respol-contribution-framing
GitHub用于将研究结果转化为对创新理论或证据的明确贡献,特别适用于Research Policy期刊。通过构建“前后对比”声明、区分理论与政策含义、确保政策启示由机制推导而来且与证据匹配,解决贡献模糊或夸大问题,提升论文的理论价值和管理/政策意义。
触发场景
安装
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill respol-contribution-framing -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "respol-contribution-framing",
"description": "Use when the one-sentence \"so what\" is the bottleneck for a Research Policy (RP) manuscript — converting solid results into an explicit advance for innovation theory\/evidence that usually carries a policy or managerial implication. Frames the claim; it does not build the mechanism (respol-theory-development) or polish prose (respol-writing-style)."
}
Contribution Framing (respol-contribution-framing)
When to trigger
- The results are in but the paper cannot say in one sentence what innovation studies now knows that it didn't
- The contribution is stated as "we find a significant effect of X on Y" (a result, not a contribution)
- There is no policy or managerial implication, or one is bolted on as a token final paragraph
- A referee says "the contribution is unclear / overclaimed / not commensurate with the evidence"
- The intro promises one contribution and the discussion delivers another
The Research Policy contribution bar
RP rewards a genuine contribution to innovation theory or evidence over narrow technique. A submittable contribution states (a) what innovation-studies readers believed before, (b) what they should believe after, and (c) why it matters — almost always with a policy or managerial implication that follows from the mechanism, not from a generic call to "inform policymakers." The implication must be earned: it should change a specific design choice (a subsidy rule, an IP regime, a university-industry interface, an R&D organizational practice), not gesture at relevance.
The contribution must be commensurate with the evidence: a single-country patent study should not claim a universal law of innovation, and a clean estimate with a thin mechanism should not claim to "rewrite" a theory.
Building the contribution statement
- Before/after. Write "Innovation scholars have assumed/shown X; we show Y," where Y is a mechanism, boundary, or contradicting fact — not just a coefficient.
- Type. Name the contribution type: a new mechanism, a boundary condition on a known one, contradicting evidence, a measurement that resolves a debate, or a new construct/typology.
- Audience split. State separately what this means for innovation theory and for innovation policy/management — RP readers come from both sides.
- Earned implication. Tie the policy/managerial implication to the estimated mechanism: "because the effect runs through [channel], policy lever [Z] should change in [direction]." If you cannot do this, the implication is decorative.
- Calibrate. Match the strength of the claim to the design, sample, and external validity. Acknowledge what the evidence does not establish.
Aligning the paper around the claim
- The abstract, the last paragraph of the intro, and the discussion must state the same contribution in compatible words.
- The theoretical-model / mechanism and the headline result must both point at the contribution; if a result is not load-bearing for the claim, it belongs in robustness, not the headline.
- The policy/managerial implication in the conclusion must trace to a specific finding, with its scope conditions attached.
Worked example (illustrative)
A study estimates that a national R&D tax credit raises patenting among small firms. A result-shaped framing says "the credit increases patents by X%." An RP contribution says: "Innovation scholars have assumed R&D subsidies mainly relieve financing constraints; we show the effect runs through new collaboration between subsidized firms and universities, implying the additionality is relational, not just financial." That before→after names a mechanism (collaboration, not finance), splits the audience (theory: rethink the additionality channel; policy: design credits to reward university linkage), and earns its policy lever from the estimated channel. The calibration line then concedes the evidence is one country and one firm-size band, so the claim is about a mechanism's existence, not its universal magnitude.
Checklist
- The contribution is stated as before→after for innovation studies, not as a result
- The contribution type is named (mechanism / boundary / contradiction / measurement / construct)
- Implications for innovation theory AND policy/management are both explicit
- The policy/managerial implication is earned from the mechanism, not generic
- The claim is commensurate with the evidence and external validity
- Abstract, intro, and discussion state the same contribution
- What the evidence does NOT establish is acknowledged
Anti-patterns
- "We find a significant effect" presented as the contribution
- A token "implications for policymakers" paragraph with no specific lever
- Overclaiming a universal innovation law from one country/sector/period
- A contribution in the intro that the discussion silently changes
- Technique-as-contribution ("we apply method M to data D") with no innovation-studies advance
- Burying the actual contribution under a literature recap
Output format
【Journal】Research Policy
【Skill】respol-contribution-framing
【Before → After】innovation scholars believed X; we show Y
【Contribution type】mechanism / boundary / contradiction / measurement / construct
【Theory implication】what changes for innovation theory
【Policy/managerial implication】specific lever + direction, earned from the mechanism
【Calibration】claim matches evidence + external validity? [Y/N]
【Verdict】pass / revise / reroute
【Next skill】respol-tables-figures
版本历史
- 1839142 当前 2026-07-05 14:19


