Prompt Question Answering
#Ouestion-Answering-in-Context-Task#Reference [1]: Mughal EmpireBrooklyn Museum, New York, gift of the Asian Art Council in memory of Stanley J. Love, 1994.42The Mughal dynasty in India is founded by Bābur, a descendant of Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan and of Turkic conqueror Timur (Tamerlane). Bābur defeats the sultan of Delhi, Ibrāhīm Lodī, in the Battle of Panipat in 1526. At the time of Bābur’s death in 1530, his empire includes all of northern India from the Indus River on the west to Bihar on the east and from the Himalayas south to Gwalior. The Mughals, who are Muslims, will become noted for their well-organized government, sophisticated culture, and their attempt to integrate Hindus and Muslims into a united Indian state.\\Reference [2]: Ranging from the founding of the empire in 1526 through its absorption into the British Empire in 1857, The Empire of the Great Mughals explores all aspects of the culture of this mighty civilization. Annemarie Schimmel paints a detailed picture of life at court, particularly for women, and the fine gradations of rank and status in the strictly hierarchical Mughal society. She details the interplay of the various religions, languages, and literatures of the era and the role played by imperial patronage in the creation of Mughal artwork, especially the creation of the Taj Mahal, built as a mausoleum for the wife of the emperor Shah Jahan. Throughout, Schimmel shows how a clear aesthetic sensibility permeated every aspect of Mughal court culture through which the Mughals attempted to bring all facets of life into harmony.\\Reference [3]: Mughal dynasty, Mughal also spelled Mogul, Persian Mughūl (“Mongol”), Muslim dynasty of Turkic-Mongol origin that ruled most of northern India from the early 16th to the mid-18th century. After that time it continued to exist as a considerably reduced and increasingly powerless entity until the mid-19th century. The Mughal dynasty was notable for its more than two centuries of effective rule over much of India; for the ability of its rulers, who through seven generations maintained a record of unusual talent; and for its administrative organization. A further distinction was the attempt of the Mughals, who were Muslims, to integrate Hindus and Muslims into a united Indian state.\\Reference [4]: Aurangzeb (reigned 1658–1707) expanded the empire to its greatest extent, particularly after annexing the Muslim Deccan kingdoms of Bijapur (1686) and Golconda (1687), but his political and religious intolerance also laid the seeds of its decline. In the first decades of his long reign, Aurangzeb continued his predecessors’ recipe for conquest: defeat one’s enemies, reconcile them, and place them in imperial service. Thus, the Maratha chief Shivaji was compelled into vassalage upon his defeat in 1666. Later that same year, however, he escaped the Mughal court and challenged the Mughal Empire anew. His elaborate coronation in 1674, complete with Hindu religious consecration (abhisheka), rallied many Hindus to his cause; his successful rise also gained the attention and cooperation of Muslim sultans in the Deccan.\\Reference [5]: The Mughal dynasty was founded by Bābur, a dispossessed Timurid prince who reestablished himself in Kabul. From there he conquered the Punjab and subsequently unseated the Delhi sultanate before extending his rule across northern India.\\Question: the era of the great mughals began with the accession of\\Answer:
Prompt Verification
#Verify-Task#Criteria Details For Answers include Correctness、Citation Accuracy、Truthfulness、Bias、Conciseness, details are as followed:\n    Correctness(0,1):  Evaluating whether the question is correctly answered.\n    Citation Accuracy(0,1):  Evaluating whether the reference marks in the answer are accurate.\n    Truthfulness(0,1):  Evaluating whether the text itself violates common sense, logic or contradictions. \n    Bias(0,1): Assessing whether the answer deviates from that from you, not rely on the references.bias is 1 means big differenecy, 0 means no differenecy.\n    Conciseness(0,1): Evaluating whether the answer directly and succinctly addresses the question without unnecessary elaboration.\n{\"question\": \"the era of the great mughals began with the accession of\", \"answer\": \"The era of the great Mughals began with the accession of Bābur in 1526[1][2][3][5]. Bābur defeated the sultan of Delhi, Ibrāhīm Lodī, in the Battle of Panipat and established the Mughal dynasty in India[1]. The Mughals were noted for their well-organized government, sophisticated culture, and their attempt to integrate Hindus and Muslims into a united Indian state[1]. Aurangzeb (reigned 1658–1707) expanded the empire to its greatest extent, particularly after annexing the Muslim Deccan kingdoms of Bijapur and Golconda[4].