## Screenshot: Credibility Assessment Tool for Health Claims
### Overview
The image displays a credibility assessment interface evaluating the statement: "Preliminary research suggests that Java tea may have hypoglycemic effects, meaning it could help regulate blood sugar levels." The tool assigns a **Sentence Credibility Score of 0.67** based on evidence from six sources, four of which support the claim. Categories of evidence (e.g., scientific articles, government websites) are visualized with checkmarks and percentages, while three references are analyzed for their relevance to the claim.
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### Components/Axes
1. **Credibility Metrics**:
- **Sentence Credibility Score**: 0.67 (bold, centered at top).
- **Supported Evidences**: 4.00/6.00 (total evidences).
2. **Evidence Categories**:
- News (0%), Blog (0%), Wiki (0%), Social Media (0%), etc. (0%), Scientific Medical Article (100%), Government Website (0%).
- Checkmarks (green) indicate active categories; percentages reflect contribution to credibility.
3. **References**:
- Three expandable entries with:
- **Title** (hyperlink),
- **Source Type** (e.g., `scientific_medical_article`),
- **Support Status**: Green check (support), thumbs-up (irrelevant), thumbs-down (not support),
- **Explanation** (gray text box).
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### Detailed Analysis
1. **Credibility Score**:
- Derived from 4/6 evidences supporting the claim (66.7%).
- Scientific medical articles dominate (100% category weight), but only one reference directly supports the claim.
2. **Reference Breakdown**:
- **Reference 1**:
- Title: *"Anti-hyperglycemic activity of encapsulated Java tea-based drink..."*
- Source: `japsonline.com` (scientific_medical_article).
- Support Status: ✅ (supports claim).
- Explanation: Mentions hypoglycemic effects of green tea, not Java tea. **Does not support claim**.
- **Reference 2**:
- Title: *"A Systematic Review of Orthosphonostamineus Benth..."*
- Source: `ncbi.nlm.nih.gov` (scientific_medical_article).
- Support Status: 👍 (supports claim).
- Explanation: Directly cites hypoglycemic effects of Java tea in diabetic rats. **Supports claim**.
- **Reference 3**:
- Title: *"Antihyperglycemic Activity of Java Tea-Based Functional Drink..."*
- Source: `researchgate.net` (scientific_medical_article).
- Support Status: ❌ (not support).
- Explanation: Focuses on cognitive-behavioral treatments, unrelated to blood sugar. **Does not support claim**.
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### Key Observations
- **Dominance of Scientific Sources**: All references are scientific medical articles, but only one (Reference 2) directly validates the claim.
- **Misleading Evidence**: Reference 1 incorrectly attributes effects to green tea instead of Java tea.
- **Irrelevant Source**: Reference 3 discusses unrelated topics (cognitive treatments), marked as irrelevant.
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### Interpretation
The credibility score of **0.67** reflects moderate confidence in the claim. While scientific evidence is prioritized (100% category weight), only **1/3 references** substantiate the hypoglycemic effects of Java tea. The tool highlights the importance of source specificity: even within scientific articles, only studies directly addressing Java tea (not green tea or unrelated topics) contribute to credibility. This underscores the need for precise evidence alignment in health claims.