Authors:Baris Karacan, Vaibhav Bhargava, Barbara Di Eugenio, Natalie Parde, Mary Khetani, Yu-Shan Tseng, Vanessa Barbosa, Julie Vignato, Lindsey Knake, Rajashree Dahal, Emily Spellman, Danielle Hitzel, Janine Petitgout, Kristi Haughey, Amanda Karstens, Brianna Clarahan, Rachel Dawson, Lauren Boyd, Mackenzie Weis, Angie Tipton, Jaewon Bae, Catherine K. Craven, Karen Dunn Lopez, Andrew D. Boyd
Abstract:Effective "all-team" summarization in high-complexity settings like the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) requires aggregating insights from diverse disciplines (physicians, nurses, therapists) spread across hundreds of clinical free-text notes. Simply pooling heterogeneous text often leads to incoherent outputs. Structured summarization therefore first requires accurate categorization of sentence-level provenance across multi-source notes. This pilot study introduces a clinical provenance categorization pipeline using supervised fine-tuning (SFT) of large language models (LLMs). We adapted two Llama-3 models (8B and 70B) to MedSecId, a corpus of 2,002 MIMIC-III (Adult ICU) notes annotated with clinical provenance headers, achieving in-domain Macro F1 scores above 92% for both models. To evaluate cross-domain generalization, we assessed model capacity (8B vs. 70B) and quantization on a gold-standard dataset of 227 sentence-level spans derived from three multi-disciplinary NICU summaries. Experimental results demonstrate a scale-dependent transfer effect: while SFT produced only marginal changes for the 8B model, it substantially improved the 70B model, increasing Macro F1 by 7%. Notably, the quantized fine-tuned 70B model outperformed its full-precision baseline while substantially reducing computational requirements. These findings suggest that sufficient model capacity is critical for preserving semantic flexibility during cross-domain clinical transfer and that efficient quantized adaptation can enable structured provenance modeling for downstream summarization.
| Comments: | 5 pages. Submitted preprint version of a paper accepted to AIME 2026. This version may differ from the camera-ready manuscript and the final Version of Record. The Version of Record will be available from Springer Nature once published |
| Subjects: | Computation and Language (cs.CL) |
| Cite as: | arXiv:2606.02487 [cs.CL] |
| (or arXiv:2606.02487v1 [cs.CL] for this version) | |
| https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2606.02487 arXiv-issued DOI via DataCite (pending registration) |
Submission history
From: Baris Karacan [view email]
[v1]
Mon, 1 Jun 2026 16:57:51 UTC (20 KB)
