| This one is particularly bad. I tested the Tinyllama web chat [1] and got this result: >> What is the population density of Nebraska? > Yes, I can provide you with the population density of Nebraska: > As of the 2020 United States Census, the population density in Nebraska was 107.9 people per square mile (41.9/km²). >> What is the population of Nebraska? > Yes, I can provide you with the population of Nebraska as of the 2020 United States Census: > As of the 2020 United States Census, the population of Nebraska was 1,835,673. >> What is the land area of Nebraska? > Yes, I can provide you with the land area of Nebraska as of the 2020 United States Census: > As of the 2020 United States Census, the land area of Nebraska was 11,761 square miles (30,590 square kilometers). >> What is 1,835,673 / 11,761? > Yes, 1,835,673 / 11,761 is approximately 15.46. Per Wikipedia, the 2020 Population of Nebraska is 1,961,504 (close, but not quite), land area is 76,796 sq. mi. (way off), density is about 25/sq. mi. (way off). And according to the standard rules of arithmetic, 1835673 / 11761 = 156.08, making this almost (but not quite) one order of magnitude off, and not even the erroneous answer of 15.46 is consistent with the other erroneous figure it gave for the population density of Nebraska (107.9). [1]: https://huggingface.co/spaces/TinyLlama/tinyllama-chat |