An arithmetic word problem about Boris and Beck's apples is used as a demonstration within a prompt for a language model. The demonstration includes the problem statement, a sequence of intermediate reasoning steps, and the final answer. What is the primary purpose of including the 'intermediate reasoning steps' in this context?
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Ch.3 Prompting - Foundations of Large Language Models
Foundations of Large Language Models
Computing Sciences
Ch.2 Generative Models - Foundations of Large Language Models
Foundations of Large Language Models Course
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
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Step 1: Calculate Boris's Final Apple Count (Boris and Beck's Apples Problem)
An arithmetic word problem about Boris and Beck's apples is used as a demonstration within a prompt for a language model. The demonstration includes the problem statement, a sequence of intermediate reasoning steps, and the final answer. What is the primary purpose of including the 'intermediate reasoning steps' in this context?
Evaluating Chain-of-Thought Demonstrations
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Final Answer Token in CoT Demonstrations
An arithmetic word problem is used to demonstrate a step-by-step reasoning process. The problem is: 'Boris starts with 100 apples. Beck has 23 fewer apples than Boris. Boris then gives 10 apples to Beck. How many more apples does Boris have than Beck in the end?' Arrange the following reasoning steps into the correct logical order to solve the problem.