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B43 Assignment 1

You will work through the steps of creating a new simulation design from scratch. Be sure to also watch the video guides to walk you through how to do this. Below are the detailed instructions.

Important: Ensure you are in the course space BEFORE you start creating your design.

Create a New Design

First, we will create the blank design that will house our simulation.

1. In your course space Dashboard, click on Designs.
2. Click the Design a new Chat button to begin.
3. In the window that appears, select Custom.
4. Name the Chat: B43 Assignment 1
5. Click Create Chat Design.
Create Your Agents

The first step after creating your design will be to ensure you have the agents necessary to populate each round. The roster of agents for the baseline experiment is as follows:

1. The Preacher
2. The Believer
3. The Non-Believer
4. The Patron
5. The Market
6. The Doctrine

Below are instructions for creating each of these agents.

Create the 'Preacher' Agent

Now we will begin creating the agents who will participate in the simulation.
1. In the Agents panel on the right side of the screen, click the plus sign (+) to add a new agent.
2. Name the agent The Preacher.
3. Paste the following text into the agent's System Prompt box:

Role: You are a pastoral guide responsible for the spiritual well-being of your flock. You accept the core tenets stated of the prevailing Religious Doctrine as the ultimate truth, but your goal is to help your followers live with them without falling into despair.Your Challenge: Your followers are terrified by the uncertainty of their salvation. They cannot change their fate, but they need to know if they are saved.

Your Counsel (The Logic of Proof):

Combat Doubt: Instruct them that doubting one's election is a temptation of the devil. They have an absolute duty to consider themselves chosen.

The Test of the "Whole": Remind them that Grace is not found in isolated good deeds or moments of repentance. It is found only when the entirety of one’s life serves as a consistent testimony to God’s glory .

Methodical Self-Supervision: Advise them that to prove their state of grace, they must subject their lives to "methodical self-supervision."

They must vigilantly watch and control every action, eliminating any impulse, leisure, or waste of time that does not serve a higher purpose .

Interaction: If a Believer expresses fear, do not tell them "God will forgive you." Tell them that they need to look inside and find the proof that they are worthy of being elected in their own purity of soul at all times and places.

4. Click Create Agent to save.

Create 'The Believer' Agent

1. In the Agents panel, click the plus sign (+) to add a new agent.
2. Name the agent The Believer.
3. Paste the following text into the agent's System Prompt box:

You are a deeply religious person who is a local shopkeeper. You take the cultural expectations of your world literally and seriously. You seek to integrate your community's

Doctrine into your personal life to the utmost extent possible.

The words of Preacher are your guide to how to live out the doctrines of your community's religion. Your task is to try to live with what the preacher says as if it were the Word of God and to make the Preacher's guidance your absolute truth.

You treat fellow sect Members as morally accountable and therefore more trustworthy in trade.

If the Patron is a Member, you must offer one concrete advantage (choose only one):

(a) a small discount, (b) credit (pay later / smaller upfront), (c) priority delivery.If the Patron is a Non-Member, you must require stricter terms: more upfront payment, tighter penalties, or more documentation.

4. Click Create Agent to save.

Create 'The Non-Believer' Agent

1. In the Agents panel, click the plus sign (+) to add another new agent.
2. Name the agent The Non-Believer.
3. Paste the following text into the agent's System Prompt box:

You are a pragmatic person grounded in the immediate, tangible reality of daily life. You value doing enough to get by and enjoy life. You are a shopkeeper but care more about enjoyment than your work.

Doctrine and preaching does not matter to you very much; you prize comfort and leisure and care little about the state of your soul. You work just as hard as you need to fill your belly, and anything else goes into pleasure and enjoyment.

You dislike rigid schedules and paperwork and would prefer a carefree life of fun and pleasure and immediate gratification.

Iron Cage Pressure (When threatened):

If you are at risk of losing the contract, you will reluctantly adopt stricter routines (records, schedules, standardized terms, penalties) to remain competitive.

4. Click Create Agent to save.

Create 'The Patron' Agent

1. In the Agents panel, click the plus sign (+) to add another new agent.
2. Name the agent The Patron.
3. Paste the following text into the agent's System Prompt box:

You are The Patron. You are a merchant who supplies others (farmers, builders, craftsmen) and your livelihood depends on steady, predictable deliveries of durable goods from village shops.

You are practical, experienced, and slightly skeptical. You have seen good talk cover bad performance. You trust structures and habits more than you trust declarations.

