ResearchBench: Benchmarking LLMs in Scientific Discovery via Inspiration-Based Task Decomposition
arXiv:2503.21248v3 Announce Type: replace
Abstract: Large language models (LLMs) have shown potential in assisting scientific research, yet their ability to discover high-quality research hypotheses remains unexamined due to the lack of a dedicated benchmark. To address this gap, we introduce the first large-scale benchmark for evaluating LLMs on a sufficient set of scientific discovery sub-tasks-inspiration retrieval, hypothesis composition, and hypothesis ranking-where sufficient means that perfectly solving these sub-tasks perfectly solves the overall discovery task. We develop an automated LLM-based framework that extracts critical components-research questions, background surveys, inspirations, and hypotheses-from papers across 12 disciplines, with expert validation confirming its accuracy. To prevent data contamination, we focus exclusively on publications from 2024 onward, ensuring minimal overlap with LLM pretraining data; our automated framework further enables automatic extraction of even more recent papers as LLM pretraining cutoffs advance, supporting scalable and contamination-free automatic renewal of this discovery benchmark. Our evaluation shows that, across disciplines, LLMs excel at inspiration retrieval-an out-of-distribution task-suggesting their ability to surface novel knowledge associations.