| name | review-paper |
| description | Comprehensive manuscript review with three modes: single-pass (default), --adversarial critic-fixer loop, and --peer [journal] simulated peer-review pipeline (editor + 2 dispositioned referees + editorial decision, calibrated to a target journal). R&R continuation via --peer --r2/--r3; hostile-editor stress test via --peer --stress; reviewer-disposition variance reporting via --peer --variance N. Auto-invokes /review-r + /audit-reproducibility on referenced scripts unless --no-cross-artifact. |
Manuscript Review
Produce a thorough, constructive review of an academic manuscript — the kind of report a top-journal referee would write.
Which review skill do I want?
/review-paper (this skill) — single comprehensive report, optional --adversarial critic-fixer loop, or --peer <journal> simulated peer-review pipeline. Best for most drafts.
/seven-pass-review — seven independent lenses in parallel (abstract, intro, methods, results, robustness, prose, citations) then synthesized. Heavier (7× token cost). Best for submission-ready drafts or R&R stage where you need maximum coverage.
/respond-to-referees — if you already have referee comments and need a response document, not another review.
/slide-excellence — for lecture slides, not papers.
Input: $ARGUMENTS — path to a paper (.tex, .pdf, or .qmd), or a filename in master_supporting_docs/. Optional flags:
--adversarial — critic-fixer loop (max 5 rounds).
--peer <JOURNAL> — simulated peer review pipeline calibrated to <JOURNAL> (see .claude/references/journal-profiles.md for available short names).
--r2 / --r3 — R&R continuation mode (requires --peer). Reloads prior round, classifies concerns Resolved / Partial / Not addressed.
--stress — hostile-editor stress test (requires --peer). Forces SKEPTIC dispositions, doubles critical peeves.
--variance (followed by integer N, default 3) — reviewer-disposition variance mode (requires --peer). Runs N referees with independently sampled dispositions from the 6-way taxonomy. Editor aggregates into a decision distribution, not a point estimate. Mutually exclusive with --stress and --r2/--r3.
--no-novelty-check — skip editor's WebSearch novelty probe (default is ON).
--no-cross-artifact — skip auto-invocation of /review-r + /audit-reproducibility on referenced scripts.
Already received referee comments? Use /respond-to-referees instead. That skill cross-references each referee concern against the revised manuscript and drafts a complete response document.
Modes
Default mode (single-pass)
One comprehensive review report. Fast, low token cost, suitable for early drafts where the author wants feedback and will iterate manually.
Adversarial mode (--adversarial)
Iterative critic-fixer loop modeled on /qa-quarto. The critic identifies issues, the fixer proposes and applies edits (with user approval), and the critic re-audits. Loops until APPROVED or max 5 rounds.
Use when: preparing a pre-submission draft, responding to a journal-desk rejection with substantive revisions, or after your own major rewrite. Costs more tokens but produces a manuscript the critic has signed off on.
Peer-review mode (--peer <JOURNAL>)
Simulated editorial pipeline: editor desk review → referee selection → 2 blind referees with different dispositions → editorial synthesis. Calibrated to a target journal from .claude/references/journal-profiles.md. Use when: pre-submission dress rehearsal, choosing between target journals, R&R planning.
This mode is materially different from --adversarial: adversarial runs the same critic 5× with fresh context; --peer runs different personas (editor + 2 dispositioned referees drawn from 6-way taxonomy: STRUCTURAL / CREDIBILITY / MEASUREMENT / POLICY / THEORY / SKEPTIC) whose priors are deliberately different and who are blind to each other.
Agents used (all reimplemented in this template; adapted from Hugo Sant'Anna's clo-author with permission):
.claude/agents/editor.md — editor (desk review, referee selection, synthesis).
.claude/agents/domain-referee.md — substance referee.
.claude/agents/methods-referee.md — methodology referee (paper-type-aware).
Sub-flags:
--r2 / --r3 — R&R mode. Skips fresh desk review; reloads prior round's reports; same referees + dispositions + peeves; classifies each prior concern as Resolved / Partial / Not addressed. Hard cap at --r3 (no round 4+).
