Suyash Maniyar

h-index13
2papers

2 Papers

CLFeb 25
Enhancing Legal LLMs through Metadata-Enriched RAG Pipelines and Direct Preference Optimization

Suyash Maniyar, Deepali Singh, Rohith Reddy

Large Language Models (LLMs) perform well in short contexts but degrade on long legal documents, often producing hallucinations such as incorrect clauses or precedents. In the legal domain, where precision is critical, such errors undermine reliability and trust. Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) helps ground outputs but remains limited in legal settings, especially with small, locally deployed models required for data privacy. We identify two failure modes: retrieval errors due to lexical redundancy in legal corpora, and decoding errors where models generate answers despite insufficient context. To address this, we propose Metadata Enriched Hybrid RAG to improve document level retrieval, and apply Direct Preference Optimization (DPO) to enforce safe refusal when context is inadequate. Together, these methods improve grounding, reliability, and safety in legal language models.

CVJun 30, 2025
AI-Generated Lecture Slides for Improving Slide Element Detection and Retrieval

Suyash Maniyar, Vishvesh Trivedi, Ajoy Mondal et al.

Lecture slide element detection and retrieval are key problems in slide understanding. Training effective models for these tasks often depends on extensive manual annotation. However, annotating large volumes of lecture slides for supervised training is labor intensive and requires domain expertise. To address this, we propose a large language model (LLM)-guided synthetic lecture slide generation pipeline, SynLecSlideGen, which produces high-quality, coherent and realistic slides. We also create an evaluation benchmark, namely RealSlide by manually annotating 1,050 real lecture slides. To assess the utility of our synthetic slides, we perform few-shot transfer learning on real data using models pre-trained on them. Experimental results show that few-shot transfer learning with pretraining on synthetic slides significantly improves performance compared to training only on real data. This demonstrates that synthetic data can effectively compensate for limited labeled lecture slides. The code and resources of our work are publicly available on our project website: https://synslidegen.github.io/.