From geb-skills
Stress-tests the analytical core of a GEB manuscript: maps assumptions, states results precisely, and checks proof correctness, tightness, and generality for theory or behavioral papers.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/geb-skills:geb-identification-strategyThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The theorem is (you believe) true but the proof is hard to follow or audit
GEB is a game-theory journal, so for theoretical papers the "identification strategy" is the logical architecture of the result, not a causal-inference design. The bar is correctness, tightness, and generality, with proofs a referee can verify. Because the Editor in Charge routes the paper to an anonymous Advisory Editor and expert referees, the argument must withstand specialists who will reconstruct each step. Treat this skill in two branches.
Use this as a second-pass capability check. First lock the primitives, equilibrium concept, comparative statics, and proof or experiment boundary; then test whether the manuscript addresses game theorists who ask what the model teaches beyond a clever example.
claim / evidence / blocker / next edit rows so the next pass can patch the manuscript directly.resources/official-source-map.md for volatile rules and name the one unresolved fact that could change the recommendation.【Branch】theory / behavioral-experimental
【Main result】one-line statement (domain → conclusion)
【Assumptions】[each: needed because ... / fails without ...]
【Generality】most general statement supported; known limits
【Proof exposition】idea-first? steps signposted? invoked theorems checked? [Y/N each]
【Tightness】bound achieved / uniqueness vs. existence
【(Behavioral) design】separates theories? session-clustered? powered? [Y/N each]
【Next step】geb-data-analysis or geb-tables-figures
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin geb-skillsHardens assumptions, results, and proof architecture for a JET theory paper. Makes every assumption load-bearing, structures proofs for expert referee verification, and defends the generality/tractability trade-off.
Stress-tests identification, assumptions, asymptotics, and proofs in EctJ submissions, ensuring proof placement under RES printed-appendix rules and pairing asymptotic claims with finite-sample evidence.
Positions a game-theory manuscript against existing literature for Games and Economic Behavior (GEB), sharpening the contribution by naming specific prior results and stating the delta.