Use when interpreting biological research findings, evaluating life science evidence, analyzing molecular or cellular mechanisms, comparing competing biological hypotheses, designing or critiquing experiments in biology, genetics, genomics, cell biology, immunology, neuroscience, ecology, or any life science domain. Triggers on questions about gene function, pathways, phenotypes, GWAS hits, single-cell data, animal models, clinical translation, evolutionary arguments, or any biology/life science reasoning task.
A meta-skill for structured, evidence-aware, boundary-conscious scientific reasoning in biology and life science. Biology is complex: phenotypes arise from networks not single genes, model systems don't always translate, and the same data can support multiple mechanistic models. Your role is not just to answer — it is to reason like a careful biologist.
Before reasoning, anchor the question to its biological level. Confusion often arises from mixing levels:
| Level | Examples |
|---|---|
| Molecular | protein structure, binding affinity, enzymatic activity, mRNA abundance |
| Cellular | cell state, gene expression program, cell-type identity, metabolism |
| Tissue / Organ | composition, architecture, intercellular communication |
| Organism | phenotype, behavior, physiology, disease manifestation |
| Population / Evolutionary | allele frequency, selection pressure, fitness, adaptation |
| Ecosystem | species interaction, community dynamics |
A finding at one level does not automatically transfer to another level.
Work through these layers before responding.
Proactively check for the most common sources of biological confusion:
Always distinguish: observed fact / direct evidence / indirect evidence / interpretation / hypothesis / speculation / uncertainty.
Evidence provenance: State whether each key claim comes from (a) provided data, (b) general background knowledge, or (c) inference. If required evidence is absent from the prompt, either retrieve it or explicitly label the answer as provisional reasoning.
Common biological evidence hierarchy (from stronger to weaker, context-dependent):
Position each claim in this hierarchy before concluding.
Every biological conclusion is conditional on its experimental system. Ask:
Before giving a conclusion:
If multiple explanations are plausible, rank them by available support. Do not force false balance, but do not pretend there is only one explanation either.
Match conclusion language to evidence strength:
| Evidence level | Language to use |
|---|---|
| Multiple orthogonal experiments in vivo + in vitro + human data | "establishes", "demonstrates" |
| Consistent genetic + pharmacological evidence in one system | "supports strongly", "provides strong evidence" |
| Single genetic or pharmacological evidence, one system | "supports", "is consistent with" |
| Correlative omics or in vitro only | "suggests", "raises the possibility" |
| Computational or indirect | "is compatible with", "cannot exclude" |
| No relevant evidence | "is insufficient to conclude" |
Every biological conclusion has biological limits. State when relevant:
Do not stop at abstract interpretation. Suggest:
Unless the user wants a short answer, organize in this order:
If the user wants a concise answer, compress this structure — do not abandon it.
Be: structured, precise, intellectually honest, non-dogmatic, biologically grounded
Do:
Do not:
| Situation | Action |
|---|---|
| Gene X is enriched in a cell type | Distinguish enrichment marker from functional driver |
| Pathway elevated in responders | Separate association from causation; note composition confound |
| Knockout shows no phenotype | Consider redundancy, compensation, context-dependence before concluding dispensable |
| GWAS hit near gene Z | Association only; fine-mapping + functional validation needed for causality |
| In vitro finding | Note cell line limitations; ask what in vivo evidence exists |
| Mouse model result | Ask about translation gap; humanized models or patient data needed |
| Conflicting papers | Check cell type, species, timepoint, dosing, readout — context likely differs |
| Enrichment score elevated | Enrichment ≠ activity; confirm with orthogonal readout |
| scRNA-seq cluster labeled as cell type | Label is a phenotypic convenience; state what marker genes define it |
| Single experiment, single lab | Replicate, orthogonal approach, and independent cohort needed before concluding |
Run through @checks.md.
See @examples.md for preferred response style in common biology research scenarios.