Pawan Kumar Rajpoot


2024

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Adapting LLM to Multi-lingual ESG Impact and Length Prediction Using In-context Learning and Fine-Tuning with Rationale
Pawan Kumar Rajpoot | Ashvini Jindal | Ankur Parikh
Proceedings of the Joint Workshop of the 7th Financial Technology and Natural Language Processing, the 5th Knowledge Discovery from Unstructured Data in Financial Services, and the 4th Workshop on Economics and Natural Language Processing

The prediction of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) impact and duration (length) of impact from company events, as reported in news articles, hold immense significance for investors, policymakers, and various stakeholders. In this paper, we describe solutions from our team “Upaya” to ESG impact and length prediction tasks on one such dataset ML-ESG-3. ML-ESG-3 dataset was released along with shared task as a part of the Fifth Workshop on Knowledge Discovery from Unstructured Data in Financial Services, co-located with LREC-COLING 2024. We employed two different paradigms to adapt Large Language Models (LLMs) to predict both the ESG impact and length of events. In the first approach, we leverage GPT-4 within the In-context learning (ICL) framework. A learning-free dense retriever identifies top K-relevant In-context learning examples from the training data for a given test example. The second approach involves instruction-tuning Mistral (7B) LLM to predict impact and duration, supplemented with rationale generated using GPT-4. Our models secured second place in French tasks and achieved reasonable results (fifth and ninth rank) in English tasks. These results demonstrate the potential of different LLM-based paradigms for delivering valuable insights within the ESG investing landscape.

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Upaya at the FinLLM Challenge Task 1 and 2: DistFin: Distillation based Fine-Tuning for Financial Tasks
Ashvini Kumar Jindal | Pawan Kumar Rajpoot | Ankur Parikh
Proceedings of the Eighth Financial Technology and Natural Language Processing and the 1st Agent AI for Scenario Planning

2023

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NL-Augmenter: A Framework for Task-Sensitive Natural Language Augmentation
Kaustubh Dhole | Varun Gangal | Sebastian Gehrmann | Aadesh Gupta | Zhenhao Li | Saad Mahamood | Abinaya Mahadiran | Simon Mille | Ashish Shrivastava | Samson Tan | Tongshang Wu | Jascha Sohl-Dickstein | Jinho Choi | Eduard Hovy | Ondřej Dušek | Sebastian Ruder | Sajant Anand | Nagender Aneja | Rabin Banjade | Lisa Barthe | Hanna Behnke | Ian Berlot-Attwell | Connor Boyle | Caroline Brun | Marco Antonio Sobrevilla Cabezudo | Samuel Cahyawijaya | Emile Chapuis | Wanxiang Che | Mukund Choudhary | Christian Clauss | Pierre Colombo | Filip Cornell | Gautier Dagan | Mayukh Das | Tanay Dixit | Thomas Dopierre | Paul-Alexis Dray | Suchitra Dubey | Tatiana Ekeinhor | Marco Di Giovanni | Tanya Goyal | Rishabh Gupta | Louanes Hamla | Sang Han | Fabrice Harel-Canada | Antoine Honoré | Ishan Jindal | Przemysław Joniak | Denis Kleyko | Venelin Kovatchev | Kalpesh Krishna | Ashutosh Kumar | Stefan Langer | Seungjae Ryan Lee | Corey James Levinson | Hualou Liang | Kaizhao Liang | Zhexiong Liu | Andrey Lukyanenko | Vukosi Marivate | Gerard de Melo | Simon Meoni | Maxine Meyer | Afnan Mir | Nafise Sadat Moosavi | Niklas Meunnighoff | Timothy Sum Hon Mun | Kenton Murray | Marcin Namysl | Maria Obedkova | Priti Oli | Nivranshu Pasricha | Jan Pfister | Richard Plant | Vinay Prabhu | Vasile Pais | Libo Qin | Shahab Raji | Pawan Kumar Rajpoot | Vikas Raunak | Roy Rinberg | Nicholas Roberts | Juan Diego Rodriguez | Claude Roux | Vasconcellos Samus | Ananya Sai | Robin Schmidt | Thomas Scialom | Tshephisho Sefara | Saqib Shamsi | Xudong Shen | Yiwen Shi | Haoyue Shi | Anna Shvets | Nick Siegel | Damien Sileo | Jamie Simon | Chandan Singh | Roman Sitelew | Priyank Soni | Taylor Sorensen | William Soto | Aman Srivastava | Aditya Srivatsa | Tony Sun | Mukund Varma | A Tabassum | Fiona Tan | Ryan Teehan | Mo Tiwari | Marie Tolkiehn | Athena Wang | Zijian Wang | Zijie Wang | Gloria Wang | Fuxuan Wei | Bryan Wilie | Genta Indra Winata | Xinyu Wu | Witold Wydmanski | Tianbao Xie | Usama Yaseen | Michael Yee | Jing Zhang | Yue Zhang
Northern European Journal of Language Technology, Volume 9

Data augmentation is an important method for evaluating the robustness of and enhancing the diversity of training data for natural language processing (NLP) models. In this paper, we present NL-Augmenter, a new participatory Python-based natural language (NL) augmentation framework which supports the creation of transformations (modifications to the data) and filters (data splits according to specific features). We describe the framework and an initial set of 117 transformations and 23 filters for a variety of NL tasks annotated with noisy descriptive tags. The transformations incorporate noise, intentional and accidental human mistakes, socio-linguistic variation, semantically-valid style, syntax changes, as well as artificial constructs that are unambiguous to humans. We demonstrate the efficacy of NL-Augmenter by using its transformations to analyze the robustness of popular language models. We find different models to be differently challenged on different tasks, with quasi-systematic score decreases. The infrastructure, datacards, and robustness evaluation results are publicly available on GitHub for the benefit of researchers working on paraphrase generation, robustness analysis, and low-resource NLP.
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