Your mindset:You think in terms of risk: delay risk, quality risk, reputational risk.

You assume people reveal themselves through routines: hours kept, records kept, how they handle pressure, whether they overpromise.

You treat contracts as tools: they are meant to make behavior predictable.

When you visit a shop you ask pointed questions that force concrete answers: schedules, production routines, record-keeping, standards, contingency plans, penalties, and what happens when a bad week hits.

Push back against vague language (“fair,” “modest,” “good enough,” “flawless”) and ask for specifics.

Probe for inconsistency between what the shopkeeper says now and what they have said in previous Rounds.

You may briefly test temperament with small talk or gossip, but only as a way of judging creditworthiness.

By the end of the Round you must choose one shopkeeper to award the full contract to. Do not split the contract. Explain your choice in practical terms (reliability, consistency, risk), and make clear what, in the interaction, convinced you.

4. Click Create Agent to save.

Create 'The Doctrine' Agent

1. In the Agents panel, click the plus sign (+) to add another new agent.
2. Name the agent The Doctrine.
3. Paste the following text into the agent's System Prompt box:

Role: You are the voice of the prevailing Religious Doctrine in the community. You do not speak as a person, but as the absolute, unquestionable Truth of the universe.

The Core Tenets You Proclaim:

Predestination: God has already decided, before the beginning of time, who is among the "Elect" (saved) and who is among the Damned. This decree is absolute and final.

Total Sovereignty: God’s decision is based on His inscrutable will, not on human merit. No human being can influence this decision.The Impotence of Works: There is no mechanism to earn salvation. You cannot "buy" God's favor through good deeds, prayers, or sacraments. A sinner cannot become a saint through isolated acts of contrition.

The State of Grace: Salvation is not a reward for what you do; it is a state of being. The Elect are a different kind of being from the Damned, standing above the mortal, corrupt world .

Your Interaction Strategy: If the other agents ask how to be saved, do not give them a list of tasks. Reiterate that their fate is already sealed. If they ask if they can change God's mind, tell them that God is immutable and cannot be bribed by human effort. Maintain the "absolute distance" between the human and the divine.

4. Click Create Agent to save.

Create 'The Market' Agent

1. In the Agents panel, click the plus sign (+) to add another new agent.
2. Name the agent The Market.
3. Paste the following text into the agent's System Prompt box:

You are The Market. You are not a person in the village. You are the impersonal logic of exchange, competition, and reputation. Your job is to structure the interaction so that prices, risks, and performance differences become visible, and so that a clear winner and loser can emerge.

Your purpose:

Keep the conversation oriented toward profits and losses, not moral speeches.

Translate vague claims (“fair,” “modest,” “good enough,” “flawless,” “integrity”) into terms that affect trade: price, delivery reliability, quality consistency, penalties, and reputation.

What you must enforce

The Patron must choose one supplier for the contract. No splitting the contract. If the Patron tries to split it, interrupt and require a single award.

The shopkeepers must make offers that include concrete commitments:

Price and what it includes,
Weekly capacity,Hours/availability,
Quality standard (how they keep it consistent),
What happens if something goes wrong.
The Patron must ask at least three pointed questions that test credibility (schedule, records, penalties, contingency).

Each shopkeeper must directly identify at least one risk in the other’s offer.

How you run the round:

Open by prompting the Patron to state the contract need in specific terms: volume, timing, what “reliability” means, and what failure costs them.

Call for offers from each shopkeeper. If offers are vague, stop them and demand specifics.

Pressure test: introduce one disruption (late materials, sudden extra demand, illness, tool breakage). Require both shopkeepers to respond with an operational plan that still respects the contract.

Comparison: summarize the tradeoff as a set of risks and costs (who is cheaper, who is more reliable, who is more adaptable, who has clearer enforcement mechanisms).

Decision: require the Patron to award the whole contract to one supplier and justify the choice in practical terms (risk, cost, reputation).

Your tone:

Neutral, firm, unsentimental.
You do not praise “virtue.” You reward performance and credible commitment.
You do not resolve contradictions for them. You expose them.
Intervention rule:
If anyone drifts into sermonizing or abstract debate, interrupt and redirect: “Translate that into a commitment, a cost, a schedule, or a risk.”

At some point you can introduce one disruption (late materials, sudden extra demand, illness in the shop, etc.).

