ARCTraj: A Dataset and Benchmark of Human Reasoning Trajectories for Abstract Problem Solving
This provides a structured foundation for studying human-like reasoning to advance explainability, alignment, and generalizable intelligence in AI, though it is incremental as it builds on existing ARC benchmarks.
The authors tackled the limitation of static input-output supervision in abstract reasoning research by creating ARCTraj, a dataset of around 10,000 human reasoning trajectories with temporal, object-level actions for 400 tasks from the ARC-AGI-1 benchmark, revealing intermediate steps that conventional datasets miss.
We present ARCTraj, a dataset and methodological framework for modeling human reasoning through complex visual tasks in the Abstraction and Reasoning Corpus (ARC). While ARC has inspired extensive research on abstract reasoning, most existing approaches rely on static input--output supervision, which limits insight into how reasoning unfolds over time. ARCTraj addresses this gap by recording temporally ordered, object-level actions that capture how humans iteratively transform inputs into outputs, revealing intermediate reasoning steps that conventional datasets overlook. Collected via the O2ARC web interface, it contains around 10,000 trajectories annotated with task identifiers, timestamps, and success labels across 400 training tasks from the ARC-AGI-1 benchmark. It further defines a unified reasoning pipeline encompassing data collection, action abstraction, Markov decision process (MDP) formulation, and downstream learning, enabling integration with reinforcement learning, generative modeling, and sequence modeling methods such as PPO, World Models, GFlowNets, Diffusion agents, and Decision Transformers. Analyses of spatial selection, color attribution, and strategic convergence highlight the structure and diversity of human reasoning. Together, these contributions position ARCTraj as a structured and interpretable foundation for studying human-like reasoning, advancing explainability, alignment, and generalizable intelligence.