Abstract Background To quantify run-to-run reproducibility of Gemini 3 Flash Preview and GPT-5.2 for trial-success classification across temperature and reasoning/thinking settings and determine whether single-run reporting suffices. Materials and Methods We utilized 250 trial abstracts labeled based on primary endpoint success. We evaluated Gemini across thinking levels (minimal, low, medium, high) and temperatures 0.0-2.0 and GPT-5.2 across reasoning-effort levels (none to x-high) with an additional temperature sweep when reasoning was disabled. Each setting was run 3 times. Results Reproducibility was high for Gemini (κ = 0.942-1.000; invalid outputs 0%-1.5%) and GPT-5.2 (κ = 0.984-0.995; no invalid outputs). F1 remained stable (mean/majority vote 0.955-0.971), with marginal gains from majority voting. Conclusion For binary biomedical classification with tightly constrained outputs, both models were reproducible across decoding and reasoning settings, suggesting single runs are often sufficient, with minimal replication as a practical stability check.
Windisch et al. (Mon,) studied this question.