Structures and writes discussion sections for academic papers and research reports. Use when writing a discussion section, interpreting research results, connecting findings to existing literature, addressing study limitations, synthesizing conclusions, or drafting any part of an academic discussion. Helps researchers organize arguments, contextualize data, and produce clear, publication-ready discussion prose.
Example prompt input:
Results: Group A showed a 23% reduction in symptom severity (p=0.003) vs. control.
Hypothesis: Intervention would reduce symptom severity.
Task: Interpret this result for the discussion section.
Example output excerpt:
The 23% reduction in symptom severity (p=0.003) supports the primary hypothesis.
This effect size is clinically meaningful and consistent with the mechanistic
rationale proposed in the introduction...
Example:
Finding: Effect was stronger in older participants.
Literature: Smith et al. (2019) found age-moderated responses in a similar cohort.
Task: Connect finding to literature.
Output:
The age-moderated effect aligns with Smith et al. (2019), who reported attenuated
responses in younger adults. One possible explanation is differential receptor
sensitivity across age groups, as suggested by...
Draft a limitations subsection that is honest but does not undermine the contribution:
Limitation: [Describe constraint]
Impact: [How it affects interpretation]
Mitigation / Future direction: [How it could be addressed]
Generate a closing paragraph that:
1. Opening: Restate the research question and summarize the key finding (2–3 sentences).
2. Interpretation: Explain what the results mean mechanistically or theoretically.
3. Comparison to Literature: Agree/contrast with prior studies; explain divergences.
4. Implications: Theoretical contributions and/or practical applications.
5. Limitations: Honest scope boundaries with future directions.
6. Conclusion: Synthesis and forward-looking close.
Use this iterative workflow after generating an initial draft:
Step 1 — Draft: Generate the full discussion section using the structure above.
Step 2 — Check: Review against the checklist:
Step 3 — Revise: For each failed checklist item, revise only the affected paragraph(s).
Step 4 — Re-check: Re-run the checklist on revised paragraphs to confirm resolution before finalizing.
references/guide.md - Detailed documentationreferences/examples/ - Sample inputs and outputsSkill ID: 950 | Version: 1.0 | License: MIT