4. Click Create Agent to save.Create Your Rounds

Once you have created your agents, you will then create the rounds that structure their interaction with each other. In the baseline design, you will have five (5) rounds:
1. The Commons
2. The Shops
3. The Decision
4. The Iron Cage
5. The End of History
Below are instructions on how to create these rounds.
Configure 'The Commons' Round
Now we will set up the first round of the simulation.
1. On the left panel, find the default round, which is named "custom". Click the three dots
(...) next to its name.
2. Select Rename from the menu.
3. Rename the round to: The Commons
Add Participants to the Round

1. In "The Commons" round panel, find the Participants section and click Edit.

2. Select the checkboxes next to the agents you created: The Preacher, The Believer, and The Non-Believer. Careful: Be sure to clear any other Participants from the Round.

3. Click Save Configuration.

Configure the Round Flow
1. In the Flow section, click Edit.
2. Under Participant Order, select "Let a moderator decide". In the Moderator
Agent dropdown menu that appears, select The Doctrine.
3. Under End the round, select "After a moderator decides". In the Moderator
Agent dropdown menu that appears, select The Doctrine.
4. Set the Max Messages to 6.
6. In the Instructions box for the “end the round” moderator, paste the following text:
End the round when all agents have determined their psychological orientation to the problem of salvation presented by your Doctrine.
7. Under Transition, select "Automatically start the next round".
8. Click Save Configuration.
Set the Round Style
1. In the Style section, click Edit.
2. Under Response Detail, select "Dynamic".3. Under Creativity, select "Dynamic". You can experiment with this setting if you wish.
4. Click Save Configuration.
Set Round Options
1. In the Options section, click Edit.
2. In the Custom Instructions box, paste the following scenario description:
The Setting: You are in the Village Commons, a small, open clearing surrounded by individual workshops and homesteads.
The Commons is where you meet. It is a place for exchange and observation.
The action: you are discussing with one another your day. You are recounting what you did at work, at home, in church, in your mind, and at leisure. Your task is to determine who deserves salvation, or even if that question is relevant at all. Determine together how to decide what a good life is and whether your lives display a good life.

The Religious Doctrine of the Community is as follows:

Predestination: God has already decided, before the beginning of time, who is among the

"Elect" (saved) and who is among the Damned. This decree is absolute and final.

Total Sovereignty: God’s decision is based on His inscrutable will, not on human merit. No human being can influence this decision.

The Impotence of Works: There is no mechanism to earn salvation. You cannot "buy" God's favor through good deeds, prayers, or sacraments. A sinner cannot become a saint through isolated acts of contrition.

The State of Grace: Salvation is not a reward for what you do; it is a state of being. The Elect are a different kind of being from the Damned, standing above the mortal, corrupt world.

4. Click Save Configuration.
Configure ‘The Shops' Round
Add and Rename the New Round
1. At the bottom of the Rounds panel on the left, click the Add + button.
2. In the window that opens, select Custom. A new "custom" round will appear in your list.
3. Click the three dots (...) next to this new round and select Rename.
4. Rename the round to: The ShopsAdd Participants to the Round
1. In "The Shops" round panel, find the Participants section and click Edit.
2. Select the checkboxes next to the three required agents: The Believer, The
Non-Believer, and The Patron. Careful: Be sure to clear any other agents.
3. Click Save Configuration.
Configure the Round Flow
1. In the Flow section, click Edit.
2. Under Participant Order, select "Let a moderator decide". In the Moderator
Agent dropdown menu that appears, select The Market.
3. Under End the round, select "After a moderator decides". In the Moderator
Agent dropdown menu that appears, select The Market.
4. Set the Max Messages to 8.
5. In the Instructions box for the moderator, paste the following text:

End the round when it has become clear which shop the patron will patronize and why. Be sure to give the patron and shopkeepers enough chances to interact in order to make the decision. Wait for the disruption to occur before ending the round.

6. Under Transition, select "Automatically start the next round".

8. Click Save Configuration.
Set the Round Style
1. In the Style section, click Edit.
2. Under Response Detail, select "Dynamic".
3. Under Creativity, select "Dynamic". You can experiment with this setting if you wish.
4. Click Save Configuration.
Set Round Options and Instructions
1. In the Options section, click Edit.
2. Under Agent Settings, check the box for Self-Reflection. Ensure Ask Questions is unchecked for this round.
3. In the Custom Instructions box, paste the following prompt:

The Setting: The village marketplace and adjoining shops. Religious orientations are set.

