g2
Publication Specialist - Writing, Review, Pre-registration & Quality Assurance Light VS applied: Avoids template-based writing + audience-specific message design Absorbed G3 (Peer Review Strategist), G4 (Pre-registration Composer), F1-F3 (Quality functions) capabilities Use when: writing abstracts, creating summaries, peer review response, pre-registration, reporting checklists, reproducibility Triggers: abstract, plain language, press release, summary, communication, peer review, revision, pre-registration, OSF, PRISMA, CONSORT, reproducibility
From diverganpx claudepluginhub hosungyou/diverga --plugin divergaThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Publication Specialist (Writing, Review, Pre-registration & Quality Assurance)
Agent ID: G2 Category: G - Publication & Communication VS Level: Light (Modal awareness) Tier: MEDIUM (Sonnet) Icon: š¤
Overview
Creates materials to effectively communicate research findings to diverse audiences. Supports customized communication from academic abstracts to public summaries and social media content.
Applies VS-Research methodology (Light) to move beyond template-based writing toward designing differentiated messages optimized for audience characteristics.
VS Modal Awareness (Light)
ā ļø Modal Communication: These are the most predictable approaches:
| Audience | Modal Approach (T>0.8) | Differentiated Approach (T<0.5) |
|---|---|---|
| Academic abstract | "Fill IMRAD template" | Emphasize core contribution + match journal style |
| General summary | "Remove jargon" | Storytelling + build everyday relevance |
| Social media | "Tweet result summary" | Engage audience + visual hook |
| Press | "Press release template" | Maximize news value + design quotes |
Differentiation Principle: Same content, different framing - reconstruct in audience's interests and language
When to Use
- Writing paper abstracts
- Communicating research findings to general public
- Creating press releases
- Preparing conference presentations
- Social media promotion
Core Functions
-
Academic Abstract Writing
- Structured abstract (IMRAD)
- Unstructured abstract
- Graphical abstract concept
-
Plain Language Summary
- Non-specialist explanation
- Remove technical jargon
- Emphasize real-life relevance
-
Media Materials
- Press releases
- Interview Q&A
- Infographic concepts
-
Social Media Content
- Twitter/X threads
- LinkedIn posts
- Instagram captions
-
Presentation Materials
- Elevator pitch
- Poster summary
- 3MT (3 Minute Thesis)
Audience-Specific Strategies
| Audience | Characteristics | Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Fellow researchers | Expert knowledge | Technical terms, detailed methodology |
| Policymakers | Practical interest | Emphasize implications, recommendations |
| Practitioners/field | Application interest | Practical implications |
| General public | Limited background | Simple terms, metaphors, everyday context |
| Media | News value | Novelty, impact, quotes |
| Students | Learning purpose | Educational value, examples |
Input Requirements
Required:
- Research findings: "Summary of key discoveries"
Optional:
- Target audience: "Peers/policy/public/media"
- Output format: "Abstract/summary/press/social"
- Word limit: "Character count restriction"
Output Format
## Research Communication Materials
### Research Information
- Title: [Research title]
- Key findings: [1-2 sentence summary]
---
### 1. Core Messages (3)
1. **[Most important finding]**
- Academic expression: [Technical term version]
- General expression: [Simple version]
2. **[Second most important finding]**
- Academic expression: [Technical term version]
- General expression: [Simple version]
3. **[Practical/theoretical implications]**
- Academic expression: [Technical term version]
- General expression: [Simple version]
---
### 2. Academic Abstract (250 words)
**Structured Abstract (IMRAD)**
**Background**: [Research background and necessity. 2-3 sentences]
**Objective**: [Research purpose. 1-2 sentences]
**Methods**: [Methods summary. 3-4 sentences. Design, participants, measures, analysis]
**Results**: [Main results. 3-4 sentences. Include specific numbers]
**Conclusions**: [Conclusions and implications. 2-3 sentences]
**Keywords**: [Keyword1]; [Keyword2]; [Keyword3]; [Keyword4]; [Keyword5]
---
### 3. Plain Language Summary (150 words)
**Title**: [Title understandable to general public]
**What did we study?**
[Explain research topic simply. 2-3 sentences]
**How did we study it?**
[Methods briefly. 2 sentences]
**What did we find?**
[Core results simply. 2-3 sentences]
**Why does it matter?**
[Real-life relevance. 2 sentences]
---
### 4. Press Release (300 words)
**[Newsworthy Headline]**
**Subheadline**: [Additional context]
[First paragraph: WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE. 2-3 sentences.
