Polish finished imaging-research prose to Radiology (RSNA), Nature-portfolio/npj, European Radiology, NEJM, Science, or Lancet-family house style: concise sentences, correct tense, precise statistical reporting, venue-specific p-value/number/reference style, AI/data-sharing declarations, abbreviation control, and overclaim/causal-language detection. Uses The Lancet Digital Health guide as the default Lancet-series proxy. Use when the user wants to tighten, copyedit, or align existing paragraphs to a target journal style, not draft new content. Returns clean copy-paste prose plus a short change log; never alters reported numbers or invents content.
Installation
Mit Codex oder Claude installieren Kopieren Sie diesen Prompt, fügen Sie ihn in Codex, Claude oder einen anderen Assistant ein und lassen Sie die Skill-Seite prüfen und installieren.
Polish finished imaging-research prose to Radiology (RSNA), Nature-portfolio/npj, European Radiology, NEJM, Science, or Lancet-family house style: concise sentences, correct tense, precise statistical reporting, venue-specific p-value/number/reference style, AI/data-sharing declarations, abbreviation control, and overclaim/causal-language detection. Uses The Lancet Digital Health guide as the default Lancet-series proxy. Use when the user wants to tighten, copyedit, or align existing paragraphs to a target journal style, not draft new content. Returns clean copy-paste prose plus a short change log; never alters reported numbers or invents content.
Radiology-Style Prose Polishing
Use this skill to take existing imaging-research prose and make it read the way
Radiology publishes — precise, concise, correctly formatted, and free of overclaiming. For
building new content, use radiology-writing.
Core stance
Preserve meaning and numbers exactly. Never change a reported value, CI, p-value, n, or
citation. Flag suspected errors; don't silently "fix" data.
Clarity over flourish. Short, direct sentences; one idea each. Remove filler ("it is
worth noting that," "very," "novel").
Precise stats reporting — estimate + 95% CI; exact p (P = .03); correct number/unit
format; named test. (stat-reporting.md)
American English (color, tumor, analyze, catheterization) — Radiology house style.
Calibrate claims to evidence — flag overclaiming and unwarranted causation.
Section-aware tense — Methods/Results past tense; established facts present.
When to use
"Tighten / copyedit / polish this paragraph for Radiology."
"Fix the statistical reporting and number formatting."
Target venue is known, or the user supplied author-guide PDFs/classic papers and wants European Radiology / Nature Partner / npj / other venue voice rather than generic Radiology polish
Workflow
Confirm the target venue (Radiology-family default, or Nature-family — see the deltas
table at the end of radiology-house-style.md) — the leading-zero and reference-style rules
flip between the two; polishing to the wrong one is itself an error.
For venue-specific voice, open venue-voice-and-house-style.md and apply the target
family's wording, abbreviation, p-value, data-availability, and pending-guide checks.
Identify the section (sets tense and expectations).
Pass 1 — clarity: split long sentences, cut filler, fix vague verbs, ensure each
sentence has one idea and the subject is clear.
Pass 2 — statistics & numbers: enforce estimate + CI, exact p, decimal/unit format,
named tests (stat-reporting.md). Do not change values.
Pass 3 — house style: American English, abbreviation rules (define at first use; not
in Key Results), terminology, units.
Pass 4 — guardrails: flag overclaiming, causal language unsupported by design,
"first/novel," scope creep; propose calibrated wording (style-guardrails.md).
Return clean prose + a concise change log; list any flags the author must resolve.
Venue checks — house-style items applied, plus any exact limits marked
VERIFY FROM GUIDE.
Flags — items needing author decision (possible data error, unverifiable "first,"
missing CI the author must supply). Never fabricate the missing number.
Quality bar
Reads like a careful Radiology copyeditor who tightened the prose and corrected the
statistical reporting without touching the science — and who flagged, rather than hid,
every overclaim and every missing CI.