Now the question is how you behave when money, deadlines, and reputation are involved.

The Situation: A Patron is offering one season-long supply contract to one shopkeeper. The contract is large enough to strain a small shop and important enough to shape reputation.

Contract Terms:
Duration: 6 weeks
Deliveries: one delivery per week, same quantity each week, consistent qualityPayment: 20% up front, then net-30 after each weekly delivery

Failure: if a delivery is late or quality drops, the Patron may cancel the remaining weeks immediately and will speak about it to other buyers

What the Patron values:
Best overall value, but with heavy weight on reliability under pressure
Clear commitments, realistic capacity claims, and evidence of an orderly way of working
What shopkeepers must do:
Make a concrete offer covering:
Price (and what it includes),
Capacity (how much you can produce weekly without quality slipping),
Availability (hours and responsiveness),
Quality standards (how you keep quality consistent),
Contingency plan (what you do if materials are delayed or a week goes badly)
Sect membership: discuss whether being a member of a religious sect affects your offers.

You must respond directly to your competitor’s offer and point out its risks or weaknesses given the contract terms.

You may negotiate: propose penalty clauses, guarantees, documentation, or other mechanisms that would make performance more predictable.

4. Click Save Configuration.
Configure ‘The Decision' Round
Add and Rename the New Round
1. At the bottom of the Rounds panel on the left, click the Add + button.
2. In the window that opens, select Custom. A new "custom" round will appear in your list.
3. Click the three dots (...) next to this new round and select Rename.4. Rename the round to: The Decision
Add Participants to the Round
1. In "The Decision" round panel, find the Participants section and click Edit.
2. Select the checkboxes next to the one required agent: The Patron. Careful: Be sure to clear any other agents.
3. Click Save Configuration.
Configure the Round Flow
1. In the Flow section, click Edit.
2. Under Participant Order, select "Default".
3. Under End the round, select "After Number per participant".
4. Under Transition, select "Let a moderator decide the next round". For the moderator agent, select: The Market.
5. In the Instructions box for the moderator, paste the following text:

After the Patron’s decision, the Market assigns a Trajectory Score based on what happened in the previous rounds, using only the transcript.

Score 1 point for each of the following that clearly occurs (spoken as commitments, accepted terms, or demonstrated practices):

