From literature-synthesis
Use this skill when asked to synthesize, survey, or summarize a body of research papers on a topic. Produces a coherent narrative across multiple sources, identifying themes, consensus, contradictions, and open questions.
npx claudepluginhub aviskaar/open-org --plugin literature-synthesis# Literature Synthesis Synthesize findings across a set of research papers into a coherent, structured overview. ## Process ### Step 1 — Scope Clarify the exact research question or topic. If not provided, ask before proceeding. ### Step 2 — Organize Sources Group papers by: - Methodology (e.g., empirical vs. theoretical, supervised vs. unsupervised) - Chronology (identify how the field evolved) - Findings (consensus vs. conflicting results) ### Step 3 — Write the Synthesis Structure the output as follows: #### Background One paragraph establishing why this topic matters and what pre...
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Synthesize findings across a set of research papers into a coherent, structured overview.
Clarify the exact research question or topic. If not provided, ask before proceeding.
Group papers by:
Structure the output as follows:
One paragraph establishing why this topic matters and what preceded it.
For each major theme or line of work:
What the field broadly agrees on, with supporting citations.
Where papers meaningfully contradict each other — describe each position fairly.
Research questions that remain unanswered or underexplored.
A 2–3 sentence takeaway: what the body of work tells us and what the most promising next step is.
Use inline parenthetical citations: (Author et al., Year). List full references at the end.
Write as a neutral analyst, not an advocate. Present conflicting views without taking sides unless the evidence is overwhelming.