| name | aer-rebuttal |
| description | Use when responding to a Revise & Resubmit decision from AER, AER:Insights, or an AEJ, and a point-by-point response letter plus aligned manuscript revisions are needed. Handles triage, the concede / clarify / push-back decision, and the response-letter format that editors actually read. |
AER Rebuttal
Overview
A Revise & Resubmit at AER is precious — most submissions never get one. The goal of the rebuttal is not to "defend the paper." It is to give the editor a credible package they can send back to the referees with confidence, ending in either acceptance or a single short final round.
The single most important rule: revise the manuscript first; write the response letter against the revised manuscript, never against the old draft.
When to Use
- An R&R decision has arrived
- A "reject and resubmit" requires a structured response
- A conditional acceptance comes with minor revisions
- The user needs to decide which reviewer comments to concede, clarify, or push back on
Do not use this skill for:
- Initial submission (use
aer-submission)
- Pre-emptive robustness drafting (use
aer-robustness)
- Writing referee reports as a reviewer (different conventions)
Response Principle
Every reviewer comment ends in exactly one of:
- Clarified in response only — no manuscript change; the answer was already there but hard to find
- Revised in manuscript only — change made, briefly noted in response
- Revised in both manuscript and response — change made, response explains the substance
- Respectfully declined with justification — change not made, explicit rationale given
No comment ends in the vague middle ground.
Triage Workflow
Step 1 — Parse
Convert the editor letter and each referee report into an atomized list of comments. Number them: E1, E2, ... for editor; R1.1, R1.2, ... for Referee 1; R2.1, ... for Referee 2.
Step 2 — Classify
For each comment, assign one category:
| Category | Definition |
|---|
misunderstanding | The paper answers this, but the answer was buried |
clarity_problem | The argument is fine; the prose caused confusion |
evidence_gap | A genuine missing analysis or robustness check |
scope_mismatch | Reasonable request, but outside the paper's contribution |
incorrect_premise | Comment based on a factual or interpretive error |
high_risk | Challenges novelty, validity, identification, or central claim |
Step 3 — Severity
| Severity | When to assign |
|---|
minor | Presentation, citation, small method detail |
major | Evidence, statistics, method, scope — affects editorial confidence |
blocking | Identification flaw, ethics, central-claim challenge — cannot draft around |
unclear | Insufficient information; ask the editor for clarification |
Step 4 — Action
Based on category + severity:
| Category × Severity | Action |
|---|
misunderstanding × any | Clarify in response; add cross-reference in manuscript |
clarity_problem × any | Revise manuscript; brief response |
evidence_gap × minor | Add robustness check; report in appendix |
evidence_gap × major | Add analysis; report in main text or substantial appendix |
evidence_gap × blocking | Restructure paper or escalate — may need new identification |
scope_mismatch | Push back politely; cite scope boundary |
incorrect_premise | Push back; cite the manuscript evidence that refutes |
high_risk × any | Address head-on; never deflect |
When to Concede
Concede when:
- A claim is stronger than the evidence supports
- A control, comparison, or limitation statement is genuinely missing
- The reviewer correctly identifies an evidence gap that is feasible to fill
- Wording created a reasonable misunderstanding
Best move:
- Narrow the claim in the manuscript
- Add the missing evidence if feasible
- Thank the reviewer explicitly for improving precision
When to Clarify Without Major Work
Clarify when:
- The requested result exists but is hard to find
- The reviewer missed a definition or setup
- The point can be addressed by reorganization or cross-reference
Best move:
- Revise for discoverability (move the buried fact forward, add a cross-reference)
- Do not imply that a major scientific issue was fixed if only presentation changed
When to Push Back
Push back only when:
- The request depends on a false premise
- The requested analysis is outside the paper's scope
- The request would require a fundamentally different paper
- The current evidence already answers the concern
Best move:
- Acknowledge the concern as reasonable
- Explain the boundary precisely
- Point to the existing evidence
- Avoid defensive tone
Handling Reviewer Disagreement
When R1 and R2 contradict on the same point: target the supportive reviewer. The editor's own preferences usually align with the more enthusiastic report. Address the dissenting reviewer respectfully, explain the alternative interpretation, and avoid making the manuscript worse to satisfy a minority view.
