CLApr 16

OccuBench: Evaluating AI Agents on Real-World Professional Tasks via Language Environment Simulation

arXiv:2604.1086645.3h-index: 23
Predicted impact top 7% in CL · last 90 daysOriginality Highly original
AI Analysis

Provides the first systematic cross-industry evaluation of AI agents on professional occupational tasks, addressing the lack of benchmarks for diverse real-world domains.

OccuBench introduces a benchmark covering 100 real-world professional task scenarios across 65 domains, using Language Environment Simulators to evaluate AI agents. Evaluation of 15 models shows no single model dominates all industries, implicit faults are harder than explicit ones, and increased reasoning effort improves performance (e.g., GPT-5.2 improves by 27.5 points).

AI agents are expected to perform professional work across hundreds of occupational domains (from emergency department triage to nuclear reactor safety monitoring to customs import processing), yet existing benchmarks can only evaluate agents in the few domains where public environments exist. We introduce OccuBench, a benchmark covering 100 real-world professional task scenarios across 10 industry categories and 65 specialized domains, enabled by Language Environment Simulators (LESs) that simulate domain-specific environments through LLM-driven tool response generation. Our multi-agent synthesis pipeline automatically produces evaluation instances with guaranteed solvability, calibrated difficulty, and document-grounded diversity. OccuBench evaluates agents along two complementary dimensions: task completion across professional domains and environmental robustness under controlled fault injection (explicit errors, implicit data degradation, and mixed faults). We evaluate 15 frontier models across 8 model families and find that: (1) no single model dominates all industries, as each has a distinct occupational capability profile; (2) implicit faults (truncated data, missing fields) are harder than both explicit errors (timeouts, 500s) and mixed faults, because they lack overt error signals and require the agent to independently detect data degradation; (3) larger models, newer generations, and higher reasoning effort consistently improve performance. GPT-5.2 improves by 27.5 points from minimal to maximum reasoning effort; and (4) strong agents are not necessarily strong environment simulators. Simulator quality is critical for LES-based evaluation reliability. OccuBench provides the first systematic cross-industry evaluation of AI agents on professional occupational tasks.

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