--stress — Hostile editor. Forces both referees to SKEPTIC disposition, doubles critical peeves, framing: "you are looking for reasons to reject this paper." Output is a concern-list gauntlet, not a decision letter.
--variance (with integer N, default 3) — Reviewer-disposition variance mode. Runs N referees with independently sampled dispositions from the 6-way taxonomy (STRUCTURAL / CREDIBILITY / MEASUREMENT / POLICY / THEORY / SKEPTIC). Editor synthesizes into a distribution of decisions, not a single verdict. See "Variance mode" below.
--no-novelty-check — Disables the editor's WebSearch novelty probes (default is ON). Use in offline or hallucination-sensitive contexts. Novelty-check caveat (document this to users): WebSearch can return hallucinated citations or miss paywalled recent work. Always surface novelty-probe results as flags for manual verification, not verdicts.
Variance mode (--peer --variance N)
Why this mode exists. Default --peer runs an editor + 2 referees with dispositions sampled once. A single peer-review pass is a point estimate of how the paper would fare — but the AgentReview ACL 2024 study (arXiv:2406.12708) found that ~37% of paper decisions vary purely from reviewer-disposition sampling and another 27.7% from partial author-identity disclosure. A point estimate hides this variance.
Variance mode runs N independent referees (default N=3, max N=5 for token-cost discipline) with disposition sampling, then reports a decision distribution that surfaces this variance to the author.
How it works:
- Editor performs desk review once (shared across the N referees).
- The editor samples N dispositions from the 6-way taxonomy with replacement. Stratification rule: if N ≥ 3, at least one SKEPTIC is always sampled (avoids drawing N friendly referees by chance).
- Each of the N referees runs in an isolated context (
Task with context: fork) — same manuscript, same paper-type rubric, different disposition. Referees are blind to each other.
- Editor receives N independent reports and produces:
- A decision-distribution table (e.g.,
2/3 R&R, 1/3 Reject with the modal verdict highlighted).
- A concern-frequency table showing which concerns appeared across multiple referees (high frequency = robust criticism; low frequency = disposition-dependent).
- An editorial recommendation that explicitly references the variance ("modal verdict R&R, with one SKEPTIC dissent on identification — author should address the identification concern even though it's not the majority position").
Output files:
quality_reports/peer_review_<paper>/referee_1.md … referee_N.md (per-referee reports)
quality_reports/peer_review_<paper>/decision_distribution.md (aggregate table + concern-frequency analysis)
quality_reports/peer_review_<paper>/editor_synthesis.md (final editorial letter)
Cost discipline. Variance mode multiplies referee-tier cost by N relative to default --peer (which runs 2 referees). The Cost-Conscious Composition section of the workflow guide recommends keeping referees on Sonnet (mid-tier) for variance runs and reserving Opus for the editor synthesis. Hard cap at N=5; for higher variance estimates, run --variance 5 twice and combine offline.
Mutual exclusivity. Variance mode cannot combine with --stress (which forces SKEPTIC×2 and would defeat the sampling purpose) or --r2/--r3 (which reuses prior-round dispositions for continuity). The skill halts with an error if mutually-exclusive flags are combined.
When to reach for it:
- Pre-submission dress rehearsal where you want to know not just "will this paper survive review" but "how confidently will it survive."
- Deciding between target journals — run
--variance 3 against two journal profiles, compare distributions.
- Responding to a rejection where the referee panel felt unrepresentative —
--variance 5 against the same journal profile gives an empirical sense of whether the original referees were typical.
Steps (both modes)
-
Locate and read the manuscript. First strip flags (--adversarial, --no-cross-artifact) from $ARGUMENTS to get the bare manuscript path. Check:
- Direct path (bare path from step 1)
master_supporting_docs/supporting_papers/$ARGUMENTS
- Glob for partial matches
-
Read the full paper end-to-end with the Read tool — a 1M-token window holds a full paper. For long PDFs, page through with the pages parameter (up to 20 pages per request).
-
Evaluate across 6 dimensions (see below).
-
Generate 3–5 "referee objections" — the tough questions a top referee would ask.
-
Produce the review report.
-
Save to quality_reports/paper_review_[sanitized_name]_round[N].md (N=1 in default mode; N increments in adversarial mode).
