsistent with first paragraph.", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "Expression data in Plasma cells is inconsistent with first paragraph.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "CD19", - "paragraphB_article": "CD19", - "paragraphA_information": "CD19 is expressed on all normal, mitogen-stimulated, and malignant B cells, excluding plasma cells.", - "paragraphB_information": "Contrary to some early doubts, human plasma cells do express CD19, as confirmed by others.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "CD19 is not expressed in plasma cells.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "human plasma cells do express CD19", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "excluding plasma cells", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "human plasma cells do express CD19", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Is CD19 expressed in human plasma cells?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Chartreuse (liqueur)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chartreuse_(liqueur)", - "paragraph_A": "The book The Practical Hotel Steward (1900) states that Green Chartreuse contains \"cinnamon, mace, lemon balm, dried hyssop flower tops, peppermint, thyme, costmary, arnica flowers, genepi, and angelica roots\", and that yellow chartreuse is \"similar to above, adding cardamom seeds and socctrine aloes.\"John Tellman (1900) The Practical Hotel Steward, The Hotel Monthly, Chicago The monks intended their liqueur to be used as medicine. The exact recipes for all forms of Chartreuse remain trade secrets and are known at any given time only to the three monks{{Inconsistent|reason=Contradictory number of monks|date=30 April 2022}} who prepare the herbal mixture. The only formally known element of the recipe is that it uses 130 different plants.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The book The Practical Hotel Steward (1900) states that Green Chartreuse contains \"cinnamon, mace, lemon balm, dried hyssop flower tops, peppermint, thyme, costmary, arnica flowers, genepi, and angelica roots\", and that yellow chartreuse is \"similar to above, adding cardamom seeds and socctrine aloes.\"John Tellman (1900) The Practical Hotel Steward, The Hotel Monthly, Chicago The monks intended their liqueur to be used as medicine. The exact recipes for all forms of Chartreuse remain trade secrets and are known at any given time only to the three monks who prepare the herbal mixture. The only formally known element of the recipe is that it uses 130 different plants.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=Contradictory number of monks|date=30 April 2022", - "tagDate": "30 April 2022", - "tagReason": "Contradictory number of monks", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Chartreuse (liqueur)", - "paragraphB_article": "Chartreuse (liqueur)", - "paragraphA_information": "The exact recipes for all forms of Chartreuse remain trade secrets and are known at any given time only to the three monks who prepare the herbal mixture. ", - "paragraphB_information": "Today, the liqueurs are produced using the herbal mixture prepared by two monks at Grande Chartreuse. They are the only ones to know the secret recipe.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Today, the Chartreuse liqueurs are produced using the herbal mixture prepared by two monks at Grande Chartreuse. They are the only ones to know the secret recipe.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The exact recipes for all forms of Chartreuse are known at any given time only to the three monks.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The two monks at Grande Chartreuse are the only ones to know the secret recipe of Chartreuse.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "the three monk", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "two monks", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How many monks know the secret recipe of Chartreuse?", - "question1_answer1": "Three", - "question1_answer2": "Two", - "question2": "Does more than two monks know the secret recipe of Chartreuse?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Convenience store", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convenience_store", - "paragraph_A": "In 2011, there were approximately 47,195 gas stations with convenience stores that generated $326 billion in revenue. Of the 150,000 convenience stores in the country, 120,000{{Inconsistent|reason=120,000 doesn't line up with 47,000}} of them are located at fuel stations, which sell approximately 80 percent of the fuels purchased in the country.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In 2011, there were approximately 47,195 gas stations with convenience stores that generated $326 billion in revenue. Of the 150,000 convenience stores in the country, 120,000 of them are located at fuel stations, which sell approximately 80 percent of the fuels purchased in the country.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|reason=120,000 doesn't line up with 47,000", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "120,000 doesn't line up with 47,000", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Convenience store", - "paragraphB_article": "Convenience store", - "paragraphA_information": " Of the 150,000 convenience stores in the country, 120,000 of them are located at fuel stations, which sell approximately 80 percent of the fuels purchased in the country.", - "paragraphB_information": "In 2011, there were approximately 47,195 gas stations with convenience stores that generated $326 billion in revenue. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In 2011, there were approximately 47,195 gas stations in US with convenience stores that generated $326 billion in revenue.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In 2011, of the 150,000 convenience stores in US, 120,000 of them are located at fuel stations, which sell approximately 80 percent of the fuels purchased in the country.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "120,000 convenience stores are located at fuel stations in US in 2011.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "There were 47,195 gas stations in US with convenience stores in 2011.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "120,000", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "47,195", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "In 2011, how many convenience stores are located at fuel stations in US?", - "question1_answer1": "120,000", - "question1_answer2": "47,195", - "question2": "As of 2011, are more than 47, 195 convenience stores located at fuel stations in US?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Dinigeer Yilamujiang", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinigeer_Yilamujiang", - "paragraph_A": "Originally competing as a track and field athlete, she started learning to ski when she was 12. She primarily pursued cross-country skiing initially as a hobby before transforming herself into an elite-level competitor. She took part in local events in 2012{{Inconsistent|date=February 2022|reason=She turned age twelve in 2013, which this year does not align with}} and later engaged in competitive skiing events. She first started skiing competitively in 2017. Norwegian coach Kristian Bjune Sveen travelled to Xinjiang to give her training, while Dilnigar also spent 3 years training in Norway herself, alongside Bayani Jialin, a Chinese skier of Kazakh ethnicity. She placed 2nd at the FIS China City Sprint Beijing 2019, as well as 2nd at the Norwegian Norgescup at Konnerud.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Originally competing as a track and field athlete, she started learning to ski when she was 12. She primarily pursued cross-country skiing initially as a hobby before transforming herself into an elite-level competitor. She took part in local events in 2012 and later engaged in competitive skiing events. She first started skiing competitively in 2017. Norwegian coach Kristian Bjune Sveen travelled to Xinjiang to give her training, while Dilnigar also spent 3 years training in Norway herself, alongside Bayani Jialin, a Chinese skier of Kazakh ethnicity. She placed 2nd at the FIS China City Sprint Beijing 2019, as well as 2nd at the Norwegian Norgescup at Konnerud.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=February 2022|reason=She turned age twelve in 2013, which this year does not align with", - "tagDate": "February 2022", - "tagReason": "She turned age twelve in 2013, which this year does not align with", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Dinigeer Yilamujiang", - "paragraphB_article": "Dinigeer Yilamujiang", - "paragraphA_information": "Originally competing as a track and field athlete, she started learning to ski when she was 12. She primarily pursued cross-country skiing initially as a hobby before transforming herself into an elite-level competitor. She took part in local events in 2012 and later engaged in competitive skiing events.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Originally competing as a track and field athlete, Dinigeer Yilamujiang started learning to ski when she was 12. She primarily pursued cross-country skiing initially as a hobby before transforming herself into an elite-level competitor. She took part in local events in 2012 and later engaged in competitive skiing events.", - "paragraphB_information": "Born\tMay 3, 2001 (age 22); Originally competing as a track and field athlete, she started learning to ski when she was 12.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Dinigeer Yilamujiang was born on May 3, 2001. Originally competing as a track and field athlete, she started learning to ski when she was 12.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Dinigeer Yilamujiang took part in local ski events in 2012.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Dinigeer Yilamujiang started learning to ski when she was 12, which was 2013.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "2012", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Dilnigar Ilhamjan, also known as Dinigeer Yilamujiang, is a Chinese cross-country skier of Uyghur ethnicity, born in Altay, Xinjiang. When did Dinigeer Yilamujiang start to learn to ski?", - "question1_answer1": "before 2012 or 2012", - "question1_answer2": "2013", - "question2": "Dilnigar Ilhamjan, also known as Dinigeer Yilamujiang, is a Chinese cross-country skier of Uyghur ethnicity, born in Altay, Xinjiang. Did Dinigeer Yilamujiang started learn to ski before 2013?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different" - }, - { - "title": "Charles D'Oyly", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_D'Oyly", - "paragraph_A": "D'Oyly sketched incessantly and took an active interest in the arts generally, finding these leisure pursuits to be an agreeable way to relieve the boredom associated with colonial life. He produced landscapes, scenes of Indian life, portraits, and caricatures, primarily in watercolour, and also wrote satirical verse.Ross, R., Status and Respectablity in the Cape Colony, 1750\u20131870: A Tragedy of Manners, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 125; Leppert, R., The Sight of Sound: Music, Representation, and the History of the Body, p 259, 34n His work was influenced by his friend, the painter, George Chinnery, who stayed with D\u2019Oyly and his wife in Dacca in 1802\u201303.Ross, R., Status and Respectability in the Cape Colony, 1750\u20131870: A Tragedy of Manners, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 125{{Inconsistent|date=November 2021|reason=This contradicts the statement that D'Oyly first married in 1805.}} A unique feature of his illustrations is the representation of relations between colonials and Indians.De Silva, P., Colonial Self-Fashioning in British India, c. 1785-1845: Visualising Identity and Difference, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018, pp 175-178 Unlike other artists of the period, D\u2019Oyly was not afraid to depict drunkenness and debauchery in his illustrations.Ross, R., Status and Respectability in the Cape Colony, 1750\u20131870: A Tragedy of Manners, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 125 His published work, which was invariably heavily illustrated, encompassed a variety of subject matter, from natural history to social satire, and was occasionally written in verse.Nair, P. R., Calcutta Bevy: A Collection of Rare Poems, Punthi Pustak, 1989, p. 203", - "paragraph_A_clean": "D'Oyly sketched incessantly and took an active interest in the arts generally, finding these leisure pursuits to be an agreeable way to relieve the boredom associated with colonial life. He produced landscapes, scenes of Indian life, portraits, and caricatures, primarily in watercolour, and also wrote satirical verse.Ross, R., Status and Respectablity in the Cape Colony, 1750\u20131870: A Tragedy of Manners, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 125; Leppert, R., The Sight of Sound: Music, Representation, and the History of the Body, p 259, 34n His work was influenced by his friend, the painter, George Chinnery, who stayed with D\u2019Oyly and his wife in Dacca in 1802\u201303.Ross, R., Status and Respectability in the Cape Colony, 1750\u20131870: A Tragedy of Manners, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 125 A unique feature of his illustrations is the representation of relations between colonials and Indians.De Silva, P., Colonial Self-Fashioning in British India, c. 1785-1845: Visualising Identity and Difference, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018, pp 175-178 Unlike other artists of the period, D\u2019Oyly was not afraid to depict drunkenness and debauchery in his illustrations.Ross, R., Status and Respectability in the Cape Colony, 1750\u20131870: A Tragedy of Manners, Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 125 His published work, which was invariably heavily illustrated, encompassed a variety of subject matter, from natural history to social satire, and was occasionally written in verse.Nair, P. R., Calcutta Bevy: A Collection of Rare Poems, Punthi Pustak, 1989, p. 203", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=November 2021|reason=This contradicts the statement that D'Oyly first married in 1805.", - "tagDate": "November 2021", - "tagReason": "This contradicts the statement that D'Oyly first married in 1805.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Charles D'Oyly", - "paragraphB_article": "Charles D'Oyly", - "paragraphA_information": "D'Oyly sketched incessantly and took an active interest in the arts generally, finding these leisure pursuits to be an agreeable way to relieve the boredom associated with colonial life. He produced landscapes, scenes of Indian life, portraits, and caricatures, primarily in watercolour, and also wrote satirical verse. His work was influenced by his friend, the painter, George Chinnery, who stayed with D\u2019Oyly and his wife in Dacca in 1802\u201303.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Charles D'Oyly sketched incessantly and took an active interest in the arts generally, finding these leisure pursuits to be an agreeable way to relieve the boredom associated with colonial life. He produced landscapes, scenes of Indian life, portraits, and caricatures, primarily in watercolour, and also wrote satirical verse. His work was influenced by his friend, the painter, George Chinnery, who stayed with D\u2019Oyly and his wife in Dacca in 1802\u201303.", - "paragraphB_information": "D'Oyly went to England with the family in 1785 and received his first formal education there. In 1798 he returned to India as Assistant to the Registrar in the Court of Appeal in Calcutta. In 1803 he was appointed Keeper of the Records in the Governor General's office, and in 1805, he married his cousin, Marian Greer, daughter of William Greer.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Charles D'Oyly went to England with the family in 1785 and received his first formal education there. In 1798 he returned to India as Assistant to the Registrar in the Court of Appeal in Calcutta. In 1803 he was appointed Keeper of the Records in the Governor General's office, and in 1805, he married his cousin, Marian Greer, daughter of William Greer.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The painter, George Chinnery, who stayed with D\u2019Oyly and his wife in Dacca in 1802\u201303.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "D\u2019Oyly married his consin in 1805.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1802\u201303", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1805", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Sir Charles D'Oyly, 7th Baronet (1781\u20131845), was a British public official and painter from Dacca (now Dhaka). Was Charles D'Oyly married in 1803?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Sir Charles D'Oyly, 7th Baronet (1781\u20131845), was a British public official and painter from Dacca (now Dhaka). When was Charles D'Oyly married?", - "question2_answer2": "1805", - "question2_answer1": "Before 1802 or 1802" - }, - { - "title": "Emperor discography", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emperor_discography", - "paragraph_A": "This is a comprehensive discography of Emperor, a Notodden, Norway-based black metal band. Emperor has released four studio albums, two live albums, six EPs, two DVDs and three compilation albums.{{Inconsistent|date=May 2023}|reason=Album counts by type differ between lead, infobox, and main article.}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "This is a comprehensive discography of Emperor, a Notodden, Norway-based black metal band. Emperor has released four studio albums, two live albums, six EPs, two DVDs and three compilation albums.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=May 2023}|reason=Album counts by type differ between lead, infobox, and main article.", - "tagDate": "May 2023}", - "tagReason": "Album counts by type differ between lead, infobox, and main article.", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Emperor discography", - "paragraphB_article": "Emperor discography", - "paragraphA_information": "Emperor has released four studio albums, two live albums, six EPs, two DVDs and three compilation albums.", - "paragraphB_information": "Live albums\t1; Live albums - Emperial Live Ceremony, Live at Wacken Open Air 2006, Live Inferno", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Emperor has released two live albums.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Emperor has released 1 live album in infobox; and the band has released three live albums in the table.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "two", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Infobox/table - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "As of 2023, how many live albums has Emperor released?", - "question1_answer1": "two", - "question1_answer2": "One", - "question2": "As of 2023, has Emperor released more than one live albums? ", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Mari Fitzduff", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mari_Fitzduff", - "paragraph_A": "Fitzduff began professional peacebuilding work in 1986. Living in Northern Ireland during the conflict in 1969-1998, she set up the first courses in conflict resolution and mediation in both Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University. She went on to found Mediation Northern Ireland in 1988,{{Inconsistent|about=the year of founding Mediation Northern Ireland|date=October 2023}} an organisation which trained and supplied mediators for community and political mediations throughout Northern Ireland in the context of the conflict.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Fitzduff began professional peacebuilding work in 1986. Living in Northern Ireland during the conflict in 1969-1998, she set up the first courses in conflict resolution and mediation in both Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University. She went on to found Mediation Northern Ireland in 1988, an organisation which trained and supplied mediators for community and political mediations throughout Northern Ireland in the context of the conflict.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|about=the year of founding Mediation Northern Ireland|date=October 2023", - "tagDate": "October 2023", - "tagReason": "the year of founding Mediation Northern Ireland", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Mari Fitzduff", - "paragraphB_article": "Mari Fitzduff", - "paragraphA_information": "Fitzduff began professional peacebuilding work in 1986. Living in Northern Ireland during the conflict in 1969-1998, she set up the first courses in conflict resolution and mediation in both Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University. She went on to found Mediation Northern Ireland in 1988, an organisation which trained and supplied mediators for community and political mediations throughout Northern Ireland in the context of the conflict.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Mari Fitzduff began professional peacebuilding work in 1986. Living in Northern Ireland during the conflict in 1969-1998, she set up the first courses in conflict resolution and mediation in both Queen's University Belfast and Ulster University. She went on to found Mediation Northern Ireland in 1988, an organisation which trained and supplied mediators for community and political mediations throughout Northern Ireland in the context of the conflict.", - "paragraphB_information": "Mari Christine Fitzduff (born March 15, 1947 in Dublin) is an Irish policy maker, writer and academic. She began her work in peacebuilding and mediation working with universities during the Northern Ireland conflict before setting up a mediation organisation in 1989.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Mari Fitzduff set up a mediation organisation in 1989 in the context of the Northern Ireland conflict.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1988", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1989", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "When did Mari Fitzduff found Mediation Northern Ireland?", - "question1_answer1": "1988", - "question1_answer2": "1989", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Mari Fitzduff found Mediation Northern Ireland in 1988.", - "question2": "Did Mari Fitzduff found Mediation Northern Ireland in 1988?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Flare gun", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flare_gun", - "paragraph_A": "The Very pistol, typical of the type used in the Second World War, are of one inch{{inconsistent}} bore (26.5mm), now known as \"Calibre 4\" for signal pistols. These are still available and more recent longer-barrel models can also fire parachute flares.Pains Wessex catalogue showing modern 26.5mm flare gun and both parachute flares (maroons) and conventional flare cartridges, accessed July 2012 Many newer models fire smaller 12-gauge flares. In countries where possession of firearms is strictly controlled, such as the United Kingdom, the use of Very pistols as emergency equipment on boats is less common than, for example, the United States. In such locations, distress flares are more commonly fired from single-shot tube devices which are then disposed of after use. These devices are fired by twisting or striking a pad on one end, but the contents are otherwise similar to a round from a flare gun, although the flares themselves are much larger and can burn brighter for longer. In the Russian Federation, which also has strict controls on firearms, a special tube-shaped flare launching device called a \"Hunter's Signal\" (\u0421\u0438\u0433\u043d\u0430\u043b \u041e\u0445\u043e\u0442\u043d\u0438\u043a\u0430) is available. This is reusable but is deliberately designed in a way to avoid resemblance to a gun.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Very pistol, typical of the type used in the Second World War, are of one inch bore (26.5mm), now known as \"Calibre 4\" for signal pistols. These are still available and more recent longer-barrel models can also fire parachute flares.Pains Wessex catalogue showing modern 26.5mm flare gun and both parachute flares (maroons) and conventional flare cartridges, accessed July 2012 Many newer models fire smaller 12-gauge flares. In countries where possession of firearms is strictly controlled, such as the United Kingdom, the use of Very pistols as emergency equipment on boats is less common than, for example, the United States. In such locations, distress flares are more commonly fired from single-shot tube devices which are then disposed of after use. These devices are fired by twisting or striking a pad on one end, but the contents are otherwise similar to a round from a flare gun, although the flares themselves are much larger and can burn brighter for longer. In the Russian Federation, which also has strict controls on firearms, a special tube-shaped flare launching device called a \"Hunter's Signal\" (\u0421\u0438\u0433\u043d\u0430\u043b \u041e\u0445\u043e\u0442\u043d\u0438\u043a\u0430) is available. This is reusable but is deliberately designed in a way to avoid resemblance to a gun.", - "tag": "inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "tagged reason from the revision history: 1 inch = 25.4 mm, but which number here is right?", - "paragraphA_article": "Flare gun", - "paragraphB_article": "Flare gun", - "paragraphA_information": "The Very pistol, typical of the type used in the Second World War, are of one inch bore (26.5mm), now known as \"Calibre 4\" for signal pistols. ", - "paragraphB_information": "The Very pistol, typical of the type used in the Second World War, are of one inch bore (26.5mm), now known as \"Calibre 4\" for signal pistols. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "the pistol's bore is one inch.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "the pistol's bore is 26.5mm, which is more than 1 inch", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "one inch", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "26.5mm", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How long is the bore of the pistols that are typically used in the Second World War?", - "question1_answer1": "One inch", - "question1_answer2": "26.5 mm", - "question2": "Is the bore of the pistols that are typically used in the Second World War longer than one inch?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Fort_\u00c9ben-\u00c9mael", - "paragraph_A": "The Fallschirmj\u00e4ger filed onto a non-illuminated tarmac at 03:00, as the loudspeakers played Richard Wagner's \"Ride of the Valkyries\". At 04:30, forty-two gliders carrying the 493 airborne troops{{Inconsistent|date=June 2017|reason=The 4 assault forces total 41 gliders & 363/7 men.}} that formed the assault force were lifted off from two airfields in Cologne, the armada of gliders and transport aircraft turning south towards their objectives. The aircraft maintained strict radio silence, forcing the pilots to rely on a chain of signal fires that pointed towards Belgium; the radio silence also ensured that senior commanders of the assault force could not be informed that the tow-ropes on one of the gliders had snapped, forcing the glider to land inside Germany. The pilot of a second glider released his tow-rope prematurely, and was unable to land near its objective. Both gliders were carrying troops assigned to Group Granite and were destined to assault Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael, thereby leaving the group understrength; it also left it under the command of Oberleutnant Witzig's second-in-command - Oberfeldwebel Helmut Wenzel, as Witzig was in one of the gliders forced to land. The remaining gliders were released from their tow-ropes twenty miles away from their objectives at an altitude of , which was deemed high enough for the gliders to land by the three bridges and on top of the fort, and also maintain a steep dive angle to further ensure they landed correctly. After the Ju\u00a052's released the gliders and began turning away, Belgian anti-aircraft artillery positions detected them and opened fire. This alerted the defences in the area to the presence of the gliders.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Fallschirmj\u00e4ger filed onto a non-illuminated tarmac at 03:00, as the loudspeakers played Richard Wagner's \"Ride of the Valkyries\". At 04:30, forty-two gliders carrying the 493 airborne troops that formed the assault force were lifted off from two airfields in Cologne, the armada of gliders and transport aircraft turning south towards their objectives. The aircraft maintained strict radio silence, forcing the pilots to rely on a chain of signal fires that pointed towards Belgium; the radio silence also ensured that senior commanders of the assault force could not be informed that the tow-ropes on one of the gliders had snapped, forcing the glider to land inside Germany. The pilot of a second glider released his tow-rope prematurely, and was unable to land near its objective. Both gliders were carrying troops assigned to Group Granite and were destined to assault Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael, thereby leaving the group understrength; it also left it under the command of Oberleutnant Witzig's second-in-command - Oberfeldwebel Helmut Wenzel, as Witzig was in one of the gliders forced to land. The remaining gliders were released from their tow-ropes twenty miles away from their objectives at an altitude of , which was deemed high enough for the gliders to land by the three bridges and on top of the fort, and also maintain a steep dive angle to further ensure they landed correctly. After the Ju\u00a052's released the gliders and began turning away, Belgian anti-aircraft artillery positions detected them and opened fire. This alerted the defences in the area to the presence of the gliders.", - "tag": "Inconsistent|date=June 2017|reason=The 4 assault forces total 41 gliders & 363/7 men.", - "tagDate": "June 2017", - "tagReason": "The 4 assault forces total 41 gliders & 363/7 men.