MMODELYST
Papers/Do Agents Know What They Can't Do? Evaluating Feasibility Awareness in Tool-Using Agents
PAP

Do Agents Know What They Can't Do? Evaluating Feasibility Awareness in Tool-Using Agents

May 27, 2026

arXiv
Abstract

Tool-using agents often incur substantial computational cost due to long reasoning chains and iterative tool usage. In practical scenarios, many tasks become infeasible under constrained tool environments, where the capabilities required for successful task completion are unavailable. Detecting infeasible tasks and stopping execution early can significantly reduce unnecessary execution cost. In this work, we propose FeasiGen, an automatic pipeline for constructing infeasible agent tasks by identifying the critical tools required for successful task completion. Our approach extracts tool-calling traces from successful executions across multiple agent systems, identifies critical tools consistently shared across diverse execution strategies, and masks these tools to automatically transform solvable tasks into infeasible ones. Human verification confirms that the infeasibility annotations for our constructed tasks achieve over 94% accuracy. We further introduce feasibility-aware evaluation metrics for measuring whether agents can recognize infeasible tasks and stop execution appropriately. Extensive evaluations across nine models reveal substantially weak infeasibility detection ability, with false continue rate reaching up to 73.9%. We further observe that multi-agent architectures significantly reduce erroneous execution under infeasible conditions.

Select text to highlight · click a highlight to remove · saved in this browser only
Authors
Liang Cheng, Mingsheng Cai, Jiuming Jiang, Luo Mai
Your notes (browser-local)
saved
arXiv:2605.28532