From experimental-economics-skills
Pre-empts standard experimentalist referee objections for an Experimental Economics manuscript before submission, helping you decide what to fix now vs. defend in the rebuttal letter.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/experimental-economics-skills:expecon-referee-strategyThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The paper is analytically done and you want to pre-empt the objections an ExpEcon referee will raise
Experimental Economics uses anonymous (double-blind) refereeing, and accepted papers need the approval of two editors (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准). Your referees are practicing experimentalists. They are unimpressed by topical novelty and intensely focused on design integrity. They read in a predictable order: gates first, then the contrast, then inference, then reproducibility. Pre-empt each.
Read your own draft in the referee's order and answer out loud:
If any answer is weak, that is the item to fix or pre-empt before the desk editor ever sends it out.
Beyond the headline gates, experimentalist referees reliably probe a cluster of subtle validity threats — treat them as first-order, not nitpicks:
For each, the winning move is the same: name the threat in a short validity subsection and show the design feature or test that addresses it, so the referee sees you raised it first.
An auction experiment expects the "your stakes are hypothetical in the practice rounds" line to pass unnoticed. A self-review flags it as an incentive-compatibility gap a referee will pounce on. The pre-emptive move: state clearly that only practice rounds were unpaid, that all decision rounds were paid via one-randomly-selected-round, and report the realized average payment — turning a likely first-round objection into a non-issue before it is raised.
Under double-blind review you cannot influence the referees' identities, but you can influence who the editors think should review it and how they frame the contribution. A cover letter that names the methods advance in one crisp sentence steers the paper toward experimentalist referees rather than topical ones. Suggesting two or three non-conflicted experts who know the procedure you use (not just the topic) helps the editors route the paper to readers who can evaluate the design on its merits — and who are less likely to mistake a methods paper for a JEBO-style topic paper.
Two editors stand between you and acceptance, and a desk screen comes first. The fastest desk rejects at this journal are: a deception procedure; non-incentivized choices; missing instructions; and an obvious method mismatch (a topic paper that should be at JEBO, or a short note that should be at JESA). None of these are about quality — they are about fit and gates. Clear all four in the first read of your own draft, because no amount of clever analysis survives a procedure the editor reads as deceptive on page 6.
【Journal】Experimental Economics (ESA method flagship)
【Skill】expecon-referee-strategy
【Verdict】ready / pre-empt-first
【Top objections】ranked (gates → power/unit → confound → purity → models → repro)
【Per objection】fix-now / disclose-and-bound / defend-in-text
【Threats subsection】present and names each alternative + test? [Y/N]
【Methods contribution】explicit enough to resist transfer? [Y/N]
【Next skill】expecon-submission
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin experimental-economics-skillsRoutes manuscript workflow from design through rebuttal for Experimental Economics submissions. Invoke when sequencing next steps or deciding which expecon-* skill to use.
Guides authors targeting Experimental Economics journal: assesses fit, frames experimental design, applies method/evidence bar, house style, and desk-reject heuristics.
Anticipates and pre-empts objections from Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization (JEBO) referees before submission — demand effects, mechanism-vs-alternative, external validity, sibling-journal fit. Helps triage fatal vs. addressable issues.