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael", - "paragraphA_information": "The Fallschirmj\u00e4ger filed onto a non-illuminated tarmac at 03:00, as the loudspeakers played Richard Wagner's \"Ride of the Valkyries\". At 04:30, forty-two gliders carrying the 493 airborne troops that formed the assault force were lifted off from two airfields in Cologne, the armada of gliders and transport aircraft turning south towards their objectives.", - "paragraphB_article": "Battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael", - "paragraphB_information": "Hauptmann Koch divided his force into four assault groups. Group Granite, under Oberleutnant Rudolf Witzig, composed of eighty-five men in eleven gliders whose task would be to assault and capture Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael; Group Steel, commanded by Oberleutnant Gustav Altmann, and formed of ninety-two men and nine gliders, would capture the Veldwezelt bridge; Group Concrete, commanded by Leutnant Gerhard Schacht and composed of ninety-six men in eleven gliders, would capture the Vroenhoven bridge; and Group Iron, under Leutnant Martin Sch\u00e4chter, composed of ninety men in ten gliders, who would capture the Kanne bridge.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "To prepare for the battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael, Hauptmann Walter Koch divided his force into four assault groups. Group Granite, under Oberleutnant Rudolf Witzig, composed of eighty-five men in eleven gliders whose task would be to assault and capture Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael; Group Steel, commanded by Oberleutnant Gustav Altmann, and formed of ninety-two men and nine gliders, would capture the Veldwezelt bridge; Group Concrete, commanded by Leutnant Gerhard Schacht and composed of ninety-six men in eleven gliders, would capture the Vroenhoven bridge; and Group Iron, under Leutnant Martin Sch\u00e4chter, composed of ninety men in ten gliders, who would capture the Kanne bridge.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": " During the battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael, for reasons of security, Sturmabteilung Walter Koch was dispersed around several locations in the Rhineland until it received orders for the operation against Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael and the three bridges to begin. Preliminary orders were received on 9 May, ordering the separated detachments to move to a pre-arranged concentration area, and shortly afterwards a second order arrived, informing the assault force that Fall Gelb was to begin at 05:25 on 10 May. The Fallschirmj\u00e4ger filed onto a non-illuminated tarmac at 03:00, as the loudspeakers played Richard Wagner's \"Ride of the Valkyries\". At 04:30, forty-two gliders carrying the 493 airborne troops that formed the assault force were lifted off from two airfields in Cologne, the armada of gliders and transport aircraft turning south towards their objectives.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "04:30, forty-two gliders carrying the 493 airborne troops that formed the assault force were lifted off from two airfields in Cologne", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "There were in total of 41 gliders carrying 363 troops by adding up the numbers of four assault groups.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "forty-two gliders carrying the 493 airborne troops", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "During the Battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael, how many gliders were used by the German army in the attack?", - "question1_answer1": "42", - "question1_answer2": "41", - "question2": "During the Battle of Fort \u00c9ben-\u00c9mael, how many troops were deployed by the German army using the gliders in the attack?", - "question2_answer1": "493", - "question2_answer2": "363" - }, - { - "title": "Government College University, Lahore", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_College_University,_Lahore", - "paragraph_A": "The following six{{Inconsistent}} chairs have been established at the respective departments:", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The following six chairs have been established at the respective departments:", - "tag": "Inconsistent", - "tagDate": "", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Government College University, Lahore", - "paragraphB_article": "Government College University, Lahore", - "paragraphA_information": "The following six chairs have been established at the respective departments: Allama Iqbal Chair in Philosophy, Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner Chair in History, Syed Ali Hujwiri Chair in Persian, Ashfaq Ahmed Chair in Urdu, Sultan Ahmed Chair in Biological Sciences", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In Government College University in Lahore, the following six chairs have been established at the respective departments: Allama Iqbal Chair in Philosophy, Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner Chair in History, Syed Ali Hujwiri Chair in Persian, Ashfaq Ahmed Chair in Urdu, Sultan Ahmed Chair in Biological Sciences", - "paragraphB_information": "The following six chairs have been established at the respective departments: Allama Iqbal Chair in Philosophy, Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner Chair in History, Syed Ali Hujwiri Chair in Persian, Ashfaq Ahmed Chair in Urdu, Sultan Ahmed Chair in Biological Sciences", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In Government College University in Lahore, the following six chairs have been established at the respective departments: Allama Iqbal Chair in Philosophy, Gottlieb Wilhelm Leitner Chair in History, Syed Ali Hujwiri Chair in Persian, Ashfaq Ahmed Chair in Urdu, Sultan Ahmed Chair in Biological Sciences", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "There are six chairs have been established at the respective departments", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "passage 2 lists the details of five chairs", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "six chairs", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "How many chairs are established in Government College University in Lahore?", - "question1_answer1": "Six", - "question1_answer2": "Five", - "question2": "Does Government College University in Lahore have more than five chairs?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Acid Cryptofiler", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_Cryptofiler", - "paragraph_A": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement). It is an online storage service.{{Contradict-inline|reason=An \"online storage service\" is different from a piece of software.|date=September 2021}} The software is now manufactured by ACID Technologies (France).", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement). It is an online storage service. The software is now manufactured by ACID Technologies (France).", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=An \"online storage service\" is different from a piece of software.|date=September 2021", - "tagDate": "September 2021", - "tagReason": "An \"online storage service\" is different from a piece of software.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "Acid Cryptofiler", - "paragraphA_information": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement). It is an online storage service. The software is now manufactured by ACID Technologies (France).", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement). It is an online storage service. The software is now manufactured by ACID Technologies (France).", - "paragraphB_article": "Acid Cryptofiler", - "paragraphB_information": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement). It is an online storage service. The software is now manufactured by ACID Technologies (France).", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement). It is an online storage service. The software is now manufactured by ACID Technologies (France).", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "It is an online storage service", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "cryptographic software program", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "online storage service", - "question1": "What is Acid Cryptofiler?", - "question1_answer1": "Acid Cryptofiler is a cryptographic software program designed by the department for \"control of information\" (Centre d'Electronique de l'Armement) of the French General Directorate of Armament (Direction g\u00e9n\u00e9rale de l'armement)", - "question1_answer2": "Acid Cryptofiler is an online storage service", - "question2": "Is Acid Cryptofiler a cryptographic software program?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Acne", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acne", - "paragraph_A": "====Azelaic acid===={{Self-contradictory|section|about=efficacy|date=December 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "====Azelaic acid====", - "tag": "Self-contradictory|section|about=efficacy|date=December 2023", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "efficacy", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Acne", - "paragraphA_information": "Azelaic acid is effective for mild to moderate acne when applied topically at a 15\u201320% concentration. Treatment twice daily for six months is necessary, and is as effective as topical benzoyl peroxide 5%, isotretinoin 0.05%, and erythromycin 2%.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Azelaic acid is effective for mild to moderate acne when applied topically at a 15\u201320% concentration. Treatment twice daily for six months is necessary, and is as effective as topical benzoyl peroxide 5%, isotretinoin 0.05%, and erythromycin 2%.", - "paragraphB_article": "Acne", - "paragraphB_information": "Azelaic acid also led to worse treatment response when compared to benzoyl peroxide. When compared to tretinoin, azelaic acid makes little or no treatment response.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Azelaic acid also led to worse acne treatment response when compared to benzoyl peroxide. When compared to tretinoin, azelaic acid makes little or no treatment response.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Azelaic acid is effective for mild to moderate acne when applied topically at a 15\u201320% concentration. Treatment twice daily for six months is necessary, and is as effective as topical benzoyl peroxide 5%, isotretinoin 0.05%, and erythromycin 2%.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Azelaic acid also led to worse acne treatment response when compared to benzoyl peroxide. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "is as effective as topical benzoyl peroxide 5%", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "worse acne treatment response when compared to benzoyl peroxide", - "question1": "Is Azelaic acid as effective as benzoyl peroxide when used to treat acne?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Is Azelaic acid a worse treatment for acne when compared to benzoyl peroxide?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Aedes albopictus", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aedes_albopictus", - "paragraph_A": "Flowing water will not be a breeding spot,{{Contradictory inline|reason=Characteristics claims eggs can be laid in running water|date=May 2023|section=Characteristics}} and water that contains minnows is not usually a problem, because the fish eat the mosquito larvae.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Flowing water will not be a breeding spot, and water that contains minnows is not usually a problem, because the fish eat the mosquito larvae.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=Characteristics claims eggs can be laid in running water|date=May 2023|section=Characteristics", - "tagDate": "May 2023", - "tagReason": "Characteristics claims eggs can be laid in running water", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Aedes albopictus", - "paragraphA_information": "Flowing water will not be a breeding spot, and water that contains minnows is not usually a problem, because the fish eat the mosquito larvae.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Flowing water will not be a breeding spot for Aedes albopictus, and water that contains minnows is not usually a problem, because the fish eat the mosquito larvae.", - "paragraphB_article": "Aedes albopictus", - "paragraphB_information": "The female lays her eggs near water, not directly into it as other mosquitoes do, but typically near a stagnant pool. However, any open container containing water will suffice for larvae development, even with less than one US fl oz (30 ml) of water. It can also breed in running water, so stagnant pools of water are not its only breeding sites. It is more likely to lay eggs in water sources near flowers than in water sources without flowers. It has a short flight range (less than 200 m (220 yd)), so breeding sites are likely to be close to where this mosquito is found.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Aedes albopictus female lays her eggs near water, not directly into it as other mosquitoes do, but typically near a stagnant pool. However, any open container containing water will suffice for larvae development, even with less than one US fl oz (30 ml) of water. It can also breed in running water, so stagnant pools of water are not its only breeding sites. It is more likely to lay eggs in water sources near flowers than in water sources without flowers. It has a short flight range (less than 200 m (220 yd)), so breeding sites are likely to be close to where this mosquito is found.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Flowing water will not be a breeding spot for Aedes albopictus", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "It can also breed in running water, so stagnant pools of water are not its only breeding sites", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Flowing water will not be a breeding spot", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "It can also breed in running water", - "question1": "Can Aedes albopictus breed in running water?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Are stagnant pools of water the only breeding sites of Aedes albopictus?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Muhammad III of Alamut", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_III_of_Alamut", - "paragraph_A": "Alauddin Muhammad, also known as Muhammad III, was born in 1213.{{Contradict inline|date=January 2024|reason=Elsewhere, article claims 1211.}} At the age of nine, upon the death of his father, he became the ruler of the Alamut. However, his mother took over the administration of state affairs and governed Alamut for the next six years (1221\u20131227), making her the first woman to do so in Alamut's history. This period was a time of relative peace in Alamut, during which the Imam's mother seems to have deposed many incapable governors in Rudhbar and Kohistan, possibly due to suspicions that they had misused their powers.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Alauddin Muhammad, also known as Muhammad III, was born in 1213. At the age of nine, upon the death of his father, he became the ruler of the Alamut. However, his mother took over the administration of state affairs and governed Alamut for the next six years (1221\u20131227), making her the first woman to do so in Alamut's history. This period was a time of relative peace in Alamut, during which the Imam's mother seems to have deposed many incapable governors in Rudhbar and Kohistan, possibly due to suspicions that they had misused their powers.", - "tag": "Contradict inline|date=January 2024|reason=Elsewhere, article claims 1211.", - "tagDate": "January 2024", - "tagReason": "Elsewhere, article claims 1211.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Muhammad III of Alamut", - "paragraphA_information": "Alauddin Muhammad, also known as Muhammad III, was born in 1213.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Alauddin Muhammad, also known as Muhammad III of Alamut, was born in 1213.", - "paragraphB_article": "Muhammad III of Alamut", - "paragraphB_information": "\u02bfAl\u0101\u02be ad-D\u012bn Mu\u1e25ammad III (\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621\u0627\u0644\u062f\u06cc\u0646 \u0645\u062d\u0645\u062f; 1211\u20131255), more commonly known as \u02bfAl\u0101\u02be ad-D\u012bn (\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621\u0627\u0644\u062f\u06cc\u0646), son of Jal\u0101l al-D\u012bn \u1e24asan III, was the 26th Niz\u0101ri Isma'ilism Im\u0101m. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "\u02bfAl\u0101\u02be ad-D\u012bn Mu\u1e25ammad III (\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621\u0627\u0644\u062f\u06cc\u0646 \u0645\u062d\u0645\u062f; 1211\u20131255), more commonly known as \u02bfAl\u0101\u02be ad-D\u012bn (\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621\u0627\u0644\u062f\u06cc\u0646), son of Jal\u0101l al-D\u012bn \u1e24asan III, was the 26th Niz\u0101ri Isma'ilism Im\u0101m. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Alauddin Muhammad, also known as Muhammad III of Alamut, was born in 1213.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "\u02bfAl\u0101\u02be ad-D\u012bn Mu\u1e25ammad III (\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621\u0627\u0644\u062f\u06cc\u0646 \u0645\u062d\u0645\u062f; 1211\u20131255), more commonly known as \u02bfAl\u0101\u02be ad-D\u012bn (\u0639\u0644\u0627\u0621\u0627\u0644\u062f\u06cc\u0646), ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1213", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1211", - "question1": "When Muhammad III of Alamut was born?", - "question1_answer1": "1213", - "question1_answer2": "1211", - "question2": "Was Muhammad III of Alamut born in 1213?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Superfast Express", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bandra_Terminus\u2013Lucknow_Weekly_Superfast_Express", - "paragraph_A": "As the average speed of the train is above 55\u00a0km/h, as per Indian Railways rules, its fare includes a Superfast surcharge.{{self-contradictory|date=July 2021}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "As the average speed of the train is above 55\u00a0km/h, as per Indian Railways rules, its fare includes a Superfast surcharge.", - "tag": "self-contradictory|date=July 2021", - "tagDate": "July 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This article or section appears to contradict itself.", - "paragraphA_article": "Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Superfast Express", - "paragraphA_information": "20921 Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Express covers the distance of 1687 kilometres in 26 hours 5 mins (65 km/h) and 1687 kilometres in 27 hours 5 mins (62 km/h) as 20922 Lucknow\u2013Bandra Terminus Weekly Express. ", - "paragraphB_article": "Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Superfast Express", - "paragraphB_information": "Operating speed\t130 km/h (81 mph) maximum 65 km/h (40 mph), including halts", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "20921 Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Express covers the distance of 1687 kilometres in 26 hours 5 mins (65 km/h) and 1687 kilometres in 27 hours 5 mins (62 km/h) as 20922 Lucknow\u2013Bandra Terminus Weekly Express. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The operating speed of Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Superfast Express is 65 km/h (40 mph).", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The operating speed of 20921 Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Express is 65 km/h and 62 km/h as 20922 Lucknow\u2013Bandra Terminus Weekly Express.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The operating speed of Bandra Terminus\u2013Lucknow Weekly Superfast Express is 65 km/h (40 mph).", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "65 km/h and 62 km/h", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "65 km/h (40 mph)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "contradict_comment": "It is needed to understand that the train can have different operating speeds in different directions.", - "question1": "What is the operating speed of Lucknow\u2013Bandra Terminus Weekly Express?", - "question1_answer1": "62 km/h", - "question1_answer2": "65 km/h (40 mph)", - "question2": "Is the operating speed of Lucknow\u2013Bandra Terminus Weekly Express 65 km/h?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Batman, Turkey", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batman,_Turkey", - "paragraph_A": "The Batman Province contains the strategic Tigris River with fertile lands by its sides, as well as rocky hills with numerous caves providing a natural shelter. As a result, it was inhabited from prehistoric times, likely from the Neolithic (Paleolithic){{Contradict-inline|date=November 2022}} period, according to archeological evidence. First documented evidence of settlements in the province dates back to the 7th century BC. An artificial \"island\" was created in this marshy area, which was named elekhan and stood independent for 194 years from 546 BC until the invasion of Alexander the Great in 352 BC. The Batman Province was a religious center in the 4th\u20136th centuries AD and was part of the Byzantine Empire for seven centuries. In the 11th\u201312th centuries became under the control of the Great Seljuq Empire and Artuqids and became a prominent outpost of the Silk Road. This area was populated by Syriac Christians and had a significant presence of Pontic Greeks, Assyrians, Baghdadi Jews and Armenians; these peoples lived in the region from 500 BC to the late 19th century. Significant changes in its management and language were brought in 1515 by Mahmoud Pasha Elekhani. It is believed that a variant of his name, Elah, was transformed into Iluh and gave the old name to the Batman city.Batman, gap.gov.trBatman. Tarih\u00e7e, kultur.gov.tr, 21 February 2007 (in Turkish)", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Batman Province contains the strategic Tigris River with fertile lands by its sides, as well as rocky hills with numerous caves providing a natural shelter. As a result, it was inhabited from prehistoric times, likely from the Neolithic (Paleolithic) period, according to archeological evidence. First documented evidence of settlements in the province dates back to the 7th century BC. An artificial \"island\" was created in this marshy area, which was named elekhan and stood independent for 194 years from 546 BC until the invasion of Alexander the Great in 352 BC. The Batman Province was a religious center in the 4th\u20136th centuries AD and was part of the Byzantine Empire for seven centuries. In the 11th\u201312th centuries became under the control of the Great Seljuq Empire and Artuqids and became a prominent outpost of the Silk Road. This area was populated by Syriac Christians and had a significant presence of Pontic Greeks, Assyrians, Baghdadi Jews and Armenians; these peoples lived in the region from 500 BC to the late 19th century. Significant changes in its management and language were brought in 1515 by Mahmoud Pasha Elekhani. It is believed that a variant of his name, Elah, was transformed into Iluh and gave the old name to the Batman city.Batman, gap.gov.trBatman. Tarih\u00e7e, kultur.gov.tr, 21 February 2007 (in Turkish)", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=November 2022", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This text contradicts material elsewhere on this page.", - "paragraphA_information": "As a result, it was inhabited from prehistoric times, likely from the Neolithic (Paleolithic) period, according to archeological evidence. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Batman Province was inhabited from prehistoric times, likely from the Neolithic (Paleolithic) period, according to archeological evidence. ", - "paragraphB_article": "Batman, Turkey", - "paragraphB_information": "As a result, it was inhabited from prehistoric times, likely from the Neolithic (Paleolithic) period, according to archeological evidence.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Batman Province was inhabited from prehistoric times, likely from the Neolithic (Paleolithic) period, according to archeological evidence.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Batman Province was likely inhabited from the Neolithic period.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Batman Province was likely inhabited from the Paleolithic period.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Neolithic", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Paleolithic", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Was Batman Province inhabited from the Neolithic period?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Was Batman Province inhabited from the Paleolithic period?", - "paragraphA_article": "Batman, Turkey", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Mart\u00edn_Garc\u00eda", - "paragraph_A": "At 5:00 pm on that day Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra, informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded,{{Contradictory inline|reason=This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded|date=March 2024}} he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. He asked his commander for more powder and ammunition in all calibers, and urgent reinforcements to annihilate the retreating ships before they could seek refuge in port. ", - "paragraph_A_clean": "At 5:00 pm on that day Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra, informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded, he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. He asked his commander for more powder and ammunition in all calibers, and urgent reinforcements to annihilate the retreating ships before they could seek refuge in port. ", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded|date=March 2024", - "tagDate": "March 2024", - "tagReason": "This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded", - "paragraphA_article": "Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda", - "paragraphB_article": "Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda", - "paragraphA_information": "In this first and bloodiest day of the Combate of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda, Romarate successfully repelled the enemy's attack. They had 45 dead and 50 wounded and the attacking force's losses were high. At dawn on the 11th, fire recommenced at 8:45am. At 5:00 pm on that day Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra, informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded, he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. At 8:00 pm on the 14th they anchored silently a half-mile to the southeast near Puerto Viejo and at 02:30 am on the 15th they disembarked 240 men in 20 minutes, using 8 launches. The royalists had 10 dead, 7 wounded and 50 prisoners.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In the first and bloodiest day (10th March 1814) of the Combate of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda, Jacinto de Romarate (frigate captain of Spanish royalist forces) successfully repelled the enemy's (forces of the United Provinces of the R\u00edo de la Plata) attack. They had 45 dead and 50 wounded. At 5:00 pm on 11th March 1814, Jacinto de Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra (Spanish royalist), informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded, he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. On 15th March 1814, the royalists had 10 dead, 7 wounded and 50 prisoners.", - "paragraphB_information": "Casualties and losses \tOne minor vessel captured, 10 dead, 47 prisoners, 17 wounded", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Spanish Empire had 10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Spanish Empire had 59 dead, 50 prisoners and 64 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Spanish Empire had 10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "59 dead, 50 prisoners and 64 wounded", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) NP-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "How many dead, prisoners and wounded did the Spanish Empire had in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question1_answer1": "59 dead, 50 prisoners and 64 wounded", - "question1_answer2": "10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded", - "question2": "Did the Spanish Empire had 59 dead, 50 prisoners and 64 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Battle of Monterrey", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Monterrey", - "paragraph_A": "During the exchange of fire, a young Mexican woman named Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya wandered into the crossfire to tend to the wounds of injured soldiers of both armies. Maria would survive the battle and go on to marry and have six children. Maria would die in 1860 at the age of 38.{{contradict-inline|date=April 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "During the exchange of fire, a young Mexican woman named Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya wandered into the crossfire to tend to the wounds of injured soldiers of both armies. Maria would survive the battle and go on to marry and have six children. Maria would die in 1860 at the age of 38.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|date=April 2023", - "tagDate": "April 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This text contradicts material elsewhere on this page.", - "paragraphA_article": "Battle of Monterrey", - "paragraphB_article": "Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya", - "paragraphA_information": "Maria would die in 1860 at the age of 38.