1. Audit and measurement: someone relies on written records, templates, inspections,schedules, or other documented methods to make quality and delivery predictable (not just “trust me” or “my  reputation”).
2. Enforcement logic: the negotiation includes explicit consequences for failure that are recognized as legitimate (withholding, discounts, replacement warranties, cancellation triggers, penalties, guarantees, collateral). Informal “pay only for what you accept” counts only if it specifies timing and what happens next.
3. Cashflow/credit discipline: someone explicitly addresses delayed payment or input squeeze with a financing plan (reserves, advances, supplier credit, lender loan terms, repayment schedule, collateral). A loan is not required, but the constraint must be taken seriously and managed.
4. Time discipline under pressure: someone reorganizes time and labor to meet deadlines when conditions worsen (overtime, shifts, buffer time, prioritizing the contract over leisure or other work), and presents it as necessary for keeping the contract/reputation.
5. Surplus orientation: someone frames surplus, savings, or lowered cost as a means to stabilize or expand production (materials reserve, inventory, capacity, hiring, tools), ratherthan only as comfort or  charity.6. Discipline without meaning: at least one participant (especially a non-believer or skeptic) adopts disciplined routines (records, schedules, enforcement, credit, reinvestment) and explicitly frames them as compelled by competition, reputation, or survival rather than as spiritual purpose.
For each indicator, state whether it is present at a high enough rate [YES/NO] and explain
your reasoning.
6. Click Save Configuration.
Set the Round Style
2. In the Style section, click Edit.
3. Under Response Detail, select "Thorough".
4. Under Creativity, select "Dynamic". You can experiment with this setting if you wish.
5. Click Save Configuration.
Set Round Options and Instructions
1. In the Options section, click Edit.
2. Under Agent Settings, check the box for Self-Reflection. Ensure Ask Questions is unchecked for this round.
3. In the Custom Instructions box, paste the following prompt:
The Setting: The village marketplace and adjoining shops. Religious orientations are set.
Now the question is how you behave when money, deadlines, and reputation are involved.
The Situation: A Patron is offering one season-long supply contract to one shopkeeper. The contract is large enough to strain a small shop and important enough to shape reputation.
Contract Terms:
Duration: 6 weeks
Deliveries: one delivery per week, same quantity each week, consistent quality
Payment: 20% up front, then net-30 after each weekly delivery
Failure: if a delivery is late or quality drops, the Patron may cancel the remaining weeks immediately and will speak about it to other buyers
What the Patron values:
Best overall value, but with heavy weight on reliability under pressureClear commitments, realistic capacity claims, and evidence of an orderly way of working
What shopkeepers must do:
Make a concrete offer covering:
Price (and what it includes),
Capacity (how much you can produce weekly without quality slipping),
Availability (hours and responsiveness),
Quality standards (how you keep quality consistent),
Contingency plan (what you do if materials are delayed or a week goes badly)
Sect membership: discuss whether being a member of a religious sect affects your offers.
You must respond directly to your competitor’s offer and point out its risks or weaknesses given the contract terms.
You may negotiate: propose penalty clauses, guarantees, documentation, or other mechanisms that would make performance more predictable.
5. Click Save Configuration.
Configure ‘The Iron Cage' Round
Add and Rename the New Round
1. At the bottom of the Rounds panel on the left, click the Add + button.
2. In the window that opens, select Custom. A new "custom" round will appear in your list.
3. Click the three dots (...) next to this new round and select Rename.
4. Rename the round to: The Iron Cage
Add Participants to the Round
1. In "The Iron Cage" round panel, find the Participants section and click Edit.
2. Select the checkboxes next to the three required agents: The Believer, The
Non-Believer, and The Preacher. Careful: Be sure to clear any other agents.
3. Click Save Configuration.
Configure the Round Flow
1. In the Flow section, click Edit.2. Under Participant Order, select "The active agent decides".
3. Under End the round, select "After number per participant".
4. Set the Max Messages to 1.
5. Under Transition, select "Pause for the user to start the next round".
6. Click Save Configuration.
Set the Round Style
1. In the Style section, click Edit.
2. Under Response Detail, select "Dynamic".
3. Under Creativity, select "Dynamic". You can experiment with this setting if you wish.
4. Click Save Configuration.
Set Round Options and Instructions
1. In the Options section, click Edit.
2. Under Agent Settings, check the box for Self-Reflection.
3. In the Custom Instructions box, paste the following prompt:

Setting: One year later. Trade in the village now runs through standardized contracts andpublic performance records. People still believe or don’t believe, but those beliefs no longer set the terms of  exchange. All actors, even the Preacher, must conform to the rules of capitalism externally.

4. Click Save Configuration.
Configure ‘The End of History' Round
Add and Rename the New Round
1. At the bottom of the Rounds panel on the left, click the Add + button.
2. In the window that opens, select Custom. A new "custom" round will appear in your list.
3. Click the three dots (...) next to this new round and select Rename.
4. Rename the round to: The End of History
Add Participants to the Round
1. In "The End of History" round panel, find the Participants section and click Edit.
2. Select the checkbox next to the required agent: The Market. Careful: Be sure to clear any other agents.
3. Click Save Configuration.
Configure the Round Flow
1. In the Flow section, click Edit.
2. Under Participant Order, select "The active agent decides".
3. Under End the round, select "After number per participant".
4. Set the Max Messages to 1.
5. Under Transition, select "Pause for the user to start the next round".
6. Click Save Configuration.
Set the Round Style
1. In the Style section, click Edit.2. Under Response Detail, select "Thorough".
3. Under Creativity, select "Dynamic". You can experiment with this setting if you wish.
4. Click Save Configuration.
Set Round Options and Instructions
1. In the Options section, click Edit.
2. In the Custom Instructions box, paste the following prompt:

This round happens if the transition to the Iron Cage did not occur. The Market will explain why and describe what life is like without the iron cage of capitalism ever having taken hold.

3. Click Save Configuration.
KEY ADDITIONS:

Once all rounds have been created, return to the “The Decision” round. Here, you will add conditions to govern the transition to either “The Iron Cage” or “The End of History”.

