TasksSotADatasetsPapersMethodsSubmitAbout
Papers With Code 2

A community resource for machine learning research: papers, code, benchmarks, and state-of-the-art results.

Explore

Notable BenchmarksAll SotADatasetsPapersMethods

Community

Submit ResultsAbout

Data sourced from the PWC Archive (CC-BY-SA 4.0). Built by the community, for the community.

Papers/Long-context Non-factoid Question Answering in Indic Langu...

Long-context Non-factoid Question Answering in Indic Languages

Ritwik Mishra, Rajiv Ratn Shah, Ponnurangam Kumaraguru

2025-04-18Question Answeringcoreference-resolutionCoreference ResolutionOpen Information Extraction
PaperPDFCode(official)

Abstract

Question Answering (QA) tasks, which involve extracting answers from a given context, are relatively straightforward for modern Large Language Models (LLMs) when the context is short. However, long contexts pose challenges due to the quadratic complexity of the self-attention mechanism. This challenge is compounded in Indic languages, which are often low-resource. This study explores context-shortening techniques, including Open Information Extraction (OIE), coreference resolution, Answer Paragraph Selection (APS), and their combinations, to improve QA performance. Compared to the baseline of unshortened (long) contexts, our experiments on four Indic languages (Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, and Urdu) demonstrate that context-shortening techniques yield an average improvement of 4\% in semantic scores and 47\% in token-level scores when evaluated on three popular LLMs without fine-tuning. Furthermore, with fine-tuning, we achieve an average increase of 2\% in both semantic and token-level scores. Additionally, context-shortening reduces computational overhead. Explainability techniques like LIME and SHAP reveal that when the APS model confidently identifies the paragraph containing the answer, nearly all tokens within the selected text receive high relevance scores. However, the study also highlights the limitations of LLM-based QA systems in addressing non-factoid questions, particularly those requiring reasoning or debate. Moreover, verbalizing OIE-generated triples does not enhance system performance. These findings emphasize the potential of context-shortening techniques to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of LLM-based QA systems, especially for low-resource languages. The source code and resources are available at https://github.com/ritwikmishra/IndicGenQA.

Related Papers

From Roots to Rewards: Dynamic Tree Reasoning with RL2025-07-17Enter the Mind Palace: Reasoning and Planning for Long-term Active Embodied Question Answering2025-07-17Vision-and-Language Training Helps Deploy Taxonomic Knowledge but Does Not Fundamentally Alter It2025-07-17City-VLM: Towards Multidomain Perception Scene Understanding via Multimodal Incomplete Learning2025-07-17Describe Anything Model for Visual Question Answering on Text-rich Images2025-07-16Is This Just Fantasy? Language Model Representations Reflect Human Judgments of Event Plausibility2025-07-16Warehouse Spatial Question Answering with LLM Agent2025-07-14Evaluating Attribute Confusion in Fashion Text-to-Image Generation2025-07-09