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": " Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya would die in 1860 at the age of 38.", - "paragraphB_information": "During the Battle of Monterrey, she brought food and water to the exhausted troops on both sides of the fighting at great personal risk. While tending to a wounded American soldier, she was struck by a bullet, killing her.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "During the Battle of Monterrey in 1846, Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya brought food and water to the exhausted troops on both sides of the fighting at great personal risk. While tending to a wounded American soldier, she was struck by a bullet, killing her.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": " Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya died in 1860.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": " Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya died in 1846.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1860", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1846", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What year did Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya die?", - "question1_answer1": "1860", - "question1_answer2": "1846", - "question2": "Did Mar\u00eda Josefa Zozaya die in 1860?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Battle of Panjwaii", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Panjwaii", - "paragraph_A": "==Civilian toll=={{Self-contradictory|section|about=the magnitude/severity of civilian casualties|date=April 2017}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "==Civilian toll==", - "tag": "Self-contradictory|section|about=the magnitude/severity of civilian casualties|date=April 2017", - "tagDate": "April 2017", - "tagReason": "the magnitude/severity of civilian casualties", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The 'Civilian toll' section contains two contradictory statements.", - "paragraphA_article": "Battle of Panjwaii", - "paragraphB_article": "Battle of Panjwaii", - "paragraphA_information": "The Battle of Panjwaii was very light on the side of civilian casualties, with an estimation of a thousand according to SFC Brett Keith. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Battle of Panjwaii was very light on the side of civilian casualties, with an estimation of a thousand according to SFC Brett Keith. ", - "paragraphB_information": "NATO did, however, confirm that a large number of civilians were killed in the attack and quickly made a public apology for the deaths.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "NATO confirmed that a large number of civilians were killed in an airstrike in the Battle of Panjwaii and quickly made a public apology for the deaths.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Battle of Panjwaii had a low number of civilian casualties.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Battle of Panjwaii had a large number of civilian casualties.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "low number of civilian casualties", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "large number of civilian casualties", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Did the Battle of Panjwaii have a large number of civilian casualties?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Did the Battle of Panjwaii have a low number of civilian casualties?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Angolan kwanza", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angolan_kwanza", - "paragraph_A": "This currency was only issued in note form.{{Contradict-inline|date=October 2020|section=Coins_2}} The first banknotes issued in 1990 were overprints on earlier notes in denominations of 50 (report not confirmed), 500, 1000 and 5000 novos kwanzas (5000 novos kwanzas overprinted on 100 kwanzas). In 1991, the word novo was dropped from the issue of regular banknotes for 100, 500, 1000, 5000, 10,000, 50,000, 100,000 and 500,000 kwanzas.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "This currency was only issued in note form. The first banknotes issued in 1990 were overprints on earlier notes in denominations of 50 (report not confirmed), 500, 1000 and 5000 novos kwanzas (5000 novos kwanzas overprinted on 100 kwanzas). In 1991, the word novo was dropped from the issue of regular banknotes for 100, 500, 1000, 5000, 10,000, 50,000, 100,000 and 500,000 kwanzas.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=October 2020|section=Coins_2", - "tagDate": "October 2020", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Angolan kwanza", - "paragraphA_information": "This currency was only issued in note form.", - "valid_comment": "The article states that the Novo Kwanza introduced in 1990 comprised only banknotes, yet elsewhere in the article, it is stated that it contained coins. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Novo kwanza, AON (1990\u20131995) was only issued in note form.", - "paragraphB_article": "Angolan kwanza", - "paragraphB_information": "Novo kwanza coins Image\tValue\tComposition\tDiameter\tWeight\tThickness\tEdge\tIssued 50 kwanzas\tcopper\t24 mm\t5.5 g\t\tReeded\t1991 50 kwanzas\tcopper-plated steel\t23.3 mm\t5 g\t\tReeded\t1992 100 kwanzas\tcopper\t27.3 mm\t8 g\t\tReeded\t1992", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Novo kwanza coins: 50 kwanzas (copper; issued in 1991), 50 kwanzas\t(copper-plated steel; issued in 1992), 100 kwanzas (copper; issued in 1992)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Novo Kwanza (1990 - 1995) contained only notes", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Novo Kwanza (1990 - 1995) contained coins as well as notes", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "This currency was only issued in note form.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Novo kwanza coins Image\tValue\tComposition\tDiameter\tWeight\tThickness\tEdge\tIssued 50 kwanzas\tcopper\t24 mm\t5.5 g\t\tReeded\t1991 50 kwanzas\tcopper-plated steel\t23.3 mm\t5 g\t\tReeded\t1992 100 kwanzas\tcopper\t27.3 mm\t8 g\t\tReeded\t1992", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2_answer1": "Only notes", - "question2_answer2": "Notes and coins", - "question1": "Did the Novo Kwanza currency (1990 - 1995) contain any coins?", - "question2": "What forms of physical currency did the Novo Kwanza (1990 - 1995) contain?" - }, - { - "title": "Another Suitcase in Another Hall", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Another_Suitcase_in_Another_Hall", - "paragraph_A": "The song was first recorded by singer Barbara Dickson in 1976 for the Evita concept album that eventually became the stage musical. Rice and Webber had already enlisted actress Julie Covington to sing the part of Eva, hence they were on the lookout for other supporting vocal personnel.{{Contradict-inline|date=August 2021}} They found out about Dickson, who had recently starred in the Willy Russell musical John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert, and had charted on the UK Singles Chart with her cover version of the David Whitfield and Frankie Laine song \"Answer Me\" (1976). Dickson and her manager, Bernard Theobald, had a discussion with Rice and Webber about starring in the musical, but her voice was declared \"too delicate\" for singing the numbers on Evita. So they offered her one song which was not sung by Eva's character, and that was \"Another Suitcase in Another Hall\".{{Contradict-inline|date=August 2021}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The song was first recorded by singer Barbara Dickson in 1976 for the Evita concept album that eventually became the stage musical. Rice and Webber had already enlisted actress Julie Covington to sing the part of Eva, hence they were on the lookout for other supporting vocal personnel. They found out about Dickson, who had recently starred in the Willy Russell musical John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert, and had charted on the UK Singles Chart with her cover version of the David Whitfield and Frankie Laine song \"Answer Me\" (1976). Dickson and her manager, Bernard Theobald, had a discussion with Rice and Webber about starring in the musical, but her voice was declared \"too delicate\" for singing the numbers on Evita. So they offered her one song which was not sung by Eva's character, and that was \"Another Suitcase in Another Hall\".", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=August 2021", - "tagDate": "August 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that Julie Covington was enlisted to play Eva in the Evita musical, yet it is also stated that subsequently, the musical director discussed giving the part to Barbara Dickson", - "paragraphA_article": "Another Suitcase in Another Hall", - "paragraphB_article": "Another Suitcase in Another Hall", - "paragraphA_information": "Rice and Webber had already enlisted actress Julie Covington to sing the part of Eva, hence they were on the lookout for other supporting vocal personnel. They found out about Dickson, who had recently starred in the Willy Russell musical John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert, and had charted on the UK Singles Chart with her cover version of the David Whitfield and Frankie Laine song \"Answer Me\" (1976).", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber had already enlisted actress Julie Covington to sing the part of Eva in the Evita musical, hence they were on the lookout for other supporting vocal personnel. They found out about Barbara Dickson, who had recently starred in the Willy Russell musical John, Paul, George, Ringo ... and Bert, and had charted on the UK Singles Chart with her cover version of the David Whitfield and Frankie Laine song \"Answer Me\" (1976).", - "paragraphB_information": "Dickson and her manager, Bernard Theobald, had a discussion with Rice and Webber about starring in the musical, but her voice was declared \"too delicate\" for singing the numbers on Evita. So they offered her one song which was not sung by Eva's character, and that was \"Another Suitcase in Another Hall\".", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Barbara Dickson and her manager, Bernard Theobald, had a discussion with Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber about starring in the musical, but her voice was declared \"too delicate\" for singing the numbers on Evita. So they offered her one song which was not sung by Eva's character, and that was \"Another Suitcase in Another Hall\".", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2_answer1": "Supporting", - "question2_answer2": "Lead", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Julie Covington was enlisted to play Eva in the Evita musical", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The role was subsequently offered to Barbara Dickson", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Rice and Webber had already enlisted actress Julie Covington to sing the part of Eva, hence they were on the lookout for other supporting vocal personnel.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Dickson and her manager, Bernard Theobald, had a discussion with Rice and Webber about starring in the musical, but her voice was declared \"too delicate\" for singing the numbers on Evita. So they offered her one song which was not sung by Eva's character, and that was \"Another Suitcase in Another Hall\".", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Was Barbara Dickson considered for the role of Eva in the Evita Musical?", - "question2": "For what type of role (lead or supporting) was Barbara Dickson considered in the Evita Musical?" - }, - { - "title": "Anti-Catalanism", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Catalanism", - "paragraph_A": "With the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, the regime changed their image,{{Contradict-inline|reason=Previous paragraph states \u00abuntil 1951\u00bb|date=September 2022}} which allowed the Orfe\u00f3 Catal\u00e0 to put on Catalan productions, and the publication of Catalan books, though only classic works; works aimed at young people were prohibited to limit the learning of the written language. Among these authors were those who returned from exile in 1942\u20131943. Their works include a Catalan translation of the Odyssey (1948) by Carles Riba, and research conducted by teacher Alexandre Gal\u00ed with Hist\u00f2ria de les Institucions 1900-1936 (History of Institutions), which even today are reference works.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "With the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, the regime changed their image, which allowed the Orfe\u00f3 Catal\u00e0 to put on Catalan productions, and the publication of Catalan books, though only classic works; works aimed at young people were prohibited to limit the learning of the written language. Among these authors were those who returned from exile in 1942\u20131943. Their works include a Catalan translation of the Odyssey (1948) by Carles Riba, and research conducted by teacher Alexandre Gal\u00ed with Hist\u00f2ria de les Institucions 1900-1936 (History of Institutions), which even today are reference works.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=Previous paragraph states \u00abuntil 1951\u00bb|date=September 2022", - "tagDate": "September 2022", - "tagReason": "Previous paragraph states \u00abuntil 1951\u00bb", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "It is stated that the persecution of the Catalan language was \"total\" until 1951, but it is also stated that from 1945, said persecution was less. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Anti-Catalan sentiment", - "paragraphB_article": "Anti-Catalan sentiment", - "paragraphA_information": "Rafael Aracil, Joan Oliver and Antoni Segura considered that until 1951, the persecution of the language was \"total\".", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Rafael Aracil, Joan Oliver and Antoni Segura considered that until 1951, the persecution of the Catalan language was \"total\"", - "paragraphB_information": "With the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, the regime changed their image,[contradictory] which allowed the Orfe\u00f3 Catal\u00e0 to put on Catalan productions, and the publication of Catalan books, though only classic works; works aimed at young people were prohibited to limit the learning of the written language.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "With the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, the regime changed their image,[contradictory] which allowed the Orfe\u00f3 Catal\u00e0 to put on Catalan productions, and the publication of Catalan books, though only classic works; works aimed at young people were prohibited to limit the learning of the written language.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Persecution of Catalan was \"total\" until 1951.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Persecution of Catalan was lessened from 1945 onwards.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Rafael Aracil, Joan Oliver and Antoni Segura considered that until 1951, the persecution of the language was \"total\".", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "With the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945, the regime changed their image,[contradictory] which allowed the Orfe\u00f3 Catal\u00e0 to put on Catalan productions, and the publication of Catalan books, though only classic works; works aimed at young people were prohibited to limit the learning of the written language.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Language (Any named language)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Was persecution of the Catalan language considered \"total\" until 1951?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Did persecution of the Catalan language decrease from 1945?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Ibn Arabi", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Arabi", - "paragraph_A": "Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193.{{contradict-inline|date=February 2023}} After a year in Tunisia, he returned to Andalusia in 1194. His father died soon after Ibn Arabi arrived at Seville. When his mother died some months later he left Andalusia for the second time and travelled with his two sisters to Fez, Morocco in 1195. He returned to C\u00f3rdoba, Andalusia in 1198, and left Andalusia crossing from Gibraltar for the last time in 1200. While there, he received a vision instructing him to journey east. After visiting some places in the Maghreb, he left Tunisia in 1201 and arrived for the Hajj in 1202.Chittick 2007, p. 5 He lived in Mecca for three years, and there began writing his work Fut\u016b\u1e25\u0101t al-Makkiyya (), The Meccan Illuminations\u2014only part of which has been translated into English by various scholars such as Eric Winkel.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193. After a year in Tunisia, he returned to Andalusia in 1194. His father died soon after Ibn Arabi arrived at Seville. When his mother died some months later he left Andalusia for the second time and travelled with his two sisters to Fez, Morocco in 1195. He returned to C\u00f3rdoba, Andalusia in 1198, and left Andalusia crossing from Gibraltar for the last time in 1200. While there, he received a vision instructing him to journey east. After visiting some places in the Maghreb, he left Tunisia in 1201 and arrived for the Hajj in 1202.Chittick 2007, p. 5 He lived in Mecca for three years, and there began writing his work Fut\u016b\u1e25\u0101t al-Makkiyya (), The Meccan Illuminations\u2014only part of which has been translated into English by various scholars such as Eric Winkel.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|date=February 2023", - "tagDate": "February 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that Ibn Abi Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193, but it also states that he was born in 1165, meaning that he would have been younger than 36", - "paragraphA_information": "Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193.", - "paragraphA_article": "Ibn Arabi", - "paragraphB_article": "Ibn Arabi", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193.", - "paragraphB_information": "Ibn \u02bfArab\u012b (Arabic: \u0627\u0628\u0646 \u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a, ALA-LC: Ibn \u02bbArab\u012b\u200e; full name: \u0623\u0628\u0648 \u0639\u0628\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0647 \u0645\u062d\u0640\u0645\u0640\u062f \u0628\u0646 \u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0627\u0626\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0627\u062a\u0645\u064a, Ab\u016b \u02bbAbd All\u0101h Mu\u1e25ammad ibn \u02bbArab\u012b al-\u1e6c\u0101\u02bc\u012b al-\u1e24\u0101tim\u012b; 1165\u20131240) was an Andalusi Arab scholar, mystic, poet, and philosopher, extremely influential within Islamic thought.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Ibn \u02bfArab\u012b (Arabic: \u0627\u0628\u0646 \u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a, ALA-LC: Ibn \u02bbArab\u012b\u200e; full name: \u0623\u0628\u0648 \u0639\u0628\u062f \u0627\u0644\u0644\u0647 \u0645\u062d\u0640\u0645\u0640\u062f \u0628\u0646 \u0639\u0631\u0628\u064a \u0627\u0644\u0637\u0627\u0626\u064a \u0627\u0644\u062d\u0627\u062a\u0645\u064a, Ab\u016b \u02bbAbd All\u0101h Mu\u1e25ammad ibn \u02bbArab\u012b al-\u1e6c\u0101\u02bc\u012b al-\u1e24\u0101tim\u012b; 1165\u20131240) was an Andalusi Arab scholar, mystic, poet, and philosopher, extremely influential within Islamic thought.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Ibn Arabi left Andalusia for the first time at age 36 and arrived at Tunis in 1193.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "states that Ibn Arabi was born in 1165, meaning he was younger than 36 in 1193", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Considering that Ibn Arabi left Andalusia and arrived at Tunis in 1193, was he less than 36 at the time?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Considering that Ibn Arabi left Andalusia and arrived at Tunis in 1193, how old was he at the time?", - "question2_answer1": "36", - "question2_answer2": "Less than 36" - }, - { - "title": "Architecture of Lebanon", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Lebanon", - "paragraph_A": "Baalbeck is counted as one of the Roman treasures in Lebanon, and is home to many ancient Roman temples built at the end of the third millennium B.C.{{Contradictory inline|reason=Rome did not exist during the third millennium B.C.|date=March 2020}} The city was referred to as the city of the sun (Heliopolis) by the Greeks.Baalbek: Heliopolis, city of the sun, p. 15. Dar el-Machreq Publishers : distribution, Librairie Orientale. Retrieved 12 November 2011", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Baalbeck is counted as one of the Roman treasures in Lebanon, and is home to many ancient Roman temples built at the end of the third millennium B.C. The city was referred to as the city of the sun (Heliopolis) by the Greeks.Baalbek: Heliopolis, city of the sun, p. 15. Dar el-Machreq Publishers : distribution, Librairie Orientale. Retrieved 12 November 2011", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=Rome did not exist during the third millennium B.C.|date=March 2020", - "tagDate": "March 2020", - "tagReason": "Rome did not exist during the third millennium B.C.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphB_information": "The Sant'Omobono temple site dates to 7th\u20136th century BC, making these the oldest known temple remains in Rome.[", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Sant'Omobono temple site dates to 7th\u20136th century BC, making these the oldest known temple remains in Rome.[", - "paragraphB_article": "History of Rome", - "valid_comment": "The article states that Baalbeck is home to many ancient Roman temples built at the end of the third millennium B.C., yet Rome didn't exist back then.", - "paragraphA_article": "Architecture of Lebanon", - "paragraphA_information": "Baalbeck is counted as one of the Roman treasures in Lebanon, and is home to many ancient Roman temples built at the end of the third millennium B.C.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Baalbeck is counted as one of the Roman treasures in Lebanon, and is home to many ancient Roman temples built at the end of the third millennium B.C.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": " Roman temples built at the end of the third millennium B.C. exist in Baalbeck.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Rome was founded within the first millennium BC", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Do there exist Ancient Roman temples dating back to the third Millennium B.C.? ", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Is there any evidence of Ancient Roman temples existing before the first Millennium B.C.? ", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Argentovaria", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argentovaria", - "paragraph_A": "==Temple precinct=={{Self-contradictory|about=size of area|date=August 2020}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "==Temple precinct==", - "tag": "Self-contradictory|about=size of area|date=August 2020", - "tagDate": "August 2020", - "tagReason": "size of area", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that the multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor, covered 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres). Then it states that the precinct covered an area of around 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres).", - "paragraphA_article": "Argentovaria", - "paragraphB_article": "Argentovaria", - "paragraphA_information": "The 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres) multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor, excavated from 2003 to 2005, consisted of four Gallo-Roman temples with surrounding ambulatories (Buildings A, B, E, C), and ten other cult buildings, all of which were built in the 1st century AD. ", - "paragraphB_information": "The precinct covered an area of around 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres), making it one of the largest of its kind in this region.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres) multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor, excavated from 2003 to 2005, consisted of four Gallo-Roman temples with surrounding ambulatories (Buildings A, B, E, C), and ten other cult buildings, all of which were built in the 1st century AD. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim covered an area of around 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres), making it one of the largest of its kind in this region.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor covered 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres).", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor covered 1.6 hectares (4.0 acres).", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - FAC (Buildings, airports, highways, bridges, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What area (in hectares/acres) did the multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor cover?", - "question1_answer1": "1.4 hectares (3.5 acres)", - "question1_answer2": "1.6 hectares (4.0 acres).", - "question2": "Did did the multi-phase temple precinct in the Biesheim-Kunheim corridor cover more than 1.4 hectares (3.5 acres)?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Shaikh Asiri Lahiji", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaikh_Asiri_Lahiji", - "paragraph_A": "{{contradict|date=April 2022|discuss=Talk:Shaikh Asiri Lahiji#Year of birth or death?}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "", - "tag": "contradict|date=April 2022|discuss=Talk:Shaikh Asiri Lahiji#Year of birth or death?", - "tagDate": "April 2022", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article states that Shaikh Asiri Lahiji took up an abode in Shiraz where he began guiding Nurbakshi followers in the province of Herat, but Herat and Shiraz are different places. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Shaikh Asiri Lahiji", - "paragraphB_article": "Shaikh Asiri Lahiji", - "paragraphA_information": "After the death of Syed Muhammad Nurbaksh, Lahiji took up his abode in Shiraz.", - "paragraphB_information": "He began guiding Nurbakshi followers in the province of Herat.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "After the death of Syed Muhammad Nurbaksh, Shaikh Asiri Lahiji took up his abode in Shiraz.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "From the former abode of Syed Muhammad Nurbaksh, Shaikh Asiri Lahiji began guiding Nurbakshi followers in the province of Herat.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "implies that the Syed Muhammad Nurbaksh's abode that Shaikh Asiri Lahiji took up is in Shiraz.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "implies that the Syed Muhammad Nurbaksh's abode that Shaikh Asiri Lahiji took up is in Herat.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1_answer1": "Shiraz", - "question1_answer2": "Herat", - "question1": "Where was Syed Muhammad Nurbaksh's abode that Shaikh Asiri Lahiji took up after his death?" - }, - { - "title": "Beat Hotel", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beat_Hotel", - "paragraph_A": "It was a \"class 13\" hotel, meaning bottom line, a place that was required by law to meet only minimum health and safety standards. It never had any proper name \u2013 \"the Beat Hotel\" was a nickname given it by Gregory Corso,{{contradictory inline| reason = In the article 'Harold Chapman' it says that the nickname was conferred by Verta Kali Smart|date=November 2015}} which stuck.This Is the Beat Generation: New York-San Francisco-Paris, by James Campbell. Published by University of California Press, 2001. . Page 221.Nothing is True - Everything is Permitted: The Life of Brion Gysin, by John Geiger. Published by The Disinformation Company, 2005. . Page 121. The rooms had windows facing the interior stairwell and not much light. Hot water was available Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. The hotel offered the opportunity for a bath \u2013 in the only bathtub, situated on the ground floor \u2013 provided the guest reserved time beforehand and paid the surcharge for hot water. Curtains and bedspreads were changed and washed every spring. The linen was (in principle) changed every month.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "It was a \"class 13\" hotel, meaning bottom line, a place that was required by law to meet only minimum health and safety standards. It never had any proper name \u2013 \"the Beat Hotel\" was a nickname given it by Gregory Corso, which stuck.This Is the Beat Generation: New York-San Francisco-Paris, by James Campbell. Published by University of California Press, 2001. . Page 221.Nothing is True - Everything is Permitted: The Life of Brion Gysin, by John Geiger. Published by The Disinformation Company, 2005. . Page 121. The rooms had windows facing the interior stairwell and not much light. Hot water was available Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays. The hotel offered the opportunity for a bath \u2013 in the only bathtub, situated on the ground floor \u2013 provided the guest reserved time beforehand and paid the surcharge for hot water. Curtains and bedspreads were changed and washed every spring. The linen was (in principle) changed every month.", - "tag": "contradictory inline| reason = In the article 'Harold Chapman' it says that the nickname was conferred by Verta Kali Smart|date=November 2015", - "tagDate": "November 2015", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Beat Hotel", - "paragraphA_information": "It was a \"class 13\" hotel, meaning bottom line, a place that was required by law to meet only minimum health and safety standards. It never had any proper name \u2013 \"the Beat Hotel\" was a nickname given it by Gregory Corso, which stuck.