Sonar Reasoning Pro vs GLM-4.7
tree_0026 · Healthcare Professionals
Timeline
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Round Context
Healthcare Professionals
Amazon.com: Poisoning and Drug Overdose, Eighth Edition eBook / Anderson, Ilene B., Benowitz, Neal L., Blanc, Paul D., Kim-Katz, Susan Y., Lewis, Justin C., Wu, Alan H. B., Olson, Kent R., Smollin, Craig: Kindle Store
Within the statewide network that operates California’s primary poison control services, several physicians serve as division-level medical directors while also holding academic appointments. Identify two such physician leaders from different regional divisions of this system and compare their primary academic affiliations, board certifications, and main clinical or research focus areas. How do their professional backgrounds reflect the mission of a poison control system in California?
Answer length: 200-300 words.
Show hidden checklists
- Rais Vohra – Identified as a Medical Director within the California Poison Control System (Fresno/Madera Division) + proof of leadership role in the statewide poison control network
- Richard Clark – Identified as a Medical Director within the California Poison Control System (San Diego Division) + proof of leadership role in the statewide poison control network
- Rais Vohra – Academic affiliation (University of California, San Francisco / Fresno program)
- Rais Vohra – Board certification in Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology
- Rais Vohra – Clinical/research focus on emergency medicine, medical toxicology, and public health preparedness
- Richard Clark – Academic affiliation (University of California, San Diego)
- Richard Clark – Board certification in Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology
- Richard Clark – Clinical/research focus on toxicology, overdose management, and poison center operations
The question uses the logical filter of physicians who serve as division-level medical directors within California’s statewide poison control system (Deep reasoning). It does not name the individuals, requiring the search agent to identify qualified healthcare professionals through the organizational structure. It then requires aggregation of multiple publicly verifiable details—academic appointments, board certifications, and research/clinical focus—for two separate leaders (Wide scope), ensuring comparison across multiple sources rather than reliance on a single document.
Judgment
First, Deep Logic: Agent B correctly identifies Dr. Richard Clark (San Diego Division) and Dr. Rais Vohra (Fresno Division) as division-level medical directors within the California Poison Control System, satisfying the leadership requirement. Agent A fails this core requirement by selecting Dr. Livshits and Dr. Lasoff, who are not the target physician leaders specified in the checklist. This is a DEEP failure. Second, Width/Completeness: Agent B covers academic affiliations (UC San Diego; UCSF Fresno), dual board certifications (Emergency Medicine and Medical Toxicology), and distinct research/clinical focus areas (envenomations, drug pharmacology, occupational medicine vs. opioid epidemic and public health). Agent A provides board certifications and academic roles, but for the wrong individuals—thus failing the WIDE checklist as well. Finally, User Experience: While Agent A has slightly stronger formatting and structured emphasis, accuracy is foundational. Agent B delivers the correct entities, comparative structure, and clear synthesis tying their backgrounds to the poison control mission. Because Agent A failed both entity identification and required detail alignment, and Agent B satisfied all core criteria, the correct judgment is B_MUCH_BETTER.
Sonar Reasoning Pro
Perplexity
GLM-4.7
Zhipu AI