A Question Answering Benchmark with Implicit Reasoning Strategies The StrategyQA dataset was created through a crowdsourcing pipeline for eliciting creative and diverse yes/no questions that require implicit reasoning steps. To solve questions in StrategyQA, the reasoning steps should be inferred using a strategy. To guide and evaluate the question answering process, each example in StrategyQA was annotated with a decomposition into reasoning steps for answering it, and Wikipedia paragraphs that provide evidence for the answer to each step. Illustrated in the figure below: Questions in StrategyQA (Q1) require implicit reasoning, in contrast to multi-step questions that explicitly specify the reasoning process (Q2). Each training example contains a question (Q1), yes/no answer (A), decomposition (D), and evidence paragraphs (E). [strategyqa_test](https://huggingface.co/datasets/voidful/StrategyQA/resolve/main/strategyqa_test.json) [strategyqa_train](https://huggingface.co/datasets/voidful/StrategyQA/blob/main/strategyqa_train.json) [strategyqa_train_filtered](https://huggingface.co/datasets/voidful/StrategyQA/blob/main/strategyqa_train_filtered.json) [strategyqa_train_paragraphs](https://huggingface.co/datasets/voidful/StrategyQA/blob/main/strategyqa_train_paragraphs.json) Paper Title: Did Aristotle Use a Laptop? A Question Answering Benchmark with Implicit Reasoning Strategies Authors: Mor Geva, Daniel Khashabi, Elad Segal, Tushar Khot, Dan Roth, Jonathan Berant Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics (TACL), 2021 Citation: ``` @article{geva2021strategyqa, title = {{Did Aristotle Use a Laptop? A Question Answering Benchmark with Implicit Reasoning Strategies}}, author = {Geva, Mor and Khashabi, Daniel and Segal, Elad and Khot, Tushar and Roth, Dan and Berant, Jonathan}, journal = {Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics (TACL)}, year = {2021}, } ```