CVMar 26

THEMIS: Towards Holistic Evaluation of MLLMs for Scientific Paper Fraud Forensics

Princeton
arXiv:2603.2508982.0h-index: 10
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for better evaluation tools in AI for academic fraud detection, though it is incremental as it builds on existing benchmark methods.

The paper tackles the problem of evaluating multimodal large language models (MLLMs) for detecting fraud in scientific papers by introducing THEMIS, a benchmark with over 4,000 questions across seven real-world scenarios, and finds that even the best model, GPT-5, achieves only 56.15% performance.

We present THEMIS, a novel multi-task benchmark designed to comprehensively evaluate multimodal large language models (MLLMs) on visual fraud reasoning within real-world academic scenarios. Compared to existing benchmarks, THEMIS introduces three major advances. (1) Real-World Scenarios and Complexity: Our benchmark comprises over 4,000 questions spanning seven scenarios, derived from authentic retracted-paper cases and carefully curated multimodal synthetic data. With 60.47% complex-texture images, THEMIS bridges the critical gap between existing benchmarks and the complexity of real-world academic fraud. (2) Fraud-Type Diversity and Granularity: THEMIS systematically covers five challenging fraud types and introduces 16 fine-grained manipulation operations. On average, each sample undergoes multiple stacked manipulation operations, with the diversity and difficulty of these manipulations demanding a high level of visual fraud reasoning from the models. (3) Multi-Dimensional Capability Evaluation: We establish a mapping from fraud types to five core visual fraud reasoning capabilities, thereby enabling an evaluation that reveals the distinct strengths and specific weaknesses of different models across these core capabilities. Experiments on 16 leading MLLMs show that even the best-performing model, GPT-5, achieves an overall performance of only 56.15%, demonstrating that our benchmark presents a stringent test. We expect THEMIS to advance the development of MLLMs for complex, real-world fraud reasoning tasks.

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