BioSkepsis vs Scite — Citation Context vs Biomedical Reasoning
Scite's flagship is Smart Citations — a classifier that labels each citation as supporting, mentioning or contrasting a claim. BioSkepsis is a biomedical AI assistant with a biology-native knowledge graph and full-text reasoning. Here is how the two differ, with sources.
What Scite actually is
Scite (also searched as "scite ai" and the typo "scite.ia") is owned by Research Solutions Inc. Its flagship product, Smart Citations, goes beyond simple citation counting. For every in-text citation Scite has indexed, it classifies the surrounding sentence as:
- Supporting — the citing paper reports evidence in favour of the claim
- Mentioning — the citation is informational, neither supporting nor contrasting
- Contrasting — the citing paper reports evidence that conflicts with the claim
Scite reports 1.2 billion+ citation statements across scholarly literature. It also ships an assistant ("Scite Assistant") that answers questions with citation-classified references, and reference-check tools that flag retracted or heavily-contrasted sources. Scite is not biomedical-specific — it covers all academic fields — but its citation-context model is field-agnostic and works across biomedical literature.
At a glance
| Feature | BioSkepsis | Scite |
|---|---|---|
| Primary job-to-be-done | Answer biomedical research questions | Evaluate how a claim is cited in literature |
| Domain focus | Biomedical & life-science native | General academic, all fields |
| Paper corpus | 40M+ curated biomedical papers | Broad academic corpus; 1.2B classified citation statements |
| Retrieval model | Biology-native knowledge graph (Gene Ontology + MeSH + genes) | Semantic search + citation-context classifier |
| Signature feature | Biology graph + full-text reasoning + lab-note interpretation | Smart Citations (supporting / mentioning / contrasting) |
| Full-text reasoning | Yes — methods, controls, supplementary | Partial — focuses on citation context, not deep methods analysis |
| Reference health check | Not a primary feature | Yes — flags retractions, heavily-contrasted claims |
| Lab-result interpretation | Upload notes → mapped against literature | Not a feature |
| Free tier | Yes — ongoing, 100 papers/session | Yes — limited access; paid plans for full features |
| Zotero / reference-manager sync | Yes | Yes |
Free tier availability
Both tools offer a free tier. We do not print dollar amounts here; verify pricing on the vendor pages.
- BioSkepsis — free tier: yes
- Basic tier includes semantic search, landscape graph, and hypothesis/methodology generation, capped at 100 papers per session. Ongoing, no time limit, no credit card. BioSkepsis pricing →
- Scite — free tier: yes (limited)
- Free access allows limited Smart Citations lookups and Assistant usage; deeper analysis and dashboards require a paid subscription. See the vendor's live pricing page for current terms.
When to choose which
BioSkepsisYou want to ask a biomedical question and get a grounded answer
BioSkepsis's retrieval layer is weighted by Gene Ontology, MeSH and gene symbols — so when you ask "what is the evidence that SGLT2 inhibitors reduce cardiovascular mortality in non-diabetic patients with heart failure?", it pulls biologically relevant papers and synthesises a cited answer from full text. Scite's Assistant will also answer, but without the biomedical ontology tilt.
SciteYou are auditing a claim's citation profile
If you want to know whether a specific claim (or a specific paper) is supported, contested, or widely mentioned across the literature, Scite's Smart Citations are unmatched. BioSkepsis does not currently classify each incoming citation as supporting/contrasting. If citation-context auditing is your core workflow — for editorial review, journalism, or policy work — Scite is the right tool.
BioSkepsisDeep methodological reasoning inside biomedical papers
BioSkepsis reads the full text of biomedical papers and can compare study designs, controls, sample sizes, and supplementary results. Scite's analysis is primarily about how a paper is cited elsewhere; it is a lighter layer of methods-level reasoning inside the cited paper itself.
SciteReference health checks before submission
Scite flags when a reference you are about to cite has been retracted, heavily contrasted, or is otherwise a weak citation anchor. This is especially useful for thesis and manuscript writing. BioSkepsis surfaces retraction status where available but this is not a flagship workflow.
BioSkepsisYou need to upload lab results or experimental notes
BioSkepsis lets you paste raw data or describe an experiment and maps it against published evidence, explaining where findings align or conflict. Scite does not offer a comparable lab-result interpretation feature.
Use them together
A practical pattern for a biomedical researcher writing a review:
- Explore with BioSkepsis. Ask your question, get a cited biomedical answer, pull out the key references.
- Audit with Scite. For the cornerstone papers in your draft, run them through Scite to see whether the literature supports or contrasts their findings, and to check for retractions.
- Sync references to Zotero from either tool.
The two tools answer different questions. "What does the evidence say?" is BioSkepsis's strength; "how is this specific claim cited?" is Scite's.
Frequently asked questions
Is BioSkepsis a Scite alternative?
Not a direct one — the two tools optimise for different jobs. Scite's Smart Citations classify how a specific claim is cited across the literature; that is its moat. BioSkepsis is a biomedical AI research assistant that retrieves on a biology-native knowledge graph and reasons over full text. If you currently use Scite's Assistant to ask biomedical questions, BioSkepsis is a stronger fit. If you use Scite for citation-context audits, BioSkepsis does not replace that.
What exactly are Scite's Smart Citations?
Smart Citations are a classification applied to each in-text citation Scite has indexed. The classifier reads the sentence around the citation and labels it as supporting, mentioning or contrasting the cited claim. Scite reports 1.2 billion+ classified statements. This is a genuinely useful signal for identifying contested or retracted findings.
How does BioSkepsis handle hallucinations compared to Scite?
Both tools ground answers in retrieved sources and provide citations. BioSkepsis limits reasoning to peer-reviewed biomedical sources and your own uploaded notes, and explicitly declines when evidence is insufficient. Scite Assistant similarly returns citations with every answer and additionally labels each as supporting/mentioning/contrasting. Neither tool invents sources, but users should always verify cited passages before publishing.
Does BioSkepsis classify citations as supporting or contrasting?
Not today. BioSkepsis surfaces the claim, the source, and the full-text passage backing it, and will flag where retrieved papers disagree, but it does not apply Scite's three-way classifier to every incoming citation. If that labelling is critical to your workflow, use Scite for that specific step.
Is Scite biomedical-specific?
No — Scite is a general academic tool covering all fields. Its citation-context classifier applies across disciplines. BioSkepsis is biomedical-native: retrieval, ontology weighting and full-text reasoning are all tuned to life-science literature.
Can I use BioSkepsis and Scite together?
Yes, and many researchers do. A common pattern: run the discovery and synthesis phase in BioSkepsis, then audit the key references in Scite before finalising a manuscript or review.
Try BioSkepsis free — no credit card
Biology-native knowledge graph across 40M+ biomedical papers. Free tier with 100 papers per session, Zotero sync, full-text reasoning.
Start freeSources & further reading
- Scite official site and Smart Citations documentation
- Research Solutions Inc. (Scite's parent company) press releases
- HKUST Library: Trust in AI evaluation
- Paperguide: Scite overview