
How to Use
About
Structured research summarization agent skill for non-dev users. Handles academic papers, web articles, reports, and documentation. Extracts key findings, generates comparative analyses, and produces properly formatted citations. Use when: user wants to summarize a research paper, compare multiple s
Research Summarizer
Read less. Understand more. Cite correctly.
Structured research summarization workflow that turns dense source material into actionable briefs. Built for product managers, analysts, founders, and anyone who reads more than they should have to.
Not a generic "summarize this" — a repeatable framework that extracts what matters, compares across sources, and formats citations properly.
Slash Commands
| Command | What it does |
|---------|-------------|
| /research:summarize | Summarize a single source into a structured brief |
| /research:compare | Compare 2-5 sources side-by-side with synthesis |
| /research:cite | Extract and format all citations from a document |
When This Skill Activates
Recognize these patterns from the user:
- "Summarize this paper / article / report"
- "What are the key findings in this document?"
- "Compare these sources"
- "Extract citations from this PDF"
- "Give me a research brief on [topic]"
- "Break down this whitepaper"
- Any request involving: summarize, research brief, literature review, citation, source comparison
If the user has a document and wants structured understanding → this skill applies.
Workflow
/research:summarize — Single Source Summary
-
Identify source type
- Academic paper → use IMRAD structure (Introduction, Methods, Results, Analysis, Discussion)
- Web article → use claim-evidence-implication structure
- Technical report → use executive summary structure
- Documentation → use reference summary structure
-
Extract structured brief
Title: [exact title] Author(s): [names] Date: [publication date] Source Type: [paper | article | report | documentation] ## Key Thesis [1-2 sentences: the central argument or finding] ## Key Findings 1. [Finding with supporting evidence] 2. [Finding with supporting evidence] 3. [Finding with supporting evidence] ## Methodology [How they arrived at these findings — data sources, sample size, approach] ## Limitations - [What the source doesn't cover or gets wrong] ## Actionable Takeaways - [What to do with this information] ## Notable Quotes > "[Direct quote]" (p. X) -
Assess quality
- Source credibility (peer-reviewed, reputable outlet, primary vs secondary)
- Evidence strength (data-backed, anecdotal, theoretical)
- Recency (when published, still relevant?)
- Bias indicators (funding source, author affiliation, methodology gaps)
/research:compare — Multi-Source Comparison
-
Collect sources (2-5 documents)
-
Summarize each using the single-source workflow above
-
Build comparison matrix
| Dimension | Source A | Source B | Source C | |------------------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------| | Central Thesis | ... | ... | ... | | Methodology | ... | ... | ... | | Key Finding | ... | ... | ... | | Sample/Scope | ... | ... | ... | | Credibility | High/Med/Low | High/Med/Low | High/Med/Low | -
Synthesize
- Where do sources agree? (convergent findings = stronger signal)
- Where do they disagree? (divergent findings = needs investigation)
- What gaps exist across all sources?
- What's the weight of evidence for each position?
-
Produce synthesis brief
## Consensus Findings [What most sources agree on] ## Contested Points [Where sources disagree, with strongest evidence for each side] ## Gaps [What none of the sources address] ## Recommendation [Based on weight of evidence, what should the reader believe/do?]
/research:cite — Citation Extraction
- Scan document for all references, footnotes, in-text citations
- Extract and format using the requested style (APA 7 default)
- Classify citations by type:
- Primary sources (original research, data)
- Secondary sources (reviews, meta-analyses, commentary)
- Tertiary sources (textbooks, encyclopedias)
- Output sorted bibliography with classification tags
Supported citation formats:
- APA 7 (default) — social sciences, business
- IEEE — engineering, computer science
- Chicago — humanities, history
- Harvard — general academic
- MLA 9 — arts, humanities
Tooling
scripts/extract_citations.py
CLI utility for extracting and formatting citations from text.
Features:
- Regex-based citation detection (DOI, URL, author-year, numbered references)
- Multiple output formats (APA, IEEE, Chicago, Harvard, MLA)
- JSON export for integration with reference managers
- Deduplication of repeated citations
Usage:
# Extract citations from a file (APA format, default)
python3 scripts/extract_citations.py documen
