AICVNov 21, 2025

Designing Domain-Specific Agents via Hierarchical Task Abstraction Mechanism

arXiv:2511.17198v15 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of building reliable autonomous systems for specialized domains like remote sensing, representing a domain-specific advancement.

The paper tackles the problem of LLM-driven agents struggling in specialized domains requiring structured workflows by introducing a Hierarchical Task Abstraction Mechanism (HTAM) framework, which when instantiated as EarthAgent for geospatial analysis outperforms existing systems on the new GeoPlan-bench benchmark.

LLM-driven agents, particularly those using general frameworks like ReAct or human-inspired role-playing, often struggle in specialized domains that necessitate rigorously structured workflows. Fields such as remote sensing, requiring specialized tools (e.g., correction, spectral indices calculation), and multi-step procedures (e.g., numerous intermediate products and optional steps), significantly challenge generalized approaches. To address this gap, we introduce a novel agent design framework centered on a Hierarchical Task Abstraction Mechanism (HTAM). Specifically, HTAM moves beyond emulating social roles, instead structuring multi-agent systems into a logical hierarchy that mirrors the intrinsic task-dependency graph of a given domain. This task-centric architecture thus enforces procedural correctness and decomposes complex problems into sequential layers, where each layer's sub-agents operate on the outputs of the preceding layers. We instantiate this framework as EarthAgent, a multi-agent system tailored for complex geospatial analysis. To evaluate such complex planning capabilities, we build GeoPlan-bench, a comprehensive benchmark of realistic, multi-step geospatial planning tasks. It is accompanied by a suite of carefully designed metrics to evaluate tool selection, path similarity, and logical completeness. Experiments show that EarthAgent substantially outperforms a range of established single- and multi-agent systems. Our work demonstrates that aligning agent architecture with a domain's intrinsic task structure is a critical step toward building robust and reliable specialized autonomous systems.

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