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Install in OpenClaw
/install journal-club-presenter
Description
Generate journal club slides with background, critique, and discussion.
README (SKILL.md)
\r
Journal Club Presenter\r
\r Paper presentation slide generator.\r \r
When to Use\r
\r
- Use this skill when the task is to Generate journal club slides with background, critique, and discussion.\r
- Use this skill for academic writing tasks that require explicit assumptions, bounded scope, and a reproducible output format.\r
- Use this skill when you need a documented fallback path for missing inputs, execution errors, or partial evidence.\r \r
Key Features\r
\r
- Scope-focused workflow aligned to: Generate journal club slides with background, critique, and discussion.\r
- Packaged executable path(s):
scripts/main.py.\r - Reference material available in
references/for task-specific guidance.\r - Structured execution path designed to keep outputs consistent and reviewable.\r \r
Dependencies\r
\r
See ## Prerequisites above for related details.\r
\r
Python:3.10+. Repository baseline for current packaged skills.\rThird-party packages:not explicitly version-pinned in this skill package. Add pinned versions if this skill needs stricter environment control.\r \r
Example Usage\r
\r
cd "20260318/scientific-skills/Academic Writing/journal-club-presenter"\r
python -m py_compile scripts/main.py\r
python scripts/main.py --help\r
```\r
\r
Example run plan:\r
1. Confirm the user input, output path, and any required config values.\r
2. Edit the in-file `CONFIG` block or documented parameters if the script uses fixed settings.\r
3. Run `python scripts/main.py` with the validated inputs.\r
4. Review the generated output and return the final artifact with any assumptions called out.\r
\r
## Implementation Details\r
\r
See `## Workflow` above for related details.\r
\r
- Execution model: validate the request, choose the packaged workflow, and produce a bounded deliverable.\r
- Input controls: confirm the source files, scope limits, output format, and acceptance criteria before running any script.\r
- Primary implementation surface: `scripts/main.py`.\r
- Reference guidance: `references/` contains supporting rules, prompts, or checklists.\r
- Parameters to clarify first: input path, output path, scope filters, thresholds, and any domain-specific constraints.\r
- Output discipline: keep results reproducible, identify assumptions explicitly, and avoid undocumented side effects.\r
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## Quick Check\r
\r
Use this command to verify that the packaged script entry point can be parsed before deeper execution.\r
\r
```bash\r
python -m py_compile scripts/main.py\r
```\r
\r
## Audit-Ready Commands\r
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Use these concrete commands for validation. They are intentionally self-contained and avoid placeholder paths.\r
\r
```bash\r
python -m py_compile scripts/main.py\r
python scripts/main.py --help\r
```\r
\r
## Workflow\r
\r
1. Confirm the user objective, required inputs, and non-negotiable constraints before doing detailed work.\r
2. Validate that the request matches the documented scope and stop early if the task would require unsupported assumptions.\r
3. Use the packaged script path or the documented reasoning path with only the inputs that are actually available.\r
4. Return a structured result that separates assumptions, deliverables, risks, and unresolved items.\r
5. If execution fails or inputs are incomplete, switch to the fallback path and state exactly what blocked full completion.\r
\r
## Use Cases\r
- Lab meeting presentations\r
- Graduate student training\r
- Critical appraisal practice\r
- Literature review sessions\r
\r
## Parameters\r
- `paper_pdf`: Source article\r
- `audience_level`: Graduate/expert\r
- `time_limit`: Minutes available\r
\r
## Returns\r
- Slide outline\r
- Background context\r
- Key figure explanations\r
- Critical evaluation points\r
- Discussion questions\r
\r
## Example\r
20-min presentation with 8 slides\r
\r
## Risk Assessment\r
\r
| Risk Indicator | Assessment | Level |\r
|----------------|------------|-------|\r
| Code Execution | Python/R scripts executed locally | Medium |\r
| Network Access | No external API calls | Low |\r
| File System Access | Read input files, write output files | Medium |\r
| Instruction Tampering | Standard prompt guidelines | Low |\r
| Data Exposure | Output files saved to workspace | Low |\r
\r
## Security Checklist\r
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- [ ] No hardcoded credentials or API keys\r
- [ ] No unauthorized file system access (../)\r
- [ ] Output does not expose sensitive information\r
- [ ] Prompt injection protections in place\r
- [ ] Input file paths validated (no ../ traversal)\r
- [ ] Output directory restricted to workspace\r
- [ ] Script execution in sandboxed environment\r
- [ ] Error messages sanitized (no stack traces exposed)\r
- [ ] Dependencies audited\r
\r
## Prerequisites\r
\r
No additional Python packages required.\r
\r
## Evaluation Criteria\r
\r
### Success Metrics\r
- [ ] Successfully executes main functionality\r
- [ ] Output meets quality standards\r
- [ ] Handles edge cases gracefully\r
- [ ] Performance is acceptable\r
\r
### Test Cases\r
1. **Basic Functionality**: Standard input → Expected output\r
2. **Edge Case**: Invalid input → Graceful error handling\r
3. **Performance**: Large dataset → Acceptable processing time\r
\r
## Lifecycle Status\r
\r
- **Current Stage**: Draft\r
- **Next Review Date**: 2026-03-06\r
- **Known Issues**: None\r
- **Planned Improvements**: \r
- Performance optimization\r
- Additional feature support\r
\r
## Output Requirements\r
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Every final response should make these items explicit when they are relevant:\r
\r
- Objective or requested deliverable\r
- Inputs used and assumptions introduced\r
