psci-writing-style

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Use when drafting or polishing a Psychological Science manuscript to fit its distinctive word format (Introduction + Discussion + footnotes + acknowledgments + appendices <= 2,000 words combined; Method + Results excluded; 150-word structured abstract) in APA 7th-edition style. Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content.

brycewang-stanford By brycewang-stanford schedule Updated 6/10/2026

name: psci-writing-style description: Use when drafting or polishing a Psychological Science manuscript to fit its distinctive word format (Introduction + Discussion + footnotes + acknowledgments + appendices <= 2,000 words combined; Method + Results excluded; 150-word structured abstract) in APA 7th-edition style. Tightens prose and format; it does not invent content.

Writing Style (psci-writing-style)

Psychological Science has one of the most demanding formats in the field. Writing well here means making a high-impact argument in very few words, in APA 7th-edition style, with a structured 150-word abstract. This skill is about fitting and polishing — not generating claims.

When to trigger

  • Drafting the Introduction/Discussion or doing final polish
  • Over the word budget and needing to cut without losing the argument
  • Writing the 150-word abstract
  • Aligning to APA 7th edition before submission

The word format (know it cold)

  • Introduction + Discussion + Footnotes + Acknowledgments + Appendices ≤ 2,000 words combined.
  • Method + Results do not count toward that limit (but should typically stay under ~2,500 words).
  • 150-word abstract (excluded from the limit) that must state sample sizes, participant populations, and important limitations of the research design.
  • ~40 references suffice for most Research Articles.

Writing to the format

  1. Front-load ruthlessly. The Introduction states the question, the gap, and the contribution in a few tight paragraphs (see psci-literature-positioning).
  2. Discussion earns every sentence. Lead with what the result means and its breadth; keep limitations honest but concise. Intro + Discussion share the 2,000 words — budget them together.
  3. Put detail where it doesn't cost the budget. Method and Results are outside the 2,000-word cap and can carry necessary procedural detail; move extended material to supplemental online material.
  4. Structured abstract. In 150 words: the question, what you did, sample sizes + populations, the key finding (effect + direction), and a design limitation. This is content-bearing, not decorative.
  5. APA 7th edition. Headings, statistics reporting (with effect sizes + CIs), bias-free language, and author-date citations; manage references with a tool and prune to the essentials.

Worked micro-example — a 150-word structured abstract (illustrative)

For the two-study attention package, every clause earns its place; sample sizes, populations, and a limitation are non-negotiable. Confirm the current abstract length against the journal's submission guidelines.

[Question] Does a brief mindfulness induction reduce attentional capture by
emotional distractors? [What we did] Two preregistered experiments tested a
single induction against a control on a screen-based capture task.
[Samples] Study 1: 240 undergraduates; Study 2: 300 online adults.
[Result] The induction reduced capture cost (Study 1 d = 0.34, 95% CI
[0.08, 0.59]; Study 2 directly replicated, d = 0.29 [0.06, 0.51]).
[Limitation] Effects are limited to brief laboratory inductions in healthy
adults and may not extend to clinical anxiety. [≈ 95 words; expand to ~150.]

Word-budget allocation (illustrative)

Section Counts toward 2,000? Suggested share Note
Introduction yes ~55–60% question, gap, contribution by paragraph two
Discussion yes ~35–40% meaning + breadth first, limitations brief
Footnotes / acks / appendices yes keep minimal they eat the same budget
Method + Results no (≤ ~2,500) as needed procedural detail lives here, not the Intro
Supplemental online material no unlimited robustness, full models, extra studies

Cutting-to-format playbook

  • Move every robustness grid, full model table, and extra study to supplemental; cite in one sentence.
  • Convert background prose into a single anchor citation (handoff to psci-literature-positioning).
  • Replace dichotomous "significant" sentences with estimation phrasing — often shorter and more venue-appropriate.
  • If the Discussion restates Results, delete the restatement; lead with interpretation and breadth.

Prose-stage reviewer pushback and the venue fix

  • "Reads like a review article" → cut chronological background; state the gap in two or three sentences.
  • "Abstract missing limitations" → add one design-limitation clause; this venue expects it.
  • "Stats without effect sizes" → report d/CI inline even when prose is tight; it is non-negotiable here.

Anti-patterns

  • A long literature review or theory section that blows the 2,000-word budget
  • A Discussion that restates results instead of interpreting their meaning and breadth
  • An abstract that omits sample sizes/populations/limitations or exceeds 150 words
  • Padding Method/Results because they're "free" — they still must stay readable (~2,500)
  • Stats reported without effect sizes / confidence intervals

Output format

【Intro+Discussion budget】combined word count ≤ 2,000 (incl. footnotes/acks/appendices)?
【Method+Results】readable, ≤ ~2,500?
【Abstract】150 words; states sample sizes + populations + limitations?
【APA 7th】headings, stats (ES+CI), citations consistent? [Y/N]
【Cuts】what moved to supplemental online material
【Next】psci-open-science-and-transparency

Supplementary resources

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill psci-writing-style
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