Ruobing Yao

h-index5
2papers

2 Papers

CVJun 14, 2024Code
First Multi-Dimensional Evaluation of Flowchart Comprehension for Multimodal Large Language Models

Enming Zhang, Ruobing Yao, Huanyong Liu et al.

With the development of Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) technology, its general capabilities are increasingly powerful. To evaluate the various abilities of MLLMs, numerous evaluation systems have emerged. But now there is still a lack of a comprehensive method to evaluate MLLMs in the tasks related to flowcharts, which are very important in daily life and work. We propose the first comprehensive method, FlowCE, to assess MLLMs across various dimensions for tasks related to flowcharts. It encompasses evaluating MLLMs' abilities in Reasoning, Localization Recognition, Information Extraction, Logical Verification, and Summarization on flowcharts. However, we find that even the GPT4o model achieves only a score of 56.63. Among open-source models, Phi-3-Vision obtained the highest score of 49.97. We hope that FlowCE can contribute to future research on MLLMs for tasks based on flowcharts. \url{https://github.com/360AILABNLP/FlowCE}

CLFeb 12, 2025
ParetoRAG: Leveraging Sentence-Context Attention for Robust and Efficient Retrieval-Augmented Generation

Ruobing Yao, Yifei Zhang, Shuang Song et al.

While Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) systems enhance Large Language Models (LLMs) by incorporating external knowledge, they still face persistent challenges in retrieval inefficiency and the inability of LLMs to filter out irrelevant information. We present ParetoRAG, an unsupervised framework that optimizes RAG systems through sentence-level refinement guided by the Pareto principle. By decomposing paragraphs into sentences and dynamically re-weighting core content while preserving contextual coherence, ParetoRAG achieves dual improvements in both retrieval precision and generation quality without requiring additional training or API resources. This framework has been empirically validated across various datasets, LLMs, and retrievers.