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question:You are an AI assistant. You will be given a task. You must generate a detailed and long answer. Do the following two sentences have the same meaning? Peterson told police he fished alone in San Francisco Bay on Christmas Eve , returning to an empty house . Peterson told police he left his wife at about 9 : 30 a.m. on Dec. 24 to fish alone in San Francisco Bay . Select from the following. A). no; B). yes; The answer is:
answer:A). no; Although the two sentences share some similarities, they do not have the exact same meaning. Here is a detailed analysis of the differences and similarities between the two sentences: 1. In the first sentence, it is mentioned that Peterson fished alone in San Francisco Bay on Christmas Eve. The second sentence specifies the exact time he left his wife: "at about 9:30 a.m. on Dec. 24." Thus, the second sentence provides more precise information about the time Peterson went fishing. 2. Both sentences highlight that Peterson was alone while fishing. This suggests that the activity of fishing does not involve anyone else other than him. 3. The first sentence mentions that Peterson returned to an empty house but does not provide information on whether he left his wife or not. In the second sentence, it explicitly states that he left his wife before going fishing. 4. The first sentence makes a point of mentioning that it was Christmas Eve, whereas the second sentence provides the specific date, Dec. 24. In conclusion, the two sentences contain overlapping details about Peterson's activities on Christmas Eve or Dec. 24, but they are not identical in meaning. The second sentence offers more specific information regarding the time and his relationship with his wife, while the first sentence emphasizes his return to an empty house.
question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. (1) He studied in Regensburg , then in Munich , where Joseph Haas was among his teachers , and in Berlin where in 1925 he gained a Ph.D.. (2) He studied in Regensburg , then in Munich , where Joseph Haas was among his teachers , and in Berlin , where he received a doctorate in 1925 . Do these two sentences mean the same thing?
answer:Yes, little buddy! These two sentences mean the same thing. They both talk about a person who studied in different places like Regensburg, Munich, and Berlin. They also mention Joseph Haas as a teacher and that this person got a special degree called a doctorate in 1925. The sentences are just written a little differently, but they tell the same story.
question:You are an AI assistant. You will be given a task. You must generate a detailed and long answer. Solve 2*k + 171 - 149 = 0 for k.
answer:To solve the equation 2*k + 171 - 149 = 0 for k, we will follow these steps: Step 1: Simplify the equation First, we will simplify the equation by combining the numerical terms. 2*k + 171 - 149 = 0 By subtracting 149 from 171, we get: 2*k + 22 = 0 Now, the simplified equation is: 2*k + 22 = 0 Step 2: Isolate the variable 'k' Next, we will isolate the variable 'k' by getting rid of the constant term (22). To do this, we will subtract 22 from both sides of the equation: 2*k + 22 - 22 = 0 - 22 This simplifies to: 2*k = -22 Step 3: Solve for 'k' Now that we have isolated the variable 'k', we will solve for it. Since 2*k equals -22, we just need to divide -22 by 2. k = (-22) / 2 Dividing -22 by 2 gives us: k = -11 So, the solution to the equation 2*k + 171 - 149 = 0 is k = -11.
question:You are an AI assistant. User will you give you a task. Your goal is to complete the task as faithfully as you can. While performing the task think step-by-step and justify your steps. Write a summary based on this article: Faster computers allowed the creation of models that incorporated differences in behavior. The Nobel committee cited Professor Deaton’s work around 1980 in modeling demand for individual goods, which was both some of the earliest work in that vein and a model that remains in wide use. In continuing his research, he found that rising incomes tend to improve calorie intake for the poorest families, but the effect diminishes at higher income levels. Aggregate statistics, as a result, obscured the benefits of income gains for very poor families. “What he’s shown is that you do learn a great deal more by looking at the behavior that underlies the aggregates,” said Duncan Thomas, an economist at Duke University and another former student. Professor Thomas said he also admired Professor Deaton’s clarity. “He will bring evidence to the table in a way that makes you say, ‘Well, of course that has to be right,’ ” Professor Thomas said. Professor Deaton said he hoped “carefulness in measurement” would be his legacy. He said his mentor, Richard Stone, a Cambridge professor who won the Nobel in economics in 1984, had ingrained in him the importance of good data. “I’ve always wanted to be like him,” Professor Deaton said. “I think putting numbers together into a coherent framework always seemed to me to be what really matters.” His work also is marked by an insistence that theories must explain these more complicated sets of facts. “A good theoretical account must explain all of the evidence that we see,” Professor Deaton wrote in a 2011 essay on his life in economics. “If it doesn’t work everywhere, we have no idea what we are talking about, and all is chaos.” ||||| A Scottish economist and son of a Yorkshire miner has been awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in economics for his pioneering work