// Creates formal academic research papers following IEEE/ACM formatting standards with proper structure, citations, and scholarly writing style. Use when the user asks to write a research paper, academic paper, or conference paper on any topic.
| name | research-paper-writer |
| description | Creates formal academic research papers following IEEE/ACM formatting standards with proper structure, citations, and scholarly writing style. Use when the user asks to write a research paper, academic paper, or conference paper on any topic. |
This skill guides the creation of formal academic research papers that meet publication standards for IEEE and ACM conferences/journals. It ensures proper structure, formatting, academic writing style, and comprehensive coverage of research topics.
When asked to write a research paper:
Clarify the topic and scope with the user:
Gather context if needed:
Follow this standard academic paper structure:
1. Title and Abstract
- Concise title reflecting the main contribution
- Abstract: 150-250 words summarizing purpose, methods, results, conclusions
2. Introduction
- Motivation and problem statement
- Research gap and significance
- Main contributions (typically 3-5 bullet points)
- Paper organization paragraph
3. Related Work / Background
- Literature review of relevant research
- Comparison with existing approaches
- Positioning of current work
4. Methodology / Approach / System Design
- Detailed description of proposed method/system
- Architecture diagrams if applicable
- Algorithms or procedures
- Design decisions and rationale
5. Implementation (if applicable)
- Technical details
- Tools and technologies used
- Challenges and solutions
6. Evaluation / Experiments / Results
- Experimental setup
- Datasets or test scenarios
- Performance metrics
- Results presentation (tables, graphs)
- Analysis and interpretation
7. Discussion
- Implications of results
- Limitations and threats to validity
- Lessons learned
8. Conclusion and Future Work
- Summary of contributions
- Impact and significance
- Future research directions
9. References
- Comprehensive bibliography in proper citation format
Apply these writing conventions from scholarly research:
Tone and Voice:
Technical Precision:
Argumentation:
Section-Specific Guidelines:
Abstract:
Introduction:
Related Work:
Results:
IEEE Format (default):
ACM Format (alternative):
In-text citations:
Reference formatting (IEEE style):
[1] A. Author, B. Author, and C. Author, "Title of paper," in Proc. Conference Name, Year, pp. 123-456.
[2] D. Author, "Title of journal article," Journal Name, vol. X, no. Y, pp. 123-456, Month Year.
[3] E. Author, Book Title, Edition. City: Publisher, Year.
Reference list requirements:
Step-by-step approach:
Create outline
Draft sections iteratively
Add citations
Review and refine
Example 1: User asks for a survey paper
User: "Write a research paper surveying recent advances in context-aware systems"
Response:
1. Clarify scope: "I'll create a survey paper on context-aware systems. A few questions:
- Should I focus on specific aspects (e.g., requirements engineering, implementation techniques)?
- What time period for 'recent' (last 5 years, 10 years)?
- Target length: 10-15 pages, or 20-30 pages comprehensive survey?
- IEEE or ACM format?"
2. After clarification, create outline showing:
- Taxonomy of context-aware systems
- Survey methodology
- Classification scheme
- Section-by-section coverage of different aspects
- Trends and future directions
3. Draft paper following survey structure with extensive related work coverage
Example 2: User asks for an experimental paper
User: "Write a paper about my new algorithm for detecting hallucinations in vision-language models"
Response:
1. Gather details about:
- Algorithm approach and novelty
- Experimental setup and datasets used
- Results and metrics
- Comparison baselines
2. Structure as experimental paper:
- Introduction: motivation for hallucination detection
- Related work: existing detection methods
- Proposed method: detailed algorithm description
- Experiments: datasets, metrics, setup
- Results: quantitative comparison with baselines
- Analysis: ablation studies, error analysis
- Conclusion: contributions and future work
3. Emphasize reproducibility and empirical validation
writing_style_guide.md: Detailed academic writing conventions extracted from example papersieee_formatting_specs.md: Complete IEEE formatting specificationsacm_formatting_specs.md: Complete ACM formatting specificationsfull_paper_template.pdf: IEEE paper template with formatting examplesinterim-layout.pdf: ACM paper template