public/SKILLS/Writing & Research/scientific-brainstorming/SKILL.md
Creative research ideation and exploration. Use for open-ended brainstorming sessions, exploring interdisciplinary connections, challenging assumptions, or identifying research gaps. Best for early-stage research planning when you do not have specific observations yet. For formulating testable hypotheses from data use hypothesis-generation.
npx skillsauth add eric861129/skills_all-in-one scientific-brainstormingInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Scientific brainstorming is a conversational process for generating novel research ideas. Act as a research ideation partner to generate hypotheses, explore interdisciplinary connections, challenge assumptions, and develop methodologies. Apply this skill for creative scientific problem-solving.
This skill should be used when:
When engaging in scientific brainstorming:
Conversational and Collaborative: Engage as an equal thought partner, not an instructor. Ask questions, build on ideas together, and maintain a natural dialogue.
Intellectually Curious: Show genuine interest in the scientist's work. Ask probing questions that demonstrate deep understanding and help uncover new angles.
Creatively Challenging: Push beyond obvious ideas. Challenge assumptions respectfully, propose unconventional connections, and encourage exploration of "what if" scenarios.
Domain-Aware: Demonstrate broad scientific knowledge across disciplines to identify cross-pollination opportunities and relevant analogies from other fields.
Structured yet Flexible: Guide the conversation with purpose, but adapt dynamically based on where the scientist's thinking leads.
Begin by deeply understanding what the scientist is working on. This phase establishes the foundation for productive ideation.
Approach:
Example questions:
Transition: Once the context is clear, acknowledge understanding and suggest moving into active ideation.
Help the scientist generate a wide range of ideas without judgment. The goal is quantity and diversity, not immediate feasibility.
Techniques to employ:
Cross-Domain Analogies
Assumption Reversal
Scale Shifting
Constraint Removal/Addition
Interdisciplinary Fusion
Technology Speculation
Interaction style:
Help identify patterns, themes, and unexpected connections among the generated ideas.
Approach:
Prompts:
Shift to constructively evaluating the most promising ideas while maintaining creative momentum.
Balance:
Questions to explore:
Help crystallize insights and create concrete paths forward.
Deliverables:
Close with encouragement:
Contains detailed descriptions of structured brainstorming methodologies that can be consulted when standard techniques need supplementation:
Consult this file when the scientist requests a specific methodology or when the brainstorming session would benefit from a more structured approach.
development
Run structured What-If scenario analysis with multi-branch possibility exploration. Use this skill when the user asks speculative questions like "what if...", "what would happen if...", "what are the possibilities", "explore scenarios", "scenario analysis", "possibility space", "what could go wrong", "best case / worst case", "risk analysis", "contingency planning", "strategic options", or any question about uncertain futures. Also trigger when the user faces a fork-in-the-road decision, wants to stress-test an idea, or needs to think through consequences before committing.
development
Access comprehensive LaTeX templates, formatting requirements, and submission guidelines for major scientific publication venues (Nature, Science, PLOS, IEEE, ACM), academic conferences (NeurIPS, ICML, CVPR, CHI), research posters, and grant proposals (NSF, NIH, DOE, DARPA). This skill should be used when preparing manuscripts for journal submission, conference papers, research posters, or grant proposals and need venue-specific formatting requirements and templates.
development
Use when challenging ideas, plans, decisions, or proposals using structured critical reasoning. Invoke to play devil's advocate, run a pre-mortem, red team, or audit evidence and assumptions.
tools
Core skill for the deep research and writing tool. Write scientific manuscripts in full paragraphs (never bullet points). Use two-stage process with (1) section outlines with key points using research-lookup then (2) convert to flowing prose. IMRAD structure, citations (APA/AMA/Vancouver), figures/tables, reporting guidelines (CONSORT/STROBE/PRISMA), for research papers and journal submissions.