Auto-claude-code-research-in-sleep paper-plan
Generate a structured paper outline from review conclusions and experiment results. Use when user says \\\"\u5199\u5927\u7eb2\\\", \\\"paper outline\\\", \\\"plan the paper\\\", \\\"\u8bba\u6587\u89c4\u5212\\\", or wants to create a paper plan before writing.
git clone https://github.com/wanshuiyin/Auto-claude-code-research-in-sleep
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/wanshuiyin/Auto-claude-code-research-in-sleep "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/skills-codex/paper-plan" ~/.claude/skills/wanshuiyin-auto-claude-code-research-in-sleep-paper-plan-b91fab && rm -rf "$T"
skills/skills-codex/paper-plan/SKILL.mdPaper Plan: From Review Conclusions to Paper Outline
Generate a structured, section-by-section paper outline from: $ARGUMENTS
Constants
- REVIEWER_MODEL =
— Model used via a secondary Codex agent for outline review. Must be an OpenAI model.gpt-5.4 - TARGET_VENUE =
— Default venue. User can override (e.g.,ICLR
). Supported:/paper-plan "topic" — venue: NeurIPS
,ICLR
,NeurIPS
,ICML
,CVPR
,ACL
,AAAI
,ACM
(IEEE Transactions / Letters),IEEE_JOURNAL
(IEEE conferences).IEEE_CONF - MAX_PAGES — Page limit. For ML conferences: main body to Conclusion end (excluding references, appendix). ICLR=9, NeurIPS=9, ICML=8. For IEEE venues: references ARE included in page count. IEEE journal Transactions ≈ 12-14 pages total, Letters ≈ 4-5 pages total; IEEE conference ≈ 5-8 pages total (including references).
Inputs
The skill expects one or more of these in the project directory:
- NARRATIVE_REPORT.md or STORY.md — research narrative with claims and evidence
- review-stage/AUTO_REVIEW.md — auto-review loop conclusions (fall back to
if not found)./AUTO_REVIEW.md - Experiment results — JSON files in
, screen logs, tablesfigures/ - idea-stage/IDEA_REPORT.md — from idea-discovery pipeline (if applicable) (fall back to
if not found)./IDEA_REPORT.md - CLAIMS_FROM_RESULTS.md — structured claim judgment from
(preferred if available)/result-to-claim
If none exist, ask the user to describe the paper's contribution in 3-5 sentences.
Orchestra-Guided Writing Overlay
Keep the existing workflow and outputs, but use the shared references below to improve the quality of the story and outline:
- Read
when framing the Abstract, Introduction, Related Work, or hero figure../shared-references/writing-principles.md - Read
before freezing the outline for a specific venue../shared-references/venue-checklists.md - Load these references only when they help; they are support material, not a new workflow phase
Workflow
Step 1: Extract Claims and Evidence
First check for
— if it exists, use it as the starting point for claims and merge it with any additional evidence from the narrative documents below.CLAIMS_FROM_RESULTS.md
Read all available narrative documents and extract:
- Core claims (3-5 main contributions)
- Evidence for each claim (which experiments, which metrics, which figures)
- Known weaknesses (from reviewer feedback)
- Suggested framing (from review conclusions)
Build a Claims-Evidence Matrix:
| Claim | Evidence | Status | Section | |-------|----------|--------|---------| | [claim 1] | [exp A, metric B] | Supported | §3.2 | | [claim 2] | [exp C] | Partially supported | §4.1 |
Step 2: Determine Paper Type and Structure
Based on TARGET_VENUE and paper content, classify and select structure.
Before committing to a structure, apply the narrative principle from
../shared-references/writing-principles.md:
- The paper should tell one coherent technical story
- By the end of the Introduction, the outline should make the What, Why, and So What explicit
- Front-load the most important material: title, abstract, introduction, and hero figure
IMPORTANT: The section count is FLEXIBLE (5-8 sections). Choose what fits the content best. The templates below are starting points, not rigid constraints.
Empirical/Diagnostic paper:
1. Introduction (1.5 pages) 2. Related Work (1 page) 3. Method / Setup (1.5 pages) 4. Experiments (3 pages) 5. Analysis / Discussion (1 page) 6. Conclusion (0.5 pages)
Theory + Experiments paper:
1. Introduction (1.5 pages) 2. Related Work (1 page) 3. Preliminaries & Modeling (1.5 pages) 4. Experiments (1.5 pages) 5. Theory Part A (1.5 pages) 6. Theory Part B (1.5 pages) 7. Conclusion (0.5 pages) — Total: 9 pages
Theory papers often need 7 sections (splitting theory into estimation + optimization, or setup + analysis). The total page budget MUST sum to MAX_PAGES.
