From jcr-skills
Guides research design for Journal of Consumer Research manuscripts: behavioral experiments, CCT fieldwork, mixed methods, or Registered Reports.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jcr-skills:jcr-methodsThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have a mechanism but are unsure how to test it
JCR states no single preferred method; the bar is a clear conceptual contribution supported by appropriate empirical evidence. In practice two flagship traditions coexist under one masthead, and you should commit to one design logic (or a principled mix):
The journal also publishes quantitative/modeling and methodological work. Choose the design the conceptual claim demands, not the one you find convenient.
JCR's transparency regime shapes the design from the start: a Data Collection Statement is required for all submissions (Step 6), data/materials posting is required at invited revision unless exempt, and replication code must be provided. Build clean materials, preregistration where appropriate, and a repository plan (OSF / Harvard Dataverse / Qualitative Data Repository / ResearchBox) into the design. For confirmatory questions, consider a Registered Report (full review before final data collection; must be JCR-worthy regardless of outcome).
【Design logic】experiments / CCT / mixed / Registered Report
【Study chain】effect → process → boundary (or CCT framework)
【Validity safeguards】randomization / checks / pretests / trustworthiness
【Power & samples】a priori N, exclusions
【Transparency plan】repository + code + Data Collection Statement
【Web appendix】overflow stimuli / extra studies (≤40 MB)
【Next step】jcr-data-analysis
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jcr-skillsRoutes manuscript work from topic selection through rebuttal for a Journal of Consumer Research (JCR) paper. Invokes specialized jcr-* sub-skills based on current bottleneck.
Designs and stress-tests experiments for JCP manuscripts: manipulations, confounds, checks, power, multi-study chains, and pre-registration.
Guides authors on fit, framing, method bar, and desk-reject risks for Journal of Consumer Research submissions. Useful when targeting JCR or positioning a consumer-behavior manuscript.