SUPER: Evaluating Agents on Setting Up and Executing Tasks from Research Repositories
read the original abstract
Given that Large Language Models (LLMs) have made significant progress in writing code, can they now be used to autonomously reproduce results from research repositories? Such a capability would be a boon to the research community, helping researchers validate, understand, and extend prior work. To advance towards this goal, we introduce SUPER, the first benchmark designed to evaluate the capability of LLMs in setting up and executing tasks from research repositories. SUPERaims to capture the realistic challenges faced by researchers working with Machine Learning (ML) and Natural Language Processing (NLP) research repositories. Our benchmark comprises three distinct problem sets: 45 end-to-end problems with annotated expert solutions, 152 sub problems derived from the expert set that focus on specific challenges (e.g., configuring a trainer), and 602 automatically generated problems for larger-scale development. We introduce various evaluation measures to assess both task success and progress, utilizing gold solutions when available or approximations otherwise. We show that state-of-the-art approaches struggle to solve these problems with the best model (GPT-4o) solving only 16.3% of the end-to-end set, and 46.1% of the scenarios. This illustrates the challenge of this task, and suggests that SUPER can serve as a valuable resource for the community to make and measure progress.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 4 Pith papers
-
Neurodata Without Boredom: Benchmarking Agentic AI for Data Reuse
AI agents handle individual data-loading and reformatting steps on neuroscience datasets but rarely complete fully error-free end-to-end pipelines, and AI judges are unreliable without ground-truth references.
-
Evaluating LLM Agents on Automated Software Analysis Tasks
A custom LLM agent achieves 94% manually verified success on a new benchmark of 35 software analysis setups, outperforming baselines at 77%, but struggles with stage mixing, error localization, and overestimating its ...
-
Neurodata Without Boredom: Benchmarking Agentic AI for Data Reuse
Agentic AI handles individual data-loading subtasks well but rarely produces fully error-free end-to-end solutions for reusing diverse neuroscience datasets.
-
CFDLLMBench: A Benchmark Suite for Evaluating Large Language Models in Computational Fluid Dynamics
CFDLLMBench is a new benchmark suite with CFDQuery, CFDCodeBench, and FoamBench to evaluate LLMs on graduate-level CFD knowledge, numerical reasoning, and context-dependent code implementation.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.