Paper detail

TOC-Bench: A Temporal Object Consistency Benchmark for Video Large Language Models

Video large language models (Video-LLMs) have made strong progress in general video understanding, but their ability to maintain temporal object consistency remains underexplored. Existing benchmarks often emphasize event recognition, action understanding, or coarse temporal reasoning, while rarely testing whether models can preserve the identity, state, and continuity of the same object across occlusion, disappearance, reappearance, state transitions, and cross-object interactions. We introduce TOC-Bench, a diagnostic benchmark for evaluating temporal object consistency in Video-LLMs. TOC-Bench is object-track grounded: each queried subject is linked to a per-frame trajectory and a structured temporal event timeline. To ensure that questions require temporally ordered visual evidence rather than language priors, single-frame shortcuts, or unordered frame cues, we design a three-layer temporal-necessity filtering protocol, which removes 60.7% of candidate QA pairs and retains 17,900 temporally dependent items across 10 diagnostic dimensions. From this pool, we construct a human-verified benchmark with 2,323 high-quality QA pairs over 1,951 videos. Experiments on representative Video-LLMs show that temporal object consistency remains a major unsolved challenge, with notable weaknesses in event counting, event ordering, identity-sensitive reasoning, and hallucination-aware verification, even when models perform well on general video understanding benchmarks. These results suggest that object-centric temporal coherence is a key bottleneck for current Video-LLMs, and that TOC-Bench provides a focused platform for diagnosing and improving object-aware temporal reasoning. The resource is available at https://github.com/cjzcjz666/toc_bench.git.

preprint2026arXivOpen access
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