Scientific writing is a process for communicating research with precision and clarity. Write manuscripts using IMRAD structure, citations (APA/AMA/Vancouver), figures/tables, and reporting guidelines (CONSORT/STROBE/PRISMA). Apply this skill for research papers and journal submissions.
When to Use This Skill
This skill should be used when:
Writing or revising any section of a scientific manuscript (abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion)
Structuring a research paper using IMRAD or other standard formats
Formatting citations and references in specific styles (APA, AMA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE)
Creating, formatting, or improving figures, tables, and data visualizations
Applying study-specific reporting guidelines (CONSORT for trials, STROBE for observational studies, PRISMA for reviews)
Drafting abstracts that meet journal requirements (structured or unstructured)
Preparing manuscripts for submission to specific journals
Improving writing clarity, conciseness, and precision
Ensuring proper use of field-specific terminology and nomenclature
関連 Skill
Addressing reviewer comments and revising manuscripts
Core Capabilities
1. Manuscript Structure and Organization
IMRAD Format: Guide papers through the standard Introduction, Methods, Results, And Discussion structure used across most scientific disciplines. This includes:
Introduction: Establish research context, identify gaps, state objectives
Methods: Detail study design, populations, procedures, and analysis approaches
Results: Present findings objectively without interpretation
For detailed guidance on IMRAD structure, refer to references/imrad_structure.md.
Alternative Structures: Support discipline-specific formats including:
Review articles (narrative, systematic, scoping)
Case reports and case series
Meta-analyses and pooled analyses
Theoretical/modeling papers
Methods papers and protocols
2. Section-Specific Writing Guidance
Abstract Composition: Craft concise, standalone summaries (100-250 words) that capture the paper's purpose, methods, results, and conclusions. Support both structured abstracts (with labeled sections) and unstructured single-paragraph formats.
Figures: Trends, patterns, relationships, comparisons best understood visually
Design Principles:
Make each table/figure self-explanatory with complete captions
Use consistent formatting and terminology across all display items
Label all axes, columns, and rows with units
Include sample sizes (n) and statistical annotations
Follow the "one table/figure per 1000 words" guideline
Avoid duplicating information between text, tables, and figures
Common Figure Types:
Bar graphs: Comparing discrete categories
Line graphs: Showing trends over time
Scatterplots: Displaying correlations
Box plots: Showing distributions and outliers
Heatmaps: Visualizing matrices and patterns
5. Reporting Guidelines by Study Type
Ensure completeness and transparency by following established reporting standards. For comprehensive guideline details, refer to references/reporting_guidelines.md.
Include required statements (funding, conflicts of interest, data availability, ethical approval)
Adhere to word limits for each section
Format according to template requirements when provided
8. Field-Specific Language and Terminology
Adapt language, terminology, and conventions to match the specific scientific discipline. Each field has established vocabulary, preferred phrasings, and domain-specific conventions that signal expertise and ensure clarity for the target audience.
Identify Field-Specific Linguistic Conventions:
Review terminology used in recent high-impact papers in the target journal
Note field-specific abbreviations, units, and notation systems
Identify preferred terms (e.g., "participants" vs. "subjects," "compound" vs. "drug," "specimens" vs. "samples")
Observe how methods, organisms, or techniques are typically described
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences:
Use precise anatomical and clinical terminology (e.g., "myocardial infarction" not "heart attack" in formal writing)