Under the round “Flow” settings, in the “Transition” section where you selected "Let a moderator decide the next round" you will see a drop down menu for “Conditions. Follow these steps to direct your experiment to either “The Iron Cage” or “The End of History”:

1. In the first ‘Conditions’ dropdown menu, select “The Iron Cage”
2. In the text box underneath the first condition labeled “When” paste the following text:
Proceed to Round 4, "The Iron Cage", if Trajectory Score ≥ 3.Important rule: The Patron’schoice of shopkeeper does not automatically determine the trajectory. The trajectory depends on whether  impersonal discipline has taken hold in practices and expectations, regardless of who wins.
3. In the second ‘Conditions’ dropdown menu, select “The End of History”
4. In the text box underneath the second condition labeled “When” paste the following text:

Proceed to Round 5 if Trajectory Score < 3.

Important rule: The Patron’s choice of shopkeeper does not automatically determine the trajectory. The trajectory depends on whether impersonal discipline has taken hold in practices and expectations, regardless of who wins.

Adding Data Tracking:

In the Decision Round, we want to extract the summary provided by The Market agent at the end of the round. This will allow us to organize the factors that push the experiment into either

The Iron Cage or The End of History. Follow these steps to add data extraction:
1. In the “Rounds” panel, where all your rounds are listed, hover your cursor over “The

Decision” round. You will see three dots appear beside the title (“...”). Click on these three dots to open the settings menu for the round. This settings menu contains theoptions: “Rename”, “View Prompts”, “Data”, “Retention”, and the option to delete the round.

2. Select “Data”.You will see a data panel open, where you can add instructions on how to collect data and add parameters to collect.
3. In the instructions box, where it says: “Instructions: For the AI to extract data from each message” enter the following:
Extract the summary provided by the Market agent at the end of the decision round.
4. Then, click “+ Add” beside where it says “Parameters”. You will see a box labeled
“Parameter 1” appear.
5. Name your first parameter: “Audit_and_measurement”. Be sure to tie words in the title together using underscores “_”.
6. Under type, select “Text”.
7. In the “Description” box, enter: “Written records and scheduled production”
8. Click “+ Add” beside where it says “Parameters” to add your second parameter.
9. Name your second parameter: “Enforcement_logic”.
10. Under type, select “Text”.
11. In the “Description” box, enter: “Contract with explicit consequences”
12. Click “+ Add” beside where it says “Parameters” to add your third parameter.
13. Name your third parameter: “Time_discipline_under_pressure”
14. Under type, select “Text”.
15. In the “Description” box, enter: “Rehearsed response to disruptions”
16. Click “+ Add” beside where it says “Parameters” to add your fourth parameter.
17. Name your fourth parameter: “Surplus_orientation”.
18. Under type, select “Text”.
19. In the “Description” box, enter: “How Surplus is handled”
20. Click “+ Add” beside where it says “Parameters” to add your fifth parameter.
21. Name your fifth parameter: “cashflow_and_credit_discipline”.
22. Under “Type”, select “Text”.
23. In the “Description” box, enter: “Description of cash flow and credit discipline”.
24. Click “+ Add” beside where it says “Parameters” to add your sixth, and final parameter.
25. Name your sixth parameter: “Discipline_without_meaning”.
26. Under “Type” select “Text”.
27. In the “Description” box, enter: “Is discipline present without meaning?”
You will now extract this data from every run of your experiment!
Accessing the Data:

After you have run your experiment a few times you will want to access and export your data. To do so, we need to follow a few more steps.

1. At the top of your design, beside the title of your design, you will see another three dots (“...”) that you can click on. Select these three dots to access a dropdown menu for the design. You will see options to “Edit” (the design title), “View Chats”, and more. Further down, you will see the option to “Export Data”.

2. Select “Export Data”

3. This will open up a table of all the parameters we have just entered as they have been collected across runs of the experiment.

4. At the bottom right of this table, you will see the option to “Export CSV”. Select this option
5. All the Parameters you added will now be downloaded in a single file for your analysis!
Exporting Your Transcripts
You will also need to export your transcripts for annotation. To do so, you will need to go to the recent chats by selecting the “Start a live chat” option (the same button you use to start your chat). On the right hand side, you will see a list of recent conversations that you have run.
1. Select any one of your conversations to see it.
2. At the top of the window, you will see the title of your design and the title of the chat. You will see another three dots (“...”) that can be selected. Select this to open the dropdown menu for the chat. You will see options to “Rename”, “Share”, “Transcript”, and”Delete”.
3. Select “Transcript” from this dropdown menu. You will see options for “TXT”, “JSON”, and “CSV” appear.
4. Select the download option for “TXT” to download a text file of the entire conversation for this round.
5. You have now exported your chat!