HiLSVA introduces a plan-first multi-agent LLM system for scientific visualization that incorporates explicit human oversight, stepwise provenance, and learn-at-test-time adaptation, evaluated via case studies and a 12-participant user study.
SciVisAgentSkills: Design and Evaluation of Agent Skills for Scientific Data Analysis and Visualization
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abstract
Recent advances in agentic visualization have enabled the translation of natural language into executable scientific visualization (SciVis) workflows. While general-purpose coding agents show strong capabilities, they often lack the tool-specific expertise required for SciVis tasks. In this work, we present SciVisAgentSkills, a collection of reusable agent skills that augment coding agents for scientific data analysis and visualization by encoding environment assumptions, tool usage patterns, and domain heuristics across scientific tools such as ParaView, napari, VMD, and TTK. We evaluate these skills on Codex and Claude Code using SciVisAgentBench, a benchmark of 108 expert-designed multi-step tasks. Results show that agent skills improve mean task scores across the evaluated suites, with token-efficiency benefits that depend on the agent harness and tool setting. These findings highlight the importance of structured procedural knowledge for enabling reliable, long-horizon SciVis workflows, while also showing that skills should be studied alongside the execution harness that loads and applies them. The skills are available at https://github.com/KuangshiAi/SciVisAgentSkills.
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cs.HC 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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HiLSVA: Design and Evaluation of a Human-in-the-Loop Agentic System for Scientific Visualization
HiLSVA introduces a plan-first multi-agent LLM system for scientific visualization that incorporates explicit human oversight, stepwise provenance, and learn-at-test-time adaptation, evaluated via case studies and a 12-participant user study.