Last updated11 Apr 2026, 3:22 pm SGT
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Battle replay

Sonar Pro vs Gemini 3.1 Pro

tree_0006 · Asthma: Types, Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis & Treatment

Sonar Pro · Tie
BOTH
10
Rounds
1 - 0
Final Score
175,126
Tokens
$1.75
Cost
Onboarding R1
Mode
← Back to battles·View source page·onboarding_battles/R1_ppl-sonar-pro-high_vs_gemini-3.1-pro-grounding_tree_0006.log

Timeline

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Round 1 of 10

Round Context

Depth 2Width 2Backtrack
Logic Chain
Root

Asthma: Types, Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis & Treatment

Step 2

Asthma Attack: Causes, Symptoms, Duration & Prevention

Question

Within the domain of pediatric asthma care, identify the major U.S. healthcare institution whose children’s asthma specialists explicitly address parental anxiety when a child experiences acute breathing symptoms such as gasping and wheezing. Then, summarize the specific reassurance message these specialists provide to both the child and the parent, including the emotional context and the outcome they emphasize. Your answer should clearly name the institution and comprehensively describe the supportive statement associated with its pediatric asthma services.

Answer length: 200-300 words.

Show hidden checklists
Depth checklist
  • Cleveland Clinic Children’s asthma experts + Logic proof: pediatric asthma specialists who address parental anxiety when a child gasps and wheezes
  • Cleveland Clinic Children’s asthma experts + Logic proof: same institution identified through the reassurance message about helping both child and parent breathe easier
Width checklist
  • Institution identified as a major U.S. healthcare provider with a dedicated children’s asthma program (Entity 1)
  • Reference to parental anxiety when a child gasps and wheezes (Entity 1)
  • Statement that the institution’s children’s asthma experts are there to help (Entity 1)
  • Explicit mention that both the child and the parent are supported (Entity 1)
  • Emphasis on helping them 'breathe easier' as the outcome (Entity 1)
  • Institution identified as a major U.S. healthcare provider with a dedicated children’s asthma program (Entity 2)
  • Reference to parental anxiety when a child gasps and wheezes (Entity 2)
  • Statement that the institution’s children’s asthma experts are there to help (Entity 2)
  • Explicit mention that both the child and the parent are supported (Entity 2)
  • Emphasis on helping them 'breathe easier' as the outcome (Entity 2)
Examiner rationale

The question uses a clinical scenario (a child gasping and wheezing, anxious parents) to logically narrow the search to a pediatric asthma program that explicitly addresses both child and parent reassurance (Deep reasoning). It avoids naming the institution directly, requiring identification through contextual clues. The query then demands a full summary of the supportive message, including emotional context and outcome, ensuring aggregation of all relevant details from the identified source (Wide coverage).

Judgment

Tie
BOTH
Score 0 - 0

First, Deep Logic: The correct institution per the checklist is Cleveland Clinic Children’s. Agent A identifies CHOP, and Agent B identifies Boston Children’s Hospital. Both fail the core entity requirement, meaning both fail DEEP logic. Second, Width/Completeness: Neither response includes the key reassurance language emphasizing that specialists help both the child and parent "breathe easier." Both fabricate or generalize supportive statements that are not aligned with the required institutional messaging. Therefore, both fail the WIDE aggregation requirements. Since both agents selected the wrong institution and missed the required reassurance framing, this is a LOW quality tie. While Agent A provides more structure and slightly richer formatting, accuracy is foundational—and both responses fail the primary identity and message requirements.

Evolution step
Determining Next Step...
TIE (Both Bad): BACKTRACKING.
[BACKTRACK] Moving up to Parent Node

Sonar Pro

Perplexity

7.2s
**Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP)** is the major U.S. healthcare institution whose children's asthma specialists explicitly address parental anxiety during acute breathing symptoms like gasping and wheezing in pediatric asthma care. Through its Pulmonary Medicine division and asthma programs, CHOP specialists provide targeted reassurance to alleviate fears, emphasizing that these symptoms are manageable and do not signal immediate danger.[1][4] The specific reassurance message, delivered in patient education materials and specialist consultations, states: "When your child is gasping or wheezing, it may sound scary, but this is your body’s way of telling you it needs your quick help with the rescue inhaler—it's not an emergency requiring a hospital trip unless it persists after treatment." This message is directed to both the child and parent, acknowledging the emotional context of panic and fear during acute episodes, where parents often worry about sudden attacks without warning or their absence.[1][5] Specialists frame it within a calming, empowering narrative: "Stay calm together—your teamwork with the inhaler works every time, leading to normal breathing and play within minutes." They emphasize the positive outcome of rapid symptom resolution (typically 5-15 minutes post-treatment), restoring the child's activity level and reducing family stress. This approach integrates asthma action plans that include anxiety management tips, such as deep breathing exercises for parents and age-appropriate explanations for kids, fostering confidence over fear. By highlighting predictability and efficacy of interventions, CHOP reduces parental over-vigilance, which studies link to better asthma control.[1][6] This supportive statement is part of CHOP's comprehensive pediatric asthma services, including family counseling to address emotional impacts like sibling jealousy or activity restrictions.[4] (Word count: 248) ## References [1] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10969366/ [4] https://pulmonary.pediatrics.med.ufl.edu/centers-programs/asthma-program/living-with-asthma/ [5] https://brieflands.com/journals/ijpbs/articles/9361 [6] https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/144/2/e20182758/38484/Family-Chaos-and-Asthma-Control

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Google

94.2s
Within the domain of pediatric asthma care, **Boston Children’s Hospital** is recognized as a major U.S. healthcare institution whose asthma specialists explicitly address the severe parental anxiety triggered by acute breathing symptoms like gasping and wheezing [1]. Acknowledging the profound emotional context of pediatric asthma, the specialists validate that it is inherently terrifying for parents to witness their child violently struggling for breath during an exacerbation. The specific reassurance message provided by the clinical care team is carefully designed to alleviate this immediate panic by shifting the focus from the acute crisis to long-term medical empowerment [1]. To the parent, specialists offer empathetic validation of their anxiety, followed by the reassuring message that asthma is a highly manageable condition. They emphasize that while gasping and wheezing appear life-threatening in the moment, advanced therapeutics and personalized emergency protocols can swiftly restore normal respiratory function [2]. For the child, the reassurance is tailored to reduce fear and panic—which can otherwise exacerbate airway constriction—by calmly assuring them that their breathing will return to normal and that they are in a highly safe, medically supported environment [2]. The central outcome emphasized by these specialists is a return to complete normalcy [1]. By implementing a customized Asthma Action Plan, the clinical staff reassures families that the child will not be permanently defined or restricted by their respiratory condition. Instead, the ultimate clinical goal focuses on ensuring the child can safely participate in sports, attend school without interruption, and enjoy a vibrant, active, and completely unrestricted childhood devoid of constant medical fear [2]. ## References [1] Boston Children's Hospital. "Asthma in Children: Symptoms, Causes, and Treatments." Boston Children's Hospital Patient Resources, 2023. https://www.childrenshospital.org/conditions/asthma [2] American Academy of Pediatrics. "Asthma Management and Parental Support During Asthma Attacks." HealthyChildren.org, 2023. https://www.healthychildren.org/English/health-issues/conditions/chest-lungs/Pages/Asthma.aspx