- Workflow or decision path\r
- Core result, recommendation, or artifact\r
- Constraints, risks, caveats, or validation needs\r
- Unresolved items and next-step checks\r
\r
## Error Handling\r
\r
- If required inputs are missing, state exactly which fields are missing and request only the minimum additional information.\r
- If the task goes outside the documented scope, stop instead of guessing or silently widening the assignment.\r
- If `scripts/main.py` fails, report the failure point, summarize what still can be completed safely, and provide a manual fallback.\r
- Do not fabricate files, citations, data, search results, or execution outcomes.\r
\r
## Input Validation\r
\r
This skill accepts requests that match the documented purpose of `journal-club-presenter` and include enough context to complete the workflow safely.\r
\r
Do not continue the workflow when the request is out of scope, missing a critical input, or would require unsupported assumptions. Instead respond:\r
\r
> `journal-club-presenter` only handles its documented workflow. Please provide the missing required inputs or switch to a more suitable skill.\r
\r
## References\r
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- [references/audit-reference.md](references/audit-reference.md) - Supported scope, audit commands, and fallback boundaries\r
\r
## Response Template\r
\r
Use the following fixed structure for non-trivial requests:\r
\r
1. Objective\r
2. Inputs Received\r
3. Assumptions\r
4. Workflow\r
5. Deliverable\r
6. Risks and Limits\r
7. Next Checks\r
\r
If the request is simple, you may compress the structure, but still keep assumptions and limits explicit when they affect correctness.\r
Usage Guidance
This package is small and self-contained, and its behavior matches the description. Before installing/ running: (1) review scripts/main.py yourself (it is short and human-readable) to confirm it meets your expectations; (2) run it in a non‑privileged or sandboxed workspace (it will write the output file to the current directory); (3) note the SKILL.md mentions a CONFIG block that the script does not include—expect to pass parameters via CLI arguments; and (4) ensure you have Python 3.10+ available. If you need networked exports, templated PPTX output, or integration with other services, this skill does not provide those and would need modification.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill
Name: journal-club-presenter
Version: 1.0.0
The skill bundle is a straightforward tool for generating academic journal club slide outlines. The primary script (scripts/main.py) uses standard Python libraries to format user-provided metadata into a text-based slide structure and write it to a local file. There is no evidence of data exfiltration, network communication, obfuscation, or persistence mechanisms. While the script lacks internal path sanitization for the output file, the documentation (SKILL.md) explicitly instructs the agent to validate paths and restrict output to the workspace, and the overall behavior is consistent with the stated academic purpose.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description match the packaged artifact. The only packaged code (scripts/main.py) implements a text-based slide outline generator and requires only Python 3.10+. No unrelated credentials, binaries, or external services are requested.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md stays on‑topic and instructs running the included script and validating inputs. Minor mismatch: SKILL.md mentions editing an in-file CONFIG block, but scripts/main.py contains no CONFIG block—this is a documentation inconsistency rather than malicious scope creep. All runtime instructions confine themselves to reading provided arguments and writing an output file.
Install Mechanism
No install specification is provided (instruction-only skill with bundled script). No downloads, package installs, or archive extraction are present.
Credentials
No environment variables, credentials, or config paths are required. The script does not read secret sources or network endpoints—only command-line args and writes a local output file.
Persistence & Privilege
Skill is not forced-always and does not modify other skills or system config. It writes an output file to the workspace (configurable via --output) which is expected behavior for its purpose.
How to Use
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install journal-club-presenter - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/journal-club-presenter - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release of journal-club-presenter.
- Generates journal club slides with background, critique, and discussion sections.
- Structured workflow for reproducible, audit-ready outputs; supports fallback handling for incomplete inputs or execution errors.
- Command-line Python script entry point with clearly documented usage and parameters.
- Includes error handling, risk assessment, and security checklist in documentation.
- Designed use cases: lab meetings, graduate training, literature reviews, and critical appraisal.
- No additional dependencies; reference materials and audit commands are provided.
Metadata
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Journal Club Presenter?
Generate journal club slides with background, critique, and discussion. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 144 downloads so far.
How do I install Journal Club Presenter?
Run "/install journal-club-presenter" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Journal Club Presenter free?
Yes, Journal Club Presenter is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Journal Club Presenter support?
Journal Club Presenter is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Journal Club Presenter?
It is built and maintained by AIpoch (@aipoch-ai); the current version is v1.0.0.
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