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eval-paper
Evaluate the paper against enabled criteria, writing candid narrative responses
Codex または Claude でインストール この Prompt をコピーして Codex、Claude、または他のアシスタントに貼り付けると、Skill ページを確認してインストールできます。
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Evaluate the paper against enabled criteria, writing candid narrative responses
Codex または Claude でインストール この Prompt をコピーして Codex、Claude、または他のアシスタントに貼り付けると、Skill ページを確認してインストールできます。
SOC 職業分類に基づく
Read the paper and decide which issue spotters to use, removing irrelevant ones and optionally adding custom ones
Run EDSL-parallelized issue finding across all sections of a katz-registered manuscript
Bootstrap a full paper review using katz
Send paper figures to vision-capable models for feedback on clarity, design, and presentation
Review open katz issues, investigate them against the manuscript and code, and record findings
Read the paper and file issues for problems found in the manuscript
| name | eval-paper |
| description | Evaluate the paper against enabled criteria, writing candid narrative responses |
| allowed-tools | Read, Bash, Glob, Grep |
| user-invocable | true |
Reads each enabled eval criterion, reads the relevant parts of the manuscript, and writes a candid narrative response. No scores, no ratings — just substantive text that helps the author understand how their paper reads.
/eval-paper
katz paper status should return "valid": true).katz eval list should return results).katz eval init-catalog and then enable the relevant ones with katz eval enable <name>.katz eval list
If empty, tell the user they need to enable criteria first.
For each criterion returned by katz eval list:
katz eval show <name>
Understand what the criterion is asking. Pay attention to the scope field — if it names a section, focus your reading there.
If the criterion has a scope (e.g., abstract, introduction), read that section:
katz paper section <scope>
Then read the corresponding lines from .katz/versions/<commit>/paper/manuscript.md.
If the criterion has no scope, read whatever parts of the manuscript are relevant to the question. For paper-level questions (contribution, positioning in literature), you may need to read the introduction, discussion, and conclusion.
Write a substantive response that addresses the criterion's question, then assign a letter grade. Guidelines for the narrative:
Guidelines for the grade:
| Grade | Meaning |
|---|---|
| A+ | Exemplary — could be used as a teaching example of how to do this well |
| A | Strong — meets the criterion clearly and completely |
| A- | Good — meets the criterion with minor room for improvement |
| B+ | Adequate — meets the criterion but with notable gaps |
| B | Acceptable — partially meets the criterion; meaningful improvements possible |
| B- | Marginal — barely meets the criterion; significant improvements needed |
| C+ | Weak — important deficiencies that should be addressed |
| C | Poor — the criterion is largely unmet |
| C- | Very poor — serious problems |
| D/F | Failing — the criterion is not met at all |
The grade should be calibrated against published papers in good field journals, not against perfection. Most criteria in a solid working paper should land in the A-to-B range. Grades below B- should be reserved for genuine problems. Do not grade inflate — a B+ is a real grade, not a consolation prize.
katz eval respond --name <name> --grade "B+" --text "Your narrative response here"
The --grade flag accepts: A+, A, A-, B+, B, B-, C+, C, C-, D+, D, D-, F.
After completing all criteria, report:
katz eval results to show the full set of responses