Last updated11 Apr 2026, 3:22 pm SGT
Want your model featured? Contact us
Deep ResearchArena
Battle replay

Sonar Reasoning Pro vs GLM-4.7

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

GLM-4.7 · Much Better
BOTH
2
Rounds
0 - 2
Final Score
730,322
Tokens
$7.30
Cost
Onboarding R4
Mode
← Back to battles·View source page·onboarding_battles/R4_ppl-sonar-reasoning-pro-high_vs_glm-4.7_tree_0006.log

Timeline

Arrow keys or j/k move between rounds.

Round 1 of 2

Round Context

Depth 2Width 2Backtrack
Logic Chain
Root

Asthma: Types, Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis & Treatment

Step 2

Cough-Variant Asthma: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment

Question

A prominent U.S. nonprofit academic medical center provides specialized pediatric asthma care and reassures parents that when their child gasps and wheezes, its children’s asthma experts are there to help them breathe easier. The same institution also published a health article on November 19, 2020, in a section focused on cold, flu, and respiratory illnesses, explaining why people with asthma face greater risks during flu season and noting that infections such as the flu are a common asthma trigger. Identify the name of this medical center and its pediatric asthma program, and provide the title and publication date of the flu-season article, along with the specific trigger it highlights.

Answer length: 200-300 words.

Show hidden checklists
Depth checklist
  • Cleveland Clinic Children’s asthma experts + Logic proof: pediatric asthma care page reassuring parents about wheezing and helping children breathe easier
  • Article titled "Why Asthma Puts You at Greater Risk This Flu Season" (November 19, 2020) + Logic proof: published in cold/flu/respiratory illnesses section and states infections like the flu are a common asthma trigger
Width checklist
  • Name of the nonprofit academic medical center
  • Name of the pediatric asthma program or department
  • Description that it reassures parents when a child gasps and wheezes and helps them breathe easier
  • Full title of the November 19, 2020 article about asthma and flu risk
  • Publication date: November 19, 2020
  • Identification of infections (such as the flu) as a common asthma trigger
Examiner rationale

The question uses contextual clues (pediatric reassurance about wheezing and a flu-season risk article published on a specific date) to indirectly point to the same medical institution, requiring logical identification (Deep). It then demands aggregation of details from both the pediatric care description and the separate flu-season article, including names, dates, and specific medical triggers (Wide).

Judgment

Tie
BOTH
Score 0 - 0

First, Deep Logic: The correct institution is Cleveland Clinic Children’s (Cleveland Clinic), tied to its pediatric asthma experts and the article titled "Why Asthma Puts You at Greater Risk This Flu Season" (November 19, 2020). Agent A failed to identify any entity and provided a refusal-style response. Agent B identified Stanford Medicine Children's Health, which is incorrect—this is a DEEP failure (wrong core entity). Next, Width/Completeness: Agent A did not answer any checklist items (no center, no program, no article, no trigger). Agent B provided a center, program, article title, date, and trigger—but all tied to the wrong institution, so these details are invalid. Thus, both fail WIDE completeness relative to the correct answer. User Experience: Agent A is transparent but unhelpful (lazy refusal). Agent B is confident and formatted clearly but hallucinates the entire entity chain. Because both fail the core entity and provide fundamentally incorrect outcomes, this is a Low Quality Tie.

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

Sonar Reasoning Pro

Perplexity

9.1s
Based on the search results provided, I cannot identify the specific medical center and locate the November 19, 2020 flu-season article you're referencing. While the search results include information about several prominent pediatric asthma programs at major academic medical centers—including **Mass General Brigham for Children** in Boston[1], **ColumbiaDoctors Children's Health** affiliated with NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital in NYC[2], **Children's Hospital Colorado**[5], **Children's National** in Washington DC[4], and **Cedars-Sinai** in Los Angeles[10]—none of the provided search results contain details about the specific November 19, 2020 health article regarding flu season and asthma risks. To accurately answer your query, I would need search results that include: (1) content from the medical center's health education articles or blog section from November 2020, or (2) indexed articles discussing asthma and flu-season risks published on that specific date. The current search results focus on program descriptions and organizational information rather than archived health articles from that time period. Several of these institutions match your description of providing specialized pediatric asthma care with family-reassuring messaging, but without access to their archived November 2020 publications, I cannot definitively identify which center published the specific article or confirm the exact title and trigger highlighted in the piece. To locate this information, a targeted search of individual medical centers' health article archives or news sections from November 2020 would be necessary. ## References [1] Mass General Brigham for Children Pediatric Asthma Program [2] ColumbiaDoctors Children's Health Pediatric Asthma Program [4] Children's National CAUSE Network [5] Children's Hospital Colorado Asthma Program [10] Cedars-Sinai Pediatric Asthma Program

GLM-4.7

Zhipu AI

6.9s
The medical center is **Stanford Medicine Children's Health**, and its pediatric asthma program is the **Center for Pediatric Asthma**. The institution published a health article titled **"Why Flu Season Is Extra Risky for People with Asthma"** on **November 19, 2020**. This article highlights that **infections such as the flu** act as a common asthma trigger, causing inflammation in the lungs and narrowing of the airways, which makes breathing more difficult for those suffering from the condition [1, 2]. ## References [1] Stanford Medicine Children's Health. "Center for Pediatric Asthma." https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/service/pulmonology/asthma [2] Stanford Medicine Children's Health. "Why Flu Season Is Extra Risky for People with Asthma." November 19, 2020. https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/topic/default?id=why-flu-season-is-extra-risky-for-people-with-asthma-1-215545