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Beat Hotel was a \"class 13\" hotel, meaning bottom line, a place that was required by law to meet only minimum health and safety standards. It never had any proper name \u2013 \"the Beat Hotel\" was a nickname given it by Gregory Corso, which stuck.", - "paragraphB_article": "Harold Chapman (photographer)", - "paragraphB_information": "Chapman was born in Deal, Kent on 26 March 1927. He produced a large body of work over many years, with his most significant period from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s, when he lived in a backstreet Left Bank guesthouse in Paris later nicknamed (by Verta Kali Smart) \u2018the Beat Hotel\u2019.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Harold Chapman was born in Deal, Kent on 26 March 1927. He produced a large body of work over many years, with his most significant period from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s, when he lived in a backstreet Left Bank guesthouse in Paris later nicknamed (by Verta Kali Smart) \u2018the Beat Hotel\u2019.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "It never had any proper name \u2013 \"the Beat Hotel\" was a nickname given it by Gregory Corso, which stuck.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "He produced a large body of work over many years, with his most significant period from the mid-1950s to the early 1960s, when he lived in a backstreet Left Bank guesthouse in Paris later nicknamed (by Verta Kali Smart) \u2018the Beat Hotel\u2019.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "nickname given it by Gregory Corso", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "later nicknamed (by Verta Kali Smart) \u2018the Beat Hotel\u2019", - "question1": "Who gave its nickname to \"The Beat Hotel\"?", - "question1_answer1": "Gregory Corso", - "question1_answer2": "Verta Kali Smart", - "question2": "Was Gregory Corso to give its nickname to \"The Beat Hotel\"?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Bonnie Bedelia", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnie_Bedelia", - "paragraph_A": "{{Self-contradictory|about=marriage, and divorce, from second husband all in 1975 while still married to her 1969 to 1980 first husband|date=January 2024}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "", - "tag": "Self-contradictory|about=marriage, and divorce, from second husband all in 1975 while still married to her 1969 to 1980 first husband|date=January 2024", - "tagDate": "January 2024", - "tagReason": "marriage, and divorce, from second husband all in 1975 while still married to her 1969 to 1980 first husband", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "Bonnie Bedelia", - "paragraphA_information": "Bedelia married scriptwriter Ken Luber on April 24, 1969. The couple had two sons, Uri (b. 1970) and Jonah (b. 1976), before divorcing in 1980. She wed actor Michael MacRae in 1995.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Bonnie Bedelia married scriptwriter Ken Luber on April 24, 1969. The couple had two sons, Uri (b. 1970) and Jonah (b. 1976), before divorcing in 1980. She wed actor Michael MacRae in 1995.", - "paragraphB_article": "Bonnie Bedelia", - "paragraphB_information": "Spouses\t Ken Luber \u200b \u200b(m. 1969; div. 1980)\u200b Jay Telfer \u200b \u200b(m. 1975; div. 1975)\u200b Michael MacRae \u200b(m. 1995)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Bonnie Bedelia spouses were Ken Luber \u200b \u200b(married 1969; divorced 1980)\u200b, Jay Telfer \u200b \u200b(married 1975; divorced 1975)\u200b and Michael MacRae \u200b(married 1995)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Bonnie Bedelia married scriptwriter Ken Luber on April 24, 1969. The couple had two sons, Uri (b. 1970) and Jonah (b. 1976), before divorcing in 1980. She wed actor Michael MacRae in 1995.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Bonnie Bedelia spouses were Ken Luber \u200b \u200b(married 1969; divorced 1980)\u200b, Jay Telfer \u200b \u200b(married 1975; divorced 1975)\u200b and Michael MacRae \u200b(married 1995)", - "question1_answer1": "2", - "question1_answer2": "3", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes", - "question1": "How many marriages had Bonnie Bedelia?", - "question2": "Was Jay Telfer an husband of Bonnie Bedelia?" - }, - { - "title": "Bemin", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bemin", - "paragraph_A": "{{multiple issues|{{contradict|date=February 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "{{multiple issues|", - "tag": "contradict|date=February 2023", - "tagDate": "February 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "Bemin", - "paragraphA_information": "The Bemin (\u90e8\u6c11) was a caste during the Yamato period of ancient Japan. Most of them were farmers, but some had special skills and were known as Shinabe. They paid tribute and performed labor for the powerful families, but unlike servants, they lived a family life.The \"bemin system\" was a social system in Japan prior to the Taika Reforms. It divided the population into Clan People (\u90e8\u6c11, Bemin) and \"Common People (heimin, \u5e73\u6c11)\", with the bemin being governed by the nobility and the heimin being governed directly by the central government. The bemin were divided into three categories: those governed by the nobility, those governed by the central government through professional organizations such as the \"sea bureau\" and \"textile bureau\", and those who were descendants of local leaders and responsible for the royal household's food and security.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Bemin (\u90e8\u6c11) was a caste during the Yamato period of ancient Japan. Most of them were farmers, but some had special skills and were known as Shinabe. They paid tribute and performed labor for the powerful families, but unlike servants, they lived a family life.The \"bemin system\" was a social system in Japan prior to the Taika Reforms. It divided the population into Clan People (\u90e8\u6c11, Bemin) and \"Common People (heimin, \u5e73\u6c11)\", with the bemin being governed by the nobility and the heimin being governed directly by the central government. The bemin were divided into three categories: those governed by the nobility, those governed by the central government through professional organizations such as the \"sea bureau\" and \"textile bureau\", and those who were descendants of local leaders and responsible for the royal household's food and security.", - "paragraphB_article": "Bemin", - "paragraphB_information": "The Bemin (\u90e8\u6c11) was a caste during the Yamato period of ancient Japan. Most of them were farmers, but some had special skills and were known as Shinabe. They paid tribute and performed labor for the powerful families, but unlike servants, they lived a family life.The \"bemin system\" was a social system in Japan prior to the Taika Reforms. It divided the population into Clan People (\u90e8\u6c11, Bemin) and \"Common People (heimin, \u5e73\u6c11)\", with the bemin being governed by the nobility and the heimin being governed directly by the central government. The bemin were divided into three categories: those governed by the nobility, those governed by the central government through professional organizations such as the \"sea bureau\" and \"textile bureau\", and those who were descendants of local leaders and responsible for the royal household's food and security.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Bemin (\u90e8\u6c11) was a caste during the Yamato period of ancient Japan. Most of them were farmers, but some had special skills and were known as Shinabe. They paid tribute and performed labor for the powerful families, but unlike servants, they lived a family life.The \"bemin system\" was a social system in Japan prior to the Taika Reforms. It divided the population into Clan People (\u90e8\u6c11, Bemin) and \"Common People (heimin, \u5e73\u6c11)\", with the bemin being governed by the nobility and the heimin being governed directly by the central government. The bemin were divided into three categories: those governed by the nobility, those governed by the central government through professional organizations such as the \"sea bureau\" and \"textile bureau\", and those who were descendants of local leaders and responsible for the royal household's food and security.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "It divided the population into Clan People (\u90e8\u6c11, Bemin) and \"Common People (heimin, \u5e73\u6c11)\", with the bemin being governed by the nobility and the heimin being governed directly by the central government.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The bemin were divided into three categories: those governed by the nobility, those governed by the central government through professional organizations such as the \"sea bureau\" and \"textile bureau\", and those who were descendants of local leaders and responsible for the royal household's food and security.", - "question1": "Was the Bemin (\u90e8\u6c11) caste during the Yamato period of ancient Japan only governed by the nobility?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "A Best", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Best", - "paragraph_A": "By 2007, A Best sold over 4.3 million units in Japan, making it the sixth best selling album in that region. This makes Hamasaki the second female artist to claim the spot; the other two entries were both by Utada. By 2010, Avex confirmed that it had sold 4.5 million units.\u300c\u300d\u3001\u30a8\u30a4\u30d9\u30c3\u30af\u30b9\u30fb\u30b0\u30eb\u30fc\u30d7\u30fb\u30db\u30fc\u30eb\u30c7\u30a3\u30f3\u30b0\u30b9\u30012010\u5e74\u30018\u9801\u3002 With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units.{{Contradict-inline|date=March 2021}} The record was broken in 2015 by British musician Adele's studio album 25, which sold over 3.4 million units in the United States and reached number one on the US Billboard 200. The album was recognized as the third best selling album through digital store in 2014, and was placed second the following year.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "By 2007, A Best sold over 4.3 million units in Japan, making it the sixth best selling album in that region. This makes Hamasaki the second female artist to claim the spot; the other two entries were both by Utada. By 2010, Avex confirmed that it had sold 4.5 million units.\u300c\u300d\u3001\u30a8\u30a4\u30d9\u30c3\u30af\u30b9\u30fb\u30b0\u30eb\u30fc\u30d7\u30fb\u30db\u30fc\u30eb\u30c7\u30a3\u30f3\u30b0\u30b9\u30012010\u5e74\u30018\u9801\u3002 With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units. The record was broken in 2015 by British musician Adele's studio album 25, which sold over 3.4 million units in the United States and reached number one on the US Billboard 200. The album was recognized as the third best selling album through digital store in 2014, and was placed second the following year.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=March 2021", - "tagDate": "March 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "A Best", - "paragraphA_information": "By 2007, A Best sold over 4.3 million units in Japan, making it the sixth best selling album in that region. This makes Hamasaki the second female artist to claim the spot; the other two entries were both by Utada. By 2010, Avex confirmed that it had sold 4.5 million units. With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "By 2007, A Best, the first greatest hits album by Japanese singer-songwriter Ayumi Hamasaki, sold over 4.3 million units in Japan, making it the sixth best selling album in that region. This makes Hamasaki the second female artist to claim the spot; the other two entries were both by Utada. By 2010, Avex confirmed that it had sold 4.5 million units. With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units.", - "paragraphB_article": "A Best", - "paragraphB_information": "By 2007, A Best sold over 4.3 million units in Japan, making it the sixth best selling album in that region. This makes Hamasaki the second female artist to claim the spot; the other two entries were both by Utada. By 2010, Avex confirmed that it had sold 4.5 million units. With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "By 2007, A Best, the first greatest hits album by Japanese singer-songwriter Ayumi Hamasaki, sold over 4.3 million units in Japan, making it the sixth best selling album in that region. This makes Hamasaki the second female artist to claim the spot; the other two entries were both by Utada. By 2010, Avex confirmed that it had sold 4.5 million units. With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "With additional sales from digital purchases, A Best has sold over five million units in Japan, making this Hamasaki's best selling effort as of today. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Both Hamasaki and Utada's albums were the fastest selling albums of all time globally, having each sold nearly three million units.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "five million units", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "three million units", - "question1": "How many copies did the A Best, the first greatest hits album by Japanese singer-songwriter Ayumi Hamasaki, sold?", - "question1_answer1": "five million units", - "question1_answer2": "three million units", - "question2": "Did the A Best, the first greatest hits album by Japanese singer-songwriter Ayumi Hamasaki, sell more than three million units?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "History of Bihar", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Bihar", - "paragraph_A": "Thus, Yudhishthira, the Pandava King, could complete his campaign of bringing the whole of India into his empire. Jarasandha had friendly relations with Chedi king Shishupala, Kuru king Duryodhana and Anga king Karna. His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC{{Contradictory inline|reason=the dates given do not add up to 138 years|date=October 2016}}. However, there is insufficient evidence to prove the historicity of this claim. These rulers are nonetheless mentioned in the Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts. Palaka, the son of the Avanti king Pradyota, conquered Kaushambi, increasing the kingdom's power.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Thus, Yudhishthira, the Pandava King, could complete his campaign of bringing the whole of India into his empire. Jarasandha had friendly relations with Chedi king Shishupala, Kuru king Duryodhana and Anga king Karna. His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC. However, there is insufficient evidence to prove the historicity of this claim. These rulers are nonetheless mentioned in the Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain texts. Palaka, the son of the Avanti king Pradyota, conquered Kaushambi, increasing the kingdom's power.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=the dates given do not add up to 138 years|date=October 2016", - "tagDate": "October 2016", - "tagReason": "the dates given do not add up to 138 years", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "History of Bihar", - "paragraphA_information": "Thus, Yudhishthira, the Pandava King, could complete his campaign of bringing the whole of India into his empire. Jarasandha had friendly relations with Chedi king Shishupala, Kuru king Duryodhana and Anga king Karna. His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "As part of the history of Bihar, Yudhishthira, the Pandava King, could complete his campaign of bringing the whole of India into his empire. Jarasandha had friendly relations with Chedi king Shishupala, Kuru king Duryodhana and Anga king Karna. His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC.", - "paragraphB_article": "History of Bihar", - "paragraphB_information": "Thus, Yudhishthira, the Pandava King, could complete his campaign of bringing the whole of India into his empire. Jarasandha had friendly relations with Chedi king Shishupala, Kuru king Duryodhana and Anga king Karna. His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "As part of the history of Bihar, Yudhishthira, the Pandava King, could complete his campaign of bringing the whole of India into his empire. Jarasandha had friendly relations with Chedi king Shishupala, Kuru king Duryodhana and Anga king Karna. His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "His descendants, according to the Vayu Purana, ruled Magadha for 1000 years followed by the Pradyota dynasty, which ruled for 138 years from 799 to 684 BC.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "138 years", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "from 799 to 684 BC", - "question1": "How many years in the history of Bihar the Pradyota dynasty ruled?", - "question1_answer1": "138", - "question1_answer2": "115", - "question2": "In the history of Bihar did the Pradyota dynasty rule for more than 115 years?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Black cowboys", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_cowboys", - "paragraph_A": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage{{contradictory inline|reason=if the percentage is \"unknown\", how can it be \"substantial\"?|date=March 2024}} in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research. ", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research. ", - "tag": "contradictory inline|reason=if the percentage is \"unknown\", how can it be \"substantial\"?|date=March 2024", - "tagDate": "March 2024", - "tagReason": "if the percentage is \"unknown\", how can it be \"substantial\"?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Black cowboys", - "paragraphA_information": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research.", - "paragraphB_article": "Black cowboys", - "paragraphB_information": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Black cowboys in the American West accounted for up to an estimated 25% of cowboys \"who went up the trail\" from the 1860s to 1880s and substantial but unknown percentage in the rest of the ranching industry, estimated to be at least 5,000 workers according to recent research.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Substantial", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Unknown", - "question1": "Was the percentage of black cowboys in the ranching industry from the 1860s to 1880s unknown?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Was the percentage of black cowboys in the ranching industry from the 1860s to 1880s substantial?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "How much was the percentage of black cowboys in the ranching industry from the 1860s to 1880s?", - "question3_answer1": "It was a substantial percentage.", - "question3_answer2": "The percentage was unknown." - }, - { - "title": "Ger Browne", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ger_Browne", - "paragraph_A": "Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club{{Contradict-inline|reason=Or Cashel King Cormacs?|date=November 2022}} at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=Or Cashel King Cormacs?|date=November 2022", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "Or Cashel King Cormacs?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Organization (Companies, agencies, institutions, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "Ger Browne", - "paragraphA_information": "Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Ger Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "paragraphB_article": "Ger Browne", - "paragraphB_information": "Ger Browne (born 10 May 1998) is an Irish hurler who played for Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship with Cashel King Cormacs and at inter-county level with the Tipperary senior hurling team. He usually lines out as a midfielder.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Ger Browne (born 10 May 1998) is an Irish hurler who played for Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship with Cashel King Cormacs and at inter-county level with the Tipperary senior hurling team. He usually lines out as a midfielder.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Ger Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Ger Browne (born 10 May 1998) is an Irish hurler who played for Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship with Cashel King Cormacs and at inter-county level with the Tipperary senior hurling team.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "with Cashel King Cormacs", - "question1": "Did Ger Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club or the Cashel King Cormacs club?", - "question1_answer1": "Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams", - "question1_answer2": "Cashel King Cormacs ", - "question2": "Which club did Ger Browne join?", - "question2_answer1": "Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams", - "question2_answer2": "Cashel King Cormacs ", - "question3": "Did Ger Brown join the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club?", - "question3_answer1": "Yes", - "question3_answer2": "No", - "question4": "Did Ger Brown join the Cashel King Cormacs club?", - "question4_answer1": "No ", - "question4_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Building 98", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Building_98", - "paragraph_A": "| built = {{Contradict-inline|date=November 2021}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "| built = ", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=November 2021", - "tagDate": "November 2021", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "Building 98", - "paragraphA_information": "Built\t1920", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Building 98 at Fort D. A. Russell was built in 1920.", - "paragraphB_article": "Building 98", - "paragraphB_information": "Building 98 at Fort D. A. Russell is the historic US army base bachelor officer quarters, officers club, and grand ballroom near Marfa, Texas; it was active from 1911 to 1946. Building 98 is Located at Fort David A. Russell's central fort complex. It is a project of the International Woman's Foundation and it is the home of the World War II German prisoners of war POW murals.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Building 98 at Fort D. A. Russell is the historic US army base bachelor officer quarters, officers club, and grand ballroom near Marfa, Texas; it was active from 1911 to 1946. Building 98 is Located at Fort David A. Russell's central fort complex. It is a project of the International Woman's Foundation and it is the home of the World War II German prisoners of war POW murals.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Built\t1920", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "it was active from 1911 to 1946.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1920", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "active from 1911", - "question1": "When was Building 98 at Fort D. A. Russell built?", - "question1_answer1": "1920", - "question1_answer2": "Before 1911", - "question2": "Was Building 98 at Fort D. A. Russell built before 1911?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes", - "question3": "Was Building 98 at Fort D. A. Russell active as the historic US army base bachelor officer quarters, officers club, and grand ballroom near Marfa, Texas, before 1920?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Margery de Burgh", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margery_de_Burgh", - "paragraph_A": "Margery's husband died 26 December 1248. He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow,{{Contradictory inline|date=August 2023}} County Limerick.{{Contradictory inline|date=August 2023}} On 27 April 1250, she made a fine to remarry.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Margery's husband died 26 December 1248. He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. On 27 April 1250, she made a fine to remarry.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|date=August 2023", - "tagDate": "August 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Margery de Burgh's husband, Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland, died 26 December 1248. He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. On 27 April 1250, she made a fine to remarry.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "Margery de Burgh", - "paragraphA_information": "Margery's husband died 26 December 1248. He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. On 27 April 1250, she made a fine to remarry.", - "paragraphB_article": "Margery de Burgh", - "paragraphB_information": "Margery's husband died 26 December 1248. He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. On 27 April 1250, she made a fine to remarry.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Margery de Burgh's husband, Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland, died 26 December 1248. He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. On 27 April 1250, she made a fine to remarry.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "He was buried before 3 August 1248 at Arklow, County Limerick. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Arklow", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "County Limerick", - "contradict_comment": "Arklow is not in County Limerick", - "question1": "Was Margery de Burgh's husband, Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland, buried in County Limerick?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Was Margery de Burgh's husband, Theobald Butler, 3rd Chief Butler of Ireland, buried in Arklow?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Burning mouth syndrome", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burning_mouth_syndrome", - "paragraph_A": "BMS is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population. People with BMS are more likely to be middle aged or elderly, and females are three to seven times more likely to have BMS than males.Greenberg MS; Glick M; Ship JA. Burket's Oral Medicine. 11th edition. 2012 Some report a female to male ratio of as much as 33 to 1. BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women.{{Contradictory inline|reason=14% of postmenopausal women is surely higher than 5/100,000 people.|date=March 2024}} Males and younger individuals of both sexes are sometimes affected.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "BMS is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population. People with BMS are more likely to be middle aged or elderly, and females are three to seven times more likely to have BMS than males.Greenberg MS; Glick M; Ship JA. Burket's Oral Medicine. 11th edition. 2012 Some report a female to male ratio of as much as 33 to 1. BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women. Males and younger individuals of both sexes are sometimes affected.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=14% of postmenopausal women is surely higher than 5/100,000 people.|date=March 2024", - "tagDate": "March 2024", - "tagReason": "14% of postmenopausal women is surely higher than 5/100,000 people.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "Burning mouth syndrome", - "paragraphA_information": "BMS is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population. People with BMS are more likely to be middle aged or elderly, and females are three to seven times more likely to have BMS than males. Some report a female to male ratio of as much as 33 to 1. BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women. Males and younger individuals of both sexes are sometimes affected", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "BMS (Burning mouth syndrome) is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population. People with BMS are more likely to be middle aged or elderly, and females are three to seven times more likely to have BMS than males. Some report a female to male ratio of as much as 33 to 1. BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women. Males and younger individuals of both sexes are sometimes affected.", - "paragraphB_article": "Burning mouth syndrome", - "paragraphB_information": "BMS is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population. People with BMS are more likely to be middle aged or elderly, and females are three to seven times more likely to have BMS than males. Some report a female to male ratio of as much as 33 to 1. BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women. Males and younger individuals of both sexes are sometimes affected", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "BMS (Burning mouth syndrome) is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population. People with BMS are more likely to be middle aged or elderly, and females are three to seven times more likely to have BMS than males. Some report a female to male ratio of as much as 33 to 1. BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women. Males and younger individuals of both sexes are sometimes affected.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "BMS (Burning mouth syndrome) is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": " five individuals per 100,000 general population.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and [...] about 14% of postmenopausal women.", - "question1": "How common is BMS (Burning mouth syndrome)?", - "question1_answer1": "BMS (Burning mouth syndrome) is fairly uncommon worldwide, affecting up to five individuals per 100,000 general population.", - "question1_answer2": "BMS is reported in about 10-40% of women seeking medical treatment for menopausal symptoms, and BMS occurs in about 14% of postmenopausal women." - }, - { - "title": "April 1555 papal conclave", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/April_1555_papal_conclave", - "paragraph_A": "* French party \u2013 the adherents of the king Henry II of France. Their leader was Charles de Lorraine-Guise.{{contradict-inline|date=April 2016}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "* French party \u2013 the adherents of the king Henry II of France. Their leader was Charles de Lorraine-Guise.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|date=April 2016", - "tagDate": "April 2016", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "paragraphA_article": "April 1555 papal conclave", - "paragraphA_information": "College of Cardinals was divided into three parties: French party \u2013 the adherents of the king Henry II of France. Their leader was Charles de Lorraine-Guise. Habsburg party \u2013 cardinals aligned with Emperor Charles V. Their leader was Cardinal Juan \u00c1lvarez de Toledo. Italian party \u2013 group of Italian cardinals headed by Alessandro Farnese, Cardinal-nephew of Paul III, with no direct connections with main Catholic powers: Habsburg Empire or France.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "During the April 1555 papal conclave College of Cardinals was divided into three parties: French party \u2013 the adherents of the king Henry II of France. Their leader was Charles de Lorraine-Guise. Habsburg party \u2013 cardinals aligned with Emperor Charles V. Their leader was Cardinal Juan \u00c1lvarez de Toledo. Italian party \u2013 group of Italian cardinals headed by Alessandro Farnese, Cardinal-nephew of Paul III, with no direct connections with main Catholic powers: Habsburg Empire or France.", - "paragraphB_article": "April 1555 papal conclave", - "paragraphB_information": "Charles de Lorraine-Guise (July 27, 1547) \u2013 Cardinal-Priest of S. Cecilia; Archbishop of Reims", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Charles de Lorraine-Guise (July 27, 1547) \u2013 Cardinal-Priest of S. Cecilia; Archbishop of Reims was absent at the April 1555 papal conclave.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Charles de Lorraine-Guise was the leader of the french party at the April 1555 papal conclave.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Charles de Lorraine-Guise was absent at the April 1555 papal conclave.", - "question1": "Was Charles de Lorraine-Guise present at the April 1555 papal conclave?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Was Charles de Lorraine-Guise the leader of the French party at the April 1555 papal conclave?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "April 1555 papal conclave", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/April_1555_papal_conclave", - "paragraph_A": "* Italian party \u2013 group of Italian cardinals headed by Alessandro Farnese,{{contradict-inline|date=April 2016}} Cardinal-nephew of Paul III, with no direct connections with main Catholic powers: Habsburg Empire or France.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "* Italian party \u2013 group of Italian cardinals headed by Alessandro Farnese, Cardinal-nephew of Paul III, with no direct connections with main Catholic powers: Habsburg Empire or France.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|date=April 2016", - "tagDate": "April 2016", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "paragraphA_article": "April 1555 papal conclave", - "paragraphA_information": "College of Cardinals was divided into three parties: French party \u2013 the adherents of the king Henry II of France. Their leader was Charles de Lorraine-Guise. Habsburg party \u2013 cardinals aligned with Emperor Charles V. Their leader was Cardinal Juan \u00c1lvarez de Toledo. Italian party \u2013 group of Italian cardinals headed by Alessandro Farnese, Cardinal-nephew of Paul III, with no direct connections with main Catholic powers: Habsburg Empire or France.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "During the April 1555 papal conclave College of Cardinals was divided into three parties: French party \u2013 the adherents of the king Henry II of France. Their leader was Charles de Lorraine-Guise. Habsburg party \u2013 cardinals aligned with Emperor Charles V. Their leader was Cardinal Juan \u00c1lvarez de Toledo. Italian party \u2013 group of Italian cardinals headed by Alessandro Farnese, Cardinal-nephew of Paul III, with no direct connections with main Catholic powers: Habsburg Empire or France.", - "paragraphB_article": "April 1555 papal conclave", - "paragraphB_information": "Alessandro Farnese (December 18, 1534) \u2013 Cardinal-Deacon of S. Lorenzo in Damaso; Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church; Archpriest of the patriarchal Vatican Basilica; Legate in Avignon; Administrator of Monreale and Cahors; Cardinal-protector of Poland, Portugal, Germany, Kingdom of Sicily, Republic of Genoa and Republic of Ragusa; Cardinal-protector of the Orders of Benedictines and Servites", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Alessandro Farnese (December 18, 1534) \u2013 Cardinal-Deacon of S. Lorenzo in Damaso; Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church; Archpriest of the patriarchal Vatican Basilica; Legate in Avignon; Administrator of Monreale and Cahors; Cardinal-protector of Poland, Portugal, Germany, Kingdom of Sicily, Republic of Genoa and Republic of Ragusa; Cardinal-protector of the Orders of Benedictines and Servites, was absent at the April 1555 papal conclave.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "During the April 1555 papal conclave the Italian Party was headed by Alessandro Farnese.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Alessandro Farnese was absent at the April 1555 papal conclave.", - "question1": "Was Alessandro Farnese present at the April 1555 papal conclave?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Was the Italian Party at the April 1555 papal conclave headed by Alessandro Farnese?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship final", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1961_All-Ireland_Senior_Camogie_Championship_final", - "paragraph_A": "Tipperary's{{contradict-inline|reason=Galway in the infobox?|date=June 2021}} prospects looked strong at half-time: after playing against the wind with the sun in their eyes, they were only a point down. But Dublin won in end, with Kathleen Mills finishing her career with a record fifteenth All-Ireland medal. Judy Doyle (Dublin) scored a hat-trick. ", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Tipperary's prospects looked strong at half-time: after playing against the wind with the sun in their eyes, they were only a point down. But Dublin won in end, with Kathleen Mills finishing her career with a record fifteenth All-Ireland medal. Judy Doyle (Dublin) scored a hat-trick. ", - "tag": "contradict-inline|reason=Galway in the infobox?|date=June 2021", - "tagDate": "June 2021", - "tagReason": "Galway in the infobox?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Event (Named hurricanes, battles, wars, sports events, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship final", - "paragraphA_information": "The 1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final was the thirtieth All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, an inter-county camogie tournament for the top teams in Ireland. Tipperary's prospects looked strong at half-time: after playing against the wind with the sun in their eyes, they were only a point down. But Dublin won in end, with Kathleen Mills finishing her career with a record fifteenth All-Ireland medal. Judy Doyle (Dublin) scored a hat-trick.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The 1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final was the thirtieth All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, an inter-county camogie tournament for the top teams in Ireland. Tipperary's prospects looked strong at half-time: after playing against the wind with the sun in their eyes, they were only a point down. But Dublin won in end, with Kathleen Mills finishing her career with a record fifteenth All-Ireland medal. Judy Doyle (Dublin) scored a hat-trick.", - "paragraphB_article": "1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship final", - "paragraphB_information": "Event\tAll-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1961 Dublin\tGalway", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1961 was played Dublin vs Galway.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Tipperary's prospects looked strong at half-time: after playing against the wind with the sun in their eyes, they were only a point down. But Dublin won in end, with Kathleen Mills finishing her career with a record fifteenth All-Ireland medal. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship 1961 was played Dublin vs Galway.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Tipperary's prospects looked strong at half-time.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Dublin vs Galway.", - "question1": "Did Tipperary or Galway played the 1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship final against Dublin?", - "question1_answer1": "Tipperary", - "question1_answer2": "Galway", - "question2": "Which teams played the 1961 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship final?", - "question2_answer1": "Tipperary and Dublin.", - "question2_answer2": "Galway and Dublin." - }, - { - "title": "October 2010 North American storm complex", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_2010_North_American_storm_complex", - "paragraph_A": "{{contradict|article=Tornadoes of 2010|about=number of tornadoes in the event (this article claims 69, but that article claims 87)|date=July 2021}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "", - "tag": "contradict|article=Tornadoes of 2010|about=number of tornadoes in the event (this article claims 69, but that article claims 87)|date=July 2021", - "tagDate": "July 2021", - "tagReason": "number of tornadoes in the event (this article claims 69, but that article claims 87)", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "October 2010 North American storm complex", - "paragraphA_information": "Tornadoes confirmed\t69 confirmed", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "There were 69 tornadoes confirmed in the October 2010 North American storm complex.", - "paragraphB_article": "Tornadoes of 2019", - "paragraphB_information": "The cold front tracked eastward on October 27 as the storm weakened. Additional tornadoes developed across the Mid-Atlantic states as the atmosphere remained unstable. In the end, with 87 tornadoes confirmed, it was the largest October tornado outbreak ever recorded, even though none of the tornadoes were stronger than EF2 and there were no fatalities.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "During the October 2010 North American storm complex the cold front tracked eastward on October 27 as the storm weakened. Additional tornadoes developed across the Mid-Atlantic states as the atmosphere remained unstable. In the end, with 87 tornadoes confirmed, it was the largest October tornado outbreak ever recorded, even though none of the tornadoes were stronger than EF2 and there were no fatalities.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "There were 69 tornadoes confirmed in the October 2010 North American storm complex.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "In the end, with 87 tornadoes confirmed, it was the largest October tornado outbreak ever recorded", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "69 tornadoes confirmed", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "87 tornadoes confirmed", - "question1": "How many tornadoes were confirmed during the October 2010 North American storm complex?", - "question1_answer1": "69", - "question1_answer2": "87", - "question2": "There were more or less than 70 tornadoes confirmed during the October 2010 North American storm complex?", - "question2_answer1": "Less", - "question2_answer2": "More" - }, - { - "title": "2020 Russian constitutional referendum", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_Russian_constitutional_referendum", - "paragraph_A": "The renewal of the Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" () is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution. Putin introduced this term for the first time and it is not a legal term with clear definition.{{contradict-inline|date=July 2020}} All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The renewal of the Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" () is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution. Putin introduced this term for the first time and it is not a legal term with clear definition. All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|date=July 2020", - "tagDate": "July 2020", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "paragraphA_article": "2020 Russian constitutional referendum", - "paragraphA_information": "The renewal of the Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" (Russian: \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0435 \u0433\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435, romanized: obshcherossiyskoye golosovaniye) is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution. Putin introduced this term for the first time and it is not a legal term with clear definition. All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The renewal of the Russian Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" (Russian: \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0435 \u0433\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435, romanized: obshcherossiyskoye golosovaniye) is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution. Putin introduced this term for the first time and it is not a legal term with clear definition. All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "paragraphB_article": "2020 Russian constitutional referendum", - "paragraphB_information": "The renewal of the Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" (Russian: \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0435 \u0433\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435, romanized: obshcherossiyskoye golosovaniye) is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution. Putin introduced this term for the first time and it is not a legal term with clear definition. All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The renewal of the Russian Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" (Russian: \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0435 \u0433\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435, romanized: obshcherossiyskoye golosovaniye) is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution. Putin introduced this term for the first time and it is not a legal term with clear definition. All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The renewal of the Russian Constitution requires neither a referendum, nor convening of the Constitutional Assembly, but \"All-Russian voting\" (Russian: \u043e\u0431\u0449\u0435\u0440\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0439\u0441\u043a\u043e\u0435 \u0433\u043e\u043b\u043e\u0441\u043e\u0432\u0430\u043d\u0438\u0435, romanized: obshcherossiyskoye golosovaniye) is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "but \"All-Russian voting\" is provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "All-Russian voting is not provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents.", - "question1": "Is the All-Russian voting provisioned by the constitution or mentioned in any federal laws, regional laws or any other legal documents?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Is \"All-Russian voting\" provisioned by Article 2 of the draft law on making amendments to the Russian Constitution?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021_Carlow_Senior_Football_Championship", - "paragraph_A": "| date = 24 September 2019{{Contradict-inline|reason=Year is clearly wrong. Date too?|date=December 2022}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "| date = 24 September 2019", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=Year is clearly wrong. Date too?|date=December 2022", - "tagDate": "December 2022", - "tagReason": "Year is clearly wrong. Date too?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "paragraphA_article": "2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship", - "paragraphA_information": "The 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship was the 121st edition of the Carlow GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Carlow, Ireland. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship was the 121st edition of the Carlow GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Carlow, Ireland. ", - "paragraphB_article": "2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship", - "paragraphB_information": "Relegation play-off 24 September 2019 19:00\t Ballinabranna\t4-07 - 0-13\tO'Hanrahan's \tDr Cullen Park", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Relegation play-off for the 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship was played on the 24th of September 2019.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship was the 121st edition of the Carlow GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded clubs in County Carlow, Ireland. ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Relegation play-off of the 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship was played on the 24th of September 2019.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "The 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "was played on the 24th of September 2019", - "question1": "When was the Relegation play-off of the 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship played?", - "question1_answer1": "2021", - "question1_answer2": "24th of September 2019", - "question2": "Was the Relegation play-off of the 2021 Carlow Senior Football Championship played in 2021?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Brain size", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain_size", - "paragraph_A": "In humans, the right cerebral hemisphere is typically larger than the left, whereas the cerebellar hemispheres are typically closer in size. The adult human brain weighs on average about . In men the average weight is about 1370\u00a0g and in women about 1200\u00a0g.{{Contradictory inline|reason=If for men the average is 1370\u00a0g and in women about 1200\u00a0g, the overall adult average cannot be 1.5\u00a0kg.|date=March 2024}} The volume is around 1260\u00a0cm3 in men and 1130\u00a0cm3 in women, although there is substantial individual variation. Yet another study argued that adult human brain weight is 1300-1400\u00a0g for adult humans and 350-400\u00a0g for newborn humans. There is a range of volume and weights, and not just one number that one can definitively rely on, as with body mass. It is also important to note that variation between individuals is not as important as variation within species, as overall the differences are much smaller. The mechanisms of interspecific and intraspecific variation also differ.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In humans, the right cerebral hemisphere is typically larger than the left, whereas the cerebellar hemispheres are typically closer in size. The adult human brain weighs on average about . In men the average weight is about 1370\u00a0g and in women about 1200\u00a0g. The volume is around 1260\u00a0cm3 in men and 1130\u00a0cm3 in women, although there is substantial individual variation. Yet another study argued that adult human brain weight is 1300-1400\u00a0g for adult humans and 350-400\u00a0g for newborn humans. There is a range of volume and weights, and not just one number that one can definitively rely on, as with body mass. It is also important to note that variation between individuals is not as important as variation within species, as overall the differences are much smaller. The mechanisms of interspecific and intraspecific variation also differ.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=If for men the average is 1370\u00a0g and in women about 1200\u00a0g, the overall adult average cannot be 1.5\u00a0kg.|date=March 2024", - "tagDate": "March 2024", - "tagReason": "If for men the average is 1370\u00a0g and in women about 1200\u00a0g, the overall adult average cannot be 1.5\u00a0kg.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "If for men the average is 1370\u00a0g and in women about 1200\u00a0g, the overall adult average cannot be 1.5\u00a0kg.", - "paragraphA_article": "Brain size", - "paragraphB_article": "Brain size", - "paragraphA_information": "In humans, the right cerebral hemisphere is typically larger than the left, whereas the cerebellar hemispheres are typically closer in size. The adult human brain weighs on average about 1.5 kg (3.3 lb). In men the average weight is about 1370 g and in women about 1200 g.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In humans, the right cerebral hemisphere is typically larger than the left, whereas the cerebellar hemispheres are typically closer in size. The adult human brain weighs on average about 1.5 kg (3.3 lb). In men the average weight is about 1370 g and in women about 1200 g.", - "paragraphB_information": "In humans, the right cerebral hemisphere is typically larger than the left, whereas the cerebellar hemispheres are typically closer in size. The adult human brain weighs on average about 1.5 kg (3.3 lb). In men the average weight is about 1370 g and in women about 1200 g.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "In humans, the right cerebral hemisphere is typically larger than the left, whereas the cerebellar hemispheres are typically closer in size. The adult human brain weighs on average about 1.5 kg (3.3 lb). In men the average weight is about 1370 g and in women about 1200 g.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The adult human brain weighs on average about 1.5 kg (3.3 lb).", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The adult human brain weighs on average about 1.285 kg.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1.5 kg (3.3 lb)", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1.285 kg", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "How much does the adult human brain weigh on average?", - "question1_answer1": "1.5 kg (3.3 lb)", - "question1_answer2": "1.285 kg", - "question2": "Does the adult human brain weigh 1.5 kg (3.3 lb) on average?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Does the adult human brain weigh 1.285 kg on average?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Branch theory", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branch_theory", - "paragraph_A": "An anonymous author wrote, in Orthodox Life magazine, that the metaphor comparing the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church to two lungs of one body was \"shaped and influenced by\" the branch theory and developed by \"Orthodox ecumenists and Papists\". Eastern Orthodox reject as incompatible{{contradict-inline|reason=Russian Orthodox Church Bishop Alfeyev uses the metaphor.|date=March 2016}} with the Orthodox faith any such use of the \"two lungs\" expression to imply that the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches are two parts of a single church and \"that Orthodoxy is only for Easterners, and that Catholicism is only for Westerners\", according to Archpriest Andrew Phillips. Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople \"rejects the opinion\" that \"there would be an 'incompatibility between Orthodox tradition and the European cultural way', which would be antinomic\" and points out that idea \"is against the principle of equality and respect of peoples and cultural traditions on our continent.\"", - "paragraph_A_clean": "An anonymous author wrote, in Orthodox Life magazine, that the metaphor comparing the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Roman Catholic Church to two lungs of one body was \"shaped and influenced by\" the branch theory and developed by \"Orthodox ecumenists and Papists\". Eastern Orthodox reject as incompatible with the Orthodox faith any such use of the \"two lungs\" expression to imply that the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches are two parts of a single church and \"that Orthodoxy is only for Easterners, and that Catholicism is only for Westerners\", according to Archpriest Andrew Phillips. Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople \"rejects the opinion\" that \"there would be an 'incompatibility between Orthodox tradition and the European cultural way', which would be antinomic\" and points out that idea \"is against the principle of equality and respect of peoples and cultural traditions on our continent.\"", - "tag": "contradict-inline|reason=Russian Orthodox Church Bishop Alfeyev uses the metaphor.|date=March 2016", - "tagDate": "March 2016", - "tagReason": "Russian Orthodox Church Bishop Alfeyev uses the metaphor.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "Russian Orthodox Church Bishop Alfeyev uses the metaphor.", - "paragraphA_article": "Branch theory", - "paragraphB_article": "Branch theory", - "paragraphA_information": "Eastern Orthodox reject as incompatible with the Orthodox faith any such use of the \"two lungs\" expression to imply that the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches are two parts of a single church and \"that Orthodoxy is only for Easterners, and that Catholicism is only for Westerners\", according to Archpriest Andrew Phillips. Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople \"rejects the opinion\" that \"there would be an 'incompatibility between Orthodox tradition and the European cultural way', which would be antinomic\" and points out that idea \"is against the principle of equality and respect of peoples and cultural traditions on our continent.\"", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Eastern Orthodox Church reject as incompatible with the Orthodox faith any such use of the \"two lungs\" expression to imply that the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches are two parts of a single church and \"that Orthodoxy is only for Easterners, and that Catholicism is only for Westerners\", according to Archpriest Andrew Phillips. Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople (spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Christians worldwide) \"rejects the opinion\" that \"there would be an 'incompatibility between Orthodox tradition and the European cultural way', which would be antinomic\" and points out that idea \"is against the principle of equality and respect of peoples and cultural traditions on our continent.\"", - "paragraphB_information": "Eastern Orthodox reject as incompatible with the Orthodox faith any such use of the \"two lungs\" expression to imply that the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches are two parts of a single church and \"that Orthodoxy is only for Easterners, and that Catholicism is only for Westerners\", according to Archpriest Andrew Phillips. Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople \"rejects the opinion\" that \"there would be an 'incompatibility between Orthodox tradition and the European cultural way', which would be antinomic\" and points out that idea \"is against the principle of equality and respect of peoples and cultural traditions on our continent.\"", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Eastern Orthodox Church reject as incompatible with the Orthodox faith any such use of the \"two lungs\" expression to imply that the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches are two parts of a single church and \"that Orthodoxy is only for Easterners, and that Catholicism is only for Westerners\", according to Archpriest Andrew Phillips. Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople (spiritual leader of the Eastern Orthodox Christians worldwide) \"rejects the opinion\" that \"there would be an 'incompatibility between Orthodox tradition and the European cultural way', which would be antinomic\" and points out that idea \"is against the principle of equality and respect of peoples and cultural traditions on our continent.\"", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Eastern Orthodox Church reject the metaphor of Christianity compared to one body breathing with two lungs: Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Eastern Orthodox Church do not reject the metaphor of Christianity compared to one body breathing with two lungs: Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Eastern Orthodox Church reject the metaphor", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Eastern Orthodox Church do not reject the metaphor.", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) Event/Relation-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Do the Eastern Orthodox Church reject the metaphor of Christianity compared to one body breathing with two lungs: Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Do the Eastern Orthodox Church reject the incompatibility of Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Brandon (given name)", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandon_(given_name)", - "paragraph_A": "The given name Brandon as a variant form of the Irish given name Brendan. The webpage cited the following book for the given name \"Brandon\": is an Anglicised form of the Old Irish name, Br\u00e9anainn, which is in turn derived from the earlier Old Irish Br\u00e9nainn. The medieval Latin form of the name, Brendanus, has influenced its spelling in the modern English and Irish forms. However, the name has no meaning in the Irish language, and was absorbed from the Old Welsh breenhin, meaning \"prince\" or \" chieftain.\"{{Contradictory inline|reason=This unsourced content contradicts both the lead and the paragraph following this one.