arXiv:2512.05967v2 Announce Type: replace-cross
Abstract: In the era of Large Language Models (LLMs), Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) architectures are gaining significant attention for their ability to ground language generation in reliable knowledge sources. Despite their effectiveness, RAG systems based solely on semantic similarity often fail to ensure factual accuracy in specialized domains, where terminological ambiguity can affect retrieval relevance. This study proposes ELERAG, an enhanced RAG architecture that integrates a factual signal derived from Entity Linking to improve the accuracy of educational question-answering systems in Italian. The system includes a Wikidata-based Entity Linking module and implements a hybrid re-ranking strategy based on Reciprocal Rank Fusion (RRF). To validate our approach, we compared it against standard baselines and state-of-the-art methods, including a Weighted-Score Re-ranking, a standalone Cross-Encoder and a combined RRF+Cross-Encoder pipeline. Experiments were conducted on two benchmarks: a custom academic dataset and the standard SQuAD-it dataset. Results show that, in domain-specific contexts, ELERAG significantly outperforms both the baseline and the Cross-Encoder configurations. Conversely, the Cross-Encoder approaches achieve the best results on the general-domain dataset. These findings provide strong experimental evidence of the domain mismatch effect, highlighting the importance of domain-adapted hybrid strategies to enhance factual precision in educational RAG systems without relying on computationally expensive models trained on disparate data distributions. They also demonstrate the potential of entity-aware RAG systems in educational environments, fostering adaptive and reliable AI-based tutoring tools.
Trust and anxiety as primary drivers of digital health acceptance in multiple sclerosis: toward an extended disease-specific technology acceptance model
BackgroundDigital health applications and AI-supported wearables may benefit people with Multiple Sclerosis (MS), yet fluctuating cognitive and physical symptoms could shape adoption in ways not




