claim-investigation

jwynia's avatarfrom jwynia

Systematically investigate social media claims and viral content. Use when fact-checking complex claims, when decomposing multi-part assertions, or when investigating narratives that mix facts with interpretation.

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When & Why to Use This Skill

This Claude skill provides a systematic framework for investigating social media claims and viral content. It enables users to decompose complex assertions into verifiable atomic facts, evaluate source credibility, and distinguish between objective evidence and narrative framing to effectively combat misinformation.

Use Cases

  • Fact-checking viral social media posts to separate verifiable events from speculative or biased narrative framing.
  • Decomposing multi-part political assertions to identify specific factual errors, missing context, or logical fallacies.
  • Investigating complex news stories by resolving vague entity references and establishing accurate chronological timelines.
  • Evaluating the credibility of information sources by cross-referencing official records, primary documents, and multiple news outlets.
  • Identifying narrative patterns such as 'causation collapse' or 'mind-reading' in investigative journalism and research.
nameclaim-investigation
descriptionSystematically investigate social media claims and viral content. Use when fact-checking complex claims, when decomposing multi-part assertions, or when investigating narratives that mix facts with interpretation.
licenseMIT
authorjwynia
version"1.0"
domainresearch
clusterfact-checking
typediagnostic
modeevaluative

Claim Investigation: Systematic Fact-Checking Skill

You help systematically investigate claims from social media and other sources, separating verifiable facts from narrative interpretation and identifying what can and cannot be confirmed.

Core Principle

Complex claims typically combine verifiable facts with unverifiable interpretations. Effective investigation decomposes claims into atomic components, verifies each independently, and clearly distinguishes between confirmed facts and narrative framing.

Phase 1: Claim Decomposition

1.1 Extract Atomic Claims

Break the statement into individual verifiable claims. Each should be:

  • A single factual assertion
  • Independently verifiable
  • Free of narrative interpretation

Example Decomposition: Original: "The House Leader refusing to seat the newly-elected AZ-07 special election winner because she'd vote to release the Epstein files"

Atomic claims:

  1. There is a House Leader (entity exists)
  2. There was an AZ-07 special election (event occurred)
  3. Someone won that election (result exists)
  4. The winner has not been seated (current state)
  5. A refusal action occurred (specific action claim)
  6. Causal relationship with Epstein files (causation claim)

1.2 Classify Each Component

Type Description Verifiability
ENTITY Person, organization, place Usually verifiable
EVENT Something that allegedly happened Often verifiable
STATE Current condition or status Usually verifiable
PROCESS Official procedure or mechanism Verifiable
CAUSATION Claimed reason or motivation Rarely verifiable
NARRATIVE Interpretive framing Not directly verifiable

1.3 Identify Missing Information

Note what's conspicuously absent:

  • Unnamed entities ("the winner" instead of a name)
  • Unspecified dates
  • Missing procedural context
  • Absent opposing perspectives

Phase 2: Entity Resolution

2.1 Resolve Vague References

Convert vague references to specific, searchable terms:

  • "House Leader" → Current House Speaker/Majority Leader name
  • "newly-elected winner" → Candidate names from election results
  • "Epstein files" → Specific documents/investigations

2.2 Establish Timeline

For each event:

  • When did it allegedly occur?
  • What is normal timeline for this type of event?
  • Are there procedural deadlines involved?

2.3 Identify Key Actors

  • Primary actors (those taking alleged actions)
  • Secondary actors (those affected)
  • Official bodies with relevant authority
  • Potential sources of verification

Phase 3: Systematic Verification

3.1 Verify Foundational Facts First

Start with most basic, verifiable claims:

  1. Did the event occur?
  2. Do the entities exist?
  3. Are basic facts correct?

Search Strategy:

  • Official sources first (.gov, electoral bodies)
  • Cross-reference multiple news sources
  • Look for primary documents

3.2 Investigate Procedural Context

For any claimed action/inaction:

  1. What is normal procedure?
  2. What are requirements?
  3. What is typical timeline?
  4. What are legitimate reasons for delays?

3.3 Examine Causation Claims

For any "because" or causal claim:

Direct Evidence:

  • Quoted statements from alleged actor
  • Official statements or press releases
  • Video/audio of relevant statements

Indirect Evidence:

  • Other explanations for observed facts
  • Standard reasons for similar situations
  • Procedural explanations

Context:

  • Previous positions by involved parties
  • Historical precedents
  • Timeline compatibility

Phase 4: Source Evaluation

4.1 Source Priority Order

  1. Official government records/databases
  2. Direct statements from involved parties
  3. Court documents or legal filings
  4. Contemporary news reports (multiple outlets)
  5. Analysis or opinion pieces (noted as such)

4.2 Credibility Markers

For each source, note:

  • Type (official, news, advocacy, social media)
  • Date relative to events
  • Whether claims are attributed
  • Presence of supporting documentation
  • Corrections or updates issued

4.3 Bias Indicators

Document without dismissing:

  • Source's typical political alignment
  • Stakeholder relationships
  • Pattern of coverage
  • Language choices (neutral vs charged)

Phase 5: Narrative Pattern Recognition

5.1 Identify Narrative Constructions

Patterns indicating narrative rather than fact:

  • Causal chains without evidence ("X because Y because Z")
  • Mind-reading claims ("thinks that," "wants to")
  • Selective fact inclusion
  • Temporal conflation (mixing time periods)
  • False dichotomies

5.2 Find Counter-Narratives

For each narrative:

  • What facts support it?
  • What facts complicate it?
  • What alternative narratives explain same facts?
  • What facts are excluded?

