AI Navigate

Measuring progress toward AGI: A cognitive framework

Google DeepMind Blog / 3/18/2026

💬 OpinionIdeas & Deep AnalysisModels & Research

Key Points

  • The article proposes a cognitive framework to measure progress toward artificial general intelligence (AGI).
  • It outlines concrete criteria and metrics to assess cognitive capabilities across AI systems.
  • It clarifies the difference between benchmarks, capabilities, and practical alignment challenges.
  • It discusses implications for researchers, product teams, business strategy, and policy as AGI milestones are pursued.

Measuring progress toward AGI: A cognitive framework

We’re introducing a framework to measure progress toward AGI, and launching a Kaggle hackathon to build the relevant evaluations.

ryanburnell
Ryan Burnell
Research Scientist, Google DeepMind
orankelly
Oran Kelly
Product Manager, Google DeepMind
Read AI-generated summary

General summary

Google DeepMind wants to help measure the progress of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) using cognitive science. Their new paper, "Measuring Progress Toward AGI: A Cognitive Taxonomy," presents a framework for understanding AI systems' cognitive capabilities. You can participate by designing evaluations for key cognitive abilities in their Kaggle hackathon for a chance to win from a prize pool of $200,000.

Summaries were generated by Google AI. Generative AI is experimental.
Several rectangles in lines diagonally across the image. Each rectangle has swirls.

Your browser does not support the audio element.

Listen to article
This content is generated by Google AI. Generative AI is experimental
[[duration]] minutes
Voice Speed
Voice
Speed 0.75X 1X 1.5X 2X

Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) has the potential to accelerate scientific discovery and help solve some of humanity’s most pressing problems. But it can be difficult to know how close we are to this key milestone, because there’s a lack of empirical tools for evaluating systems’ general intelligence. Tracking progress toward AGI will require a wide range of methods and approaches, and we believe cognitive science provides one important piece of the puzzle.

That’s why today, we’re releasing a new paper, “Measuring Progress Toward AGI: A Cognitive Taxonomy,” that presents a scientific foundation for understanding the cognitive capabilities of AI systems.

Alongside the paper, we are partnering with Kaggle to launch a hackathon, inviting the research community to help build the evaluations needed to put this framework into practice.

Deconstructing general intelligence

Our framework draws on decades of research from psychology, neuroscience and cognitive science to develop a cognitive taxonomy. It identifies 10 key cognitive abilities that we hypothesize will be important for general intelligence in AI systems:

  1. Perception: extracting and processing sensory information from the environment
  2. Generation: producing outputs such as text, speech and actions
  3. Attention: focusing cognitive resources on what matters
  4. Learning: acquiring new knowledge through experience and instruction
  5. Memory: storing and retrieving information over time
  6. Reasoning: drawing valid conclusions through logical inference
  7. Metacognition: knowledge and monitoring of one's own cognitive processes
  8. Executive functions: planning, inhibition and cognitive flexibility
  9. Problem solving: finding effective solutions to domain-specific problems
  10. Social cognition: processing and interpreting social information and responding appropriately in social situations
Bubbles all connecting to the central bubble "Cognitive faculties". Each bubble list a cognitive faculty.

To understand AI capabilities across these cognitive abilities, we propose a three-stage evaluation protocol that benchmarks system performance in relation to human capabilities:

  1. Evaluate AI systems across a broad suite of cognitive tasks covering each ability, using held-out test sets to prevent data contamination
  2. Collect human baselines for the same tasks from a demographically representative sample of adults
  3. Map each AI system’s performance relative to the distribution of human performance in each ability

Going from theory to practice

Defining these cognitive abilities is a crucial first step, but we need more than a framework to measure progress. To put this theory into practice, we are launching a new Kaggle hackathon — “Measuring progress toward AGI: Cognitive abilities”. The hackathon encourages the community to design evaluations for five cognitive abilities where the evaluation gap is the largest: learning, metacognition, attention, executive functions and social cognition.

Participants can use Kaggle's newly launched Community Benchmarks platform to build and test their evaluations against a lineup of frontier models.

We are offering a total prize pool of $200,000: $10,000 awards for the top two submissions in each of the five tracks, and $25,000 grand prizes for the four absolute best overall submissions. Submissions are open March 17 through April 16, and we’ll announce the results June 1. Head over to the Kaggle website to start building.

Get more stories from Google in your inbox. Get more stories from Google in your inbox.

Email address

Your information will be used in accordance with Google's privacy policy.

Subscribe

Done. Just one step more.

Check your inbox to confirm your subscription.

You are already subscribed to our newsletter.

You can also subscribe with a different email address .

POSTED IN: