Soohak is a new 439-problem mathematician-authored benchmark showing frontier LLMs reach only 30% on research math and fail to exceed 50% on refusing ill-posed questions.
EternalMath: A Living Benchmark of Frontier Mathematics that Evolves with Human Discovery
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Current evaluations of mathematical reasoning in large language models (LLMs) are dominated by static benchmarks, either derived from competition-style problems or curated through costly expert effort, resulting in limited coverage of research-level mathematics and rapid performance saturation. We propose a fully automated, theorem-grounded pipeline for evaluating frontier mathematical reasoning, which directly transforms recent peer-reviewed mathematical literature into executable and verifiable reasoning tasks. The pipeline identifies constructive or quantitative results, instantiates them into parameterized problem templates, and generates deterministic solutions through execution-based verification, enabling scalable, reproducible, and continuously updatable evaluation without reliance on large-scale expert authoring. By design, this approach supports temporal extensibility, intrinsic correctness checking, and domain-specific customization across mathematical subfields. Applying this pipeline yields \textbf{EternalMath}, an evolving evaluation suite derived from contemporary research papers. Experiments with state-of-the-art LLMs reveal substantial performance gaps, indicating that mathematical reasoning at the research frontier remains far from saturated and underscoring the need for evaluation methodologies that evolve in step with human mathematical discovery.
fields
cs.CL 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Soohak: A Mathematician-Curated Benchmark for Evaluating Research-level Math Capabilities of LLMs
Soohak is a new 439-problem mathematician-authored benchmark showing frontier LLMs reach only 30% on research math and fail to exceed 50% on refusing ill-posed questions.