6b. Cross-artifact integration. Unless $ARGUMENTS contains --no-cross-artifact, and if the manuscript references analysis scripts (detected via \input{scripts/...}, %% source: comments, or matching scripts/R/_outputs/ filenames), auto-invoke:
/review-r on each referenced script (forked subagent, results to quality_reports/cross_artifact_[paper]/review_r_*.md)
/audit-reproducibility on the manuscript + outputs dir (results to quality_reports/cross_artifact_[paper]/reproducibility.md)
Merge critical cross-artifact findings (code bug invalidates paper claim, reproducibility FAIL) into a new "Cross-Artifact Findings" section at the top of the paper review report. See .claude/rules/cross-artifact-review.md for the full protocol.
- If
--adversarial is in $ARGUMENTS: invoke the critic-fixer loop defined in the next section. Otherwise stop here.
Review Dimensions
1. Argument Structure
- Is the research question clearly stated?
- Does the introduction motivate the question effectively?
- Is the logical flow sound (question → method → results → conclusion)?
- Are the conclusions supported by the evidence?
- Are limitations acknowledged?
2. Identification Strategy
- Is the causal claim credible?
- What are the key identifying assumptions? Are they stated explicitly?
- Are there threats to identification (omitted variables, reverse causality, measurement error)?
- Are robustness checks adequate?
- Is the estimator appropriate for the research design?
3. Econometric Specification
- Correct standard errors (clustered? robust? bootstrap?)?
- Appropriate functional form?
- Sample selection issues?
- Multiple testing concerns?
- Are point estimates economically meaningful (not just statistically significant)?
4. Literature Positioning
- Are the key papers cited?
- Is prior work characterized accurately?
- Is the contribution clearly differentiated from existing work?
- Any missing citations that a referee would flag?
5. Writing Quality
- Clarity and concision
- Academic tone
- Consistent notation throughout
- Abstract effectively summarizes the paper
- Tables and figures are self-contained (clear labels, notes, sources)
6. Presentation
- Are tables and figures well-designed?
- Is notation consistent throughout?
- Are there any typos, grammatical errors, or formatting issues?
- Is the paper the right length for the contribution?
Output Format
# Manuscript Review: [Paper Title]
**Date:** [YYYY-MM-DD]
**Reviewer:** review-paper skill
**File:** [path to manuscript]
## Summary Assessment
**Overall recommendation:** [Strong Accept / Accept / Revise & Resubmit / Reject]
[2-3 paragraph summary: main contribution, strengths, and key concerns]
## Strengths
1. [Strength 1]
2. [Strength 2]
3. [Strength 3]
## Major Concerns
### MC1: [Title]
- **Dimension:** [Identification / Econometrics / Argument / Literature / Writing / Presentation]
- **Issue:** [Specific description]
- **Suggestion:** [How to address it]
- **Location:** [Section/page/table if applicable]
[Repeat for each major concern]
## Minor Concerns
### mc1: [Title]
- **Issue:** [Description]
- **Suggestion:** [Fix]
[Repeat]
## Referee Objections
These are the tough questions a top referee would likely raise:
### RO1: [Question]
**Why it matters:** [Why this could be fatal]
**How to address it:** [Suggested response or additional analysis]
[Repeat for 3-5 objections]
## Specific Comments
[Line-by-line or section-by-section comments, if any]
## Summary Statistics
| Dimension | Rating (1-5) |
|-----------|-------------|
| Argument Structure | [N] |
| Identification | [N] |
| Econometrics | [N] |
| Literature | [N] |
| Writing | [N] |
| Presentation | [N] |
| **Overall** | **[N]** |
Principles
- Be constructive. Every criticism should come with a suggestion.
- Be specific. Reference exact sections, equations, tables.
- Think like a referee at a top-5 journal. What would make them reject?
- Distinguish fatal flaws from minor issues. Not everything is equally important.
- Acknowledge what's done well. Good research deserves recognition.
- Do NOT fabricate details. If you can't read a section clearly, say so.
Adversarial Mode — Critic-Fixer Loop
Only runs if --adversarial is in $ARGUMENTS.
