Note with different prompt types I refer to different types of meta-prompts to generate the AGENTS.md. All of these are quite useless. Some additional experiments not in the paper showed that other automated approaches are also useless ("memory" creating methods, broadly speaking).
It could... but as pointed out by other the significance is unclear and per-model results have even less samples than the benchmark average. So: maybe :)
Regarding the 4% improvement for human written AGENTS.md: this would be huge indeed if it were a _consistent_ improvement. However, for example on Sonnet 4.5, performance _drops_ by over 2%. Qwen3 benefits most and GPT-5.2 improves by 1-2%.
The LLM-generated prompts follow the coding agent recommendations. We also show an ablation over different prompt types, and none have consistently better performance.
But ultimately I agree with your post. In fact we do recommend writing good AGENTS.md, manually and targetedly. This is emphasized for example at the end of our abstract and conclusion.
Hey, paper author here.
We did try to get an even sample - we include both SWE-bench repos (which are large, popular and mostly human-written) and a sample of smaller, more recent repositories with existing AGENTS.md (these tend to contain LLM written code of course). Our findings generalize across both these samples. What is arguably missing are small repositories of completely human-written code, but this is quite difficult to obtain nowadays.
Hey, a paper author here :)
I agree, if you know well about LLMs it shouldn't be too surprising that autogenerated context files are not helping - yet this is the default recommendation by major AI companies which we wanted to scrutinize.
> Their definition of context excludes prescriptive specs/requirements files.
Can you explain a bit what you mean here? If the context file specifies a desired behavior, we do check whether the LLM follows it, and this seems generally to work (Section 4.3).
Note with different prompt types I refer to different types of meta-prompts to generate the AGENTS.md. All of these are quite useless. Some additional experiments not in the paper showed that other automated approaches are also useless ("memory" creating methods, broadly speaking).