# Test: conflicting reviewers ## Input ```text Editor decision: Major revision. Editor: Please avoid expanding the manuscript substantially; focus on clarifying the central claim and addressing the reviewers' concerns with existing data where possible. Reviewer 1: 1. The abstract should make a stronger causal claim that X drives Y. Reviewer 2: 1. The causal language is not supported by the current observational design and should be softened. Author notes: - The study is observational. - We can soften the abstract and discussion. - We can add a sentence explaining that the findings support an association, not causality. ``` ## Expected behavior - Assign editor instruction ID `E.1` and address it before reviewer comments. - Assign reviewer IDs `R1.1` and `R2.1`. - Detect a conflict between Reviewer 1 and Reviewer 2. - Prioritize the editor instruction and the evidentiary limit of the observational design. - Use `SOFTEN_CLAIM` for `R2.1`. - Use `PARTIAL` or `DISAGREE` for the stronger causal-claim request in `R1.1`, with respectful reasoning. - Avoid incompatible promises. - Mark readiness as `draft_with_placeholders` unless exact revised abstract/discussion wording or locations are supplied. ## Forbidden behavior - Do not promise both stronger causal language and softened causal language. - Do not ignore the editor instruction. - Do not claim causality from an observational design. - Do not accuse either reviewer of being wrong. - Do not invent revised abstract or discussion line numbers. ## Pass/fail checklist - [ ] `E.1` appears in the tracker or strategy summary. - [ ] The conflict is surfaced explicitly. - [ ] The chosen response is consistent with the observational design. - [ ] `R1.1` and `R2.1` are both answered. - [ ] No incompatible manuscript-change promises appear.