From pnas-skills
Writes PNAS Significance Statements — ≤120 words for a broad audience. Useful when drafting or revising the mandatory statement for PNAS submissions.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/pnas-skills:pnas-significanceThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Every PNAS research article must include a **Significance Statement** — a short, mandatory, separately submitted paragraph that explains, in plain language, **why the work matters to science and society**. It appears prominently with the article and is read by editors at triage and by the broad readership. It is **not** a second abstract. Getting it right is one of the highest-leverage things y...
Every PNAS research article must include a Significance Statement — a short, mandatory, separately submitted paragraph that explains, in plain language, why the work matters to science and society. It appears prominently with the article and is read by editors at triage and by the broad readership. It is not a second abstract. Getting it right is one of the highest-leverage things you can do for a PNAS submission, so draft it as soon as the central claim is locked — do not leave it to the final upload.
The Significance Statement answers "so what, and who cares?" — the abstract answers "what did you do and find?"
| Significance Statement | Abstract (pnas-abstract) |
|---|---|
| Why it matters, for a broad reader | What/how/found, for scientists |
| Plain language, minimal jargon | Technical but accessible |
| The gap + the advance + the broader consequence | Context, methods, quantified results, conclusion |
| ≤120 words | ~250 words |
Keep it to one paragraph. No citations, no figure references, no undefined acronyms, no equations.
"[Broad phenomenon] underlies [important process], yet how [specific gap] has remained unclear. Here we show that [plain-language advance], demonstrating that [general principle]. This finding [changes/explains/enables] [broad consequence], with implications for [adjacent field or application]."
When a draft statement is too technical, run this pass:
The cap is short (≤120 words) precisely to force this. You are not summarizing the paper; you are answering "why should a non-specialist care?"
pnas-fit).【Word count】 N ≤ 120
【Reader test】 can a non-specialist / undergraduate state why it matters? yes/no
【Four moves present?】 gap / advance(plain) / why-it-matters / (optional) application
【Distinct from abstract?】 yes/no (if no, rewrite — not a condensed abstract)
【Jargon / acronym hits removed】 [...]
【Over-claiming check】 consequence supported by the data? (link pnas-fit if not)
【Next】 pnas-abstract
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin pnas-skillsWrites a PNAS abstract: ~250 words, single paragraph, self-contained, quantified, accessible to broad scientific audience. Use after results/significance are settled.
Polishes Science (AAAS) abstracts and one-sentence summaries: quantifies results, removes jargon, enforces ≤125 words. Use late-stage when format is settled.
Structures the one-claim narrative for Physical Review Letters papers when the central claim and broad significance are not yet sharp. Does not run analysis or design figures.