Existing reasoning datasets saturate and fail to test abstract, multi-step problems, especially pathfinding and complex rule constraint satisfaction. We introduce SPaRC (Spatial Pathfinding Reasoning Challenge), a dataset of 1,000 2D grid pathfinding puzzles to evaluate spatial and symbolic reasoning, requiring step-by-step planning with arithmetic and geometric rules. Humans achieve near-perfect accuracy (98.0%; 94.5% on hard puzzles), while the best reasoning models, such as o4-mini, struggle (15.8%; 1.1% on hard puzzles). Models often generate invalid paths (>50% of puzzles for o4-mini), and reasoning tokens reveal they make errors in navigation and spatial logic. Unlike humans, who take longer on hard puzzles, models fail to scale test-time compute with difficulty. Allowing models to make multiple solution attempts improves accuracy, suggesting potential for better spatial reasoning with improved training and efficient test-time scaling methods. SPaRC can be used as a window into models' spatial reasoning limitations and drive research toward new methods that excel in abstract, multi-step problem-solving.
SPaRC: A Spatial Pathfinding Reasoning Challenge
SPaRC, a new dataset of 2D grid pathfinding puzzles, highlights the shortcomings of existing reasoning models in handling spatial and symbolic reasoning tasks, particularly with multi-step plans and geometric rules.
- Year
- 2025
- Venue
- arXiv 2025
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- 4
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2505.16686ARXIV-DEFAULT
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