From spq-skills
Builds the theoretical argument of an SPQ manuscript into a contribution to sociological social psychology by specifying mechanisms, scope conditions, and observable implications.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/spq-skills:spq-theory-buildingThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
At SPQ a result is not a contribution until it is attached to a **social-psychological mechanism** that
At SPQ a result is not a contribution until it is attached to a social-psychological mechanism that connects social structure or process to the individual — the self, identity, emotion, cognition, or interaction. This skill turns findings into theory in the idiom of your tradition: explicit mechanisms, scope conditions, and observable implications.
spq-research-design.Ask: Does the argument explain how something social (structure, position, interaction) connects to
something individual (self, emotion, cognition, behavior)? If it only explains an individual process
with no social anchor, it drifts toward psychology; if only macro patterns with no individual mechanism,
toward macro sociology. Tighten until the link is the contribution (or reframe via spq-topic-selection).
Write the core argument as a ladder, not a topic list:
| Step | Question | Manuscript evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Social condition | What position, interaction, institution, or group process starts the chain? | Setting, measure, field episode, or formal assumption |
| Perception / meaning | How is the condition interpreted by actors? | Accounts, measures, manipulation, or model parameter |
| Self / emotion / cognition | What individual-level social-psychological process changes? | Construct definition and observable indicator |
| Behavior / interaction | What consequence follows, and for whom? | Test, qualitative pattern, or derived prediction |
| Boundary | Where should the mechanism weaken or reverse? | Scope condition, null case, or contrast |
Use the ladder to decide what belongs in the theory section. A paragraph that cannot be placed on the ladder is probably background, not argument. A ladder with no boundary step will read as overgeneralized.
【Core claim】one sentence
【Tradition】symbolic interaction / SSP / group processes / identity / affect
【Mechanism】how structure/interaction connects to the individual
【Mechanism ladder】condition → meaning → individual process → behavior → boundary
【Observable implications】testable consequences → research-design
【Scope conditions】settings / populations where it holds
【Structure–individual link explicit?】[Y/N]
【Next】spq-research-design
../../resources/external_tools.md — formal-modeling and measurement tooling (affect control, SEM)../../resources/official-source-map.md — SPQ scope and contribution expectationsnpx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin spq-skillsPositions an SPQ manuscript as a contribution to sociological social psychology by engaging the field's own traditions and theoretical programs.
Builds portable theoretical arguments for ASR manuscripts. Defines mechanisms, scope conditions, and concepts across quantitative, ethnographic, comparative-historical, and computational methods.
Structures theoretical arguments for American Journal of Sociology manuscripts into portable, discipline-level contributions with explicit concepts, mechanisms, and scope conditions.