| language: en | |
| tags: | |
| - math | |
| - pegasus | |
| datasets: | |
| - hendrycks/competition_math | |
| metrics: | |
| - rouge | |
| widget: | |
| - text: Michael scores a 95, 87, 85, 93, and a 94 on his first 5 math tests. If he | |
| wants a 90 average, what must he score on the final math test? | |
| example_title: averaging | |
| - text: If the sum of the smallest and largest of three consecutive even numbers is | |
| 28, what is the value of the second largest number in the series? | |
| example_title: puzzle2 | |
| - text: Two inlet pipes lead into a large water tank. One pipe can fill the tank in | |
| 45 minutes; the other can fill it in 40 minutes. To the nearest tenth of a minute, | |
| how long would it take the two pipes together to fill the tank if both were opened | |
| at the same time? | |
| example_title: patek water | |
| - text: A football team lost 5 yards and then gained 9. What is the team's progress? | |
| example_title: sportsball | |
| - text: Half a number plus 5 is 11.What is the number? | |
| example_title: half | |
| inference: | |
| parameters: | |
| max_length: 128 | |
| no_repeat_ngram_size: 4 | |
| length_penalty: 0.7 | |
| repetition_penalty: 3.1 | |
| num_beams: 4 | |
| early_stopping: true | |
| # pegasus does math? | |
| - testing to see how feasible seq2seq math problems are | |
| - answer: at least with 2 epochs, it is uhhhh not super feasible. | |