From experimental-economics-skills
Helps position an Experimental Economics paper's contribution against prior experiments and behavioral theory.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/experimental-economics-skills:expecon-literature-positioningThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- A referee or coauthor says "we already know this" — the marginal contribution over existing experiments is unclear
At a method-defined journal, positioning is not "no one has studied topic X." It is "no prior design could deliver the comparison I deliver." Locate your paper on this ladder, from weakest to strongest:
A reviewer should never finish the intro thinking "this is a JEBO behavioral paper" or "this is a GEB theory paper with a demo." Your literature should be dominated by experimental-methods work and read as a conversation about designs and procedures, not only about a phenomenon.
A trust-game paper claims to be "the first to study trust under time pressure." A quick search shows several such studies — so the positioning collapses to a re-label. The fix climbs the ladder: the real contribution is confound removal — prior time-pressure designs confounded cognitive load with the deadline framing itself, and the new design adds a load-only control that holds framing fixed. Now the intro names the two closest prior treatments, states the single new control, and shows the contrast splits a "depletion of self-control" account (predicts less trust) from a "framing" account (predicts no change). The reference list leans on elicitation-method papers, not the broad trust literature.
If you cannot write these three sentences, the contribution is not yet positioned — return to expecon-topic-selection.
ExpEcon literatures are organized around a handful of canonical paradigms; positioning is often clearest when you say which building block you take and what you bolt onto it. Make the lineage explicit:
| Paradigm | Studies | Your move is usually… |
|---|---|---|
| Public goods / VCM | cooperation, punishment | add a clean institution treatment (e.g., communication, sanction design) |
| Trust / gift exchange | reciprocity, fairness | isolate the channel (intentions vs. outcomes) prior work conflated |
| Dictator / ultimatum | social preferences | a boundary condition or a confound-removing control |
| Markets / auctions | price formation, efficiency | a new mechanism or information structure |
| Coordination / beauty contest | strategic reasoning | manipulate the depth-of-reasoning lever |
Naming the building block and the one new piece is itself strong positioning — it tells the referee exactly where your design sits in the family tree.
Strong ExpEcon positioning cites not only the studies that used a procedure but the ones that criticized it. If you elicit risk with Holt–Laury, acknowledge the known issues (multiple switching, framing of the safe option) and say how your implementation handles them. If you use the strategy method, cite the evidence on when it does and does not replicate direct-response behavior. This signals that you chose the procedure deliberately, not by inertia — exactly the methodological self-awareness the flagship rewards, and it pre-empts a referee who knows the critique.
Replications are explicitly in scope, but a flagship replication must do more than re-run: it should be adequately powered (often more than the original), pre-registered, and framed as resolving a contested or influential finding — not an arbitrary re-test. State the original effect size, your MDE, and what a confirm-or-overturn outcome would mean for the literature. For a Registered Report, the positioning lives in the Stage-1 protocol: the contribution is the question and design, judged before results exist, so the introduction must make the case that the answer matters whichever way it comes out. A "we replicate X and find the same thing" framing with no power story or stakes reads as JESA-scale, not flagship.
【Journal】Experimental Economics (ESA method flagship)
【Skill】expecon-literature-positioning
【Verdict】pass / sharpen / reroute
【Closest paradigm + treatment】named prior design
【Contribution rung】boundary / confound-removal / new-treatment / methodology / replication
【Models adjudicated】which behavioral predictions the contrast separates
【Sibling boundary】why not JEBO / GEB / AEJ:Micro
【Next skill】expecon-theory-model
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin experimental-economics-skillsFrames whether a research question is a method-defined fit for Experimental Economics manuscripts and selects the minimal treatment contrast for the design.
Positions JEBO manuscripts against behavioral, experimental, and organizational literatures using the 'what we knew / what was missing / what this adds' frame. Helps authors honestly stake a replication, extension, or mechanism-level contribution.
Positions the marginal contribution of an AEJ: Applied manuscript precisely against prior applied-micro work. Use when a contribution is fuzzy, undersold, or risks reading as a replication.