AIMay 15, 2025

On the Evaluation of Engineering Artificial General Intelligence

arXiv:2505.10653v12 citationsh-index: 77
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of benchmarking eAGI agents for researchers and practitioners in AI and engineering, but it is incremental as it adapts existing evaluation methods to a specific domain.

The paper tackles the challenge of evaluating engineering artificial general intelligence (eAGI) agents by proposing an extensible evaluation framework that grounds Bloom's taxonomy in an engineering design context, resulting in a taxonomy of evaluation questions, a pluggable framework for textual and structured artifacts, and an automatable customization procedure.

We discuss the challenges and propose a framework for evaluating engineering artificial general intelligence (eAGI) agents. We consider eAGI as a specialization of artificial general intelligence (AGI), deemed capable of addressing a broad range of problems in the engineering of physical systems and associated controllers. We exclude software engineering for a tractable scoping of eAGI and expect dedicated software engineering AI agents to address the software implementation challenges. Similar to human engineers, eAGI agents should possess a unique blend of background knowledge (recall and retrieve) of facts and methods, demonstrate familiarity with tools and processes, exhibit deep understanding of industrial components and well-known design families, and be able to engage in creative problem solving (analyze and synthesize), transferring ideas acquired in one context to another. Given this broad mandate, evaluating and qualifying the performance of eAGI agents is a challenge in itself and, arguably, a critical enabler to developing eAGI agents. In this paper, we address this challenge by proposing an extensible evaluation framework that specializes and grounds Bloom's taxonomy - a framework for evaluating human learning that has also been recently used for evaluating LLMs - in an engineering design context. Our proposed framework advances the state of the art in benchmarking and evaluation of AI agents in terms of the following: (a) developing a rich taxonomy of evaluation questions spanning from methodological knowledge to real-world design problems; (b) motivating a pluggable evaluation framework that can evaluate not only textual responses but also evaluate structured design artifacts such as CAD models and SysML models; and (c) outlining an automatable procedure to customize the evaluation benchmark to different engineering contexts.

Foundations

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