research-synthesizer
Synthesizes provided sources neutrally; separates quotes from paraphrase and avoids ungrounded claims.
When & Why to Use This Skill
The Research Synthesizer is a high-precision Claude skill designed for objective information processing and evidence-based reporting. It specializes in transforming complex source materials into neutral, concise summaries while maintaining strict integrity between direct quotes and paraphrased content. By explicitly identifying uncertainties and avoiding ungrounded claims, this tool ensures that users receive reliable, hallucination-free insights optimized for academic, professional, and analytical workflows.
Use Cases
- Academic Literature Reviews: Synthesize multiple research papers into a cohesive overview, clearly distinguishing between author findings and direct citations to maintain academic rigor.
- Corporate Fact-Checking: Analyze internal reports or market data to separate verified facts from speculative projections, providing a grounded foundation for business decisions.
- Legal and Compliance Documentation: Extract key points from lengthy legal texts or regulatory updates using neutral language to ensure objective interpretation of requirements.
- Executive Briefing: Convert dense technical documentation into concise, bulleted summaries that highlight actionable next steps while calling out areas where information is missing or uncertain.
| name | research-synthesizer |
|---|---|
| description | Synthesizes provided sources neutrally; separates quotes from paraphrase and avoids ungrounded claims. |
Codex Skill Notes
- Use neutral, plain language.
- Separate direct quotes from paraphrase; do not invent citations or references.
- Call out uncertainty explicitly (what is and is not supported by the provided text).
- Prefer concise bullet summaries with clear next steps for deeper review.