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On Integrating Resilience and Human Oversight into LLM-Assisted Modeling Workflows for Digital Twins

Lekshmi P, Neha Karanjkar

Abstract

LLM-assisted modeling holds the potential to rapidly build executable Digital Twins of complex systems from only coarse descriptions and sensor data. However, resilience to LLM hallucination, human oversight, and real-time model adaptability remain challenging and often mutually conflicting requirements. We present three critical design principles for integrating resilience and oversight into such workflows, derived from insights gained through our work on FactoryFlow - an open-source LLM-assisted framework for building simulation-based Digital Twins of manufacturing systems. First, orthogonalize structural modeling and parameter fitting. Structural descriptions (components, interconnections) are LLM-translated from coarse natural language to an intermediate representation with human visualization and validation, which is algorithmically converted to the final model. Parameter inference, in contrast, operates continuously on sensor data streams with expert-tunable controls. Second, restrict the model IR to interconnections of parameterized, pre-validated library components rather than monolithic simulation code, enabling interpretability and error-resilience. Third, and most important, is to use a density-preserving IR. When IR descriptions expand dramatically from compact inputs hallucination errors accumulate proportionally. We present the case for Python as a density-preserving IR : loops express regularity compactly, classes capture hierarchy and composition, and the result remains highly readable while exploiting LLMs strong code generation capabilities. A key contribution is detailed characterization of LLM-induced errors across model descriptions of varying detail and complexity, revealing how IR choice critically impacts error rates. These insights provide actionable guidance for building resilient and transparent LLM-assisted simulation automation workflows.

On Integrating Resilience and Human Oversight into LLM-Assisted Modeling Workflows for Digital Twins

Abstract

LLM-assisted modeling holds the potential to rapidly build executable Digital Twins of complex systems from only coarse descriptions and sensor data. However, resilience to LLM hallucination, human oversight, and real-time model adaptability remain challenging and often mutually conflicting requirements. We present three critical design principles for integrating resilience and oversight into such workflows, derived from insights gained through our work on FactoryFlow - an open-source LLM-assisted framework for building simulation-based Digital Twins of manufacturing systems. First, orthogonalize structural modeling and parameter fitting. Structural descriptions (components, interconnections) are LLM-translated from coarse natural language to an intermediate representation with human visualization and validation, which is algorithmically converted to the final model. Parameter inference, in contrast, operates continuously on sensor data streams with expert-tunable controls. Second, restrict the model IR to interconnections of parameterized, pre-validated library components rather than monolithic simulation code, enabling interpretability and error-resilience. Third, and most important, is to use a density-preserving IR. When IR descriptions expand dramatically from compact inputs hallucination errors accumulate proportionally. We present the case for Python as a density-preserving IR : loops express regularity compactly, classes capture hierarchy and composition, and the result remains highly readable while exploiting LLMs strong code generation capabilities. A key contribution is detailed characterization of LLM-induced errors across model descriptions of varying detail and complexity, revealing how IR choice critically impacts error rates. These insights provide actionable guidance for building resilient and transparent LLM-assisted simulation automation workflows.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 14 sections, 9 figures, 1 table.

Figures (9)

  • Figure 1: LangGraph-based architecture for LLM-assisted structural model generation in FactoryFlow
  • Figure 2: Error counts across models ordered by complexity (IR size).
  • Figure 3: Aggregate error type frequency across all models.
  • Figure 4: Error composition across individual models for both coarse and detailed descriptions.
  • Figure 5: Examples of various types of errors observed
  • ...and 4 more figures