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Main Authors: Zan, Mingrui, Zhang, Yunquan, Zhang, Boyang, Liu, Fangming, Cheng, Daning
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12332
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author Zan, Mingrui
Zhang, Yunquan
Zhang, Boyang
Liu, Fangming
Cheng, Daning
author_facet Zan, Mingrui
Zhang, Yunquan
Zhang, Boyang
Liu, Fangming
Cheng, Daning
contents Users of Large Language Models (LLMs) often perceive these models as intelligent entities with human-like capabilities. However, the extent to which LLMs' capabilities truly approximate human abilities remains a topic of debate. In this paper, to characterize the capabilities of LLMs in relation to human capabilities, we collected performance data from over 80 models across 37 evaluation benchmarks. The evaluation benchmarks are categorized into 6 primary abilities and 11 sub-abilities in human aspect. Then, we then clustered the performance rankings into several categories and compared these clustering results with classifications based on human ability aspects. Our findings lead to the following conclusions: 1. We have confirmed that certain capabilities of LLMs with fewer than 10 billion parameters can indeed be described using human ability metrics; 2. While some abilities are considered interrelated in humans, they appear nearly uncorrelated in LLMs; 3. The capabilities possessed by LLMs vary significantly with the parameter scale of the model.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2504_12332
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Can the capability of Large Language Models be described by human ability? A Meta Study
Zan, Mingrui
Zhang, Yunquan
Zhang, Boyang
Liu, Fangming
Cheng, Daning
Computation and Language
Computers and Society
Users of Large Language Models (LLMs) often perceive these models as intelligent entities with human-like capabilities. However, the extent to which LLMs' capabilities truly approximate human abilities remains a topic of debate. In this paper, to characterize the capabilities of LLMs in relation to human capabilities, we collected performance data from over 80 models across 37 evaluation benchmarks. The evaluation benchmarks are categorized into 6 primary abilities and 11 sub-abilities in human aspect. Then, we then clustered the performance rankings into several categories and compared these clustering results with classifications based on human ability aspects. Our findings lead to the following conclusions: 1. We have confirmed that certain capabilities of LLMs with fewer than 10 billion parameters can indeed be described using human ability metrics; 2. While some abilities are considered interrelated in humans, they appear nearly uncorrelated in LLMs; 3. The capabilities possessed by LLMs vary significantly with the parameter scale of the model.
title Can the capability of Large Language Models be described by human ability? A Meta Study
topic Computation and Language
Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.12332