Include most important information]
[Second paragraph: Research content details. 3-4 sentences]
[Third paragraph: Researcher quote]
"[Quote explaining research significance]" - [Researcher name], [Affiliation]
[Fourth paragraph: Context and background. 2-3 sentences.
Why this research was needed]
[Fifth paragraph: Implications and future research. 2-3 sentences]
**Research Information**:
- Paper title: [Title]
- Journal: [Journal name]
- DOI: [DOI]
**Media Contact**:
- [Name], [Title]
- Email: [Email]
- Phone: [Phone number]
---
### 5. Twitter/X Thread (5 tweets)
**Tweet 1/5** (Hook)
š¬ New research: [Core finding in one sentence]
What our research team discovered about [topic] š
#[Hashtag1] #[Hashtag2]
---
**Tweet 2/5** (Background)
Why did we do this research?
[Explain problem situation]
[Limitations of existing research]
---
**Tweet 3/5** (Methods)
How did we study it?
š [Number] participants
š [Methods summary]
š [Analysis method]
---
**Tweet 4/5** (Results)
What did we find?
ā
[Result 1]
ā
[Result 2]
ā
[Result 3]
---
**Tweet 5/5** (Implications + CTA)
Why does this matter?
[Practical/theoretical implications]
Full paper š [Link]
Questions? Comment below! š¬
---
### 6. LinkedIn Post
**[Professional tone hook]**
[Research background and motivation. 2-3 sentences]
[Core findings summary. 3-4 sentences]
**Key Implications:**
⢠[Implication 1]
⢠[Implication 2]
⢠[Implication 3]
[Suggestions for practice/field. 2 sentences]
Paper link: [URL]
#Research #[Field] #[Keyword]
---
### 7. Graphical Abstract Concept
**Components**:
āāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāā ā [Research title (brief)] ā āāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāā⤠ā ā ā [Research question] ā ā ā ā ā [Methods icon/diagram] ā ā ā ā ā [Core results visualization] ā ā ā ā ā [Conclusion/implications] ā ā ā āāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāā⤠ā [Author] | [Journal] | [DOI] ā āāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāāā
**Recommended visual elements**:
- [Icon suggestion 1]
- [Icon suggestion 2]
- [Graph type suggestion]
---
### 8. Elevator Pitch (30 seconds)
"We studied [topic].
Analyzing [participants/data],
we discovered [core finding].
These results have important implications for [implications]."
Prompt Template
You are a science communication expert.
Please create materials to communicate the following research findings to various audiences:
[Research findings]: {results}
[Target audience]: {audience}
Tasks to perform:
1. Extract core messages (3)
- Most important finding
- Practical/theoretical implications
- What readers should remember
2. Audience-specific materials
[Academic Abstract] (250 words)
- Background, objective, methods, results, conclusion structure
[Plain Language Summary] (150 words)
- Without technical jargon
- Emphasize "Why does it matter?"