Pattern adapted from /qa-quarto, which uses the same loop to iterate on slide quality. Papers get it now because the single-pass review leaves authors doing manual fix-and-resubmit cycles.
Flow
Phase 0: Pre-flight
│
├─ Verify the manuscript compiles (xelatex / quarto render) if applicable
├─ Snapshot the pre-review version: git stash OR copy to a .review-backup/
│
Phase 1: Critic audit (round N=1,2,3,...)
│
├─ Run the default review above, producing a round-N report
├─ If the report has ZERO Major Concerns and ZERO Referee Objections
│ rated "fatal":
│ → VERDICT = APPROVED. Stop the loop. Write final summary.
│ Else: continue.
│
Phase 2: Fixer
│
├─ For each Major Concern in the round-N report, produce a concrete
│ proposed edit (diff or new text block).
├─ Present proposed edits to the user grouped by severity (Critical →
│ Major → Minor). Ask for approval: "apply all", "apply critical+major
│ only", "review each", or "abort".
├─ Apply approved edits with Edit / Edit tools.
├─ If the manuscript is a compile target (`.tex` / `.qmd`), re-compile
│ and verify it still builds.
│
Phase 3: Re-audit
│
└─ Spawn a FRESH-CONTEXT subagent (via Task, `subagent_type` set to
general-purpose) to re-read the paper and produce a round-(N+1)
report. Fresh context prevents anchoring bias — the new reviewer
sees the edited paper, not the diff.
→ Jump back to Phase 1.
Iteration limits
- Max 5 rounds. After round 5, halt regardless of verdict.
- Fix round limits: if the same Concern label appears in rounds N and N+2, flag as "author disagreement" and let the user decide (keep-as-is with rationale vs. another fix attempt).
- Budget escape: if cumulative token cost across all rounds exceeds a configurable spend cap (default ~500k — a spend ceiling, not a context-window limit, since each re-audit runs in fresh context), warn and let the user cap further rounds.
Stopping criteria
| Condition | Action |
|---|
| Zero Major Concerns, zero fatal Referee Objections | APPROVED — final summary |
| Max 5 rounds reached | HALTED — list remaining concerns, user decides |
| User approves zero fixes in a round | HALTED — user signals "I disagree with this review" |
| Compile fails after applied fixes | ROLLED BACK to pre-round-N snapshot, report compile error, user decides |
Final report
After the loop ends, write quality_reports/paper_review_[sanitized_name]_FINAL.md:
# Final Review: [Paper Title]
**Rounds:** N
**Verdict:** APPROVED | HALTED (max rounds) | HALTED (user override) | ROLLED BACK
**Token cost estimate:** ~XXk
## Round Summary
| Round | Major Concerns | Fatal Objections | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 7 | 2 | Fixed 5, deferred 2 |
| 2 | 3 | 1 | ... |
| ... | ... | ... | ... |
| N | 0 | 0 | APPROVED |
## Changes Applied
[link to git diff between the pre-round-1 snapshot and HEAD]
## Remaining Concerns (if HALTED)
[list with severity + rationale]
## Next Steps
[recommended action: submit / one more pass / substantial revision]
When NOT to use adversarial mode
- Early exploratory drafts (the loop forces premature polish on ideas still being shaped)
- Papers you don't yet have compilable source for (can't verify edits)
- When you'd rather get ONE opinion and decide for yourself (adversarial-mode enforces "critic signed off" semantics — that's sometimes the wrong frame)
--peer [journal] workflow detail
Phase 0: Cross-artifact pre-flight (runs BEFORE desk review in --peer mode)
Unless --no-cross-artifact is set, auto-invoke /audit-reproducibility on the manuscript + its outputs directory first. Any reproducibility FAIL becomes desk-reject-worthy evidence the editor can cite. See .claude/rules/cross-artifact-review.md.
Reports: quality_reports/cross_artifact_[paper]/reproducibility.md.
Novelty-probe Post-Flight (new in v1.7.0). The editor's novelty probe uses WebSearch to check whether the paper's contribution has been made before. WebSearch results can be hallucinated — fabricated prior work, misattributed findings, wrong years. Before the editor's desk review incorporates novelty-probe claims into its decision, those claims must pass Post-Flight Verification per .claude/rules/post-flight-verification.md:
- The editor collects novelty-probe claims (e.g., "Smith 2022 already showed this exact result").
