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Agentic-MME: What Agentic Capability Really Brings to Multimodal Intelligence?

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arXiv:2604.03016v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) are evolving from passive observers into active agents, solving problems through Visual Expansion (invoking visual tools) and Knowledge Expansion (open-web search). However, existing evaluations fall short: they lack flexible tool integration, test visual and search tools separately, and evaluate primarily by final answers. Consequently, they cannot verify if tools were actually invoked, applied correctly, o

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    Computer Science > Artificial Intelligence [Submitted on 3 Apr 2026] Agentic-MME: What Agentic Capability Really Brings to Multimodal Intelligence? Qianshan Wei, Yishan Yang, Siyi Wang, Jinglin Chen, Binyu Wang, Jiaming Wang, Shuang Chen, Zechen Li, Yang Shi, Yuqi Tang, Weining Wang, Yi Yu, Chaoyou Fu, Qi Li, Yi-Fan Zhang Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) are evolving from passive observers into active agents, solving problems through Visual Expansion (invoking visual tools) and Knowledge Expansion (open-web search). However, existing evaluations fall short: they lack flexible tool integration, test visual and search tools separately, and evaluate primarily by final answers. Consequently, they cannot verify if tools were actually invoked, applied correctly, or used efficiently. To address this, we introduce Agentic-MME, a process-verified benchmark for Multimodal Agentic Capabilities. It contains 418 real-world tasks across 6 domains and 3 difficulty levels to evaluate capability synergy, featuring over 2,000 stepwise checkpoints that average 10+ person-hours of manual annotation per task. Each task includes a unified evaluation framework supporting sandboxed code and APIs, alongside a human reference trajectory annotated with stepwise checkpoints along dual-axis: S-axis and V-axis. To enable true process-level verification, we audit fine-grained intermediate states rather than just final answers, and quantify efficiency via an overthinking metric relative to human trajectories. Experimental results show the best model, Gemini3-pro, achieves 56.3% overall accuracy, which falls significantly to 23.0% on Level-3 tasks, underscoring the difficulty of real-world multimodal agentic problem solving. Subjects: Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI) Cite as: arXiv:2604.03016 [cs.AI]   (or arXiv:2604.03016v1 [cs.AI] for this version)   https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2604.03016 Focus to learn more Submission history From: Qianshan Wei [view email] [v1] Fri, 3 Apr 2026 13:02:01 UTC (24,551 KB) Access Paper: HTML (experimental) view license Current browse context: cs.AI < prev   |   next > new | recent | 2026-04 Change to browse by: cs References & Citations NASA ADS Google Scholar Semantic Scholar Export BibTeX Citation Bookmark Bibliographic Tools Bibliographic and Citation Tools Bibliographic Explorer Toggle Bibliographic Explorer (What is the Explorer?) Connected Papers Toggle Connected Papers (What is Connected Papers?) Litmaps Toggle Litmaps (What is Litmaps?) scite.ai Toggle scite Smart Citations (What are Smart Citations?) Code, Data, Media Demos Related Papers About arXivLabs Which authors of this paper are endorsers? | Disable MathJax (What is MathJax?)
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    arXiv AI
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    ◬ AI & Machine Learning
    Published
    Apr 06, 2026
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    Apr 06, 2026
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