Lin, Hongquan
SuperGPQA: Scaling LLM Evaluation across 285 Graduate Disciplines
Team, M-A-P, Du, Xinrun, Yao, Yifan, Ma, Kaijing, Wang, Bingli, Zheng, Tianyu, Zhu, Kang, Liu, Minghao, Liang, Yiming, Jin, Xiaolong, Wei, Zhenlin, Zheng, Chujie, Deng, Kaixin, Jia, Shian, Jiang, Sichao, Liao, Yiyan, Li, Rui, Li, Qinrui, Li, Sirun, Li, Yizhi, Li, Yunwen, Ma, Dehua, Ni, Yuansheng, Que, Haoran, Wang, Qiyao, Wen, Zhoufutu, Wu, Siwei, Xing, Tianshun, Xu, Ming, Yang, Zhenzhu, Wang, Zekun Moore, Zhou, Junting, Bai, Yuelin, Bu, Xingyuan, Cai, Chenglin, Chen, Liang, Chen, Yifan, Cheng, Chengtuo, Cheng, Tianhao, Ding, Keyi, Huang, Siming, Huang, Yun, Li, Yaoru, Li, Yizhe, Li, Zhaoqun, Liang, Tianhao, Lin, Chengdong, Lin, Hongquan, Ma, Yinghao, Pang, Tianyang, Peng, Zhongyuan, Peng, Zifan, Qi, Qige, Qiu, Shi, Qu, Xingwei, Quan, Shanghaoran, Tan, Yizhou, Wang, Zili, Wang, Chenqing, Wang, Hao, Wang, Yiya, Wang, Yubo, Xu, Jiajun, Yang, Kexin, Yuan, Ruibin, Yue, Yuanhao, Zhan, Tianyang, Zhang, Chun, Zhang, Jinyang, Zhang, Xiyue, Zhang, Xingjian, Zhang, Yue, Zhao, Yongchi, Zheng, Xiangyu, Zhong, Chenghua, Gao, Yang, Li, Zhoujun, Liu, Dayiheng, Liu, Qian, Liu, Tianyu, Ni, Shiwen, Peng, Junran, Qin, Yujia, Su, Wenbo, Wang, Guoyin, Wang, Shi, Yang, Jian, Yang, Min, Cao, Meng, Yue, Xiang, Zhang, Zhaoxiang, Zhou, Wangchunshu, Liu, Jiaheng, Lin, Qunshu, Huang, Wenhao, Zhang, Ge
Large language models (LLMs) have demonstrated remarkable proficiency in mainstream academic disciplines such as mathematics, physics, and computer science. However, human knowledge encompasses over 200 specialized disciplines, far exceeding the scope of existing benchmarks. The capabilities of LLMs in many of these specialized fields-particularly in light industry, agriculture, and service-oriented disciplines-remain inadequately evaluated. To address this gap, we present SuperGPQA, a comprehensive benchmark that evaluates graduate-level knowledge and reasoning capabilities across 285 disciplines. Our benchmark employs a novel Human-LLM collaborative filtering mechanism to eliminate trivial or ambiguous questions through iterative refinement based on both LLM responses and expert feedback. Our experimental results reveal significant room for improvement in the performance of current state-of-the-art LLMs across diverse knowledge domains (e.g., the reasoning-focused model DeepSeek-R1 achieved the highest accuracy of 61.82% on SuperGPQA), highlighting the considerable gap between current model capabilities and artificial general intelligence. Additionally, we present comprehensive insights from our management of a large-scale annotation process, involving over 80 expert annotators and an interactive Human-LLM collaborative system, offering valuable methodological guidance for future research initiatives of comparable scope.
II-Bench: An Image Implication Understanding Benchmark for Multimodal Large Language Models
Liu, Ziqiang, Fang, Feiteng, Feng, Xi, Du, Xinrun, Zhang, Chenhao, Wang, Zekun, Bai, Yuelin, Zhao, Qixuan, Fan, Liyang, Gan, Chengguang, Lin, Hongquan, Li, Jiaming, Ni, Yuansheng, Wu, Haihong, Narsupalli, Yaswanth, Zheng, Zhigang, Li, Chengming, Hu, Xiping, Xu, Ruifeng, Chen, Xiaojun, Yang, Min, Liu, Jiaheng, Liu, Ruibo, Huang, Wenhao, Zhang, Ge, Ni, Shiwen
The rapid advancements in the development of multimodal large language models (MLLMs) have consistently led to new breakthroughs on various benchmarks. In response, numerous challenging and comprehensive benchmarks have been proposed to more accurately assess the capabilities of MLLMs. However, there is a dearth of exploration of the higher-order perceptual capabilities of MLLMs. To fill this gap, we propose the Image Implication understanding Benchmark, II-Bench, which aims to evaluate the model's higher-order perception of images. Through extensive experiments on II-Bench across multiple MLLMs, we have made significant findings. Initially, a substantial gap is observed between the performance of MLLMs and humans on II-Bench. The pinnacle accuracy of MLLMs attains 74.8%, whereas human accuracy averages 90%, peaking at an impressive 98%. Subsequently, MLLMs perform worse on abstract and complex images, suggesting limitations in their ability to understand high-level semantics and capture image details. Finally, it is observed that most models exhibit enhanced accuracy when image sentiment polarity hints are incorporated into the prompts. This observation underscores a notable deficiency in their inherent understanding of image sentiment. We believe that II-Bench will inspire the community to develop the next generation of MLLMs, advancing the journey towards expert artificial general intelligence (AGI). II-Bench is publicly available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/m-a-p/II-Bench.
COIG-CQIA: Quality is All You Need for Chinese Instruction Fine-tuning
Bai, Yuelin, Du, Xinrun, Liang, Yiming, Jin, Yonggang, Liu, Ziqiang, Zhou, Junting, Zheng, Tianyu, Zhang, Xincheng, Ma, Nuo, Wang, Zekun, Yuan, Ruibin, Wu, Haihong, Lin, Hongquan, Huang, Wenhao, Zhang, Jiajun, Chen, Wenhu, Lin, Chenghua, Fu, Jie, Yang, Min, Ni, Shiwen, Zhang, Ge
Recently, there have been significant advancements in large language models (LLMs), particularly focused on the English language. These advancements have enabled these LLMs to understand and execute complex instructions with unprecedented accuracy and fluency. However, despite these advancements, there remains a noticeable gap in the development of Chinese instruction tuning. The unique linguistic features and cultural depth of the Chinese language pose challenges for instruction tuning tasks. Existing datasets are either derived from English-centric LLMs or are ill-suited for aligning with the interaction patterns of real-world Chinese users. To bridge this gap, we introduce COIG-CQIA, a high-quality Chinese instruction tuning dataset. Our aim is to build a diverse, wide-ranging instruction-tuning dataset to better align model behavior with human interactions. To this end, we collect a high-quality human-written corpus from various sources on the Chinese Internet, including Q&A communities, Wikis, examinations, and existing NLP datasets. This corpus was rigorously filtered and carefully processed to form the COIG-CQIA dataset. Furthermore, we train models of various scales on different subsets of CQIA, following in-depth evaluation and analyses. The findings from our experiments offer valuable insights for selecting and developing Chinese instruction-tuning datasets. We also find that models trained on CQIA-Subset achieve competitive results in human assessment as well as knowledge and security benchmarks. Data are available at https://huggingface.co/datasets/m-a-p/COIG-CQIA