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RAG

Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) is a task that combines the strengths of both retrieval-based models and generation-based models. In this approach, a retrieval system selects relevant documents or passages from a large corpus, and a generation model, typically a neural language model, uses the retrieved information to generate a response. This method enhances the accuracy and coherence of generated text, especially in tasks requiring detailed knowledge or long context handling.

RAG is particularly useful in open-domain question answering, knowledge-grounded dialogue, and summarization tasks. The retrieval step helps the model to access and incorporate external information, making it less reliant on memorized knowledge and better suited for generating responses based on the latest or domain-specific information.

The performance of RAG systems is usually measured using metrics such as precision, recall, F1 score, BLEU score, and exact match. Some popular datasets for evaluating RAG models include Natural Questions, MS MARCO, TriviaQA, and SQuAD.

Papers

Showing 13011310 of 2111 papers

TitleStatusHype
StructRAG: Boosting Knowledge Intensive Reasoning of LLMs via Inference-time Hybrid Information StructurizationCode2
Retriever-and-Memory: Towards Adaptive Note-Enhanced Retrieval-Augmented GenerationCode2
Increasing the Difficulty of Automatically Generated Questions via Reinforcement Learning with Synthetic Preference0
No Free Lunch: Retrieval-Augmented Generation Undermines Fairness in LLMs, Even for Vigilant Users0
Do You Know What You Are Talking About? Characterizing Query-Knowledge Relevance For Reliable Retrieval Augmented Generation0
News Reporter: A Multi-lingual LLM Framework for Broadcast T.V News0
KRAG Framework for Enhancing LLMs in the Legal Domain0
TurboRAG: Accelerating Retrieval-Augmented Generation with Precomputed KV Caches for Chunked TextCode2
Context-Augmented Code Generation Using Programming Knowledge Graphs0
Astute RAG: Overcoming Imperfect Retrieval Augmentation and Knowledge Conflicts for Large Language Models0
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