NEEDS REVIEW
As of June 16, 2026 at 6:21 PM, this is how Optics News reads the wording differences in this story.
What happened A Cleveland-area biotech company has developed a powder that mimics the body's own clotting cells.
The headline split The headlines are mostly aligned. The differences are small wording choices, not a major framing split.
Match confidence Developing. Only 5 sources are matched, and the source map is still narrow. Useful to watch, not enough to draw conclusions yet.
Same-event confidenceDevelopingNot enough sources yet to confirm this is the same specific event.
Framing confidenceHiddenWording-gap score not shown — same-event match is still developing.
Wording differs, but the match is too narrow to read confidently yet.
WHAT EACH SIDE EMPHASIZED
Left / center-leftNo matching source in this bucket yet.Optics keeps watching for pickup.
CenterFreeze-dried synthetic platelets could save lives on the battlefield and eventually in your backyardKHOU11 (Tegna, Houston) · Center · News report
Right / center-rightNo matching source in this bucket yet.Optics keeps watching for pickup.
SEE THE HEADLINES
Freeze-dried synthetic platelets could save lives on the battlefield and eventually in your backyard
A Cleveland-area biotech company has developed a powder that mimics the body's own clotting cells.
Open sourceFreeze-dried synthetic platelets could save lives on the battlefield and eventually in your backyard
A Cleveland-area biotech company has developed a powder that mimics the body's own clotting cells.
Open sourceFreeze-dried synthetic platelets could save lives on the battlefield and eventually in your backyard
A Cleveland-area biotech company has developed a powder that mimics the body's own clotting cells.
Open sourceFreeze-dried synthetic platelets could save lives on the battlefield and eventually in your backyard
A Cleveland-area biotech company has developed a powder that mimics the body's own clotting cells.
Open sourceFreeze-dried synthetic platelets could save lives on the battlefield and eventually in your backyard
A Cleveland-area biotech company has developed a powder that mimics the body's own clotting cells.
Open sourceDetailsScore hidden · 5 sources · 1 bias buckets
Score hidden until the match is cleanerLow confidence5 sources · 1 bias bucketsDeveloping · 5 sources · 1 bucketFormats: News report
SOURCE MAP CHANGES
Jun 16, 6:21 PM: KHOU11 (Tegna, Houston) joined the source map.
Jun 16, 6:21 PM: WUSA9 (Tegna, Washington DC) joined the source map.
Jun 16, 6:21 PM: KARE11 (Tegna, Minneapolis) joined the source map.
Jun 16, 6:21 PM: WCNC Charlotte (Tegna) joined the source map.
Now: score hidden until the source match is cleaner. Story health is developing · 5 sources · 1 bucket.