| name | radiology-writing |
| description | Draft or rebuild imaging-AI / radiomics / radiogenomics manuscript sections for Radiology (RSNA), Nature-portfolio/npj, European Radiology, NEJM, Science, or Lancet-family style from author-provided results, figures, notes, or Chinese drafts. Enforces the target venue's manuscript shape: Radiology Summary/Key Results, Nature-style broad scientific narrative, European Radiology key points/clinical relevance, NEJM four-part clinical abstract and SAP rigor, Science compact display-item story, or Lancet-series Research in context and AI/data transparency using The Lancet Digital Health guide as the default proxy. Use when the user wants to write or restructure imaging-research prose, not just polish it. Never invents data, metrics, or citations. |
Radiology-Style Manuscript Writing
Use this skill to construct imaging-research prose — argument first, then sentences —
in the exact shape Radiology requires. It is for drafting and restructuring, not only
polishing (for sentence-level polish use radiology-polishing).
Core stance
- Author evidence first. Never invent results, metrics, p-values, cohort numbers,
citations, mechanisms, or limitations. Missing input → explicit placeholder or a question.
- Write the argument before the sentences. One-sentence claim → section architecture →
paragraph jobs → prose.
- Match the Radiology shape. Structured abstract, Summary statement (one sentence),
Key Results (≤ 3, ≤ 75 words), structured Discussion, tight word/figure limits.
- Bound the claim. Ambitious but evidence-bounded; calibrate verbs to evidence
(demonstrate → suggest → may reflect).
- Reporting-aware. Every Methods/Results element should satisfy the relevant checklist
item (CLAIM/TRIPOD+AI/CLEAR/STARD) — cross-check with
radiology-reporting.
When to use
- Draft/rebuild any section: title, structured abstract, Summary statement, Key Results,
Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion.
- Turn Chinese lab notes / mixed drafts into submission-ready English.
- Restructure a rejected draft to the Radiology argument shape.
When to open extra files
| File | Open when |
|---|
| references/article-architecture.md | Section order, argument flow, and the Radiology manuscript skeleton |
| references/structured-abstract.md | Writing the structured abstract + Summary statement + Key Results box |
| references/methods.md | Materials and Methods for imaging/AI/radiomics studies (what must appear, in order) |
| references/results.md | Results narrative: flow, performance with CIs, comparisons, validation |
| references/discussion.md | Structured Discussion (key-finding first → context → limitations → conclusion) |
| references/chinese-author-workflow.md | Notes are Chinese / mixed / lab-note style; translate intent and argument, not clause order |
| references/nature-family-shape.md | Target is Nature Medicine / Nature Biomedical Engineering / Nature Communications / npj Digital Medicine / Cell Reports Medicine etc. — unstructured abstract, no Summary statement/Key Results box, different Methods placement |
| references/argument-spine-and-stage-gates.md | Full manuscript rebuild, rejected-paper rescue, unclear contribution, high-impact submission, or a draft whose story/figures/results do not yet lock together |
| references/journal-family-writing-style.md | Target journal family is known, or the user supplied author-guide PDFs/classic papers and wants the manuscript to carry that venue's writing style |
Intake (identify before drafting)
- Target venue/shape: Radiology-family (structured abstract, Summary statement, Key
Results — default) or Nature-family (unstructured abstract, no Summary statement/Key Results
→
references/nature-family-shape.md). If undecided, draft the Radiology shape first and
confirm venue before finalising the abstract (→ radiology-journal).
- Section(s) requested.
- Study type: diagnostic-accuracy, prediction model, radiomics, radiogenomics, reader
study, observational, trial.
- Core claim: what the study actually shows.
- Evidence: cohorts (n, source, dates), metrics with CIs, comparisons, validation.
- Boundary: where the claim stops (single-centre? retrospective? prevalence?).
- Limits: target word/figure counts (verify against current author instructions).
If core claim, evidence, or boundary is missing, surface the gap and offer a scaffold with
placeholders rather than inventing content.
Writing workflow
- For full manuscripts or high-impact rebuilds, open
argument-spine-and-stage-gates.md and establish the project context, contribution-first
gate, and results-as-validation map before drafting long prose.
- For target-venue writing taste, open
journal-family-writing-style.md after confirming
the venue family; use it to adjust article shape, title/abstract rhythm, key points, and
clinical relevance language.
- One-sentence argument: "In [population/modality], we show [advance] using [approach],
supported by [key result with CI], with [boundary]."
- Pick the architecture (article-architecture.md) by study type.
- Map each paragraph to one job: context / gap / objective / design / cohort / technique
/ analysis / result / comparison / validation / interpretation / limitation.
- For full sections, draft the topic-sentence chain first. If the claims do not flow,
revise the chain before writing full paragraphs.
- Draft from evidence outward — keep claims next to the numbers that support them.
- Calibrate verbs to evidence; remove unsupported novelty/"first" claims.
- Fit the Radiology shape — abstract headings, Summary statement, Key Results,
structured Discussion.
- Self-review against the relevant reporting checklist; flag unmet items.
Section defaults
- Title — concrete: population/condition + modality/method + finding/role. State AI/
radiomics if central. Avoid slogans and "novel."
- Structured abstract — Background → Purpose → Materials and Methods → Results →
Conclusion; report design, cohort sizes/dates, primary metric(s) with CIs, a bounded
conclusion. (structured-abstract.md)
- Summary statement — a single declarative sentence of the main finding.
- Key Results — up to 3 results/conclusions, ≤ 75 words, with summary data; don't
repeat the Summary statement; avoid vague language and abbreviations.
- Introduction — field/clinical stakes → specific gap → objective/hypothesis. Short; no
results dump.
- Materials and Methods — design + ethics/registration → participants/flow → imaging
technique → image analysis/reference standard/readers → model/feature pipeline →
statistical analysis. (methods.md)
- Results — patient flow + characteristics → primary performance with CIs → comparisons →
validation/subgroups. Past tense, quantitative. (results.md)
- Discussion — first paragraph = concise summary of key findings, then relation to
prior work, then limitations, then a bounded conclusion. (discussion.md)
Output format
Draft — the requested prose in Radiology shape.
Section outline — 3–7 compact bullets (for a full section).
Topic-sentence chain — for full sections or major rewrites, the claim sequence before
paragraph expansion.
Claim–evidence map — Claim | Evidence (with CI) | Status: supported / needs input.
Stage gates — for full manuscripts: contribution gate, results-as-validation gate,
citation/figure/reporting gates that are passed or still open.
Venue style check — if the target family is known: abstract shape, title/key-points
logic, clinical relevance language, and any guide-derived limits or VERIFY FROM GUIDE.
Assumptions / missing inputs — only material gaps.
Reporting check — checklist items this draft does/doesn't satisfy (→ radiology-reporting).
For Chinese notes: polished English first, then brief Chinese notes on structural choices.
Handoffs
- Sentence-level polish / house style →
radiology-polishing.
- Statistics/CIs/tests behind the numbers →
radiology-stats.
- Checklist compliance →
radiology-reporting.
- Figures/legends →
radiology-figure.
- Finding/verifying citations to support a claim in Introduction/Discussion →
radiology-citation.
- Draft is complete and ready for a harsh read before submission →
radiology-prereview.