From grimoire
Guides drafting or revising a scientific abstract using IMRAD structure. Ensures compliance with journal word limits and reporting standards.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/grimoire:write-scientific-abstractThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Compose a structured scientific abstract that accurately represents the study within word limits using IMRAD logic.
Compose a structured scientific abstract that accurately represents the study within word limits using IMRAD logic.
Adopted by: PubMed/MEDLINE indexing standards, over 3,000 journals in the Elsevier/Springer/Wiley portfolios, NIH grant applications, APA-style journals, CONSORT and PRISMA systematic review guidelines.
Impact: Structured abstracts increase retrieval accuracy by 30% and reader comprehension by 25% vs. unstructured abstracts (Hartley 2004, BMJ study); 75% of readers read only the abstract — it must stand alone.
Why best: IMRAD mirrors the logical flow of scientific reasoning: background → question → method → finding → implication. Structured sections prevent omission of critical elements.
Sources: ANSI/NISO Z39.14-1997; APA 7th ed. §2.9; CONSORT 2010 item 17; PRISMA 2020 item 2.
Check journal requirements — note the word limit (usually 150–300 words), section structure (structured vs. unstructured), and any mandatory fields (trial registration, funding).
Write Background/Objective (1–2 sentences) — state the knowledge gap and the specific aim or hypothesis. Do not write general field introduction.
Write Methods (2–4 sentences) — specify study design, subjects/samples (species, n, key characteristics), intervention or exposure, and primary outcome measure.
Write Results (2–4 sentences) — report the primary outcome with effect size and 95% CI or p-value; include one or two key secondary findings. Use exact numbers, not "significant" alone.
Write Conclusion (1–2 sentences) — state what the results mean for the field; do not overstate beyond what the data support.
Add Keywords — list 4–6 MeSH terms or journal-specified controlled vocabulary terms below the abstract.
Self-check completeness — verify: Is every claim in the abstract supported in the full text? Are all statistical figures accurate? Does it make sense without reading the paper?
Cut to word limit — remove adjectives, condense methods, shorten background; never cut results or conclusions.
npx claudepluginhub jeffreytse/grimoire --plugin grimoireWrites structured academic abstracts for conference submissions or journal articles, stating problem, method, findings, and significance in 150–300 words.
Generates or optimizes academic paper abstracts using the 5-sentence Farquhar formula. Supports from-scratch from raw materials or restructuring existing abstracts, with labeled verification and clean outputs.
Use this skill for "write a paper", "draft manuscript", "write introduction", "write methods section", "write results", "write discussion", "write abstract", "structure a paper", "academic writing", "write for journal", or when the user wants to draft or revise sections of an academic manuscript.