,

Anthropic unveils ‘Claude Science’ for scientific research

Anthropic on Tuesday launched Claude Science, an AI ​research workbench, designed to help scientists streamline research, ‌analyze data and manage complex computing workflows.The workbench offers scientists a user interface specifically designed for conducting research. The launch is part ​of Anthropic’s life sciences and healthcare initiative, which ​the IPO-bound company has been developing since October 2025.…

Anthropic on Tuesday launched Claude Science, an AI ​research workbench, designed to help scientists streamline research, ‌analyze data and manage complex computing workflows.The workbench offers scientists a user interface specifically designed for conducting research.

The launch is part ​of Anthropic’s life sciences and healthcare initiative, which ​the IPO-bound company has been developing since October 2025.

Here ⁠are a few details on the launch:

  • Claude Science combines ​databases, coding tools, compute and research workflows in one ​workspace, helping scientists analyze literature, run analyses, create figures and manuscripts, and trace results back to their source code and environment.
  • The tool ​is pre-configured with more than 60 scientific databases and ​can render scientific artifacts such as 3D protein structures, genome browser ‌tracks and chemistry drawings, Anthropic said.
  • Claude Science runs on Anthropic’s existing Claude models, which have undergone the company’s standard responsible scaling and biosecurity evaluations.
  • Several research organizations and companies testing ​the platform ​in beta reported ⁠significant efficiency gains, Anthropic added.
  • Anthropic is also launching its own pre-clinical drug programs, focused on neglected diseases, the AI startup’s head of ⁠life sciences, Eric Kauderer-Abrams, said during a press briefing.
  • “These are areas that are outside the scope of what the ⁠traditional pharma ​and biotech landscape might consider ​attractive targets, but nonetheless have real burden associated with them,” Kauderer-Abrams said.

About The Author

About the Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

El Nino weather pattern underway as global ocean heat hits new peak

Ebola outbreak could cost Africa $3.6 bn, says UN

Kylian Mbappe: A FIFA World Cup phenomenon

Dubai gold prices fall to one-month low