arXiv:2603.14170v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Tax authorities and public-sector financial agencies rely on large volumes of unstructured and semi-structured fiscal documents – including tax forms, instructions, publications, and jurisdiction-specific guidance – to support compliance analysis and audit workflows. While recent advances in generative AI and retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) have shown promise for document-centric question answering, existing approaches often lack the transparency, citation fidelity, and conservative behaviour required in high-stakes regulatory domains. This paper presents a multimodal, citation-enforced RAG framework for fiscal document intelligence that prioritises explainability and auditability. The framework adopts a source-first ingestion strategy, preserves page-level provenance, enforces citations during generation, and supports abstention when evidence is insufficient. Evaluation on real IRS and state tax documents demonstrates improved citation fidelity, reduced hallucination, and analyst-usable explanations, illustrating a pathway toward trustworthy AI for tax compliance.
Dissociable contributions of cortical thickness and surface area to cognitive ageing: evidence from multiple longitudinal cohorts.
Cortical volume, a widely-used marker of brain ageing, is the product of two genetically and developmentally dissociable morphometric features: thickness and area. However, it remains

