Agentic Science Workflows
Agentic science workflows use software agents to plan, retrieve, write, reason over tools, and coordinate tasks. In life sciences, the central issue is not whether an agent sounds scientific. The issue is whether it preserves provenance and respects experimental limits.
- Define agentic workflows without overstating autonomy.
- Place human review gates around biological actions.
- Use provenance, tool logs, and citations as safety infrastructure.
Agentic systems are useful as research operating layers when tasks are bounded, sources are checked, and lab actions require authorization. They are risky when fluent plans are treated as validated science.
Introduction
ARPA-H IGoR names AI/ML orchestration and agentic systems alongside laboratory automation, protocol standardization, and distributed systems (ARPA-H IGoR, 2026). That framing puts agents inside a governed research infrastructure rather than outside it.
Demonstrated
Demonstrated capability includes literature triage, code execution, data cleaning, protocol draft support, and orchestration of bounded computational workflows. IGoR demonstrates that federal research programs now treat agentic systems as part of biomedical research infrastructure planning (ARPA-H IGoR, 2026).
| Evidence Anchor | What It Supports | Practical Constraint |
|---|---|---|
| ARPA-H IGoR | Agentic systems in biomedical research infrastructure | Program ambition is not proof of deployed reliability |
| Bridge2AI | AI-ready data and workforce materials | Agents need high-quality inputs and human review |
| EMA and FDA materials | Lifecycle accountability for AI in regulated contexts | Regulatory use requires documentation |
Theoretical
Theoretical capability includes agents that propose experiments, call analysis tools, update models, and prepare protocol-ready plans. This is plausible for bounded settings with source control, tool permissions, and human approval.
Beyond Current Capabilities
Beyond current capabilities includes unsupervised agents conducting open-ended biological research without human governance. Biological materials, safety controls, privacy, and scientific accountability require explicit human authority.
Practice Notes
- Require source links for literature-derived claims.
- Log tool calls, parameters, data versions, and outputs.
- Use separate permissions for reading, analysis, procurement, and laboratory execution.
- Block autonomous actions involving biological materials unless a human authorizes the exact protocol.