aaag-rebuttal
GitHub用于应对Annals期刊修改决定,构建逐点回复信。指导如何综合回应编辑与审稿人意见,强化地理论证、地图及空间方法,妥善处理冲突,并遵守字数限制。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill aaag-rebuttal -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "aaag-rebuttal",
"description": "Use when responding to an Annals of the American Association of Geographers decision letter (major\/minor revision) — building a point-by-point response to the subject editor and 1-3 referees across the journal's four areas. Structures the response and revisions; it does not fabricate results."
}
Revision & Rebuttal (aaag-rebuttal)
A major revision at the Annals is a scoped invitation, not a rejection. The response letter is judged alongside the manuscript by the subject editor who handled it and the 1-3 referees (one of whom is the editor or designate). Win by addressing every point, respectfully and concretely, and by strengthening the geographic argument, not just patching mechanics.
When to trigger
- A decision letter arrived: minor revision, major revision (R&R), or reject-with-encouragement
- Multiple referees disagree, or a referee challenges the area framing, spatial methods, or cartography
- You need to decide what to concede, what to push back on, and how to show the changes
Build the response
- Open with a synthesis. A short note to the editor summarizing the main changes and how the revision strengthens the geographic contribution and addresses the area's concerns.
- Point-by-point, quote each comment. Reproduce each referee/editor comment verbatim, then respond directly beneath it. Number them (R1.1, R1.2 …) for easy cross-reference.
- Show, don't assert. For each accepted point, quote the revised text and give the manuscript location (page/section); for new analyses, name the exhibit.
- Disagree carefully. Where you decline, give a reasoned, evidence-based rationale and, where possible, a partial accommodation — never dismiss a referee.
Annals-specific moves
- Reconcile cross-area referees. Reviewers may come from different traditions (e.g., a quantitative and a qualitative reviewer). Address each on its own terms rather than forcing one standard; show the revision satisfies both where they pull in different directions.
- Strengthen the geography, not only the stats. If a referee called the paper descriptive, the fix
is a sharper geographic concept (
aaag-theory-building), not just more robustness tables. - Cartography & spatial-method fixes are first-order. Re-projecting maps, fixing classification, adding spatial-CV or MAUP sensitivity, or an accuracy/error panel are concrete wins editors notice.
- Honor the cap on the way back. Revisions add words; re-check the 11,000-word inclusive cap and trim or move detail to supplementary material.
When referees conflict
- Name the conflict for the editor and propose a resolution; do not silently satisfy one and ignore the other.
- If a requested change would harm the paper, explain the trade-off and let the editor adjudicate.
Response micro-template (illustrative)
R2.3 (verbatim): "The OLS results ignore spatial autocorrelation; I am not convinced the relationships
are real rather than artifacts of clustering."
Response: We agree this was a gap. We now test residual spatial autocorrelation (Moran's I = 0.31,
p<0.01 in the OLS) and re-estimate with a spatial error model; the focal relationship persists and
weakens modestly (new Table 3, p. 14). We also add a MAUP sensitivity panel across three areal units
(Appendix B) showing the result is not a unit artifact. Revised text: "…accounting for residual
spatial dependence, the association remains…" (p. 14, ¶2).
This concedes the point, shows the new analysis and its location, and quotes the revised sentence — the move editors reward over "we have addressed this."
Decision triage (how hard to fight)
| Referee ask | Posture |
|---|---|
| Valid spatial-method / validation gap | Concede and fix; it is first-order at this venue |
| "Make it quantitative" on a qualitative paper | Push back on its own terms; do not abandon the method |
| Cross-area standard clash | Reconcile; name the clash for the editor |
| Out-of-scope new study | Decline with rationale; offer a scoped alternative |
Checklist
- Every comment quoted and answered (numbered, point-by-point)
- Revised text quoted with manuscript locations; new exhibits named
- Cross-area referees each addressed on their own methodological terms
- Geographic argument strengthened where "descriptive" was the charge
- Spatial-method / cartography fixes made and described
- Re-checked against the inclusive word cap and house style
Anti-patterns
- A response that asserts "we have addressed this" without showing the change
- Dismissing or arguing combatively with a referee
- Satisfying a quantitative referee by abandoning the qualitative contribution (or vice versa)
- Adding requested analyses but blowing past the word cap
- Patching mechanics while leaving the "atheoretical" critique unanswered
Output format
【Decision】minor / major (R&R) / reject-with-encouragement
【Editor synthesis】2-3 lines on the main changes
【Point-by-point】each comment quoted + response + revised-text location
【Cross-area reconciliation】how divergent referees were each satisfied
【Geography strengthened】concept/spatial-method/cartography improvements
【Cap re-check】within inclusive limit after revisions? [Y/N]
【Next】resubmit via ScholarOne (aaag-submission for final preflight)
Supplementary resources
../../resources/official-source-map.md— review model, editors, and decision categories../../resources/README.md— shared reviewer-objection-checklist background
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 12:23


