一键导入
rebuttal-response
// Use when responding to journal or conference reviewer comments and you need a structured author response, aligned manuscript edits, and clear decisions about when to clarify, add evidence, concede, or respectfully disagree.
// Use when responding to journal or conference reviewer comments and you need a structured author response, aligned manuscript edits, and clear decisions about when to clarify, add evidence, concede, or respectfully disagree.
Use when checking manuscript citations, bibliography hygiene, DOI or PMID completeness, placeholder references, or BibTeX consistency before submission or revision.
Use when drafting, auditing, or revising Data Availability statements, repository plans, accession-number placement, source-data coverage, or restricted-data wording for journal submission or resubmission.
Use when starting a new manuscript project or cleaning up an existing paper directory and you need a standard structure, active source files, project memory, and venue defaults before deeper writing begins.
Use when deciding which paper-related skill to use or how to sequence manuscript work from project setup through submission and rebuttal.
Use when writing or revising scientific manuscripts, abstracts, figures, or references for journal submission and you need full-paragraph prose, scientific structure, citation-style guidance, or reporting-guideline support.
Use when a manuscript is close to submission or resubmission and you need a preflight audit for claim support, figure-panel coverage, legend sync, methods references, terminology stability, and venue-facing risks.
| name | rebuttal-response |
| description | Use when responding to journal or conference reviewer comments and you need a structured author response, aligned manuscript edits, and clear decisions about when to clarify, add evidence, concede, or respectfully disagree. |
Use this skill when reviewer comments already exist and the task is no longer generic manuscript revision. The goal is to produce a response package that is credible, efficient, and easy for editors or reviewers to verify.
This skill is not for redesigning the whole paper. Use manuscript-optimizer first if the manuscript itself is structurally unstable. Use this skill when the paper is in revision mode and each comment must be turned into an explicit response and, where needed, a concrete manuscript change.
Use this skill when:
Do not use this skill for:
Every reviewer comment should end in exactly one of these outcomes:
Do not leave a comment in the vague middle ground where the reply sounds polite but the action taken is unclear.
Classify each comment before writing:
Triage first. Only then decide what to change.
Assign each comment a severity:
minor
presentation, clarity, formatting, citation, or small method-detail issuemajor
evidence, validation, method, statistics, interpretation, or scope issue that may affect editorial confidenceblocking
ethics, compliance, data integrity, unsupported central claim, or another issue that should not be drafted aroundunclear
insufficient information to judge severity safelyLabel the package honestly at the end:
ready_to_submitdraft_with_placeholdersneeds_author_inputblockedAssume the editor is scanning quickly for three things:
Do not write replies that only say the manuscript was revised without specifying the change.
Concede when:
Best move:
Use clarification when:
Best move:
Push back only when:
Best move:
Classify comments using these buckets before drafting:
Use the category to choose the response action. For example:
blocking until the missing facts existPrefer:
Avoid:
When using this skill, produce:
ready_to_submit, draft_with_placeholders, needs_author_input, or blocked