this post was submitted on 27 Mar 2026
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The ARC Prize organization designs benchmarks which are specifically crafted to demonstrate tasks that humans complete easily, but are difficult for AIs like LLMs, "Reasoning" models, and Agentic frameworks.

ARC-AGI-3 is the first fully interactive benchmark in the ARC-AGI series. ARC-AGI-3 represents hundreds of original turn-based environments, each handcrafted by a team of human game designers. There are no instructions, no rules, and no stated goals. To succeed, an AI agent must explore each environment on its own, figure out how it works, discover what winning looks like, and carry what it learns forward across increasingly difficult levels.

Previous ARC-AGI benchmarks predicted and tracked major AI breakthroughs, from reasoning models to coding agents. ARC-AGI-3 points to what's next: the gap between AI that can follow instructions and AI that can genuinely explore, learn, and adapt in unfamiliar situations.

You can try the tasks yourself here: https://arcprize.org/arc-agi/3

Here is the current leaderboard for ARC-AGI 3, using state of the art models

  • OpenAI GPT-5.4 High - 0.3% success rate at $5.2K
  • Google Gemini 3.1 Pro - 0.2% success rate at $2.2K
  • Anthropic Opus 4.6 Max - 0.2% success rate at $8.9K
  • xAI Grok 4.20 Reasoning - 0.0% success rate $3.8K.

ARC-AGI 3 Leaderboard
(Logarithmic cost on the horizontal axis. Note that the vertical scale goes from 0% to 3% in this graph. If human scores were included, they would be at 100%, at the cost of approximately $250.)

https://arcprize.org/leaderboard

Technical report: https://arcprize.org/media/ARC_AGI_3_Technical_Report.pdf

In order for an environment to be included in ARC-AGI-3, it needs to pass the minimum “easy for humans” threshold. Each environment was attempted by 10 people. Only environments that could be fully solved by at least two human participants (independently) were considered for inclusion in the public, semi-private and fully-private sets. Many environments were solved by six or more people. As a reminder, an environment is considered solved only if the test taker was able to complete all levels, upon seeing the environment for the very first time. As such, all ARC-AGI-3 environments are verified to be 100% solvable by humans with no prior task-specific training

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[–] CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com 60 points 10 hours ago (5 children)

As a technologist, I have to remind everyone that AI is not intelligence. It's a word prediction/statistical machine. It's guessing at a surprisingly good rate what words follow the words before it.

It's math. All the way down.

We as humans have simply taken these words and have said that it is "intelligence".

[–] Iconoclast@feddit.uk 3 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Few of countless dictionary definitions for intelligence:

  • The ability to acquire, understand, and use knowledge.
  • The ability to learn or understand or to deal with new or trying situations
  • The ability to apply knowledge to manipulate one's environment or to think abstractly as measured by objective criteria (such as tests)
  • The act of understanding
  • The ability to learn, understand, and make judgments or have opinions that are based on reason
  • It can be described as the ability to perceive or infer information; and to retain it as knowledge to be applied to adaptive behaviors within an environment or context.

There isn't even concensus on what intelligence actually means yet here you are declaring "AI is not intelligence" what ever that even means.

Artificial Intelligence is a term in computer science that describes a system that's able to perform any task that would normally require human intelligence. Atari chess engine is an intelligent system. It's narrowly intelligent as opposed to humans that are generally intelligent but it's intelligent nevertheless.

[–] partofthevoice@lemmy.zip 1 points 3 hours ago

You’re more precisely right, but also the aforementioned person is not wrong. Intelligence is a broad term as we’re discovering. Truth is, we don’t have the language to effectively communicate about AGI in the ways we’d like to. We don’t know if consciousness is a prerequisite to truly generalizable intelligence, we don’t even know what consciousness is, we don’t know what dimensions truly matter here. Is intelligence a dimension of consciousness, meaning you can have some intelligence without being conscious? What’s the limit, why? … We need some discovery around the taxonomy/topology of consciousness.

[–] Earthman_Jim@lemmy.zip 1 points 4 hours ago

It's something like folks calling a mirror intelligent.

[–] unpossum@sh.itjust.works 25 points 10 hours ago (3 children)

As another technologist, I have to remind everyone that unless you subscribe to some rather fringe theories, humans are also based on standard physics.

Which is math. All the way down.

