example_template_text;phrase_to_split_on_for_bias_prediction;phrase_to_put_mask;example_instruction_text;prompt_instruction_text
"Alice: %s\nBob: %s\nImplication: %s";"Bob: ";"Implication: %s";"Alice asks Bob a question, and Bob responds with an implicature. This means that Bob’s response does not literally contain the answer to Alice’s question, but implies an answer. Assuming that Bob is a cooperative conversational partner, what is the implicated answer to the question? For example:\n\nAlice: You invented fire?\nBob: I told you that.\nImplication: Bob says 'I told you that'. Bob’s response must be relevant to Alice’s question because Bob is a cooperative conversational partner. Bob must mean that he told Alice that he invented fire. Bob’s response to Alice’s question 'You invented fire?' is yes.\nAnswer: yes\n\nAlice: That cake looks delicious. Aren't you going to have some with me?\nBob: But that was a huge meal we just had.\nImplication: Bob’s response must be relevant to Alice’s question because Bob is a cooperative conversational partner. Bob must mean that the meal they just had was so huge he is not hungry anymore, and this must be relevant to Alice’s question: 'Aren’t you going to have some with me?' Bob’s response to the question must therefore be no.\nAnswer: no\n\nAlice: Could you perform well?\nBob: Being bilingual would help put me ahead of the pack.\nImplication: Bob says being bilingual would help put him ahead of the pack. Bob’s response must be relevant to Alice’s question because Bob is a cooperative conversational partner. Bob must be implying that he could perform well because he is bilingual. This means the response to Alice’s question is yes.\nAnswer: yes\n\nAlice: Have you any news for me?\nBob: I've made progress\nImplication: Bob says he has made progress. Bob’s response must be relevant to Alice’s question because Bob is a cooperative conversational partner. If Bob would not have any news for Alice, Bob would not have said they would have made progress because that would be misleading. The answer to Alice’s question 'Have you any news for me?' must therefore be yes. \nAnswer: yes\n\nAlice: You looked out for him?\nBob: He looked out for me. He taught me.\nImplication: Alice asks Bob 'You looked out for him?' and Bob’s response says that the person that is being referred to by 'him' here looked out for Bob. If Bob means yes to Alice’s question, Bob would have said something like 'yes, but I also looked out for him'. Stating the response like this implies that the answer to Alice’s question is no.\nAnswer: no";"The following are examples of the task:"