TraversalBench: Challenging Paths to Follow for Vision Language Models

April 13, 2026 ยท Grace Period ยท + Add venue

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Authors Clara Petrova, Zhuo Chen, Marin Soljaฤiฤ‡ arXiv ID 2604.10999 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Citations 0
Abstract
Vision-language models (VLMs) perform strongly on many multimodal benchmarks. However, the ability to follow complex visual paths -- a task that human observers typically find straightforward -- remains under-tested. We introduce TraversalBench, a controlled benchmark for exact visual path traversal. Each instance contains a single continuous polyline, a unique start marker, and markers placed at path vertices; the task is to recover the exact ordered sequence encountered when traversing the path from start to finish. The benchmark explicitly balances key path-structural factors including self-intersection count, tortuosity, vertex count, and nearby confounding lines, while minimizing reliance on OCR, world knowledge, and open-ended planning. We find that self-intersections are the dominant source of difficulty. A first-crossing analysis shows that errors are sharply localized: performance is relatively stable immediately before the first crossing, then drops steeply when the model must resolve the correct continuation. By contrast, nearby confounding lines produce a weaker persistent degradation that compounds with repeated exposure. These analyses make TraversalBench a useful diagnostic for identifying whether models suffer from human-like failures or other breakdowns in sustained visual processing. An auxiliary reading-order benchmark further reveals a consistent preference for layouts compatible with left-to-right serialization, while not explaining away the main effects of path complexity. Together, these results position TraversalBench as a controlled diagnostic of path-faithful visual reasoning and as a useful testbed for studying multimodal spatial reasoning under ambiguity, clutter, and distractor structure. More broadly, we position TraversalBench as a contribution to the still-limited area of sustained visual grounding benchmarks for VLMs.
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