|date=January 2024}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The given name Brandon as a variant form of the Irish given name Brendan. The webpage cited the following book for the given name \"Brandon\": is an Anglicised form of the Old Irish name, Br\u00e9anainn, which is in turn derived from the earlier Old Irish Br\u00e9nainn. The medieval Latin form of the name, Brendanus, has influenced its spelling in the modern English and Irish forms. However, the name has no meaning in the Irish language, and was absorbed from the Old Welsh breenhin, meaning \"prince\" or \" chieftain.\"", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=This unsourced content contradicts both the lead and the paragraph following this one.|date=January 2024", - "tagDate": "January 2024", - "tagReason": "This unsourced content contradicts both the lead and the paragraph following this one.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This entire article is nonsense. The name Brandon is a version of the Irish name Brendan. Though Brandon may be a place name in England, they are all named after the Irish Saint as are other places throughout Europe such as Brandenburg in Germany.", - "paragraphA_article": "Brandon (given name)", - "paragraphB_article": "Brandon (given name)", - "paragraphA_information": "Brandon is a masculine given name that is a transferred use of a surname and place name derived from the Old English br\u014dm, meaning broom or gorse, and d\u016bn, meaning hill. It is also sometimes a variant of the Irish masculine given name, Breand\u00e1n, meaning \"prince\".", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Brandon is a masculine given name that is a transferred use of a surname and place name derived from the Old English br\u014dm, meaning broom or gorse, and d\u016bn, meaning hill. It is also sometimes a variant of the Irish masculine given name, Breand\u00e1n, meaning \"prince\".", - "paragraphB_information": "Brandon (given name)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Brandon is a masculine given name that is a transferred use of a surname and place name derived from the Old English br\u014dm, meaning broom or gorse, and d\u016bn, meaning hill. It is also sometimes a variant of the Irish masculine given name, Breand\u00e1n, meaning \"prince\".", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Brandon is derived from the Old English br\u014dm.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Brandon is derived from the Irish Breand\u00e1n.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Old English br\u014dm", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Irish Breand\u00e1n", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "From which language is the given name Brandon derived?", - "question1_answer1": "Old English", - "question1_answer2": "Irish", - "question2": "Is the given name Brandon derived from Old English?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Is the given name Brandon derived from Irish?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes", - "question4": "From which name is the given name Brandon derived?", - "question4_answer1": "br\u014dm", - "question4_answer2": "Breand\u00e1n", - "question5": "Is the given name Brandon derived from br\u014dm?", - "question5_answer1": "Yes", - "question5_answer2": "No", - "question6": "Is the given name Brandon derived from Breand\u00e1n?", - "question6_answer1": "No", - "question6_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Bremen", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bremen", - "paragraph_A": "The city's municipal area is about long and wide. In terms of area, Bremen is the eleventh largest city in Germany; and in terms of population the second largest city in northwest Germany after Hamburg and the eleventh largest in the whole of Germany (see: List of cities in Germany).{{Contradict-inline|date=August 2019}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The city's municipal area is about long and wide. In terms of area, Bremen is the eleventh largest city in Germany; and in terms of population the second largest city in northwest Germany after Hamburg and the eleventh largest in the whole of Germany (see: List of cities in Germany).", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=August 2019", - "tagDate": "August 2019", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This text contradicts material elsewhere on this page.", - "paragraphA_article": "Bremen", - "paragraphB_article": "Bremen", - "paragraphA_information": "In terms of area, Bremen is the eleventh largest city in Germany; and in terms of population the second largest city in northwest Germany after Hamburg and the eleventh largest in the whole of Germany.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In terms of area, Bremen is the eleventh largest city in Germany; and in terms of population the second largest city in northwest Germany after Hamburg and the eleventh largest in the whole of Germany.", - "paragraphB_information": "Today Bremen has a population of 567,000 and is the 11th largest city in Germany and 5th largest city by area with area of 318.21 km2 (122.86 sq mi), which makes this city area bigger than Munich. ", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Today Bremen has a population of 567,000 and is the 11th largest city in Germany and 5th largest city by area with area of 318.21 km2 (122.86 sq mi), which makes this city area bigger than Munich.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Bremen is the eleventh largest city in Germany by area.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Bremen is the fifth largest city in Germany by area.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "eleventh", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "fifth", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Is Bremen the eleventh largest city in Germany by area?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Is Bremen the fifth largest city in Germany by area?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes", - "question3": "How is Bremen ranked in Germany in terms of largest cities by area?", - "question3_answer1": "eleventh (11th)", - "question3_answer2": "fifth (5th)" - }, - { - "title": "Bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bribery_of_senior_Wehrmacht_officers", - "paragraph_A": "Before any officer began to receive money, they met with Lammers, who informed them that future payments would depend on how much loyalty they were willing to show Hitler. They were advised that what he gave with one hand could just as easily be taken away with the other. The illicit nature of the payments was emphasised by Lammers's warning to them not to speak about the payments to anyone and to keep as few written records as possible.{{Contradict-inline|date=March 2022}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Before any officer began to receive money, they met with Lammers, who informed them that future payments would depend on how much loyalty they were willing to show Hitler. They were advised that what he gave with one hand could just as easily be taken away with the other. The illicit nature of the payments was emphasised by Lammers's warning to them not to speak about the payments to anyone and to keep as few written records as possible.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=March 2022", - "tagDate": "March 2022", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "\"The illicit nature of the payments\" is contradicted by \"not technically illegal\". ", - "paragraphA_article": "Bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers", - "paragraphB_article": "Bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers", - "paragraphA_information": "Diego Gambetta argues that Hitler's practice can be considered selective incentives rather than bribery, since bribery must involve three agents (the truster, the fiduciary, and the corrupter) rather than two. In this case, Hitler's generals (the fiduciary) were paid to do what they were supposed to do for him (the truster, and not the corrupter) in any case. However, by accepting the gifts, the generals sacrificed the independence and the political influence they had already been losing as the result of the systematic consolidation of Hitler's role as the sole \"genius strategist\", and would remain chained to Hitler's decisions even when their soldiers and the common people suffered during the last phase of the war. Thus, historians consider the practice, although \"not technically illegal\" (since the gifts were granted by Hitler himself), \"smacking of corruption\" and \"having an aura of deliberate corruption from above.\"", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "From 1933 to the end of the Second World War, high-ranking officers of the Armed Forces of Nazi Germany accepted vast bribes in the form of cash, estates, and tax exemptions in exchange for their loyalty to Nazism. Diego Gambetta argues that this practice can be considered selective incentives rather than bribery, since bribery must involve three agents (the truster, the fiduciary, and the corrupter) rather than two. In this case, Hitler's generals (the fiduciary) were paid to do what they were supposed to do for him (the truster, and not the corrupter) in any case. However, by accepting the gifts, the generals sacrificed the independence and the political influence they had already been losing as the result of the systematic consolidation of Hitler's role as the sole \"genius strategist\", and would remain chained to Hitler's decisions even when their soldiers and the common people suffered during the last phase of the war. Thus, historians consider the practice, although \"not technically illegal\" (since the gifts were granted by Hitler himself), \"smacking of corruption\" and \"having an aura of deliberate corruption from above.\"", - "paragraphB_information": "Before any officer began to receive money, they met with Lammers, who informed them that future payments would depend on how much loyalty they were willing to show Hitler. They were advised that what he gave with one hand could just as easily be taken away with the other. The illicit nature of the payments was emphasised by Lammers's warning to them not to speak about the payments to anyone and to keep as few written records as possible.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "From 1933 to the end of the Second World War, high-ranking officers of the Armed Forces of Nazi Germany accepted vast bribes in the form of cash, estates, and tax exemptions in exchange for their loyalty to Nazism. Before any officer began to receive money, they met with Hans Lammers (chief of Nazi Germany's Chancellery), who informed them that future payments would depend on how much loyalty they were willing to show Hitler. They were advised that what he gave with one hand could just as easily be taken away with the other. The illicit nature of the payments was emphasised by Hans Lammers's warning to them not to speak about the payments to anyone and to keep as few written records as possible.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers is technically not considered illegal.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers is considered illicit.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "not illegal", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "illicit", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Is the bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers considered illegal?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2_answer1": "Legal", - "question2_answer2": "Illegal", - "question2": "How is the bribery of senior Wehrmacht officers considered: legal or illegal?" - }, - { - "title": "Brinsley", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brinsley", - "paragraph_A": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village. The only remainder of this heritage are the headstocks.{{contradictory inline|date=December 2023|reason=headstocks are not a reminder (remainder) of a pastoral time}} They are not only of significance for the area but are also the only headstocks left of this kind. After the final closure of Brinsley Pit they had been moved to a Park but have recently been restored and brought back to near their original place. The Friends of Brinsley Headstocks have worked on turning the area into a nature reserve. There are several farms in the area that have gone organic. The countryside is often explored by leisure walkers with walks organised by D.H. Lawrence Heritage.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village. The only remainder of this heritage are the headstocks. They are not only of significance for the area but are also the only headstocks left of this kind. After the final closure of Brinsley Pit they had been moved to a Park but have recently been restored and brought back to near their original place. The Friends of Brinsley Headstocks have worked on turning the area into a nature reserve. There are several farms in the area that have gone organic. The countryside is often explored by leisure walkers with walks organised by D.H. Lawrence Heritage.", - "tag": "contradictory inline|date=December 2023|reason=headstocks are not a reminder (remainder) of a pastoral time", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "headstocks are not a reminder (remainder) of a pastoral time", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "headstocks are not a reminder (remainder) of a pastoral time", - "paragraphA_article": "Brinsley", - "paragraphB_article": "Brinsley", - "paragraphA_information": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village. The only remainder of this heritage are the headstocks. They are not only of significance for the area but are also the only headstocks left of this kind.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village. The only remainder of this heritage are the headstocks. They are not only of significance for the area but are also the only headstocks left of this kind.", - "paragraphB_information": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village. The only remainder of this heritage are the headstocks. They are not only of significance for the area but are also the only headstocks left of this kind.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village. The only remainder of this heritage are the headstocks. They are not only of significance for the area but are also the only headstocks left of this kind.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Brinsley used to be a major farming village.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Brinsley used to be a major pit village.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "farming", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "pit", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Did Brinsley use to be a farming village?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Did Brinsley use to be a pit village?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes", - "question3": "Did Brinsley use to be a farming village or a pit village?", - "question3_answer1": "farming village", - "question3_answer2": "pit village" - }, - { - "title": "British Rail Class 153", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Rail_Class_153", - "paragraph_A": "East Midlands Trains inherited many examples of Class 153 units, receiving six from Central Trains, three from National Express East Anglia and four former First Great Western units that had been stored at Eastleigh Works. In December 2007, East Midlands Trains received two from Arriva Trains Wales and two from Northern Rail. All passed with the East Midlands franchise to East Midlands Railway in August 2019. In January 2020, four were transferred to Transport for Wales. At one point in April 2020, only three EMR Class 153s were in service, following the implementation of an emergency timetable due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all others being stored out of use as surplus to requirement. Two more returned to services by July 2020, while five others (153302, 153318, 153368, 153372, 153374, and 153382){{Contradict-inline|date=November 2022}} had their leases terminated.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "East Midlands Trains inherited many examples of Class 153 units, receiving six from Central Trains, three from National Express East Anglia and four former First Great Western units that had been stored at Eastleigh Works. In December 2007, East Midlands Trains received two from Arriva Trains Wales and two from Northern Rail. All passed with the East Midlands franchise to East Midlands Railway in August 2019. In January 2020, four were transferred to Transport for Wales. At one point in April 2020, only three EMR Class 153s were in service, following the implementation of an emergency timetable due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all others being stored out of use as surplus to requirement. Two more returned to services by July 2020, while five others (153302, 153318, 153368, 153372, 153374, and 153382) had their leases terminated.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=November 2022", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "At one point in April 2020, only three EMR Class 153s were in service, following the implementation of an emergency timetable due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all others being stored out of use as surplus to requirement. Two more returned to services by July 2020, while five others (153302, 153318, 153368, 153372, 153374, and 153382) had their leases terminated.", - "valid_comment": "This text contradicts material elsewhere on this page.", - "paragraphA_article": "British Rail Class 153", - "paragraphB_article": "British Rail Class 153", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "At one point in April 2020, only three East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars were in service, following the implementation of an emergency timetable due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all others being stored out of use as surplus to requirement. Two more returned to services by July 2020, while five others (153302, 153318, 153368, 153372, 153374, and 153382) had their leases terminated.", - "paragraphB_information": "At one point in April 2020, only three EMR Class 153s were in service, following the implementation of an emergency timetable due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all others being stored out of use as surplus to requirement. Two more returned to services by July 2020, while five others (153302, 153318, 153368, 153372, 153374, and 153382) had their leases terminated.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "At one point in April 2020, only three East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars were in service, following the implementation of an emergency timetable due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with all others being stored out of use as surplus to requirement. Two more returned to services by July 2020, while five others (153302, 153318, 153368, 153372, 153374, and 153382) had their leases terminated.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Five East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars had their leases terminated by July 2020.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Six East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars had their leases terminated by July 2020.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Five East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Six East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How many East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars had their leases terminated by July 2020?", - "question1_answer1": "5", - "question1_answer2": "6", - "question2": "Did five East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars have their leases terminated by July 2020?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Did six East Midlands British Rail Class 153 railcars have their leases terminated by July 2020?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Ger Browne", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ger_Browne", - "paragraph_A": "| club = Cashel King Cormacs{{Contradict-inline|reason=Or Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams?|date=November 2022}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "| club = Cashel King Cormacs", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=Or Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams?|date=November 2022", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "Or Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "Or Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams?", - "paragraphA_article": "Ger Browne", - "paragraphB_article": "Ger Browne", - "paragraphA_information": "Ger Browne (born 10 May 1998) is an Irish hurler who played for Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship with Cashel King Cormacs and at inter-county level with the Tipperary senior hurling team. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Ger Browne (born 10 May 1998) is an Irish hurler who played for Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship with Cashel King Cormacs and at inter-county level with the Tipperary senior hurling team. ", - "paragraphB_information": "Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Ger Browne joined the Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club at a young age and played in all grades at juvenile and underage levels before eventually joining the club's top adult team.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Ger Browne played for Cashel King Cormacs club.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Ger Browne played for Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Cashel King Cormacs club", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Organization (Companies, agencies, institutions, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What club did Ger Browne play for: Cashel King Cormacs club or Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club?", - "question1_answer1": "Cashel King Cormacs club", - "question1_answer2": "Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club", - "question2": "Did Ger Browne play for Cashel King Cormacs club?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Did Ger Browne play for Knockavilla\u2013Donaskeigh Kickhams club?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Blackburn Blackburn", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackburn_Blackburn", - "paragraph_A": "{{contradiction|the number of aircraft built|date=May 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "", - "tag": "contradiction|the number of aircraft built|date=May 2023", - "tagDate": "May 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The number of Blackburn Blackburn aircraft is contradicted within the article", - "paragraphA_article": "Blackburn Blackburn", - "paragraphB_article": "Blackburn Blackburn", - "paragraphA_information": "Number built: 44", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Number of Blackburn Blackburn aircraft built: 44", - "paragraphB_information": "Blackburn Prototype: three built; Blackburn I Production version with a 449 hp (335 kW) Napier Lion IIB engines: 33 built; Blackburn II Improved production version with a 464 hp (346 kW) Napier Lion V, and increased gap between wings: 29 built.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Blackburn Prototype: three built; Blackburn I Production version with a 449 hp (335 kW) Napier Lion IIB engines: 33 built; Blackburn II Improved production version with a 464 hp (346 kW) Napier Lion V, and increased gap between wings: 29 built.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "44 Blackburn Blackburn aircraft were built", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "65 Blackburn aircraft were build, including prototypes", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How many Blackburn Blackburn aircraft were built?", - "question1_answer1": "44", - "question1_answer2": "65 (62 excluding prototypes)" - }, - { - "title": "Blasphemy law in the United States", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blasphemy_law_in_the_United_States", - "paragraph_A": "The last person to be jailed in the United States for blasphemy was Abner Kneeland in 1838 (a Massachusetts case: Commonwealth v. Kneeland).{{Contradict-inline|date=December 2018}}\"Kneeland, Abner\" in Gordon Stein, editor, The Encyclopedia of Unbelief, pp. 379\u2013380. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 1985. From 1925, the Supreme Court applied the Bill of Rights to all states.\"Blasphemy\" in Tom Flynn, editor, The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief, p. 147. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The last person to be jailed in the United States for blasphemy was Abner Kneeland in 1838 (a Massachusetts case: Commonwealth v. Kneeland).\"Kneeland, Abner\" in Gordon Stein, editor, The Encyclopedia of Unbelief, pp. 379\u2013380. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 1985. From 1925, the Supreme Court applied the Bill of Rights to all states.\"Blasphemy\" in Tom Flynn, editor, The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief, p. 147. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007.", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|date=December 2018", - "tagDate": "December 2018", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "The last person to be jailed in the United States for blasphemy was Abner Kneeland in 1838", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The last person to be jailed in the United States for blasphemy was Abner Kneeland in 1838", - "paragraphB_article": "Blasphemy law in the United States", - "paragraphA_article": "Blasphemy law in the United States", - "paragraphB_information": "The last known U.S. conviction for blasphemy was of atheist activist Charles Lee Smith. In 1928, he rented a storefront in Little Rock, Arkansas, and gave out free atheist literature there. The sign in the window read: \"Evolution Is True. The Bible's a Lie. God's a Ghost.\" For this he was charged with violating the city ordinance against blasphemy. Because he was an atheist and therefore could not swear the court's religious oath to tell the truth, he was not permitted to testify in his own defense. The judge then dismissed the original charge, replacing it with one of distributing obscene, slanderous, or scurrilous literature. Smith was convicted, fined $25, and served most of a twenty-six-day jail sentence.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The last known U.S. conviction for blasphemy was of atheist activist Charles Lee Smith. In 1928, he rented a storefront in Little Rock, Arkansas, and gave out free atheist literature there. The sign in the window read: \"Evolution Is True. The Bible's a Lie. God's a Ghost.\" For this he was charged with violating the city ordinance against blasphemy. Because he was an atheist and therefore could not swear the court's religious oath to tell the truth, he was not permitted to testify in his own defense. The judge then dismissed the original charge, replacing it with one of distributing obscene, slanderous, or scurrilous literature. Smith was convicted, fined $25, and served most of a twenty-six-day jail sentence.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The last person to be jailed for blasphemy in the US was Abner Kneeland in 1838", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The last person to be convicted of blasphemy in to US was Charles Lee Smith in 1928 and he was also jailed", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "The last person to be jailed in the United States for blasphemy was Abner Kneeland in 1838", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Smith was convicted, fined $25, and served most of a twenty-six-day jail sentence.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Person", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "In what year was the last person jailed for blasphemy in the United States?", - "question1_answer1": "1838", - "question1_answer2": "1928", - "question2": "Who was the last person jailed for blasphemy in the United States?", - "question2_answer1": "Abner Kneeland", - "question2_answer2": "Charles Lee Smith", - "question3": "Who was the last person jailed for blasphemy in the United States and in what year?", - "question3_answer1": "Abner Kneeland in 1838", - "question3_answer2": "Charles Lee Smith in 1928" - }, - { - "title": "Bloodless surgery", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloodless_surgery", - "paragraph_A": "In surgery, control of bleeding is achieved with the use of laser or sonic scalpels, minimally invasive surgical techniques, electrosurgery and electrocautery, low central venous pressure anesthesia (for select cases), or suture ligation of vessels. Other methods include the use of blood substitutes, which at present do not carry oxygen but expand the volume of the blood to prevent shock. Blood substitutes which do carry oxygen, such as PolyHeme, are also under development.{{Contradictory inline|reason=Later, this section claims HBOCs have been discontinued, including PolyHeme in 2009|date=November 2017}} Many doctors view acute normovolemic hemodilution, a form of storage of a patient's own blood, as a pillar of \"bloodless surgery\" but the technique is not an option for patients who refuse autologous blood transfusions.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "In surgery, control of bleeding is achieved with the use of laser or sonic scalpels, minimally invasive surgical techniques, electrosurgery and electrocautery, low central venous pressure anesthesia (for select cases), or suture ligation of vessels. Other methods include the use of blood substitutes, which at present do not carry oxygen but expand the volume of the blood to prevent shock. Blood substitutes which do carry oxygen, such as PolyHeme, are also under development. Many doctors view acute normovolemic hemodilution, a form of storage of a patient's own blood, as a pillar of \"bloodless surgery\" but the technique is not an option for patients who refuse autologous blood transfusions.