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Prompts Research Proposal Experiment Roadmap Generator

agent research skill risk: low

Research Proposal Experiment Roadmap Generator

Converts a refined research proposal into a claim-driven experiment plan by defining primary claims, experiment blocks, run-order milestones, compute budgets, and two output markdo…

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SKILL 1 file

SKILL.md
---
name: auto-claude-code-research-in-sleep-experiment-plan
description: "Turn a refined research proposal or method idea into a detailed, claim-driven experiment roadmap. Use after `research-refine`, or when the user asks for a detailed experiment plan, ablation matrix, evaluation protocol, run order, compute budget, or paper-ready validation that supports the core probl"
---
# Experiment Plan: Claim-Driven, Paper-Oriented Validation

Refine and concretize: **$ARGUMENTS**

## Overview

Use this skill after the method is stable enough that the next question becomes: **what exact experiments should we run, in what order, to defend the paper?** If the user wants the full chain in one request, prefer `/research-refine-pipeline`.

The goal is not to generate a giant benchmark wishlist. The goal is to turn a proposal into a **claim -> evidence -> run order** roadmap that supports four things:

1. the method actually solves the anchored problem
2. the dominant contribution is real and focused
3. the method is elegant enough that extra complexity is unnecessary
4. any frontier-model-era component is genuinely useful, not decorative

## Constants

- **OUTPUT_DIR = `refine-logs/`** — Default destination for experiment planning artifacts.
- **MAX_PRIMARY_CLAIMS = 2** — Prefer one dominant claim plus one supporting claim.
- **MAX_CORE_BLOCKS = 5** — Keep the must-run experimental story compact.
- **MAX_BASELINE_FAMILIES = 3** — Prefer a few strong baselines over many weak ones.
- **DEFAULT_SEEDS = 3** — Use 3 seeds when stochastic variance matters and budget allows.

## Workflow

### Phase 0: Load the Proposal Context

Read the most relevant existing files first if they exist:

- `refine-logs/FINAL_PROPOSAL.md`
- `refine-logs/REVIEW_SUMMARY.md`
- `refine-logs/REFINEMENT_REPORT.md`

Extract:

- **Problem Anchor**
- **Dominant contribution**
- **Optional supporting contribution**
- **Critical reviewer concerns**
- **Data / compute / timeline constraints**
- **Which frontier primitive is central, if any**

If these files do not exist, derive the same information from the user's prompt.

### Phase 1: Freeze the Paper Claims

Before proposing experiments, write down the claims that must be defended.

Use this structure:

- **Primary claim**: the main mechanism-level contribution
- **Supporting claim**: optional, only if it directly strengthens the main paper story
- **Anti-claim to rule out**: e.g. "the gain only comes from more parameters," "the gain only comes from a larger search space," or "the modern component is just decoration"
- **Minimum convincing evidence**: what would make each claim believable to a strong reviewer?

Do not exceed `MAX_PRIMARY_CLAIMS` unless the paper truly has multiple inseparable claims.

### Phase 2: Build the Experimental Storyline

Design the paper around a compact set of experiment blocks. Default to the following blocks and delete any that are not needed:

1. **Main anchor result** — does the method solve the actual bottleneck?
2. **Novelty isolation** — does the dominant contribution itself matter?
3. **Simplicity / elegance check** — can a bigger or more fragmented version be avoided?
4. **Frontier necessity check** — if an LLM / VLM / Diffusion / RL-era component is central, is it actually the right tool?
5. **Failure analysis or qualitative diagnosis** — what does the method still miss?

For each block, decide whether it belongs in:

- **Main paper** — essential to defend the core claims
- **Appendix** — useful but non-blocking
- **Cut** — interesting, but not worth the paper budget

Prefer one strong baseline family over many weak baselines. If a stronger modern baseline exists, use it instead of padding the list.

### Phase 3: Specify Each Experiment Block

For every kept block, fully specify:

- **Claim tested**
- **Why this block exists**
- **Dataset / split / task**
- **Compared systems**: strongest baselines, ablations, and variants only
- **Metrics**: decisive metrics first, secondary metrics second
- **Setup details**: backbone, frozen vs trainable parts, key hyperparameters, training budget, seeds
- **Success criterion**: what outcome would count as convincing evidence?
- **Failure interpretation**: if the result is negative, what does it mean?
- **Table / figure target**: where this result should appear in the paper

Special rules:

- A **simplicity check** should usually compare the final method against either an overbuilt variant or a tempting extra component that the paper intentionally rejects.
- A **frontier necessity check** should usually compare the chosen modern primitive against the strongest plausible simpler or older alternative.
- If the proposal is intentionally non-frontier, say so explicitly and skip the frontier block instead of forcing one.