- Spawn
claim-verifier via Task with subagent_type=claim-verifier and context=fork, passing the claims + verification questions + candidate source URLs. Forked fresh context is the CoVe independence trick.
- Only verified claims are allowed into the desk-review narrative. Unverified claims are surfaced separately as "editor could not verify — manual check recommended" rather than presented as established prior work.
Opt-out: --no-novelty-check already skips the probe entirely. If the probe runs, Post-Flight is mandatory.
Pre-Flight Report (required before Phase 1). Before spawning the editor, output a Pre-Flight Report so the user can verify the inputs are read correctly:
## Pre-Flight Report — /review-paper --peer
**Manuscript:** [path] — [page count, last modified]
**Target journal:** [JOURNAL_SHORT] → [full name from `.claude/references/journal-profiles.md`]
**Journal profile loaded:** [yes/no; resolved from `.claude/references/journal-profiles.md`; key adjustments: e.g., "Identification 35 → 40"]
**Cross-artifact scripts found:** [list referenced .R / .py / .do files]
**Reproducibility status:** [PASS / FAIL from Phase 0] — [N of M claims within tolerance]
**Round:** [fresh / r2 / r3 / stress]
If the manuscript path doesn't exist, the target journal isn't in .claude/references/journal-profiles.md, or a cross-artifact script is missing, stop and surface the issue before proceeding.
Phase 1: Editor desk review
Spawn forked subagent editor with the manuscript path and --peer <JOURNAL> context. Editor:
- Reads journal profile from
.claude/references/journal-profiles.md → states "Calibrated to: [journal]".
- Reads abstract + intro + methods overview + headline results.
- Runs novelty probes (unless
--no-novelty-check).
- Either DESK REJECT (pipeline terminates with rejection letter) or SEND OUT.
Report: quality_reports/peer_review_[paper]/desk_review.md.
Phase 1b: Referee selection (inside editor)
Editor draws 2 DIFFERENT dispositions from journal's Referee-pool weights and assigns each referee 1 critical + 1 constructive peeve (stress mode: 2 critical + 1 constructive). Appended to desk_review.md.
Phase 2: Two parallel referees, blind to each other
Spawn in parallel:
- Forked subagent
domain-referee with disposition D1, peeves P1 → referee_domain.md.
- Forked subagent
methods-referee with disposition D2, peeves P2 → referee_methods.md.
Each referee must include "What would change my mind: [specific ask]" on every MAJOR concern.
Phase 3: Editor synthesis
Read both referee reports. Classify each MAJOR concern as FATAL / ADDRESSABLE / TASTE. Produce editorial decision using the decision rule table in editor.md.
Report: quality_reports/peer_review_[paper]/editorial_decision.md.
Phase 4: Summary
Tell the user:
- Final decision (Accept / Minor / Major / Reject / Desk Reject)
- Token usage + wall-clock time
- Paths to all 4 reports (desk_review, referee_domain, referee_methods, editorial_decision)
Output layout for --peer mode
quality_reports/
peer_review_[sanitized_paper_name]/
desk_review.md # Phase 1 + Phase 1b
referee_domain.md # Phase 2 (parallel)
referee_methods.md # Phase 2 (parallel)
editorial_decision.md # Phase 3
(R&R rounds: desk_review_r2.md, referee_domain_r2.md, ...)
cross_artifact_[sanitized_paper_name]/
reproducibility.md # Phase 0
review_r_*.md # Phase 0 (one per referenced script)
Field adaptation
The shipped journal-profiles.md covers 5 econ journals (AER, QJE, JPE, ECMA, ReStud). For other fields (finance, political science, biology, CS, etc.), copy templates/journal-profile-template.md into a new section of journal-profiles.md and fill in the schema. See the "Field adaptation" section at the end of journal-profiles.md for detailed guidance. The pipeline itself is field-agnostic; only the calibration data changes.
For non-econ paper types in methods-referee.md, extend the paper-type list (e.g., biology: observational / experimental / computational / review).