CVAug 6, 2025

VisualTrans: A Benchmark for Real-World Visual Transformation Reasoning

arXiv:2508.04043v110 citationsh-index: 9Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the sim-to-real gap and limited task complexity in VTR benchmarks for researchers and developers of intelligent systems, though it is incremental as it builds upon existing benchmark efforts.

The authors tackled the problem of visual transformation reasoning (VTR) by introducing VisualTrans, a benchmark for real-world human-object interaction scenarios, which revealed that state-of-the-art vision-language models perform well in static spatial tasks but struggle in dynamic, multi-step reasoning, with notable shortcomings in intermediate state recognition and transformation sequence planning.

Visual transformation reasoning (VTR) is a vital cognitive capability that empowers intelligent agents to understand dynamic scenes, model causal relationships, and predict future states, and thereby guiding actions and laying the foundation for advanced intelligent systems. However, existing benchmarks suffer from a sim-to-real gap, limited task complexity, and incomplete reasoning coverage, limiting their practical use in real-world scenarios. To address these limitations, we introduce VisualTrans, the first comprehensive benchmark specifically designed for VTR in real-world human-object interaction scenarios. VisualTrans encompasses 12 semantically diverse manipulation tasks and systematically evaluates three essential reasoning dimensions - spatial, procedural, and quantitative - through 6 well-defined subtask types. The benchmark features 472 high-quality question-answer pairs in various formats, including multiple-choice, open-ended counting, and target enumeration. We introduce a scalable data construction pipeline built upon first-person manipulation videos, which integrates task selection, image pair extraction, automated metadata annotation with large multimodal models, and structured question generation. Human verification ensures the final benchmark is both high-quality and interpretable. Evaluations of various state-of-the-art vision-language models show strong performance in static spatial tasks. However, they reveal notable shortcomings in dynamic, multi-step reasoning scenarios, particularly in areas like intermediate state recognition and transformation sequence planning. These findings highlight fundamental weaknesses in temporal modeling and causal reasoning, providing clear directions for future research aimed at developing more capable and generalizable VTR systems. The dataset and code are available at https://github.com/WangYipu2002/VisualTrans.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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