### Phase 4: Turn the Plan Into an Execution Order

Build a realistic run order so the user knows what to do first.

Use this milestone structure:

1. **Sanity stage** — data pipeline, metric correctness, one quick overfit or toy split
2. **Baseline stage** — reproduce the strongest baseline(s)
3. **Main method stage** — run the final method on the primary setting
4. **Decision stage** — run the decisive ablations for novelty, simplicity, and frontier necessity
5. **Polish stage** — robustness, qualitative figures, appendix extras

For each milestone, estimate:

- compute cost
- expected turnaround time
- stop / go decision gate
- risk and mitigation

Separate **must-run** from **nice-to-have** experiments.

### Phase 5: Write the Outputs

#### Step 5.1: Write `refine-logs/EXPERIMENT_PLAN.md`

Use this structure:

```markdown
# Experiment Plan

**Problem**: [problem]
**Method Thesis**: [one-sentence thesis]
**Date**: [today]

## Claim Map
| Claim | Why It Matters | Minimum Convincing Evidence | Linked Blocks |
|-------|-----------------|-----------------------------|---------------|
| C1    | ...             | ...                         | B1, B2        |

## Paper Storyline
- Main paper must prove:
- Appendix can support:
- Experiments intentionally cut:

## Experiment Blocks

### Block 1: [Name]
- Claim tested:
- Why this block exists:
- Dataset / split / task:
- Compared systems:
- Metrics:
- Setup details:
- Success criterion:
- Failure interpretation:
- Table / figure target:
- Priority: MUST-RUN / NICE-TO-HAVE

### Block 2: [Name]
...

## Run Order and Milestones
| Milestone | Goal | Runs | Decision Gate | Cost | Risk |
|-----------|------|------|---------------|------|------|
| M0        | ...  | ...  | ...           | ...  | ...  |

## Compute and Data Budget
- Total estimated GPU-hours:
- Data preparation needs:
- Human evaluation needs:
- Biggest bottleneck:

## Risks and Mitigations
- [Risk]:
- [Mitigation]:

## Final Checklist
- [ ] Main paper tables are covered
- [ ] Novelty is isolated
- [ ] Simplicity is defended
- [ ] Frontier contribution is justified or explicitly not claimed
- [ ] Nice-to-have runs are separated from must-run runs
```

#### Step 5.2: Write `refine-logs/EXPERIMENT_TRACKER.md`

Use this structure:

```markdown
# Experiment Tracker

| Run ID | Milestone | Purpose | System / Variant | Split | Metrics | Priority | Status | Notes |
|--------|-----------|---------|------------------|-------|---------|----------|--------|-------|
| R001   | M0        | sanity  | ...              | ...   | ...     | MUST     | TODO   | ...   |
```

Keep the tracker compact and execution-oriented.

#### Step 5.3: Present a Brief Summary to the User

```
Experiment plan ready.

Must-run blocks:
- [Block 1]
- [Block 2]

Highest-risk assumption:
- [risk]

First three runs to launch:
1. [run]
2. [run]
3. [run]

Plan file: refine-logs/EXPERIMENT_PLAN.md
Tracker file: refine-logs/EXPERIMENT_TRACKER.md
```

## Output Protocols

> Follow these shared protocols for all output files:
> - **[Output Versioning Protocol](../../shared-references/output-versioning.md)** — write timestamped file first, then copy to fixed name
> - **[Output Manifest Protocol](../../shared-references/output-manifest.md)** — log every output to MANIFEST.md
> - **[Output Language Protocol](../../shared-references/output-language.md)** — respect the project's language setting

## Key Rules

- **Large file handling**: If the Write tool fails due to file size, immediately retry using Bash (`cat << 'EOF' > file`) to write in chunks. Do NOT ask the user for permission — just do it silently.

