CLJan 13

DeepResearch Bench II: Diagnosing Deep Research Agents via Rubrics from Expert Report

arXiv:2601.08536v110 citationsh-index: 14
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for rigorous evaluation of deep research systems, which is crucial for developers and users in AI and information synthesis, though it is incremental as it builds on prior benchmarking efforts.

The authors tackled the problem of evaluating deep research systems by introducing Deep Research Bench II, a benchmark with 132 tasks and 9430 fine-grained rubrics derived from expert reports, and found that even top models satisfy fewer than 50% of the rubrics, highlighting a significant performance gap.

Deep Research Systems (DRS) aim to help users search the web, synthesize information, and deliver comprehensive investigative reports. However, how to rigorously evaluate these systems remains under-explored. Existing deep-research benchmarks often fall into two failure modes. Some do not adequately test a system's ability to analyze evidence and write coherent reports. Others rely on evaluation criteria that are either overly coarse or directly defined by LLMs (or both), leading to scores that can be biased relative to human experts and are hard to verify or interpret. To address these issues, we introduce Deep Research Bench II, a new benchmark for evaluating DRS-generated reports. It contains 132 grounded research tasks across 22 domains; for each task, a system must produce a long-form research report that is evaluated by a set of 9430 fine-grained binary rubrics in total, covering three dimensions: information recall, analysis, and presentation. All rubrics are derived from carefully selected expert-written investigative articles and are constructed through a four-stage LLM+human pipeline that combines automatic extraction with over 400 human-hours of expert review, ensuring that the criteria are atomic, verifiable, and aligned with human expert judgment. We evaluate several state-of-the-art deep-research systems on Deep Research Bench II and find that even the strongest models satisfy fewer than 50% of the rubrics, revealing a substantial gap between current DRSs and human experts.

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