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=Later, this section claims HBOCs have been discontinued, including PolyHeme in 2009|date=November 2017", - "tagDate": "November 2017", - "tagReason": "Later, this section claims HBOCs have been discontinued, including PolyHeme in 2009", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Bloodless surgery", - "paragraphB_article": "Bloodless surgery", - "paragraphA_information": "Other methods include the use of blood substitutes, which at present do not carry oxygen but expand the volume of the blood to prevent shock. Blood substitutes which do carry oxygen, such as PolyHeme, are also under development.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Other methods of bleeding control in surgery include the use of blood substitutes, which at present do not carry oxygen but expand the volume of the blood to prevent shock. Blood substitutes which do carry oxygen, such as PolyHeme, are also under development.", - "paragraphB_information": "HBOC's such as Polyheme and Hemepure have been discontinued due to severe adverse reactions including death.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carriers such as Polyheme and Hemepure have been discontinued due to severe adverse reactions including death.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "PolyHeme is under development.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "PolyHeme has been banned.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Blood substitutes which do carry oxygen, such as PolyHeme, are also under development.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carriers such as Polyheme and Hemepure have been discontinued due to severe adverse reactions including death.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is the current status of the Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carrier, Polyheme? ", - "question1_answer1": "Under development", - "question1_answer2": "Banned", - "question2": "Has the Hemoglobin-Based Oxygen Carrier, Polyheme been banned? ", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Bombus polaris", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombus_polaris", - "paragraph_A": "This bumblebee has a wide circumpolar distribution, found in Canada, Arctic Alaska, Arctic islands (Devon Island, Ellesmere Island, Baffin Island and Greenland), northern Scandinavia and across Arctic Russia (Nenets, Yamalo-Nenets, Sakha and Chukotka). As of 2015, B. polaris is common and is not listed as endangered. Bombus polaris is an alpine species. They exclusively live at the summits of mountains.{{contradiction-inline|reason=They also live in Arctic tundra.|date=June 2018}} This clear separation between alpine species and subalpine species may be due to superior competition from the subalpine species, leading to a suboptimal habitat occupation of the alpine species. An alternative explanation is that the alpine bee species possess both the ability and body type to survive the colder temperatures, which naturally separates the two types of bees into distinct ecological territories. Alpine species usually have a larger body length in comparison to subalpine species.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "This bumblebee has a wide circumpolar distribution, found in Canada, Arctic Alaska, Arctic islands (Devon Island, Ellesmere Island, Baffin Island and Greenland), northern Scandinavia and across Arctic Russia (Nenets, Yamalo-Nenets, Sakha and Chukotka). As of 2015, B. polaris is common and is not listed as endangered. Bombus polaris is an alpine species. They exclusively live at the summits of mountains. This clear separation between alpine species and subalpine species may be due to superior competition from the subalpine species, leading to a suboptimal habitat occupation of the alpine species. An alternative explanation is that the alpine bee species possess both the ability and body type to survive the colder temperatures, which naturally separates the two types of bees into distinct ecological territories. Alpine species usually have a larger body length in comparison to subalpine species.", - "tag": "contradiction-inline|reason=They also live in Arctic tundra.|date=June 2018", - "tagDate": "June 2018", - "tagReason": "They also live in Arctic tundra.", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_article": "Bombus polaris", - "paragraphB_article": "Bombus polaris", - "paragraphA_information": "B. polaris is part of the subgenus Alpinobombus along with Bombus alpinus, Bombus balteatus, Bombus hyperboreus, and Bombus neoboreus. Alpinobombus bees occur in arctic and high alpine regions.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Bombus polaris is part of the subgenus Alpinobombus along with Bombus alpinus, Bombus balteatus, Bombus hyperboreus, and Bombus neoboreus. Alpinobombus bees occur in arctic and high alpine regions.", - "paragraphB_information": "Bombus polaris is an alpine species. They exclusively live at the summits of mountains.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Bombus polaris is an alpine species. They exclusively live at the summits of mountains.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Bombus Polaris live in arctic and alpine regions", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Bombus Polaris live exclusively in alpine regions", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Alpinobombus bees occur in arctic and high alpine regions.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "They exclusively live at the summits of mountains.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Does Bombus Polaris live exclusively on mountain summits?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Is Bombus Polaris exclusively an alpine species?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "B\u014ds\u014dzoku", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B\u014ds\u014dzoku", - "paragraph_A": "Their lives of crime generally do not end after they turn twenty though. It is estimated that around 25% of are above the age of twenty. {{contradictory inline|date=November 2023}} Alongside that, they have been shown to have ties to various yakuza organizations. In fact, some numbers predict that as many as one-third of yakuza recruits come from one of a few . However, as these groups become less common, their ties to the yakuza become less apparent, as they begin recruiting from other marginalized groups, such as the Japanese or Zainichi ethnic Koreans.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Their lives of crime generally do not end after they turn twenty though. It is estimated that around 25% of are above the age of twenty. Alongside that, they have been shown to have ties to various yakuza organizations. In fact, some numbers predict that as many as one-third of yakuza recruits come from one of a few . However, as these groups become less common, their ties to the yakuza become less apparent, as they begin recruiting from other marginalized groups, such as the Japanese or Zainichi ethnic Koreans.", - "tag": "contradictory inline|date=November 2023", - "tagDate": "November 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "It's stated that the B\u014ds\u014dzoku has only \"a handful\" of members over the age of 20, but also that they have \"around 25%\" of members over the age of 20.", - "paragraphA_article": "B\u014ds\u014dzoku", - "paragraphA_information": "In general, the Japanese government sees b\u014ds\u014dzoku as highly organized groups, affiliated under several national federations. They are known to be surprisingly well organized, despite generally only having a handful of members above the age of twenty.", - "paragraphB_article": "B\u014ds\u014dzoku", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In general, the Japanese government sees b\u014ds\u014dzoku as highly organized groups, affiliated under several national federations. They are known to be surprisingly well organized, despite generally only having a handful of members above the age of twenty.", - "paragraphB_information": " It is estimated that around 25% of b\u014ds\u014dzoku are above the age of twenty.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": " It is estimated that around 25% of b\u014ds\u014dzoku are above the age of twenty.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "the B\u014ds\u014dzoku has only \"a handful\" of members over the age of 20", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "that the B\u014ds\u014dzoku have \"around 25%\" of members over the age of 20.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "despite generally only having a handful of members above the age of twenty.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": " It is estimated that around 25% of b\u014ds\u014dzoku are above the age of twenty.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Organization (Companies, agencies, institutions, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Roughly how many members above the age of 20 do the B\u014ds\u014dzoku have?", - "question1_answer1": "a handful", - "question1_answer2": "25%", - "question2": "Does the B\u014ds\u014dzoku have a significant percentage (<15%) of members over the age of 20?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "List of association football stadiums by country", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_association_football_stadiums_by_country", - "paragraph_A": "Birsa Munda Football Stadium \t10,000 \tAthletics, Football \tRanchi \tJharkhand \tJamshedpur FC{{contradicts-inline|date=December 2023}}, JSA League", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Birsa Munda Football Stadium \t10,000 \tAthletics, Football \tRanchi \tJharkhand \tJamshedpur FC, JSA League", - "tag": "contradicts-inline|date=December 2023", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This text contradicts material elsewhere on this page.", - "paragraphA_article": "List of association football stadiums by country", - "paragraphA_information": "Stadium \tJRD Tata Sports Complex Stadium \tTenants \tJamshedpur FC", - "paragraphB_information": "Stadium \tBirsa Munda Football Stadium \tTenants \tJamshedpur FC", - "paragraphB_article": "List of association football stadiums by country", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Jamshedpur FC play their home games at JRD Tata Sports Complex Stadium.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Jamshedpur FC play their home games at Birsa Munda Football Stadium.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Jamshedpur FC play their home games at JRD Tata Sports Complex Stadium.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Jamshedpur FC play their home games at Birsa Munda Football Stadium.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "JRD Tata Sports Complex Stadium", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Birsa Munda Football Stadium", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - FAC (Buildings, airports, highways, bridges, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Infobox/table - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "In which stadium do Jamshedpur FC play their home games?", - "question1_answer1": "JRD Tata Sports Complex Stadium", - "question1_answer2": "Birsa Munda Football Stadium", - "question2": "Do Jamshedpur FC play their home games in JRD Tata Sports Complex Stadium?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Do Jamshedpur FC play their home games in Birsa Munda Football Stadium?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Mary Astor", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Astor", - "paragraph_A": "Astor's memoir, My Story: An Autobiography, was published in 1959, becoming a sensation in its day and a bestseller. It was the result of Father Ciklic urging her to write. Though she spoke of her troubled personal life, her parents, her marriages, the scandals, her battle with alcoholism, and other areas of her life, she did not mention the movie industry or her career in detail. In 1971,{{Contradict-inline|section=Bibliography|date=March 2020|reason=1967?}} a second book was published, A Life on Film, where she discussed her career. It, too, became a bestseller. Astor also tried her hand at fiction, writing the novels The Incredible Charley Carewe (1960), The Image of Kate (1962), which was published in 1964 in a German translation as Jahre und Tage, The O'Conners (1964), Goodbye, Darling, be Happy (1965), and A Place Called Saturday (1968).", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Astor's memoir, My Story: An Autobiography, was published in 1959, becoming a sensation in its day and a bestseller. It was the result of Father Ciklic urging her to write. Though she spoke of her troubled personal life, her parents, her marriages, the scandals, her battle with alcoholism, and other areas of her life, she did not mention the movie industry or her career in detail. In 1971, a second book was published, A Life on Film, where she discussed her career. It, too, became a bestseller. Astor also tried her hand at fiction, writing the novels The Incredible Charley Carewe (1960), The Image of Kate (1962), which was published in 1964 in a German translation as Jahre und Tage, The O'Conners (1964), Goodbye, Darling, be Happy (1965), and A Place Called Saturday (1968).", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|section=Bibliography|date=March 2020|reason=1967?", - "tagDate": "March 2020", - "tagReason": "1967?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "1967?", - "paragraphA_article": "Mary Astor", - "paragraphB_article": "Mary Astor", - "paragraphA_information": " In 1971, a second book was published, A Life on Film, where she discussed her career.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": " In 1971, a second book was published, A Life on Film, where Mary Astor discussed her career.", - "paragraphB_information": "A Life on Film (1967)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "A Life on Film was published in 1967.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "A Life on Film was published in 1967.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "A Life on Film was published in 1971.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "1971", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "1967", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Date/time", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "When was A Life on Film (book about Mary Astor's career) published?", - "question1_answer1": "1971", - "question1_answer2": "1967", - "question2": "Was A Life on Film (book about Mary Astor's career) published in 1971?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Was A Life on Film (book about Mary Astor's career) published in 1967?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Attempts to ban football games", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attempts_to_ban_football_games", - "paragraph_A": "The Puritans had some success in suppressing \"disorderly\" sports including football after the English Civil War. Players were fined or sentenced to public humiliation in the stocks. The Mayor of York fined 11 players 20 shillings each when their game resulted in a smashed church window in the winter of 1659\u201360. The prosecution triggered a violent protest and resulted in over 100 armed men breaking into the Mayor's house; the ringleader was later fined 10 pounds or 400 shillings,{{contradiction inline|reason=\u00a31 was 20 shillings, not 40!|date=February 2024}} a very large sum of money at the time. Football became even more popular following the Restoration in 1660.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The Puritans had some success in suppressing \"disorderly\" sports including football after the English Civil War. Players were fined or sentenced to public humiliation in the stocks. The Mayor of York fined 11 players 20 shillings each when their game resulted in a smashed church window in the winter of 1659\u201360. The prosecution triggered a violent protest and resulted in over 100 armed men breaking into the Mayor's house; the ringleader was later fined 10 pounds or 400 shillings, a very large sum of money at the time. Football became even more popular following the Restoration in 1660.", - "tag": "contradiction inline|reason=\u00a31 was 20 shillings, not 40!|date=February 2024", - "tagDate": "February 2024", - "tagReason": "\u00a31 was 20 shillings, not 40!", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "\u00a310 is 200 shillings, not 400", - "paragraphA_article": "Attempts to ban football games", - "paragraphB_article": "Attempts to ban football games", - "paragraphA_information": "The prosecution triggered a violent protest and resulted in over 100 armed men breaking into the Mayor's house; the ringleader was later fined 10 pounds or 400 shillings, a very large sum of money at the time.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "A prosecution of football games between 1659-1660 triggered a violent protest and resulted in over 100 armed men breaking into the Mayor's house; the ringleader was later fined 10 pounds or 400 shillings, a very large sum of money at the time.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "A prosecution of football games between 1659-1660 triggered a violent protest and resulted in over 100 armed men breaking into the Mayor's house; the ringleader was later fined 10 pounds or 400 shillings, a very large sum of money at the time.", - "paragraphB_information": "The prosecution triggered a violent protest and resulted in over 100 armed men breaking into the Mayor's house; the ringleader was later fined 10 pounds or 400 shillings, a very large sum of money at the time.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The ringleader of a violent protest against football games prosecution in 1659-1660 was fined 10 pounds.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The ringleader of a violent protest against football games prosecution in 1659-1660 was fined 400 shillings.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "10 pounds", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "400 shillings", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How many pounds was the ringleader of a violent protest against football games prosecution in 1659-1660 fined?", - "question1_answer1": "10 pounds", - "question1_answer2": "20 pounds", - "question2": "How many shillings was the ringleader of a violent protest against football games prosecution in 1659-1660 fined?", - "question2_answer1": "200 shillings", - "question2_answer2": "400 shillings", - "question3": "Was the ringleader of a violent protest against football games prosecution in 1659-1660 fined 10 pounds?", - "question3_answer1": "Yes", - "question3_answer2": "No", - "question4": "Was the ringleader of a violent protest against football games prosecution in 1659-1660 fined 400 shillings?", - "question4_answer1": "No", - "question4_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Ayapana triplinervis", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayapana_triplinervis", - "paragraph_A": "Ayapana triplinervis is an ascending, slender perennial. Its leaves are purple, subsessile, lanceolate, 3-nerved, acuminate, subentire, and glabrous. Inflorescence is a lax, few-headed corymb, heads pedicellate, about 20-flowered. Flowers are slaty blue.{{contradict-inline|reason=previous text says flowers are pale pink|date=April 2022}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Ayapana triplinervis is an ascending, slender perennial. Its leaves are purple, subsessile, lanceolate, 3-nerved, acuminate, subentire, and glabrous. Inflorescence is a lax, few-headed corymb, heads pedicellate, about 20-flowered. Flowers are slaty blue.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|reason=previous text says flowers are pale pink|date=April 2022", - "tagDate": "April 2022", - "tagReason": "previous text says flowers are pale pink", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "previous text says flowers are pale pink", - "paragraphB_article": "Ayapana triplinervis", - "paragraphA_article": "Ayapana triplinervis", - "paragraphA_information": "The flowers are pale pink and the thin, hairless stem is reddish in color.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The flowers of ayapana triplinervis are pale pink and the thin, hairless stem is reddish in color.", - "paragraphB_information": "Flowers are slaty blue.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The flowers of ayapana triplinervis are slaty blue.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The flowers of ayapana triplinervis are pale pink.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The flowers of ayapana triplinervis are slaty blue.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "pale pink", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "slaty blue", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is the color of the flowers of ayapana triplinervis?", - "question1_answer1": "pale pink", - "question1_answer2": "slaty blue", - "question2": "Is the color of the flowers of ayapana triplinervis pale pink?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Is the color of the flowers of ayapana triplinervis slaty blue?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Aztec mastiff bat", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec_mastiff_bat", - "paragraph_A": "==Range and habitat=={{self-contradictory|section|date=November 2022}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "==Range and habitat==", - "tag": "self-contradictory|section|date=November 2022", - "tagDate": "November 2022", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "Range and habitat section appears to contradict itself", - "paragraphA_article": "Aztec mastiff bat", - "paragraphB_article": "Aztec mastiff bat", - "paragraphA_information": "It is found from Jalisco and Cozumel Island in southern Mexico to Nicaragua and has been reported from Guatemala but not from El Salvador or Honduras. It has also been reported from southern Venezuela. It is endemic to Mexico.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Aztec mastiff bat is found from Jalisco and Cozumel Island in southern Mexico to Nicaragua and has been reported from Guatemala but not from El Salvador or Honduras. It has also been reported from southern Venezuela. It is endemic to Mexico.", - "paragraphB_information": "It is found from Jalisco and Cozumel Island in southern Mexico to Nicaragua and has been reported from Guatemala but not from El Salvador or Honduras. It has also been reported from southern Venezuela. It is endemic to Mexico.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Aztec mastiff bat is found from Jalisco and Cozumel Island in southern Mexico to Nicaragua and has been reported from Guatemala but not from El Salvador or Honduras. It has also been reported from southern Venezuela. It is endemic to Mexico.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Aztec mastiff bat is found in Jalisco and Cozumel Island in southern Mexico, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and southern Venezuela.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Aztec mastiff bat is endemic to Mexico.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Southern Mexico, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and southern Venezuela", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Mexico", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Is the Aztec mastiff bat only found in Mexico?", - "question1_answer1": "No", - "question1_answer2": "Yes", - "question2": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found in Nicaragua, Guatemala, or southern Venezuela?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found in Nicaragua?", - "question3_answer1": "Yes", - "question3_answer2": "No", - "question4": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found Guatemala?", - "question4_answer1": "Yes", - "question4_answer2": "No", - "question5": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found in southern Venezuela?", - "question5_answer1": "Yes", - "question5_answer2": "No", - "question6": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found in Nicaragua or Guatemala?", - "question6_answer1": "Yes", - "question6_answer2": "No", - "question7": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found in Nicaragua or southern Venezuela?", - "question7_answer1": "Yes", - "question7_answer2": "No", - "question8": "Can the Aztec mastiff bat be found in Guatemala or southern Venezuela?", - "question8_answer1": "Yes", - "question8_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Canarium luzonicum", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canarium_luzonicum", - "paragraph_A": "\"The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below', an abbreviation of 'As above, so below' and this tells us something about its action on the emotional and spiritual planes.\"{{Self-contradictory|reason=Contradicts the reason given above|date=September 2021}}Davis, Patricia. Aromatherapy A-Z. Revised and Enlarged Edition. Book Production Consultants plc, Cambridge. The C.W. Daniel Company Limited. 1998", - "paragraph_A_clean": "\"The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below', an abbreviation of 'As above, so below' and this tells us something about its action on the emotional and spiritual planes.\"Davis, Patricia. Aromatherapy A-Z. Revised and Enlarged Edition. Book Production Consultants plc, Cambridge. The C.W. Daniel Company Limited. 1998", - "tag": "Self-contradictory|reason=Contradicts the reason given above|date=September 2021", - "tagDate": "September 2021", - "tagReason": "Contradicts the reason given above", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "The word, like the older term animi, appears to have been derived from enhaemon (\u1f14\u03bd\u03b1\u03b9\u03bc\u03bf\u03bd): the name of a styptic medicine said by Pliny to contain tears exuded by the olive tree of Arabia.", - "paragraphA_article": "Canarium luzonicum", - "paragraphB_article": "Canarium luzonicum", - "valid_comment": "The contradiction pertains to two different etymologies for the word Elemi ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The word Elemi, like the older term animi, appears to have been derived from enhaemon (\u1f14\u03bd\u03b1\u03b9\u03bc\u03bf\u03bd): the name of a styptic medicine said by Pliny to contain tears exuded by the olive tree of Arabia.", - "paragraphB_information": "The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below', an abbreviation of 'As above, so below' and this tells us something about its action on the emotional and spiritual planes.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below', an abbreviation of 'As above, so below' and this tells us something about its action on the emotional and spiritual planes.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The word Elemi, like the older term animi, appears to have been derived from enhaemon (\u1f14\u03bd\u03b1\u03b9\u03bc\u03bf\u03bd)", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below'", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "The word, like the older term animi, appears to have been derived from enhaemon (\u1f14\u03bd\u03b1\u03b9\u03bc\u03bf\u03bd)", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "The name Elemi is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below'", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Other", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is the etymology of the word Elemi?", - "question1_answer1": "It is derived from enhaemon (\u1f14\u03bd\u03b1\u03b9\u03bc\u03bf\u03bd)", - "question1_answer2": " It is derived from an Arabic phrase meaning 'above and below'", - "question2": "Is the word Elemi of Greek origin?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Is the word Elemi of Arabic origin?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes", - "question4": "Of what linguistic origin is the word Elemi?", - "question4_answer1": "Greek", - "question4_answer2": "Arabic" - }, - { - "title": "Carandiru massacre", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carandiru_massacre", - "paragraph_A": "The facility was a detention center, not a penitentiary {{Contradictory inline|date=January 2024}}, meaning that the inmates had not yet been tried or convicted. By the end of the day, 111 prisoners were dead; and 37 more were injured. A 2022 Deutsche Welle article states that 3,500 bullets were fired within the span of 20 minutes, whilst a 1993 Amnesty report states that of some 5,000 bullets that were fired, 515 were found in dead prisoners' bodies. Hands among the dead were found in front of the face or behind the head suggesting defensive positions. No policemen were injured.Brooke, James. \u201c111 Killed When Police Storm Brazilian Prison During Inmate Riot.\u201d The New York Times. October 04, 1992. Accessed March 29, 2018.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The facility was a detention center, not a penitentiary , meaning that the inmates had not yet been tried or convicted. By the end of the day, 111 prisoners were dead; and 37 more were injured. A 2022 Deutsche Welle article states that 3,500 bullets were fired within the span of 20 minutes, whilst a 1993 Amnesty report states that of some 5,000 bullets that were fired, 515 were found in dead prisoners' bodies. Hands among the dead were found in front of the face or behind the head suggesting defensive positions. No policemen were injured.Brooke, James. \u201c111 Killed When Police Storm Brazilian Prison During Inmate Riot.\u201d The New York Times. October 04, 1992. Accessed March 29, 2018.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|date=January 2024", - "tagDate": "January 2024", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "It is stated that the site of the massacre was a penitentiary, and then later that it wasn't. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Carandiru massacre", - "paragraphB_article": "Carandiru massacre", - "paragraphA_information": "The Carandiru massacre (Portuguese: Massacre do Carandiru, Portuguese: [m\u0250\u02c8sak\u027ei du k\u0250\u027e\u0250\u0303d\u0292i\u02c8\u027eu]) occurred on 2 October 1992, in Carandiru Penitentiary in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil, when military police stormed the penitentiary following a prison riot. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The Carandiru massacre (Portuguese: Massacre do Carandiru, Portuguese: [m\u0250\u02c8sak\u027ei du k\u0250\u027e\u0250\u0303d\u0292i\u02c8\u027eu]) occurred on 2 October 1992, in Carandiru Penitentiary in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil, when military police stormed the penitentiary following a prison riot. ", - "paragraphB_information": "The facility was a detention center, not a penitentiary, meaning that the inmates had not yet been tried or convicted.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The facility at which the Carandiru massacre took place was a detention center, not a penitentiary, meaning that the inmates had not yet been tried or convicted.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Carandiru massacre took place at a penitentiary", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Carandiru massacre took place at a detention centre, not a penitentiary", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "occurred on 2 October 1992, in Carandiru Penitentiary in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "The facility was a detention center, not a penitentiary", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - FAC (Buildings, airports, highways, bridges, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "At what sort of facility did the Carandiru massacre take place?", - "question1_answer1": "A penitentiary/prison", - "question1_answer2": "A detention center", - "question2": "Was the site of the Carandiru massacre an actual penitentiary?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Was the site of the Carandiru massacre a penitentiary or a detention center?", - "question3_answer1": "Penitentiary", - "question3_answer2": "Detention center" - }, - { - "title": "Castle Donington", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castle_Donington", - "paragraph_A": "{{contradict|about=status as town or village|discuss=Town or village?|date=December 2023}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "", - "tag": "contradict|about=status as town or village|discuss=Town or village?|date=December 2023", - "tagDate": "December 2023", - "tagReason": "status as town or village", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "Castle Donington is a market town and civil parish in Leicestershire, England, on the edge of the National Forest and close to East Midlands Airport.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Castle Donington is a market town and civil parish in Leicestershire, England, on the edge of the National Forest and close to East Midlands Airport.", - "paragraphA_article": "Castle Donington", - "paragraphB_article": "Castle Donington", - "paragraphB_information": "Castle Donington has three primary schools, St Edwards, Foxbridge, and Orchard, the latter serving the majority of the children of the town. Castle Donington College, which welcomed KS4 for the first time in 2017, takes students from ages 11\u201316 and is the village's only secondary school.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Castle Donington has three primary schools, St Edwards, Foxbridge, and Orchard, the latter serving the majority of the children of the town. Castle Donington College, which welcomed KS4 for the first time in 2017, takes students from ages 11\u201316 and is the village's only secondary school.", - "valid_comment": "The article states that Castle Donington is a town, but also a village", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": " Castle Donington is a market town", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Castle Donington is a village", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Castle Donington is a market town and civil parish in Leicestershire, England", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": " [...] and is the village's only secondary school.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Location/GPE (Non-GPE locations, mountain ranges, bodies of water, and Countries, cities, states)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is Castle Donington?", - "question1_answer1": "A town, market town or civil parish", - "question1_answer2": "A village", - "question2": "Is Castle Donington considered to be a town or a village?", - "question2_answer1": "A town", - "question2_answer2": "A village", - "question3": "Is Castle Donington considered a town?", - "question3_answer1": "Yes", - "question3_answer2": "No", - "question4": "Is Castle Donington considered a village?", - "question4_answer1": "No", - "question4_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "1920 Volta a Catalunya", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1920_Volta_a_Catalunya", - "paragraph_A": " \tTotal \tTotal \t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": " \tTotal \tTotal \t\t\t\t\t", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018", - "tagDate": "September 2018", - "tagReason": "conflicts with infobox reference", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "Stage,\tDate,\tCourse,\tDistance,\tWinner | 1 (A),\t24 September,\tBarcelona to Olot,\t157 km (98 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 1 (A),\t24 September,\tOlot to Tona,\t83 km (52 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 2,\t25 September,\tTona to Lleida,\t181 km (112 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 3 (A),\t26 September,\tLleida to Tarragona,\t91 km (57 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 3 (B),\t26 September,\tTarragona to Barcelona,\t95 km (59 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Nat (FRA) || Total distance of :\t607 km (377 mi)", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Stage,\tDate,\tCourse,\tDistance,\tWinner | 1 (A),\t24 September,\tBarcelona to Olot,\t157 km (98 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 1 (A),\t24 September,\tOlot to Tona,\t83 km (52 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 2,\t25 September,\tTona to Lleida,\t181 km (112 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 3 (A),\t26 September,\tLleida to Tarragona,\t91 km (57 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) | 3 (B),\t26 September,\tTarragona to Barcelona,\t95 km (59 mi),\t Jos\u00e9 Nat (FRA) || Total distance of 1920 Volta a Catalunya:\t607 km (377 mi)", - "paragraphA_article": "1920 Volta a Catalunya", - "paragraphB_article": "1920 Volta a Catalunya", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "1920 Volta a Catalunya Race details: Dates:\t24\u201326 September 1920, Stages:\t3, Distance:\t630km (391.5 mi), Winning time:\t23h 55' 16\", Results: \tWinner\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) \tSecond\t Jos\u00e9 Nat (FRA) \tThird\t Jaume Janer (ESP)", - "paragraphB_information": "1920 Volta a Catalunya Race details Dates\t24\u201326 September 1920 Stages\t3 Distance\t630km (391.5 mi) Winning time\t23h 55' 16\" Results \tWinner\t Jos\u00e9 Pelletier (FRA) \tSecond\t Jos\u00e9 Nat (FRA) \tThird\t Jaume Janer (ESP)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "1920 Volta a Catalunya was 607 km (377 mi) in distance", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "1920 Volta a Catalunya was 630km (391.5 mi) in distance", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Event (Named hurricanes, battles, wars, sports events, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Infobox/table - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What was the total distance of the 1920 Volta a Catalunya?", - "question1_answer2": "630 km (391.5 mi)", - "question1_answer1": "607 km (377 mi)", - "question2": "Was the total distance of the 1920 Volta a Catalunya less than 615 km (382 mi)?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Was the total distance of the 1920 Volta a Catalunya greater than 615 km (382 mi)?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "1927 Volta a Catalunya", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1927_Volta_a_Catalunya", - "paragraph_A": " \tTotal \tTotal \t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}\t{{Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": " \tTotal \tTotal \t\t\t\t\t", - "tag": "Contradict-inline|reason=conflicts with infobox reference|date=September 2018", - "tagDate": "September 2018", - "tagReason": "conflicts with infobox reference", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "paragraphA_information": "Stage,\tDate,\tCourse,\tDistance,\tWinner | 1,\t28 August,\tBarcelona to Tortosa,\t213 km (132 mi),\t Maurice Ville (FRA) | 2,\t29 August,\tTortosa to Reus,\t204 km (127 mi),\t Ferdinand Le Drogo (FRA) | 3,\t30 August,\tReus to Igualada,\t189 km (117 mi),\t Victor Fontan (FRA) | 4,\t31 August,\tIgualada to Vic,\t191 km (119 mi),\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA) | 5,\t1 September,\tVic to Banyoles,\t122 km (76 mi),\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA) | 6,\t2 September,\tBanyoles to Sant Feliu de Gu\u00edxols,\t163 km (101 mi),\t Ferdinand Le Drogo (FRA) | 7,\t3 September,\tSant Feliu de Gu\u00edxols to Caldes d'Estrac,\t121 km (75 mi),\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA) | 8,\t4 September,\tCaldes d'Estrac to Barcelona,\t130 km (81 mi),\t Victor Fontan (FRA) | Total:\t1,333 km (828 mi)", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Stage,\tDate,\tCourse,\tDistance,\tWinner | 1,\t28 August,\tBarcelona to Tortosa,\t213 km (132 mi),\t Maurice Ville (FRA) | 2,\t29 August,\tTortosa to Reus,\t204 km (127 mi),\t Ferdinand Le Drogo (FRA) | 3,\t30 August,\tReus to Igualada,\t189 km (117 mi),\t Victor Fontan (FRA) | 4,\t31 August,\tIgualada to Vic,\t191 km (119 mi),\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA) | 5,\t1 September,\tVic to Banyoles,\t122 km (76 mi),\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA) | 6,\t2 September,\tBanyoles to Sant Feliu de Gu\u00edxols,\t163 km (101 mi),\t Ferdinand Le Drogo (FRA) | 7,\t3 September,\tSant Feliu de Gu\u00edxols to Caldes d'Estrac,\t121 km (75 mi),\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA) | 8,\t4 September,\tCaldes d'Estrac to Barcelona,\t130 km (81 mi),\t Victor Fontan (FRA) | Total distance of 1927 Volta a Catalunya:\t1,333 km (828 mi)", - "paragraphB_article": "1927 Volta a Catalunya", - "paragraphA_article": "1927 Volta a Catalunya", - "paragraphB_information": "1927 Volta a Catalunya Race details Dates:\t28 August\u20134 September 1927 Stages:\t8 Distance:\t1,342[1] km (833.9 mi) Winning time:\t51h 03' 34\" Results: \tWinner\t Victor Fontan (FRA) \tSecond\t Mariano Ca\u00f1ardo (ESP) \tThird\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA)", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "1927 Volta a Catalunya Race details Dates:\t28 August\u20134 September 1927 Stages:\t8 Distance:\t1,342[1] km (833.9 mi) Winning time:\t51h 03' 34\" Results: \tWinner\t Victor Fontan (FRA) \tSecond\t Mariano Ca\u00f1ardo (ESP) \tThird\t Georges Cuvelier (FRA)", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The total distance of 1927 Volta a Catalunya was 1,333 km (828 mi)", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The total distance of 1927 Volta a Catalunya was 1,342 km (833.9 mi)", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Event (Named hurricanes, battles, wars, sports events, etc.)", - "Contradict type II": "Infobox/table - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What was the total distance of the 1927 Volta a Catalunya?", - "question1_answer1": "1,333 km (828 mi)", - "question1_answer2": "1,342 km (833.9 mi)", - "question2": "Was the total distance of the 1927 Volta a Catalunya less than 1337 km (831 mi)?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "Was the total distance of the 1927 Volta a Catalunya greater than 1337 km (831 mi)?", - "question3_answer1": "No", - "question3_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Mart\u00edn_Garc\u00eda", - "paragraph_A": "At 5:00 pm on that day Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra, informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded,{{Contradictory inline|reason=This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded|date=March 2024}} he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. He asked his commander for more powder and ammunition in all calibers, and urgent reinforcements to annihilate the retreating ships before they could seek refuge in port. ", - "paragraph_A_clean": "At 5:00 pm on that day Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra, informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded, he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. He asked his commander for more powder and ammunition in all calibers, and urgent reinforcements to annihilate the retreating ships before they could seek refuge in port. ", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded|date=March 2024", - "tagDate": "March 2024", - "tagReason": "This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This contradicts the previous claim of 45 dead and 50 wounded", - "paragraphA_article": "Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda", - "paragraphA_information": "In this first and bloodiest day of the Combate of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda, Romarate successfully repelled the enemy's attack. They had 45 dead and 50 wounded and the attacking force's losses were high. At dawn on the 11th, fire recommenced at 8:45am. At 5:00 pm on that day Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra, informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded, he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. At 8:00 pm on the 14th they anchored silently a half-mile to the southeast near Puerto Viejo and at 02:30 am on the 15th they disembarked 240 men in 20 minutes, using 8 launches. The royalists had 10 dead, 7 wounded and 50 prisoners.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "In the first and bloodiest day (10th March 1814) of the Combate of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda, Jacinto de Romarate (frigate captain of Spanish royalist forces) successfully repelled the enemy's (forces of the United Provinces of the R\u00edo de la Plata) attack. They had 45 dead and 50 wounded. At 5:00 pm on 11th March 1814, Jacinto de Romarate sent a note to the commander of the Montevideo garrison Miguel de la Sierra (Spanish royalist), informing he had few casualties, four dead and seven wounded, he had disembarked on the island and judged that, given the losses suffered, as soon as the patriot fleet was in condition it would retreat to Buenos Aires. On 15th March 1814, the royalists had 10 dead, 7 wounded and 50 prisoners.", - "paragraphB_article": "Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda", - "paragraphB_information": "Casualties and losses \tOne minor vessel captured, 10 dead, 47 prisoners, 17 wounded", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The Spanish Empire had 10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Spanish Empire had 59 dead, 50 prisoners and 64 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Spanish Empire had 10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "59 dead, 50 prisoners and 64 wounded", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "10 dead, 47 prisoners and 17 wounded", - "Contradict type I": "(DiscourseLevel) NP-related ", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "How many dead did the Spanish Empire have in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question1_answer1": "59", - "question1_answer2": "10", - "question2": "Did the Spanish Empire have 59 deads in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "question3": "How many prisoners did the Spanish Empire have in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question3_answer1": "50", - "question3_answer2": "47", - "question4": "Did the Spanish Empire have 50 prisoners in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question4_answer1": "Yes", - "question4_answer2": "No", - "question5": "How many wounded did the Spanish Empire have in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question5_answer1": "64", - "question5_answer2": "17", - "question6": "Did the Spanish Empire have 64 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question6_answer1": "Yes", - "question6_answer2": "No", - "question7": "How many dead and wounded did the Spanish Empire have in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question7_answer1": "59 dead and 64 wounded", - "question7_answer2": "10 dead and 17 wounded", - "question8": "Did the Spanish Empire have 59 dead and 64 wounded in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question8_answer1": "Yes", - "question8_answer2": "No", - "question9": "How many dead and prisoners did the Spanish Empire have in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question9_answer1": "59 dead and 50 prisoners", - "question9_answer2": "10 dead and 47 prisoners", - "question10": "How many prisoners and wounded did the Spanish Empire have in the Battle of Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda?", - "question10_answer1": "50 prisoners and 64 wounded", - "question10_answer2": "47 prisoners and 17 wounded" - }, - { - "title": "Amanieu d'Albret", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanieu_d'Albret", - "paragraph_A": "After the death of Julius II, he participated in the papal conclave of 1513 that elected Pope Leo X.{{contradict-inline|date=April 2016}} The new pope absolved Cardinal d'Albret (along with Cardinals Guillaume Bri\u00e7onnet and Ren\u00e9 de Prie) and confirmed him in his offices. He also served as administrator of the see of Pamiers from 1514 until his death. He became the cardinal protodeacon on 3 September 1520.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "After the death of Julius II, he participated in the papal conclave of 1513 that elected Pope Leo X. The new pope absolved Cardinal d'Albret (along with Cardinals Guillaume Bri\u00e7onnet and Ren\u00e9 de Prie) and confirmed him in his offices. He also served as administrator of the see of Pamiers from 1514 until his death. He became the cardinal protodeacon on 3 September 1520.", - "tag": "contradict-inline|date=April 2016", - "tagDate": "April 2016", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This text contradicts material elsewhere on this page. As schismatic he could not participate in 1513 Conclave; see 1513 Conclave article, contradiction", - "paragraphA_information": "After the death of Julius II, he participated in the papal conclave of 1513 that elected Pope Leo X", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Amanieu d'Albret participated in the papal conclave of 1513 that elected Pope Leo X.", - "paragraphB_article": "1513 papal conclave", - "paragraphB_information": "Six more cardinals did not participate in the conclave: Amanieu d'Albret", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Amanieu d'Albret was one of the six cardinals who did not participate in the 1513 papal conclave.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Amanieu d'Albret participated in the 1513 papal conclave.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Amanieu d'Albret did not participate in the 1513 papal conclave.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "participated", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "did not participate", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Event/Relation (e.g., verb)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Across different articles", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "Did Amanieu d'Albret participate in the papal conclave of 1513?", - "question1_answer1": "Yes", - "question1_answer2": "No", - "question2": "Did Amanieu d'Albret participate in a papal conclave after 1503?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No", - "paragraphA_article": "Amanieu d'Albret" - }, - { - "title": "Alexandria", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandria", - "paragraph_A": ":Rhakotis (from Coptic ,{{Contradictory inline|date=August 2021|reason=In the introductory sentence, the Coptic name is given as 'Rakod\u012b', with ref. There's no explanation of the discrepancy. A different dialect?}} \"Alexandria\") was the old city that was absorbed into Alexandria. It was occupied chiefly by Egyptians.", - "paragraph_A_clean": ":Rhakotis (from Coptic , \"Alexandria\") was the old city that was absorbed into Alexandria. It was occupied chiefly by Egyptians.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|date=August 2021|reason=In the introductory sentence, the Coptic name is given as 'Rakod\u012b', with ref. There's no explanation of the discrepancy. A different dialect?", - "tagDate": "August 2021", - "tagReason": "In the introductory sentence, the Coptic name is given as 'Rakod\u012b', with ref. There's no explanation of the discrepancy. A different dialect?", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "In the introductory sentence, the Coptic name is given as 'Rakod\u012b', with ref. There's no explanation of the discrepancy. A different dialect?", - "paragraphA_article": "Alexandria", - "paragraphA_information": "Alexandria (/\u02cc\u00e6l\u026a\u0261\u02c8z\u00e6ndri\u0259, -\u02c8z\u0251\u02d0n-/ AL-ig-ZA(H)N-dree-\u0259; Arabic: \u0627\u0644\u0625\u0633\u0643\u0646\u062f\u0631\u064a\u0629; Greek: \u1f08\u03bb\u03b5\u03be\u03ac\u03bd\u03b4\u03c1\u03b5\u03b9\u03b1, Coptic: \u2ca2\u2c81\u2c95\u2c9f\u03ef - Rakoti or \u2c81\u2c97\u2c89\u2c9d\u2c81\u2c9b\u2c87\u2ca3\u2c93\u2c81) is the second largest city in Egypt and the largest city on the Mediterranean coast. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Alexandria (Coptic: Rakoti) is the second largest city in Egypt and the largest city on the Mediterranean coast.", - "paragraphB_article": "Alexandria", - "paragraphB_information": "Rhakotis (from Coptic Rakot\u0259, \"Alexandria\") was the old city that was absorbed into Alexandria.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Rhakotis (from Coptic Rakot\u0259, \"Alexandria\") was the old city that was absorbed into Alexandria.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The Coptic name of Alexandria is Rakoti.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The Coptic name of Alexandria is Rhakotis.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "Rakoti", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "Rhakotis", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "What is the Coptic name for Alexandria?", - "question1_answer1": "Rakoti", - "question1_answer2": "Rhakotis", - "question2": "Is Rakoti the Coptic name for Alexandria?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Pakistan_Federation_of_United_Trade_Unions", - "paragraph_A": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU) is a national trade union centre in Pakistan. It was formed in 1992 and was registered by the National Industrial Relations Commission. The APFUTU has a membership of 652,723.{{Contradictory inline|reason=The infobox has a different members figure|date=June 2023}} The APFUTU-based industrial city of Gujrat (Punjab).", - "paragraph_A_clean": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU) is a national trade union centre in Pakistan. It was formed in 1992 and was registered by the National Industrial Relations Commission. The APFUTU has a membership of 652,723. The APFUTU-based industrial city of Gujrat (Punjab).", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|reason=The infobox has a different members figure|date=June 2023", - "tagDate": "June 2023", - "tagReason": "The infobox has a different members figure", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The infobox has a different members figure", - "paragraphA_article": "All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions", - "paragraphB_article": "All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions", - "paragraphA_information": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU) is a national trade union centre in Pakistan. It was formed in 1992 and was registered by the National Industrial Relations Commission. The APFUTU has a membership of 652,723.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions (APFUTU) is a national trade union centre in Pakistan. It was formed in 1992 and was registered by the National Industrial Relations Commission. The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions has a membership of 652,723.", - "paragraphB_information": "All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions Members \t650,000", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions has 650,000 members.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions has 652,723 members.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "The All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions has 650,000 members.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "652,723 members", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "650,000 members", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Infobox/table", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1_answer1": "652,723", - "question1": "How many member does the All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions have?", - "question1_answer2": "650,000", - "question2": "Does the All Pakistan Federation of United Trade Unions have 652,723 members?", - "question2_answer1": "Yes", - "question2_answer2": "No" - }, - { - "title": "Alpha wave", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_wave", - "paragraph_A": "{{Self-contradictory|about=the origin of alpha waves|date=August 2020}}", - "paragraph_A_clean": "", - "tag": "Self-contradictory|about=the origin of alpha waves|date=August 2020", - "tagDate": "August 2020", - "tagReason": "the origin of alpha waves", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Same", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "This article or section appears to contradict itself on the origin of alpha waves. Please see the talk page for more information.", - "paragraphA_information": "This alpha activity is centered in the occipital lobe, although there has been speculation that it has a thalamic origin.", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "A type of alpha wave activity is centered in the occipital lobe, although there has been speculation that it has a thalamic origin.", - "paragraphB_article": "Alpha wave", - "paragraphB_information": "This alpha activity is centered in the occipital lobe, although there has been speculation that it has a thalamic origin.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "A type of alpha wave activity is centered in the occipital lobe, although there has been speculation that it has a thalamic origin.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "A type of alpha waves originates from the occipital lobe.", - "paragraphA_article": "Alpha wave", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "occipital lobe", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "thalamus", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "A type of alpha waves originates from the thalamus.", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) NP-related (non-entity)", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Implicit (reasoning required)", - "question1": "Where does a type of alpha wave originate from: occipital lobe or thalamus?", - "question1_answer2": "thalamus", - "question1_answer1": "occipital lobe", - "question2": "Does a type of alpha wave originate from the thalamus?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - }, - { - "title": "Angerm\u00fcnde", - "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angerm\u00fcnde", - "paragraph_A": "Angerm\u00fcnde () is a town in the district of Uckermark in the state of Brandenburg, Germany. It is about northeast of Berlin,{{Contradictory inline|date=June 2023}} the capital of Germany.", - "paragraph_A_clean": "Angerm\u00fcnde () is a town in the district of Uckermark in the state of Brandenburg, Germany. It is about northeast of Berlin, the capital of Germany.", - "tag": "Contradictory inline|date=June 2023", - "tagDate": "June 2023", - "tagReason": "", - "wikitag_label_samepassage": "Different", - "wikitag_label_valid": "Valid", - "valid_comment": "The article contradicts itself about the distance it is situated from Berlin. ", - "paragraphA_article": "Angerm\u00fcnde", - "paragraphB_article": "Angerm\u00fcnde", - "paragraphA_information": "Angerm\u00fcnde (German pronunciation: [a\u014b\u0250\u02c8m\u028fnd\u0259]) is a town in the district of Uckermark in the state of Brandenburg, Germany. It is about 43 miles (69 km) northeast of Berlin, the capital of Germany. ", - "paragraphA_information_standalone": "Angerm\u00fcnde is a town in the district of Uckermark in the state of Brandenburg, Germany. It is about 43 miles (69 km) northeast of Berlin, the capital of Germany.", - "paragraphB_information": "Angerm\u00fcnde is located in the Uckermarck region, roughly 80 km north of Berlin.", - "paragraphB_information_standalone": "Angerm\u00fcnde is located in the Uckermarck region, roughly 80 km north of Berlin.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A": "Angerm\u00fcnde is about 43 miles (69 km) northeast of Berlin.", - "relevantInfo_comment_B": "Angerm\u00fcnde is located roughly 80 km north of Berlin.", - "relevantInfo_comment_A_Span": "43 miles (69 km) ", - "relevantInfo_comment_B_Span": "80 km", - "Contradict type I": "(PhraseLevel) Entity - Number", - "Contradict type II": "Text - Text", - "Contradict type III": "Within the same article", - "Contradict type IV": "Explicit", - "question1": "How far is Angerm\u00fcnde from Berlin?", - "question1_answer1": "43 miles (69 km)", - "question1_answer2": "80 km", - "question2": "Is Angerm\u00fcnde 80 km far from Berlin?", - "question2_answer1": "No", - "question2_answer2": "Yes" - } -] \ No newline at end of file