Response Letter Format
Structure
[Date]
[Editor name]
[Journal]
Dear [Editor],
Thank you for the opportunity to revise our manuscript [Title], MS#[XXX].
We are grateful for the constructive comments from you and both referees.
This revision addresses all comments as detailed below. Major changes include
[2-3 sentences summarizing the most substantive revisions].
Below we reproduce each comment in italics, followed by our response in
plain text. Page and line references are to the revised manuscript.
[Sincerely,]
[Authors]
---
# Response to the Editor
## Comment E1
*[Verbatim quote of editor comment.]*
**Response.** We agree. We have [action taken]. See revised manuscript,
page 4, lines 14-22.
---
# Response to Referee 1
## Comment R1.1
*[Verbatim quote.]*
**Response.** [State the action in the first 1-2 sentences.]
[Then provide substance.] See revised manuscript, page X, Section Y.
## Comment R1.2
*[...]*
---
# Response to Referee 2
...
Per-Comment Discipline
- Quote or paraphrase the comment fairly. Do not paraphrase a sharp criticism into a gentler version.
- Lead with the action. The first 1-2 sentences of the response must state what was done: revised / clarified / declined.
- State agreement explicitly when not obvious from the action.
- Distinguish between what was changed, what was clarified, and what was not changed and why.
- Cite the revised location by page, section, table, figure, or line number. AER reviewers verify.
- If a claim was softened, say so. Do not hide a concession in passive voice.
Editor-Efficiency Rule
Assume the editor scans for three things on each comment:
- Do the authors agree or disagree?
- What concrete revision was made?
- Where can that revision be found?
Write the first sentence of every response so all three answers are visible.
Tone
Prefer:
- Respectful
- Direct
- Specific
- Non-defensive
- Evidence-led
Avoid:
- Over-thanking ("we deeply appreciate the reviewer's profound insight ...")
- Vague promises ("we have improved the discussion of ...")
- Evasive wording ("the reviewer raises an important point that we believe is consistent with our interpretation")
- Replying to criticism with hype
- Claiming a concern was addressed when only wording changed
Revision Mechanics
- Edit the manuscript first. Make every change the response will reference.
- Generate a marked-up version (LaTeX
latexdiff, or Word track-changes) and a clean version.
- Cross-check the response letter against the revised manuscript — every page/line reference must resolve.
- Update table and figure numbering if exhibits were added or removed; cite the new identifiers.
- Re-run the replication package if results changed; re-deposit if material.
Decision Letter Conventions
If the editor wrote a summary letter with their own priorities (common at AER), treat the editor's letter as authoritative. When editor and referee disagree, follow the editor. Acknowledge the conflict in your response to the relevant referee comment.
What Not to Do
- Write the response before deciding the manuscript revisions
- Quote a comment, thank the reviewer, then never state the action
- Promise to "consider" a request without specifying outcome
- Argue with a reviewer's tone or competence
- Send a 50-page response letter — editors compress
- Concede to every comment to seem agreeable — at AER, defending the design when correct signals confidence
- Submit a revision without re-reading the editor letter as if it were a fresh referee report
Pre-Submission Checklist
Repository Resources
When working from the AER-skills repository or plugin bundle, read examples/rebuttal-example.md only when the user needs a complete response-letter model or a concrete triage example.
Handoff
COMMENTS TOTAL: <n>
COMMENTS BY ACTION: <conceded / clarified / both / declined>
SEVERITY DISTRIBUTION: <minor / major / blocking>
MANUSCRIPT CHANGES MADE: <yes — list / no>
RESPONSE LETTER LENGTH: <n> pages
READY TO SUBMIT REVISION: <yes / no — with blockers>
NEXT SKILL: aer-submission (final preflight on the revised package)
Anti-Patterns
- A response letter longer than the paper
- "We agree with the reviewer" followed by no manuscript change
- Hedging on identification — at AER, the identification strategy is either defensible or it is not
- Deferring blocking comments to "future work"
- Inventing robustness checks the reviewer did not ask for, to pad the response — referees notice
- Changing the abstract without re-checking the 100-word limit on the revised version