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Weihang Su

Weihang Su contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

4 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Decoupling Knowledge and Task Subspaces for Composable Parametric Retrieval Augmented Generation

Parametric Retrieval-Augmented Generation (PRAG) encodes external documents into lightweight parameter modules that can be retrieved and merged at inference time, offering a promising alternative to in-context retrieval augmentation. Despite its potential, many PRAG implementations train document adapters with task-supervised objectives, which may cause each adapter to encode both document-specific facts and reusable task-solving behavior. This entanglement may make adapter composition less reliable: when multiple adapters are merged at inference time, their overlapping task behaviors can accumulate together with document-specific updates, potentially making the merged adapter less stable and less focused on the intended document knowledge. To examine this issue, we explore Orthogonal Subspace Decomposition (OSD), an adapter-training setup that separates reusable task behavior from document-specific knowledge adapters. Concretely, we first train a Task LoRA to capture reusable task behavior, and then train document LoRAs to encode document-specific knowledge in a orthogonal subspace. This setup provides a controlled way to examine how orthogonalizing task and document LoRA updates affects adapter composition in multi-document PRAG. Experiments across multiple knowledge-intensive tasks and model scales suggest that this orthogonalization strategy can improve compositional robustness in parametric RAG, especially when multiple document adapters are merged.

preprint2026arXiv

Enhancing Judgment Document Generation via Agentic Legal Information Collection and Rubric-Guided Optimization

Automating the drafting of judgment documents is pivotal to judicial efficiency, yet it remains challenging due to the dual requirements of comprehensive retrieval of legal information and rigorous logical reasoning. Existing approaches, typically relying on standard Retrieval-Augmented Generation and Supervised Fine-Tuning, often suffer from insufficient evidence recall, hallucinated statutory references, and logically flawed legal reasoning. To bridge this gap, we propose Judge-R1, a unified framework designed to enhance LLM-based judgment document generation by jointly improving legal information collection and judgment document generation. First, we introduce Agentic Legal Information Collection, which employs a dynamic planning agent to retrieve precise statutes and precedents from multiple sources. Second, we implement Rubric-Guided Optimization, a reinforcement learning phase utilizing Group Relative Policy Optimization (GRPO) with a comprehensive legal reward function to enforce adherence to judicial standards and reasoning logic. Extensive experiments on the JuDGE benchmark demonstrate that Judge-R1 significantly outperforms state-of-the-art baselines in both legal accuracy and generation quality.

preprint2024arXiv

Caseformer: Pre-training for Legal Case Retrieval Based on Inter-Case Distinctions

Legal case retrieval aims to help legal workers find relevant cases related to their cases at hand, which is important for the guarantee of fairness and justice in legal judgments. While recent advances in neural retrieval methods have significantly improved the performance of open-domain retrieval tasks (e.g., Web search), their advantages have not been observed in legal case retrieval due to their thirst for annotated data. As annotating large-scale training data in legal domains is prohibitive due to the need for domain expertise, traditional search techniques based on lexical matching such as TF-IDF, BM25, and Query Likelihood are still prevalent in legal case retrieval systems. While previous studies have designed several pre-training methods for IR models in open-domain tasks, these methods are usually suboptimal in legal case retrieval because they cannot understand and capture the key knowledge and data structures in the legal corpus. To this end, we propose a novel pre-training framework named Caseformer that enables the pre-trained models to learn legal knowledge and domain-specific relevance information in legal case retrieval without any human-labeled data. Through three unsupervised learning tasks, Caseformer is able to capture the special language, document structure, and relevance patterns of legal case documents, making it a strong backbone for downstream legal case retrieval tasks. Experimental results show that our model has achieved state-of-the-art performance in both zero-shot and full-data fine-tuning settings. Also, experiments on both Chinese and English legal datasets demonstrate that the effectiveness of Caseformer is language-independent in legal case retrieval.

preprint2024arXiv

Wikiformer: Pre-training with Structured Information of Wikipedia for Ad-hoc Retrieval

With the development of deep learning and natural language processing techniques, pre-trained language models have been widely used to solve information retrieval (IR) problems. Benefiting from the pre-training and fine-tuning paradigm, these models achieve state-of-the-art performance. In previous works, plain texts in Wikipedia have been widely used in the pre-training stage. However, the rich structured information in Wikipedia, such as the titles, abstracts, hierarchical heading (multi-level title) structure, relationship between articles, references, hyperlink structures, and the writing organizations, has not been fully explored. In this paper, we devise four pre-training objectives tailored for IR tasks based on the structured knowledge of Wikipedia. Compared to existing pre-training methods, our approach can better capture the semantic knowledge in the training corpus by leveraging the human-edited structured data from Wikipedia. Experimental results on multiple IR benchmark datasets show the superior performance of our model in both zero-shot and fine-tuning settings compared to existing strong retrieval baselines. Besides, experimental results in biomedical and legal domains demonstrate that our approach achieves better performance in vertical domains compared to previous models, especially in scenarios where long text similarity matching is needed.