From tar-skills
Develops economic mechanisms, analytical models, and testable predictions for TAR manuscripts. Trigger when predictions lack economic logic or a friction is needed.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/tar-skills:tar-theory-developmentThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- Predictions read as bald associations ("disclosure X relates to outcome Y") with no economic logic
TAR is open to all methods, but it does not publish atheoretical regressions. Whether the paper is archival, experimental, or analytical, every prediction must rest on an explicit economic mechanism — typically an information friction (asymmetric information, adverse selection, moral hazard), an agency conflict, a contracting or monitoring force, a processing/attention constraint, or a real-decision channel through which accounting information changes behavior. Name the friction and the channel verb (reduces information asymmetry, tightens monitoring, relaxes a covenant, disciplines investment, deters tax aggressiveness).
【Lane】archival / analytical / experimental
【Friction】information asymmetry / agency / attention / contracting ...
【Prediction P1 (focal)】construct → channel → outcome; direction/form
【Prediction P2 (channel/mediation)】...
【P3+ (cross-section/boundary)】... economic reason
【Analytical only】propositions proven? comparative statics stated? yes/no
【Rival explanation】named + how it will be ruled out
【Next step】tar-literature-positioning, then tar-methods
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin tar-skillsBuilds economic mechanisms and derives signed, falsifiable predictions for JAR manuscripts using information economics, contracting, and disclosure theory.
Develops economic mechanisms, analytical models, and testable predictions for RAST accounting manuscripts. Builds friction-based arguments for disclosure, contracting, or archival hypotheses.
Builds the conceptual engine of a CAR manuscript: economic/behavioral mechanism, predictions/hypotheses, or formal model, adapted to archival, experimental, analytical, or qualitative traditions.