Multi-agent debate and mixture-of-agents outperform self-consistency by 1.3 and 2.7 percentage points respectively at equal compute budgets on MMLU-Pro and BBH, with advantages that continue at higher scales while self-consistency saturates.
Mind the Gap Between Spatial Reasoning and Acting! Step-by-Step Evaluation of Agents With Spatial-Gym
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abstract
Spatial reasoning is central to navigation and robotics, yet measuring model capabilities on these tasks remains difficult. Existing benchmarks evaluate models in a one-shot setting, requiring full solution generation in a single response, unlike humans, who work in interactive environments step-by-step. We introduce Spatial-Gym, a Gymnasium environment that isolates spatial constraint reasoning by testing pathfinding in 2D-grid puzzles as a sequential decision task with optional backtracking. We evaluate eight models in three settings (one-shot, step-by-step, step-by-step with backtracking) against human, random, and A* baselines on 500 episodes. The best model, GPT-OSS 120B, achieves a solve rate of 16.0%, 82 points below the human baseline (98.0%). Step-by-step format helps weaker models (up to +5.4%) by removing formatting errors, but hurts stronger models (up to 5.6%) by constraining global planning. Backtracking improves episode completion, but increases solve rate only for weaker models; stronger models rarely backtrack and do not benefit from it. Our experiments have three key findings: (1) models fail to scale reasoning effort with difficulty, (2) vision models receiving images of the spatial environment reduce solve rate by 73%, and (3) extended chain-of-thought reasoning retains a 3-5x accuracy advantage over standard inference even in the step-by-step setting. Spatial-Gym enables diagnosis of model limitations and provides a framework for improving spatial reasoning through reinforcement learning.
fields
cs.AI 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Multi-Agent Reasoning Improves Compute Efficiency: Pareto-Optimal Test-Time Scaling
Multi-agent debate and mixture-of-agents outperform self-consistency by 1.3 and 2.7 percentage points respectively at equal compute budgets on MMLU-Pro and BBH, with advantages that continue at higher scales while self-consistency saturates.