From jcr-skills
Builds the conceptual core of a JCR manuscript: psychological process & hypotheses for experiments papers, or interpretive theorization for CCT papers. Does not run studies.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/jcr-skills:jcr-theory-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have a consumer effect but no explanatory mechanism
JCR judges manuscripts on whether they advance, deepen, or repudiate existing theory about consumption, with conceptual and empirical support. The theory section must do conceptual work — not just predict an effect, but explain why it occurs in a way that engages an established account and changes it. Substantive framing from psychology, anthropology, sociology, or economics is expected, not a decorative citation.
Because JCR's dominant tradition is theory-driven behavioral experimentation, the modal theory section specifies a psychological process (the mediator) and the conditions under which it operates (moderators), then derives testable hypotheses a priori. The journal also publishes interpretive CCT work, where "theory development" means building concepts and a conceptual framework grounded in the data rather than deriving point-prediction hypotheses.
【Genre】experiments / CCT
【Core claim】what theory we advance/deepen/repudiate
【Mechanism】process (mediator) or grounded construct
【Boundary】moderators / scope conditions and their rationale
【Rivals】alternative accounts to rule out
【Study chain】how each study tests a link (experiments) / framework (CCT)
【Next step】jcr-literature-positioning then jcr-methods
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin jcr-skillsGuides development of psychological theory and hypotheses for JCP manuscripts: naming mediators, deriving theory-predicted moderators, and pre-empting rival processes.
Guides research design for Journal of Consumer Research manuscripts: behavioral experiments, CCT fieldwork, mixed methods, or Registered Reports.
Guides building conceptual logic for Journal of Marketing manuscripts — grounding theory in a marketing phenomenon, deriving predictions, and accommodating empirics-first routes.