measuring poverty around the world. Angus Deaton, 69, became the 47th recipient of the Nobel, which was announced by Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in Stockholm today. BREAKING NEWS The 2015 Prize in Economic Sciences is awarded to 69 years old Angus Deaton @Princeton #NobelPrize pic.twitter.com/8iHMo0CcPX He received the accolade for three decades of research analysing welfare in the developing world and the relationship between income and spending. "Mr Deaton's work has helped transform the fields of microeconomics, macroeconomics & development economics" said the Royal Swedish Academy. The decision to award the prize to an economist whose work has influenced public policy on aid and poverty, was widely praised. US economist Tyler Cowen said Mr Deaton was "a brilliant, excellent selection". He described him as an "economist who looks more closely at what poor households consume to get a better sense of their living standards and possible paths for economic development. "He truly, deeply understands the implications of economic growth, the benefits of modernity, and political economy" said Mr Cowen. Mr Deaton, who holds both US and British citizenship, taught at the Universities of Cambridge and Bristol, before moving to the US. He said he was "surprised and delighted" albeit a little "sleepy" when he received the call from Stockholm at his US home on Monday morning. Aid is guided less by the needs of the recipients than by the donor country’s domestic and international interests. Angus Deaton Born in Edinburgh in 1945, Angus Deaton is the son of a Yorkshire miner who later became a civil engineer. Mr Deaton fulfilled his father's dream by gaining a scholarship to study at the prestigious Fettes College in Edinburgh aged 13. "My father believed in education, and he liked to measure things" wrote Mr Deaton in 2011. "He was determined that I should be educated properly, and set his heart on sending me to Fettes College... whose annual fees were well in excess of his salary". While at Cambridge, Mr Deaton said he "found economics much more to my taste than mathematics". He left Cambridge to briefly work for the Bank of England, but soon returned for his post-graduate study, later receiving his PhD in economics. "He was in a bit of shock...but I think he was very very happy" said prize giver and friend, professor Jakob Svensson. Mr Deaton's most recent book, "The Great Escape" was published in 2013. In it he argues that foreign aid from western governments has done more harm than good to developing nations, saying that it has helped prop up corrupt governments and rarely reaches the poor. "The idea that global poverty could be eliminated if only rich people or rich countries were to give more money to poor people or to poor countries, however appealing, is wrong", he wrote in 2013. "These simplistic beliefs are based on a misdiagnosis of what it is that is keeping people poor". The Deaton choice will not make the aid industry happy. He is a vocal critic of foreign aid. — Dani Rodrik (@rodrikdani) October 12, 2015 Economist Justin Wolfers described him as "one of the great microeconomists and microeconometricians of our time." "Deaton has worked tirelessly to understand the lot of the poor". Angus Deaton has been one of the pioneering researchers on the economics of happiness & well-being. — Justin Wolfers (@JustinWolfers) October 12, 2015 Last year, the award - which is officially known as the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in memory of Alfred Nobel - went to French economist Jean Tirole for his pioneering work on the regulation of large companies. This prize has been awarded every year since 1969. Mr Deaton had been touted as one of the leading candidates for this year's Nobel. Other candidates had included British economist and professor at University College London, Sir Robert Blundell. What did Angus Deaton win the Nobel prize for? Angus Deaton is one of the world's foremost economists specialising in the nature of poverty and living standards in the developing world. His contribution to economic science hinges on pioneering ways to measure poverty at the individual rather than societal level. Mr Deaton's research, mainly in India, has focussed on using household survey data to show relationships between income and consumption, concentrating on aspects such as calorie intake and food demand when incomes rise and fall. His findings have also given birth to the "Deaton Paradox" - the observation that short sudden shocks to people's income do not have large effects on consumption. In 1980, Mr Deaton developed a model called the "Almost Ideal Demand System", an intuitive way of estimating how the demand for each good depends on the prices of all goods and on individual incomes ||||| Focused crawls are collections of frequently-updated webcrawl data from narrow (as opposed to broad or wide) web crawls, often focused on a single domain or subdomain. |||||
answer:Scottish economist Angus Deaton has been awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in economics for his innovative work on measuring poverty around the world. Deaton's research over three decades, has concentrated on analysing welfare in the developing world and the relationship between income and spending. He has focused on using household survey data to show relationships between income and consumption which has been a valuable tool in measuring poverty at the individual rather than societal level. His work has greatly influenced public policy on aid and poverty reducing measures.