arXiv:2604.08628v1 Announce Type: cross
Abstract: Unauthorized disclosure of confidential documents demands robust, low-leakage classification. In real work environments, there is a lot of inflow and outflow of documents. To continuously update knowledge, we propose a methodology for classifying confidential documents using Retrieval Augmented Classification (RAC). To confirm this effectiveness, we compare RAC and supervised fine tuning (FT) on the WikiLeaks US Diplomacy corpus under realistic sequence-length constraints. On balanced data, RAC matches FT. On unbalanced data, RAC is more stable while delivering comparable performance–about 96% Accuracy on both the original (unbalanced) and augmented (balanced) sets, and up to 94% F1 with proper prompting–whereas FT attains 90% F1 trained on the augmented, balanced set but drops to 88% F1 trained on the original, unbalanced set. When robust augmentation is infeasible, RAC provides a practical, security-preserving path to strong classification by keeping sensitive content out of model weights and under your control, and it remains robust as real-world conditions change in class balance, data, context length, or governance requirements. Because RAC grounds decisions in an external vector store with similarity matching, it is less sensitive to label skew, reduces parameter-level leakage, and can incorporate new data immediately via reindexing–a difficult step for FT, which typically requires retraining. The contributions of this paper are threefold: first, a RAC-based classification pipeline and evaluation recipe; second, a controlled study that isolates class imbalance and context-length effects for FT versus RAC in confidential-document grading; and third, actionable guidance on RAC design patterns for governed deployments.
Bioethical considerations in deploying mobile mental health apps in LMIC settings: insights from the MITHRA pilot study in rural India
IntroductionIn India, untreated depression among women contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality, underscoring an urgent need for accessible and ethically grounded mental health interventions. Mobile



