Claude Science Completes Two Years' Work in a Few Weeks, Is 10x Research Acceleration Really Here?
Claude Science, a new AI workbench from Anthropic, is being tested by scientists, reportedly accelerating specific research workflows by up to 10x. A neuro-scientist at the Allen Institute completed a lengthy literature review in weeks instead of nearly two years using the tool, which automates tasks like citation verification.
The platform is an integrated environment for macOS and Linux, connecting to local or remote computing resources. It streamlines the fragmented research process—literature analysis, computation, visualization, and drafting—into a single, auditable workflow. A key feature is its emphasis on reproducibility: every chart generated includes the exact code, environment, and history used to create it.
Claude Science uses a multi-agent system. A coordinator manages over 60 pre-configured skills for life sciences (genomics, proteomics, etc.) and can spawn specialized agents. A dedicated reviewer agent checks citations and calculations for accuracy, creating a form of internal AI peer review. The system operates with a human-in-the-loop, requiring user approval for major steps.
Initial applications are in life sciences. Examples include target identification for biotech company Manifold Bio and germline variant analysis for glioma research at UCSF, completing analyses in roughly one-tenth the previous time.
The approach contrasts with competitors: Google focuses on proprietary models like AlphaFold, while OpenAI is advancing models' scientific reasoning with benchmarks like GeneBench-Pro. Claude Science differentiates by automating and integrating the practical research pipeline, not just the model's intelligence, aiming to make AI-aided science more reproducible and integrated into daily lab work.
marsbit26m ago