- **Every experiment must defend a claim.** If it does not change a reviewer belief, cut it.
- **Prefer a compact paper story.** Design the main table first, then add only the ablations that defend it.
- **Defend simplicity explicitly.** If complexity is a concern, include a deletion study or a stronger-but-bloated variant comparison.
- **Defend frontier choices explicitly.** If a modern primitive is central, prove why it is better than the strongest simpler alternative.
- **Prefer strong baselines over long baseline lists.** A short, credible comparison set is better than a padded one.
- **Separate must-run from nice-to-have.** Do not let appendix ideas delay the core paper evidence.
- **Reuse proposal constraints.** Do not invent unrealistic budgets or data assumptions.
- **Do not fabricate results.** Plan evidence; do not claim evidence.

## Composing with Other Skills

```
/research-refine-pipeline -> one-shot method + experiment planning
/research-refine   -> method and claim refinement
/experiment-plan   -> detailed experiment roadmap
/run-experiment    -> execute the runs
/auto-review-loop  -> react to results and iterate on the paper
```

INPUTS

$ARGUMENTS REQUIRED

refined research proposal or method idea to plan experiments for

REQUIRED CONTEXT

  • refined research proposal or method idea ($ARGUMENTS)

OPTIONAL CONTEXT

  • existing refine-logs files (FINAL_PROPOSAL.md, REVIEW_SUMMARY.md, REFINEMENT_REPORT.md)

ROLES & RULES

  1. Read the most relevant existing files first if they exist
  2. Do not exceed MAX_PRIMARY_CLAIMS unless the paper truly has multiple inseparable claims
  3. Prefer one strong baseline family over many weak baselines
  4. A simplicity check should usually compare the final method against either an overbuilt variant or a tempting extra component that the paper intentionally rejects
  5. A frontier necessity check should usually compare the chosen modern primitive against the strongest plausible simpler or older alternative
  6. If the proposal is intentionally non-frontier, say so explicitly and skip the frontier block
  7. Every experiment must defend a claim
  8. Prefer a compact paper story
  9. Defend simplicity explicitly
  10. Defend frontier choices explicitly
  11. Prefer strong baselines over long baseline lists
  12. Separate must-run from nice-to-have
  13. Reuse proposal constraints
  14. Do not fabricate results
  15. If the Write tool fails due to file size, immediately retry using Bash to write in chunks

EXPECTED OUTPUT

Format
markdown
Schema
markdown_sections · Claim Map, Paper Storyline, Experiment Blocks, Run Order and Milestones, Compute and Data Budget, Risks and Mitigations, Final Checklist, Experiment Tracker
Constraints
  • follow exact templates for EXPERIMENT_PLAN.md and EXPERIMENT_TRACKER.md
  • include brief user summary at end
  • use claim->evidence structure throughout

SUCCESS CRITERIA

  • Turn a proposal into a claim -> evidence -> run order roadmap
  • Support that the method solves the anchored problem
  • Support that the dominant contribution is real and focused
  • Support that the method is elegant enough that extra complexity is unnecessary
  • Support that any frontier-model-era component is genuinely useful
  • Write EXPERIMENT_PLAN.md and EXPERIMENT_TRACKER.md with the exact structures shown

FAILURE MODES

  • May generate a giant benchmark wishlist instead of a compact claim-driven roadmap
  • May include experiments that do not defend a reviewer belief
  • May fail to isolate novelty or defend simplicity/frontier choices

CAVEATS

Dependencies
  • refine-logs/FINAL_PROPOSAL.md
  • refine-logs/REVIEW_SUMMARY.md
  • refine-logs/REFINEMENT_REPORT.md
  • User prompt containing the proposal
Ambiguities
  • References external files (`../../shared-references/output-versioning.md` etc.) and commands (`/research-refine-pipeline`) without including their content.
  • Mentions 'the project's language setting' without defining how it is provided or detected.
  • Phase 0 says 'derive the same information from the user's prompt' but does not specify fallback extraction rules when files are absent.

QUALITY

OVERALL
0.87
CLARITY
0.78
SPECIFICITY
0.92
REUSABILITY
0.85
COMPLETENESS
0.93

IMPROVEMENT SUGGESTIONS

  • Add an explicit 'Input' section at the top that states the single placeholder `$ARGUMENTS` and any optional flags the user may supply.
  • Replace the three external protocol links with a short inline summary of the required behavior (timestamped writes, manifest logging, language handling) so the prompt is self-contained.
  • Define a default value or detection rule for 'the project's language setting' (e.g., 'English unless the proposal states otherwise').

USAGE

Copy the prompt above and paste it into your AI of choice — Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or anywhere else you're working. Replace any placeholder sections with your own context, then ask for the output.

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