Grigorios Alexandrou

2papers

2 Papers

40.5MAMay 13
A Multi-Agent Orchestration Framework for Venture Capital Due Diligence

Grigorios Alexandrou, Katerina Pramatari

We present a fully automated multi-agent framework for corporate due diligence and market analysis in venture capital. The system runs on an event-driven orchestration architecture, combining Large Language Models (LLMs) with real-time web retrieval to synthesize unstructured data into structured investment intelligence. A central technical contribution is a programmatic extraction pipeline that reverse-engineers the frontend-to-backend communication of the Greek Business Registry ($Γ$.E.MH.), querying dynamic endpoints to retrieve official financial filings that are then parsed using a layout-aware OCR extractor. A structural fallback mechanism explicitly flags data absence rather than generating unverified figures, directly targeting hallucination in financial contexts. All workflow artifacts are publicly available to support replication.

52.3DLMay 12
Citation Cliques in Low Impact Journals

Panagiotis-Alexios Spanakis, Grigorios Alexandrou, Diomidis Spinellis

This exploratory study examines how low-impact journals, defined through subject-normalized Eigenfactor percentiles, are associated with denser and more reciprocating patterns of author-to-author citations. Using Crossref records, we assign journals to broad subject areas, compute subject-specific Eigenfactor scores, propagate venue quality to works and authors, match authors in low- (Case) versus high-influence (Control) venues by subject and h5, and analyze citation edges for cohesion and anomalies. Across a 10% sample of 9,431 matched pairs, authors in low-impact venues exhibit significantly higher cohesion: 6.7x higher co-author citation rates and 4.7x higher reciprocity in the aggregate Case-Control comparison. A subject-aware hybrid detection pipeline flags 277 outliers with 93.5% Case purity; these outliers display an 11x clique-strength lift relative to non-outliers, revealing a stark "Two Worlds" segregation (r = 0.71) where low-impact venues operate as closed citation economies. The largest detected component (n = 23) displays a hub-and-spoke topology in which peripheral "Sycophants" funnel citations to central "Beneficiaries" through coordinated bursts, confirming a directed flow imbalance rather than reciprocal exchange among equals. Overall, cohesion, rather than broad asymmetry, accounts for the main Case-Control differences, suggesting that low-impact venues foster segregated, inward-looking citation economies that distort bibliometric indicators.