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Tackling the Inherent Difficulty of Noise Filtering in RAG

Published: January 5, 2026 | arXiv ID: 2601.01896v2

By: Jingyu Liu, Jiaen Lin, Yong Liu

Potential Business Impact:

Teaches computers to ignore bad information.

Business Areas:
Natural Language Processing Artificial Intelligence, Data and Analytics, Software

Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) has become a widely adopted approach to enhance Large Language Models (LLMs) by incorporating external knowledge and reducing hallucinations. However, noisy or irrelevant documents are often introduced during RAG, potentially degrading performance and even causing hallucinated outputs. While various methods have been proposed to filter out such noise, we argue that identifying irrelevant information from retrieved content is inherently difficult and limited number of transformer layers can hardly solve this. Consequently, retrievers fail to filter out irrelevant documents entirely. Therefore, LLMs must be robust against such noise, but we demonstrate that standard fine-tuning approaches are often ineffective in enabling the model to selectively utilize relevant information while ignoring irrelevant content due to the structural constraints of attention patterns. To address this, we propose a novel fine-tuning method designed to enhance the model's ability to distinguish between relevant and irrelevant information within retrieved documents. Extensive experiments across multiple benchmarks show that our approach significantly improves the robustness and performance of LLMs.

Country of Origin
🇨🇳 China

Page Count
17 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Computation and Language