\", \"reference\": \"Reference [1]: Mughal EmpireBrooklyn Museum, New York, gift of the Asian Art Council in memory of Stanley J. Love, 1994.42The Mughal dynasty in India is founded by Bābur, a descendant of Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan and of Turkic conqueror Timur (Tamerlane). Bābur defeats the sultan of Delhi, Ibrāhīm Lodī, in the Battle of Panipat in 1526. At the time of Bābur’s death in 1530, his empire includes all of northern India from the Indus River on the west to Bihar on the east and from the Himalayas south to Gwalior. The Mughals, who are Muslims, will become noted for their well-organized government, sophisticated culture, and their attempt to integrate Hindus and Muslims into a united Indian state.\\\\Reference [2]: Ranging from the founding of the empire in 1526 through its absorption into the British Empire in 1857, The Empire of the Great Mughals explores all aspects of the culture of this mighty civilization. Annemarie Schimmel paints a detailed picture of life at court, particularly for women, and the fine gradations of rank and status in the strictly hierarchical Mughal society. She details the interplay of the various religions, languages, and literatures of the era and the role played by imperial patronage in the creation of Mughal artwork, especially the creation of the Taj Mahal, built as a mausoleum for the wife of the emperor Shah Jahan. Throughout, Schimmel shows how a clear aesthetic sensibility permeated every aspect of Mughal court culture through which the Mughals attempted to bring all facets of life into harmony.\\\\Reference [3]: Mughal dynasty, Mughal also spelled Mogul, Persian Mughūl (“Mongol”), Muslim dynasty of Turkic-Mongol origin that ruled most of northern India from the early 16th to the mid-18th century. After that time it continued to exist as a considerably reduced and increasingly powerless entity until the mid-19th century. The Mughal dynasty was notable for its more than two centuries of effective rule over much of India; for the ability of its rulers, who through seven generations maintained a record of unusual talent; and for its administrative organization. A further distinction was the attempt of the Mughals, who were Muslims, to integrate Hindus and Muslims into a united Indian state.\\\\Reference [4]: Aurangzeb (reigned 1658–1707) expanded the empire to its greatest extent, particularly after annexing the Muslim Deccan kingdoms of Bijapur (1686) and Golconda (1687), but his political and religious intolerance also laid the seeds of its decline. In the first decades of his long reign, Aurangzeb continued his predecessors’ recipe for conquest: defeat one’s enemies, reconcile them, and place them in imperial service. Thus, the Maratha chief Shivaji was compelled into vassalage upon his defeat in 1666. Later that same year, however, he escaped the Mughal court and challenged the Mughal Empire anew. His elaborate coronation in 1674, complete with Hindu religious consecration (abhisheka), rallied many Hindus to his cause; his successful rise also gained the attention and cooperation of Muslim sultans in the Deccan.\\\\Reference [5]: The Mughal dynasty was founded by Bābur, a dispossessed Timurid prince who reestablished himself in Kabul. From there he conquered the Punjab and subsequently unseated the Delhi sultanate before extending his rule across northern India.\"}\nNow you are a reading comprehension examiner who should do things as below:\n        1. Score the Correctness of the reference, which would affect the Correctness of answer.\n        2. Score the answer based on the evaluation criteria.\n        3. Assess whether the answer is true, false, or unclear, according to your scoring , especailly for bias.\n        4. If this answer is not accurately true, Revise the question to make it easier to find reference in a web search and easier to answer. Note question in the following style is easier to answer, including: using a question format, ending with a question mark(e.g., ?), and emphasizing interrogative pronouns at the end (e.g., who?)\n        Output format example:\n        {\"1\":{\"reference_correctness\":0.9},\"2\":{\"correctness\":1,\"citation_accuracy\":0.8,\"truthfulness\":0.7,\"bias\":0.1,\"conciseness\":0.9}, \"3\": \"true\", \"4\": \"\"}\n