ppsych-writing-style
GitHub用于修订 Perspectives on Psychological Science 稿件,确保文风广博、引人入胜且易读。优化开篇与结尾,规范 APA 引用及摘要格式,提升跨领域可读性,不涉及框架设计或证据评估。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill ppsych-writing-style -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "ppsych-writing-style",
"description": "Use when revising a Perspectives on Psychological Science (PoPS) piece for the PoPS voice — broad, provocative, accessible to psychologists outside the subfield, signposted, with a strong opening, a forward-looking close, an APA reference style, and a ≤200-word review-style abstract. Polishes prose and structure; it does not design the framework (ppsych-organizing-framework) or appraise evidence (ppsych-comprehensiveness-and-balance)."
}
PoPS Writing Style — the Perspective Voice (ppsych-writing-style)
When to trigger
- The framework and balance are settled and it is time to make the piece read well
- A psychologist from an adjacent area would get lost or bored in the current draft
- The opening buries the argument under machinery, methods, or throat-clearing
- The abstract reads like an empirical-paper abstract ("we found…") rather than a perspective abstract
The PoPS voice: broad + provocative + accessible
A PoPS piece is read by psychologists outside the subfield — smart, but not specialists here. The voice is a trusted, fair expert making a big-picture argument to a colleague from another area. Four qualities define it:
- Provocative + agenda-setting. PoPS prizes pieces that reframe and instigate lasting impact, not ones that merely summarize. The reader should feel a claim worth arguing about, stated plainly and early. Provocation is earned by evidence and balance, never by hot takes.
- Accessible across areas. Technical machinery is explained intuition-first, notation/method-second; jargon from the home paradigm is defined or avoided. This bar is sharper than at a specialist journal: the defining reader is the outsider, and a piece only one area can follow has missed PoPS's mandate.
- Signposted. A broad piece needs a map: section architecture that mirrors the spine, plus periodic "where we are / where we go next" cues so the reader never loses the thread.
- Synthesis prose, not summary prose. Sentences make papers and areas talk to each other ("Whereas the cognitive work finds…, the developmental evidence suggests…"), not march paper-by-paper.
The perspective opening arc
A PoPS introduction differs from an empirical-paper intro:
frame the question (what is at stake for the field broadly) → why now (new evidence / method shift / reform debate) → the claim and the spine (the reframing the reader will be given) → what the piece concludes and the open agenda (the payoff, stated up front) → roadmap (brief).
State the bottom line early. A perspective that withholds its claim to the end wastes the outsider's time and reads as indecisive.
The forward-looking close
PoPS prizes the future-agenda ending: the empty cells of the framework become a concrete agenda — what we do not yet know, what evidence would resolve it, which methods or practices the field should adopt. A PoPS piece that ends with "more research is needed" has wasted its most valuable section; name the specific open questions and the call to action.
The abstract
The abstract is ≤ 200 words (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准) and describes what the piece does for the reader — the question, why a synthesis/argument now, the organizing idea, the headline take-home — not a single finding. Avoid "we found an effect of…"; that is an empirical-paper abstract.
House style notes
PoPS is a SAGE/APS journal; manuscripts follow APA style for references, statistics, and exhibits (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准 — confirm the current APA edition and any house deviations on the SAGE author pages). There is no strict page limit for stand-alone articles, but concise pieces get more readership and impact — length is a privilege, and every section must earn its pages by advancing the argument about the field. Brief reports have their own limit (1,000–1,500 words) (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准).
Checklist
- Opening follows the arc: frame → why now → claim + spine → conclusions + open agenda → roadmap
- Bottom-line claim stated early, not withheld to the end
- Technical material introduced intuition-first; home-paradigm jargon defined or avoided
- Section architecture mirrors the spine; periodic signposting present
- Prose synthesizes (papers/areas in dialogue), not summarizes (paper-by-paper)
- The provocation/reframe is explicit and evidence-backed, not a hot take
- The close names a concrete future agenda / call to action, not "more research is needed"
- Abstract ≤ 200 words, perspective-style (contribution to reader), not a single finding
- APA reference/stat style applied; length kept concise; a psychologist from another area can follow
Anti-patterns
- The annotated-bibliography drone: "Smith (2010) found… Jones (2012) found…" with no connective argument
- Opening with method/notation before the field's question and the stakes
- Withholding the piece's claim until the final section
- Home-paradigm jargon that locks out the cross-area reader (PoPS's defining audience)
- An empirical-paper abstract ("we found d = 0.4") on a perspective, or an abstract over 200 words
- A limp "more research is needed" ending instead of a specific agenda
- Provocation without evidence (a hot take) — the opposite failure from neutrality-as-evasion
Output format
【Opening arc】frame → why-now → claim+spine → conclusions+agenda → roadmap? Y/N
【Bottom line early】claim stated up front? Y/N
【Accessibility】intuition-first; jargon controlled; another-area psychologist can follow? Y/N
【Signposting】architecture mirrors spine; periodic cues? Y/N
【Synthesis prose】papers/areas in dialogue, not listed? Y/N
【Provocation】reframe explicit and evidence-backed (not a hot take)? Y/N
【Forward agenda】close names concrete open questions / call to action? Y/N
【Abstract】≤ 200 words, perspective-style? Y/N
【Style】APA references/stats; concise? Y/N
【Next step】→ ppsych-transparency-and-reproducibility → ppsych-editor-strategy
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:11


