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Papers/When Robots Do the Chores: A Benchmark and Agent for Long-Horizon Household Task Execution
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When Robots Do the Chores: A Benchmark and Agent for Long-Horizon Household Task Execution

May 14, 2026

arXiv
Abstract

Long-horizon household tasks demand robust high-level planning and sustained reasoning capabilities, which are largely overlooked by existing embodied AI benchmarks that emphasize short-horizon navigation or manipulation and rely on fixed task categories. We introduce LongAct, a benchmark designed to evaluate planning-level autonomy in long-horizon household tasks specified through free-form instructions. By abstracting away embodiment-specific low-level control, LongAct isolates high-level cognitive capabilities such as instruction understanding, dependency management, memory maintenance, and adaptive planning. We further propose HoloMind, a VLM-driven agent with a DAG-based long-horizon hierarchical planner, a Multimodal Spatial Memory for persistent world modeling, an Episodic Memory for experience reuse, and a global Critic for reflective supervision. Experiments with GPT-5 and Qwen3-VL models show that HoloMind substantially improves long-horizon performance while reducing reliance on model scale. Even top models achieve only 59% goal completion and 16% full-task success, underscoring the difficulty of LongAct and the need for stronger long-horizon planning in embodied agents.

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Authors
Zilin Zhu, Longteng Guo, Yanghong Mei, Bowen Pang, Zongxun Zhang, Xingjian He, Ruyi Ji, Jing Liu
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arXiv:2605.14504