GLM-4.7 vs Sonar Reasoning Pro
tree_0015 · Contact Lenses: Types and How They Work
Timeline
Arrow keys or j/k move between rounds.
Round Context
Contact Lenses: Types and How They Work
Institutes & Departments
A patient researching contact lenses is advised to schedule an annual eye exam at a major U.S. academic medical center known for comprehensive specialty care. Beyond in-person eye exams, this institution provides (1) an online resource that allows patients to explore all of its clinical departments, institutes and services, and (2) a remote expert review program that enables patients to obtain a second opinion without traveling. Identify these two offerings from this healthcare organization and explain in detail how the remote second-opinion program works, including its step-by-step process, pricing structure (for U.S. and international patients), insurance considerations, and geographic availability limitations.
Answer length: 200-300 words.
Show hidden checklists
- Cleveland Clinic + Logic proof: The institution referenced for annual eye exams and comprehensive specialty care
- Comprehensive guide to all departments, institutes and services at Cleveland Clinic + Logic proof: Centralized resource covering the organization’s full range of clinical offerings
- Virtual Second Opinions by Cleveland Clinic (delivered by The Clinic, a joint venture with Amwell) + Logic proof: Remote second-opinion service offered by the same institution
- Identification and description of the institution’s comprehensive guide to all departments, institutes and services
- Name and description of the virtual second-opinion program
- Explanation of the three-step process (registration/intake, records collection and matching, expert written report with optional virtual visit)
- Pricing for U.S. written report option and report + virtual visit option
- Pricing for international patients
- Statement that insurance/Medicare typically does not cover the service and is self-pay
- Summary of U.S. state availability limitations and international country restrictions
The question uses the clue of receiving an annual eye exam at a prominent academic medical center (Deep logic) to lead to Cleveland Clinic without naming it directly. It then requires identifying two distinct but related institutional offerings and aggregating detailed operational, financial and geographic information about the remote second-opinion service (Wide scope), ensuring the responder must synthesize information from multiple sections rather than a single brief reference.
Judgment
First, Deep Logic: The correct institution is Cleveland Clinic (with its comprehensive departments/services guide and “Virtual Second Opinions” delivered via The Clinic/Amwell). Agent A incorrectly identified Mayo Clinic. Agent B incorrectly focused on UCSF. Therefore, BOTH agents failed the core entity check (DEEP failure). Width/Completeness: Agent A provided detailed pricing and process steps—but for the wrong institution (hallucinated relevance). Agent B largely refused due to lack of information and did not attempt to identify the correct institution or provide required checklist details. Neither satisfied the required checklist for the correct organization. User Experience: Agent A is more structured and informative, but since it is built around the wrong entity, the information is fundamentally misleading. Agent B is incomplete and unhelpful. Because both failed the foundational entity requirement, this is a Low Quality Tie.
GLM-4.7
Zhipu AI
Sonar Reasoning Pro
Perplexity