From pnas-skills
Stress-tests whether a research result clears PNAS's bar for high-quality, broadly significant science, and routes it to the right venue (Science/Nature, PNAS, or a field journal). Run before drafting.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/pnas-skills:pnas-fitThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
PNAS is selective, but its gate is different from Science/Nature. The bar is **high-quality, broadly significant science** — not *only* the single flashiest discovery of the year. A rigorous, important, well-supported paper that a general scientific audience would value has a real home at PNAS even if it is not top-1% headline news. Run this before investing in prose, and use it to make the **r...
PNAS is selective, but its gate is different from Science/Nature. The bar is high-quality, broadly significant science — not only the single flashiest discovery of the year. A rigorous, important, well-supported paper that a general scientific audience would value has a real home at PNAS even if it is not top-1% headline news. Run this before investing in prose, and use it to make the realistic step-down call from Science/Nature.
pnas-track).| Bar level | Venue |
|---|---|
| Top-1% general-interest discovery, decisive and timely | Science / Nature (use those packs) |
| High-quality, important, broadly significant — solid science a general audience values | PNAS |
| Deep but mostly of interest to one subfield | top field journal |
| Clinical/medical with patient outcomes | NEJM / Lancet (use those packs) |
PNAS values solid important science over only-the-flashiest. Do not under-sell a strong paper as "not good enough for PNAS" just because it would not lead Science; equally, do not inflate an incremental result.
Imagine a reader from a different PNAS division (a cell biologist reading a physics paper, an economist reading a genetics paper). The paper passes if that reader would say "I understand why this matters and I'd want to know about it." PNAS spans Biological, Physical, and Social Sciences, so the cross-division reader is real — write for them.
Rungs 2–4 are the PNAS sweet spot. Rung 5 may justify trying Science/Nature first; rung 1 points to a field journal.
| Situation | Recommend |
|---|---|
| Rung 4–5, decisive, broad, timely | try Science / Nature first; PNAS is a strong fallback |
| Rung 2–4, solid, broadly significant, rigorous | PNAS (Direct or Contributed → pnas-track) |
| Deep but specialist | top field journal |
| Clinical/medical with patient outcomes | NEJM / Lancet |
| Strong idea but evidence not yet decisive | add experiments before submitting |
【Significance rung】 1–5 + one-line justification
【Cross-division reader test】 pass / borderline / fail (which other-division reader cares, and why)
【PNAS division (likely)】 Biological / Physical / Social Sciences
【Fatal triggers present】 [...]
【Recommended venue】 Science-Nature / PNAS / field journal / NEJM-Lancet
【If PNAS, the single sentence of broad significance】 "..."
【Next】 pnas-track (if PNAS) | reconsider venue (if fail)
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin pnas-skillsStress-tests whether a research result clears Science's desk-reject filter by evaluating broad significance and general interest across disciplines. Helps decide between Science, Science Advances, and specialist journals.
Guides authors on PNAS fit, framing, evidence bar, and desk-reject patterns. Use when targeting the National Academy of Sciences journal or deciding if a manuscript fits its scope.
Routes manuscript workflow decisions for PNAS submissions, selecting the appropriate specialized skill (fit, track, writing, figures, etc.) based on current stage.