Artur Nowak

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2papers

2 Papers

CLSep 23, 2025Code
Are Smaller Open-Weight LLMs Closing the Gap to Proprietary Models for Biomedical Question Answering?

Damian Stachura, Joanna Konieczna, Artur Nowak

Open-weight versions of large language models (LLMs) are rapidly advancing, with state-of-the-art models like DeepSeek-V3 now performing comparably to proprietary LLMs. This progression raises the question of whether small open-weight LLMs are capable of effectively replacing larger closed-source models. We are particularly interested in the context of biomedical question-answering, a domain we explored by participating in Task 13B Phase B of the BioASQ challenge. In this work, we compare several open-weight models against top-performing systems such as GPT-4o, GPT-4.1, Claude 3.5 Sonnet, and Claude 3.7 Sonnet. To enhance question answering capabilities, we use various techniques including retrieving the most relevant snippets based on embedding distance, in-context learning, and structured outputs. For certain submissions, we utilize ensemble approaches to leverage the diverse outputs generated by different models for exact-answer questions. Our results demonstrate that open-weight LLMs are comparable to proprietary ones. In some instances, open-weight LLMs even surpassed their closed counterparts, particularly when ensembling strategies were applied. All code is publicly available at https://github.com/evidenceprime/BioASQ-13b.

CLJan 7, 2019
Team EP at TAC 2018: Automating data extraction in systematic reviews of environmental agents

Artur Nowak, Paweł Kunstman

We describe our entry for the Systematic Review Information Extraction track of the 2018 Text Analysis Conference. Our solution is an end-to-end, deep learning, sequence tagging model based on the BI-LSTM-CRF architecture. However, we use interleaved, alternating LSTM layers with highway connections instead of the more traditional approach, where last hidden states of both directions are concatenated to create an input to the next layer. We also make extensive use of pre-trained word embeddings, namely GloVe and ELMo. Thanks to a number of regularization techniques, we were able to achieve relatively large capacity of the model (31.3M+ of trainable parameters) for the size of training set (100 documents, less than 200K tokens). The system's official score was 60.9% (micro-F1) and it ranked first for the Task 1. Additionally, after rectifying an obvious mistake in the submission format, the system scored 67.35%.