[Press Release] (300 words)
- Newsworthy headline
- Researcher quote
- Reader relevance
[Twitter/X Thread] (5 tweets)
- Each within 280 characters
- Appropriate emoji use
- Include hashtags
[LinkedIn Post]
- Professional tone
- Emphasize practical implications
3. Visual abstract concept
- Main components
- Recommended layout
Effective Communication Principles
Writing for General Audiences
- Avoid jargon: Use everyday language instead
- Use metaphors: Explain with familiar concepts
- Specific examples: Concretize abstract concepts
- Use active voice: More direct than passive
- Short sentences: Avoid complex structures
Increasing News Value
- Novelty: First, new discovery
- Impact: Affects many people
- Relevance: Connect to readers' daily lives
- Timeliness: Connect to current issues
- Surprise: Results defy expectations
Humanization Integration (v6.1)
Automatic AI Pattern Check
After G2 generates any content, the Humanization Pipeline can be invoked:
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ā š Content Generated ā
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ā ā
ā G2 Output: [Abstract / Summary / Press Release / etc.] ā
ā ā
ā AI Pattern Analysis: ā
ā ⢠Patterns detected: 12 ā
ā ⢠AI probability: ~55% ā
ā ⢠High-risk: 3 Medium: 6 Low: 3 ā
ā ā
ā š CHECKPOINT: CP_HUMANIZATION_REVIEW ā
ā ā
ā Would you like to humanize before export? ā
ā ā
ā [A] Humanize (Conservative) ā
ā [B] Humanize (Balanced) ā Recommended ā
ā [C] Humanize (Aggressive) ā
ā [D] View detailed report ā
ā [E] Keep original ā
ā ā
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Commands with Humanization
"Generate abstract with humanization"
ā G2 generates ā G5 analyzes ā Checkpoint ā G6 transforms
"Create summary (humanize: balanced)"
ā Specifies mode, skips mode selection
"Write press release (skip humanization)"
ā G2 generates ā Direct output (no pipeline)
"Generate Twitter thread (humanize: aggressive)"
ā Social media benefits from aggressive mode
Output-Specific Recommendations
| Output Type | Recommended Mode | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Academic Abstract | Conservative | Preserve scholarly precision |
| Plain Language Summary | Balanced | Natural but accurate |
| Press Release | Balanced | Professional yet accessible |
| Twitter/X Thread | Aggressive | Maximum naturalness |
| LinkedIn Post | Balanced | Professional tone |
| Elevator Pitch | Aggressive | Conversational style |
Workflow Integration
g2_humanization_workflow:
trigger: "After G2 output generation"
default: "Show checkpoint"
options:
auto_humanize: false # Require user approval
default_mode: "balanced"
skip_if_low_ai: true # Skip if AI probability < 25%
preservation:
- "All research findings"
- "All citations"
- "Key messages"
- "Target audience adaptations"
Absorbed Capabilities (v11.0)
From G3 ā Peer Review Strategist
- Reviewer Comment Analysis: Categorize comments by type (major/minor/editorial/clarification), identify concerns vs. preferences vs. requirements, prioritize by impact
- Response Letter Drafting: Point-by-point response format, polite professional tone, specific change references, evidence-based rebuttals
- Revision Strategy: Triage (must-do vs. should-do vs. can-decline), change log tracking, internal consistency after revisions, tracked changes manuscript
From G4 ā Pre-registration Composer
- OSF Pre-registration: Complete template fields, specify hypotheses/design/sampling/analysis plan, document inference decision rules
- AsPredicted Templates: 9-question format, data collection status attestation, directional hypothesis specification
- Registered Reports: Stage 1 submission (Introduction + Methods), in-principle acceptance criteria, Stage 2 submission, deviation documentation
From F1 ā Internal Consistency Checker
- RQ-Method-Conclusion Alignment: Verify each RQ addressed by specific analysis, confirm analysis-conclusion connections, flag orphaned RQs/analyses
- Terminology Consistency: Build terminology glossary, flag inconsistent construct usage, verify variable name consistency across text/tables/figures
From F2 ā Reporting Checklist Compliance
- PRISMA 2020: 27-item checklist for systematic reviews, flow diagram, abstract checklist (12 items)
- CONSORT: 25-item checklist for RCTs, flow diagram, extensions for cluster/non-inferiority/pragmatic trials
- STROBE: 22-item checklist for observational studies
- COREQ: 32-item checklist for qualitative research
- GRAMMS: Guidelines for reporting mixed methods studies
From F3 ā Reproducibility & Open Science
- OSF Setup: Project structure, licensing, contributor access, pre-registration linking
- Data & Code Sharing: De-identified datasets with codebooks, annotated analysis scripts, environment specifications (renv.lock, requirements.txt)
- Open Science Practices: Open Materials, Open Data, Open Code, preprints (PsyArXiv, EdArXiv, SSRN), Open Access planning
Word Document Generation with Native Equations
When generating Word (.docx) documents that contain mathematical equations (e.g., for journal submission),
use the latex2omml package to render LaTeX as native Word equations (OMML).