5.3 Missing Context

What would change interpretation:

  • Standard procedures being followed
  • Similar historical cases
  • Full quotes vs partial quotes
  • Events immediately before/after

Phase 6: Synthesis and Reporting

6.1 Report Structure

VERIFIED FACTS:
- [Fact] (Source: [citation])

DISPUTED/UNCLEAR:
- [Claim]:
  - Supporting: [source]
  - Contradicting: [source]
  - Unable to verify: [what's missing]

CONTEXT NEEDED:
- [Procedural context]
- [Historical precedent]
- [Timeline considerations]

NARRATIVE ELEMENTS:
- [Claim]
  - Facts that support: [list]
  - Facts that complicate: [list]
  - Alternative explanations: [list]

6.2 Confidence Levels

Level Meaning
Certain Multiple primary sources confirm
Probable Multiple credible sources align, no contradictions
Possible Some evidence supports, gaps remain
Unclear Contradictory evidence or insufficient info
False Contradicted by authoritative sources

Phase 7: Meta-Analysis

7.1 Information Gaps

Document what couldn't be determined:

  • Information that should exist but wasn't found
  • Questions that remain unanswered
  • Time constraints on verification

7.2 Manipulation Indicators

Patterns suggesting intentional misrepresentation:

  • Key facts consistently omitted
  • Misquoted or out-of-context statements
  • Conflation of different events/people
  • Old events presented as new

7.3 Further Investigation

If initial investigation reveals deeper issues:

  • What additional tools/access would help?
  • What questions should be asked of officials?
  • What documents should be requested?

Search Query Construction

  • Start broad, then narrow
  • Use multiple phrasings for same concept
  • Include date ranges when relevant
  • Search for both supporting and contradicting evidence
  • Use exact phrases for quotes, broad terms for concepts

Output Principles

  1. Lead with verified facts
  2. Clearly separate facts from analysis
  3. Include all relevant context
  4. Present multiple valid interpretations where applicable
  5. Never assert causation without evidence
  6. Acknowledge investigation limitations

Anti-Patterns

1. Confirmation Rush

Pattern: Finding one source that matches the claim and declaring it verified. Why it fails: Single-source verification misses errors, biases, and coordinated misinformation where multiple outlets repeat the same false claim without independent verification. Fix: Require at least 2-3 independent sources. Trace claims back to primary sources. Check if "multiple sources" are actually just repeating the same original source.

2. Causation Collapse

Pattern: Accepting "X happened because Y" claims when only "X happened" and "Y exists" are verified. Why it fails: Correlation proves co-occurrence, not causation. Human pattern-matching fills in causal links that may not exist. Political narratives especially exploit this gap. Fix: Demand direct evidence for causation (stated intent, documented decisions). When causation can't be verified, report it as "alleged motivation" or "claimed reason."

3. Premature Debunking

Pattern: Finding one fact wrong and dismissing the entire claim without investigating other components. Why it fails: Complex claims often mix true and false elements. Dismissing everything because one part is wrong misses real issues embedded in the narrative. Fix: Decompose fully, verify each component independently. Report accuracy per-component: "Claims A and C are verified; claim B is false; claim D is unverifiable."

4. Authority Fallacy

Pattern: Accepting official sources uncritically because they're "authoritative." Why it fails: Official sources can be wrong, incomplete, outdated, or deliberately misleading. Authority reduces probability of error but doesn't eliminate it. Fix: Cross-reference official sources with other evidence. Note when official sources have incentives to misrepresent. Distinguish between "official position" and "verified fact."

5. Narrative Anchoring

Pattern: Starting with a hypothesis about what's "really happening" and investigating to prove it. Why it fails: Confirmation bias shapes what evidence you seek and how you interpret it. You'll find "evidence" for any narrative if you look hard enough. Fix: Start with the specific claims made. Investigate each on its own terms. Actively seek disconfirming evidence. Document alternative explanations that fit the same facts.

Integration

Inbound (feeds into this skill)

Skill What it provides
research Initial source discovery and query expansion
media-meta-analysis Understanding of source biases and media patterns

Outbound (this skill enables)

Skill What this provides
fact-check Verified facts for post-generation checking
sensitivity-check Context for evaluating representation claims

Complementary

Skill Relationship
research Use research for broad information gathering, claim-investigation for specific claim verification
fact-check Use claim-investigation for external claims, fact-check for AI-generated content verification