Theory papers should:
- Include proof sketch locations (not just theorem statements)
- Plan a comparison table of prior theoretical bounds vs. this paper's bounds
- Identify which proofs go in appendix vs. main body
Method paper:
1. Introduction (1.5 pages) 2. Related Work (1 page) 3. Method (2 pages) 4. Experiments (2.5 pages) 5. Ablation / Analysis (1 page) 6. Conclusion (0.5 pages)
Step 3: Section-by-Section Planning
For each section, specify:
### §0 Abstract - **One-sentence problem**: [what gap this paper addresses] - **Approach**: [what we do, in one sentence] - **Key result**: [most compelling quantitative finding] - **Implication**: [why it matters] - **Estimated length**: 150-250 words - **Self-contained check**: can a reader understand this without the paper? ### §1 Introduction - **Opening hook**: [1-2 sentences that motivate the problem] - **Gap**: [what's missing in prior work] - **Key questions**: [the research questions this paper answers] - **Contributions**: [numbered list, matching Claims-Evidence Matrix] - **Hero figure**: [describe what Figure 1 should show — MUST include clear comparison if applicable] - **Estimated length**: 1.5 pages - **Key citations**: [3-5 papers to cite here] ### §2 Related Work - **Subtopics**: [2-4 categories of related work] - **Positioning**: [how this paper differs from each category] - **Minimum length**: 1 full page (at least 3-4 paragraphs with substantive synthesis) - **Must NOT be just a list** — synthesize, compare, and position ### §3 Method / Setup / Preliminaries - **Notation**: [key symbols and their meanings] - **Problem formulation**: [formal setup] - **Method description**: [algorithm, model, or experimental design] - **Formal statements**: [theorems, propositions if applicable] - **Proof sketch locations**: [which key steps appear here vs. appendix] - **Estimated length**: 1.5-2 pages ### §4 Experiments / Main Results - **Figures planned**: - Fig 1: [description, type: bar/line/table/architecture, WHAT COMPARISON it shows] - Fig 2: [description] - Table 1: [what it shows, which methods/baselines compared] - **Data source**: [which JSON files / experiment results] ### §5 Conclusion - **Restatement**: [contributions rephrased, not copy-pasted from intro] - **Limitations**: [honest assessment — reviewers value this] - **Future work**: [1-2 concrete directions] - **Estimated length**: 0.5 pages
Step 4: Figure Plan
List every figure and table:
## Figure Plan | ID | Type | Description | Data Source | Priority | |----|------|-------------|-------------|----------| | Fig 1 | Hero/Architecture | System overview + comparison | manual | HIGH | | Fig 2 | Line plot | Training curves comparison | figures/exp_A.json | HIGH | | Fig 3 | Bar chart | Ablation results | figures/ablation.json | MEDIUM | | Table 1 | Comparison table | Main results vs. baselines | figures/main_results.json | HIGH | | Table 2 | Theory comparison | Prior bounds vs. ours | manual | HIGH (theory papers) |
CRITICAL for Figure 1 / Hero Figure: Describe in detail what the figure should contain, including:
- Which methods are being compared
- What the visual difference should demonstrate
- Caption draft that clearly states the comparison
Step 5: Citation Scaffolding
For each section, list required citations:
## Citation Plan - §1 Intro: [paper1], [paper2], [paper3] (problem motivation) - §2 Related: [paper4]-[paper10] (categorized by subtopic) - §3 Method: [paper11] (baseline), [paper12] (technique we build on)
Citation rules (from claude-scholar + Imbad0202/academic-research-skills):
- NEVER generate BibTeX from memory — always verify via search or existing .bib files
- Every citation must be verified: correct authors, year, venue
- Flag any citation you're unsure about with
[VERIFY] - Prefer published versions over arXiv preprints when available
Step 6: Cross-Review with REVIEWER_MODEL
Send the complete outline to GPT-5.4 xhigh for feedback:
spawn_agent: model: gpt-5.4 reasoning_effort: xhigh message: | Review this paper outline for a [VENUE] submission. [full outline including Claims-Evidence Matrix] Score 1-10 on: 1. Logical flow — does the story build naturally? 2. Claim-evidence alignment — every claim backed? 3. Missing experiments or analysis 4. Positioning relative to prior work 5. Page budget feasibility (MAX_PAGES = main body to Conclusion end, excluding refs/appendix) For each weakness, suggest the MINIMUM fix. Be specific and actionable — "add X" not "consider more experiments".
Apply feedback before finalizing.
Step 7: Output
Save the final outline to
PAPER_PLAN.md in the project root:
# Paper Plan **Title**: [working title] **Venue**: [target venue] **Type**: [empirical/theory/method] **Date**: [today] **Page budget**: [MAX_PAGES] pages (main body to Conclusion end, excluding references & appendix) **Section count**: [N] (must match the number of section files that will be created) ## Claims-Evidence Matrix [from Step 1] ## Structure [from Step 2-3, section by section] ## Figure Plan [from Step 4, with detailed hero figure description] ## Citation Plan [from Step 5] ## Reviewer Feedback [from Step 6, summarized] ## Next Steps - [ ] /paper-figure to generate all figures - [ ] /paper-write to draft LaTeX - [ ] /paper-compile to build PDF
Key Rules
-
Large file handling: If the Write tool fails due to file size, immediately retry using Bash (
) to write in chunks. Do NOT ask the user for permission — just do it silently.cat << 'EOF' > file -
Do NOT generate author information — leave author block as placeholder or anonymous
-
Be honest about evidence gaps — mark claims as "needs experiment" rather than overclaiming
-
Page budget is hard — if content exceeds MAX_PAGES, suggest what to move to appendix
-
MAX_PAGES counting differs by venue — ML conferences: main body to Conclusion end, references/appendix NOT counted. IEEE venues: references ARE counted toward the page limit.
-
Venue-specific norms — ML conferences (ICLR/NeurIPS/ICML) use
(natbib
/\citep
); IEEE venues use\citet
package (cite
, numeric style)\cite{} -
Claims-Evidence Matrix is the backbone — every claim must map to evidence, every experiment must support a claim
-
Figures need detailed descriptions — especially the hero figure, which must clearly specify comparisons and visual expectations
-
Section count is flexible — 5-8 sections depending on paper type. Don't force content into a rigid 5-section template.
Acknowledgements
Outline methodology inspired by Research-Paper-Writing-Skills (claim-evidence mapping), claude-scholar (citation verification), and Imbad0202/academic-research-skills (claim verification protocol).
Output Protocols
Follow these shared protocols for all output files:
- Output Versioning Protocol — write timestamped file first, then copy to fixed name
- Output Manifest Protocol — log every output to MANIFEST.md
- Output Language Protocol — respect the project's language setting