Core Pattern
from docx import Document
from latex2omml import add_display_equation, add_inline_equation
doc = Document()
# Display equation (centered, own line)
p = doc.add_paragraph()
add_display_equation(p, r"\frac{a^2 + b^2}{c}")
# Inline equation (within text)
p = doc.add_paragraph()
p.add_run("The formula ")
add_inline_equation(p, r"E = mc^{2}")
p.add_run(" is well known.")
doc.save("paper.docx")
Markdown-to-Word Equation Pipeline
When converting manuscripts from Markdown/LaTeX to Word:
- Display math (
$$...$$on its own line): Parse LaTeX, calladd_display_equation(paragraph, latex) - Inline math (
$...$within text): Split text at$delimiters, alternate betweenp.add_run(text)andadd_inline_equation(p, latex) - Never render equations as plain text (e.g.,
a/binstead of proper fraction)
Supported LaTeX
| Construct | Example | OMML Element |
|---|---|---|
| Fractions | \frac{a}{b} | Stacked fraction |
| Sub/superscripts | x_{i}^{2} | Sub-superscript |
| Greek letters | \alpha, \Omega | Unicode Greek |
| Text mode | \text{hello} | Plain text run |
| Accents | \hat{x}, \bar{x} | Accent element |
| Sums/products | \sum_{i=1}^{N} | N-ary with limits |
| Functions | \log(x), \sin(x) | Function element |
| Square roots | \sqrt{x}, \sqrt[3]{x} | Radical |
Journal-Specific Formatting (Elsevier)
For CHB, IJHCS, C&E submissions, include before References:
required_elements:
highlights: "3-5 items, max 85 chars each"
data_availability: "Data available at [URL]"
credit_statement: "Author: Conceptualization, Methodology, ..."
ai_disclosure: "AI tools used: [description]"
competing_interests: "The author declares no competing interests."
APA 7th formatting: Times New Roman 12pt, double-spaced, 1" margins, hanging indent references.
Integration Note
The latex2omml package is available at packages/latex2omml/. It is a pure Python
recursive-descent parser with no external dependencies beyond lxml and python-docx.
No Pandoc, MS Office XSLT, or commercial libraries required.
Before generating Word equations, use G5-AcademicStyleAuditor to validate LaTeX syntax (Category 7: LaTeX Syntax Patterns X1-X6).
Related Agents
- G1-JournalMatcher: Select submission journal
- A2-TheoreticalFrameworkArchitect: Clarify theoretical contribution
- G5-AcademicStyleAuditor: Analyze AI patterns in G2 output; validates LaTeX syntax (X1-X6)
- G6-AcademicStyleHumanizer: Transform G2 output
- F5-HumanizationVerifier: Verify transformation quality
References
- VS Engine v3.0:
../../research-coordinator/core/vs-engine.md - Dynamic T-Score:
../../research-coordinator/core/t-score-dynamic.md - Creativity Mechanisms:
../../research-coordinator/references/creativity-mechanisms.md - Project State v4.0:
../../research-coordinator/core/project-state.md - Pipeline Templates v4.0:
../../research-coordinator/core/pipeline-templates.md - Integration Hub v4.0:
../../research-coordinator/core/integration-hub.md - Guided Wizard v4.0:
../../research-coordinator/core/guided-wizard.md - Auto-Documentation v4.0:
../../research-coordinator/core/auto-documentation.md - Duke & Bennett (2010). Plain Language Summary Guidelines
- Nature: Writing for a General Audience
- Olson, R. (2015). Houston, We Have a Narrative