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Probing Mechanical Reasoning in Large Vision Language Models

Haoran Sun
Qingying Gao
Haiyun Lyu
Dezhi Luo
Yijiang Li
Hokin Deng
Abstract

Mechanical reasoning is a hallmark of human intelligence, defined by its ubiquitous yet irreplaceable role in human activities ranging from routine tasks to civil engineering. Embedding machines with mechanical reasoning is therefore an important step towards building human-level artificial intelligence. Here, we leveraged 155 cognitive experiments to test the understanding of system stability, gears and pulley systems, leverage principle, inertia and motion, and fluid mechanics in 26 Vision Language Models (VLMs). Results indicate that VLMs consistently perform worse than humans on all domains, while demonstrate significant difficulty in reasoning about gear systems and fluid mechanics. Notably, their performance on these tasks do not improve as number of parameters increase, suggesting that current attention-based architecture may fail to grasp certain underlying mechanisms required for mechanical reasoning, particularly those pertaining to mental simulations.

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@article{sun2025_2410.00318,
  title={ Probing Mechanical Reasoning in Large Vision Language Models },
  author={ Haoran Sun and Qingying Gao and Haiyun Lyu and Dezhi Luo and Yijiang Li and Hokin Deng },
  journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2410.00318},
  year={ 2025 }
}
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