[–] NewOldGuard@lemmy.ml 6 points 4 hours ago

As a mathematician, it should be noted that the mathematics of physics aren’t laws of the universe, they are models of the laws of the universe. They’re useful for understanding and predicting, but are purely descriptive, not prescriptive. And as they say, all models are wrong, but some are useful

[–] HereIAm@lemmy.world 10 points 9 hours ago

I agree, the maths argument is not a good one. While a neural network is perhaps closer to what a brain is than just a CPU (or a clock, as it was compared to in he olden days), it would be a very big mistake to equate the two.

[–] xep@discuss.online 3 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

What maths do our memories follow? What about consciousness?

[–] Iconoclast@feddit.uk 1 points 3 hours ago (1 children)

Consciousness (the fact of experience) doesn't necessarily need to be linked to intelligence. It might be but it doesn't have to. An LLM is almost definitely more intelligent than an insect but it most likely is like nothing to be an LLM but it probably is like something to be an insect.

[–] partofthevoice@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

Isn’t it kind of eery that you can only suppose it must be “like something” to be an insect, from the very precise bias of being human? We’re projecting the idea that “it’s like something to be something [as a human]” only the experience of other things.

How would we describe what it’s like? Would something poetic suffice, such as “it’s like being a leaf in the wind, and with weak preference of where you blow but no memory of where you’ve been.” … but, all of that is human concepts, human experience decomposed into a subset of more human experiences (really weird, the recursive nature of experience and concepts).

I think the idea of “what it’s like…” has some interesting flaws when applied to nonhumans. It kind of presupposes that insects are lesser, in a way. As though we can conceptualize what it’s kind to be them, merely by understanding a stricter subset of what it’s like to be human.

[–] Iconoclast@feddit.uk 1 points 2 hours ago (1 children)

I can only suppose that of other people as well. There's no way to measure consciousness. The only evidence of its existence is the fact that it feels like something to be me from my subjective perspective. Other humans behave the way I do so I assume they're probably having similar experiences but I have no idea what it's like to be a bat for example.

However, answering the question "what it's like to be" is not relevant here. What's relevant is that existence has qualia at all.

[–] partofthevoice@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

However, answering the question "what it's like to be" is not relevant here. What's relevant is that existence has qualia at all.

Does existence “have qualia?” That treats qualia almost like it’s ontological, if I’m interpreting you correctly. Yet, qualia can only exist from the perspective of a being with the capacity to model a (seemingly external) world via said qualia. There is no magic qualia sauce we can embed inside something.

Qualia, I think, is a process of information reduction… but also it’s a flavor of information interrogation. Because, reducing electromagnetic radiation to “visual perception” happens inside light sensors too — albeit without counting as “qualia.”

What would you say counts as “qualia?” Or rather, what are its dependencies?

[–] Iconoclast@feddit.uk 1 points 45 minutes ago

It's the fact of subjective experience - the warmth of a campfire, the bitterness of lemon, the greenness of green. We're essentially talking about consciousness here. The fact that there's something it is like to be.

While nobody knows what consciousness is or how it comes about, what I mean by it is best captured by the philosopher Thomas Nagel in his aforementioned essay "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?"

Nagel argues that consciousness has an essentially subjective character, a what-it-is-like aspect. He states that "an organism has conscious mental states if and only if there is something that it is like to be that organism – something it is like for the organism.

[–] xploit@lemmy.world 6 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

Obligatory xkcd... we're just meatbags somewhere to the left Purity

On a more serious note, there's plenty to explore there and there are some potentially interesting links to quantum physics and stuff in our brain, as well as how certain drugs can completely disrupt our consciousness (ever had an operation?) and how it could link up. But there is obviously no definitive answer.

At best consciousness is whatever flavour of philosophical interpretation/explanation you like at any given time.

[–] wonderingwanderer@sopuli.xyz 2 points 6 hours ago

Philosopher: looks at the mathematician...

[–] silverneedle@lemmy.ca 10 points 9 hours ago

As someone who knows a thing or two about biology I think LLMs strip away >90% of what makes animals think.

[–] TherapyGary@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 4 hours ago

As a therapist, I can tell you the only thing holding LLMs back from true intelligence is having to pee and poop. Peeing and pooping is the foundation of all higher level operations. I poured water on my PC and the LLM I was running said "I think" right before committing suicide