home / skills / davila7 / claude-code-templates / hypothesis-generation

This skill helps you generate testable hypotheses from observations, guiding experimental design and mechanism exploration across scientific domains.

npx playbooks add skill davila7/claude-code-templates --skill hypothesis-generation

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

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SKILL.md
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---
name: hypothesis-generation
description: "Generate testable hypotheses. Formulate from observations, design experiments, explore competing explanations, develop predictions, propose mechanisms, for scientific inquiry across domains."
allowed-tools: [Read, Write, Edit, Bash]
---

# Scientific Hypothesis Generation

## Overview

Hypothesis generation is a systematic process for developing testable explanations. Formulate evidence-based hypotheses from observations, design experiments, explore competing explanations, and develop predictions. Apply this skill for scientific inquiry across domains.

## When to Use This Skill

This skill should be used when:
- Developing hypotheses from observations or preliminary data
- Designing experiments to test scientific questions
- Exploring competing explanations for phenomena
- Formulating testable predictions for research
- Conducting literature-based hypothesis generation
- Planning mechanistic studies across scientific domains

## Visual Enhancement with Scientific Schematics

**⚠️ MANDATORY: Every hypothesis generation report MUST include at least 1-2 AI-generated figures using the scientific-schematics skill.**

This is not optional. Hypothesis reports without visual elements are incomplete. Before finalizing any document:
1. Generate at minimum ONE schematic or diagram (e.g., hypothesis framework showing competing explanations)
2. Prefer 2-3 figures for comprehensive reports (mechanistic pathway, experimental design flowchart, prediction decision tree)

**How to generate figures:**
- Use the **scientific-schematics** skill to generate AI-powered publication-quality diagrams
- Simply describe your desired diagram in natural language
- Nano Banana Pro will automatically generate, review, and refine the schematic

**How to generate schematics:**
```bash
python scripts/generate_schematic.py "your diagram description" -o figures/output.png
```

The AI will automatically:
- Create publication-quality images with proper formatting
- Review and refine through multiple iterations
- Ensure accessibility (colorblind-friendly, high contrast)
- Save outputs in the figures/ directory

**When to add schematics:**
- Hypothesis framework diagrams showing competing explanations
- Experimental design flowcharts
- Mechanistic pathway diagrams
- Prediction decision trees
- Causal relationship diagrams
- Theoretical model visualizations
- Any complex concept that benefits from visualization

For detailed guidance on creating schematics, refer to the scientific-schematics skill documentation.

---

## Workflow

Follow this systematic process to generate robust scientific hypotheses:

### 1. Understand the Phenomenon

Start by clarifying the observation, question, or phenomenon that requires explanation:

- Identify the core observation or pattern that needs explanation
- Define the scope and boundaries of the phenomenon
- Note any constraints or specific contexts
- Clarify what is already known vs. what is uncertain
- Identify the relevant scientific domain(s)

### 2. Conduct Comprehensive Literature Search

Search existing scientific literature to ground hypotheses in current evidence. Use both PubMed (for biomedical topics) and general web search (for broader scientific domains):

**For biomedical topics:**
- Use WebFetch with PubMed URLs to access relevant literature
- Search for recent reviews, meta-analyses, and primary research
- Look for similar phenomena, related mechanisms, or analogous systems

**For all scientific domains:**
- Use WebSearch to find recent papers, preprints, and reviews
- Search for established theories, mechanisms, or frameworks
- Identify gaps in current understanding

**Search strategy:**
- Begin with broad searches to understand the landscape
- Narrow to specific mechanisms, pathways, or theories
- Look for contradictory findings or unresolved debates
- Consult `references/literature_search_strategies.md` for detailed search techniques

### 3. Synthesize Existing Evidence

Analyze and integrate findings from literature search:

- Summarize current understanding of the phenomenon
- Identify established mechanisms or theories that may apply
- Note conflicting evidence or alternative viewpoints
- Recognize gaps, limitations, or unanswered questions
- Identify analogies from related systems or domains

### 4. Generate Competing Hypotheses

Develop 3-5 distinct hypotheses that could explain the phenomenon. Each hypothesis should:

- Provide a mechanistic explanation (not just description)
- Be distinguishable from other hypotheses
- Draw on evidence from the literature synthesis
- Consider different levels of explanation (molecular, cellular, systemic, population, etc.)

**Strategies for generating hypotheses:**
- Apply known mechanisms from analogous systems
- Consider multiple causative pathways
- Explore different scales of explanation
- Question assumptions in existing explanations
- Combine mechanisms in novel ways

### 5. Evaluate Hypothesis Quality

Assess each hypothesis against established quality criteria from `references/hypothesis_quality_criteria.md`:

**Testability:** Can the hypothesis be empirically tested?
**Falsifiability:** What observations would disprove it?
**Parsimony:** Is it the simplest explanation that fits the evidence?
**Explanatory Power:** How much of the phenomenon does it explain?
**Scope:** What range of observations does it cover?
**Consistency:** Does it align with established principles?
**Novelty:** Does it offer new insights beyond existing explanations?

Explicitly note the strengths and weaknesses of each hypothesis.

### 6. Design Experimental Tests

For each viable hypothesis, propose specific experiments or studies to test it. Consult `references/experimental_design_patterns.md` for common approaches:

**Experimental design elements:**
- What would be measured or observed?
- What comparisons or controls are needed?
- What methods or techniques would be used?
- What sample sizes or statistical approaches are appropriate?
- What are potential confounds and how to address them?

**Consider multiple approaches:**
- Laboratory experiments (in vitro, in vivo, computational)
- Observational studies (cross-sectional, longitudinal, case-control)
- Clinical trials (if applicable)
- Natural experiments or quasi-experimental designs

### 7. Formulate Testable Predictions

For each hypothesis, generate specific, quantitative predictions:

- State what should be observed if the hypothesis is correct
- Specify expected direction and magnitude of effects when possible
- Identify conditions under which predictions should hold
- Distinguish predictions between competing hypotheses
- Note predictions that would falsify the hypothesis

### 8. Present Structured Output

Generate a professional LaTeX document using the template in `assets/hypothesis_report_template.tex`. The report should be well-formatted with colored boxes for visual organization and divided into a concise main text with comprehensive appendices.

**Document Structure:**

**Main Text (Maximum 4 pages):**
1. **Executive Summary** - Brief overview in summary box (0.5-1 page)
2. **Competing Hypotheses** - Each hypothesis in its own colored box with brief mechanistic explanation and key evidence (2-2.5 pages for 3-5 hypotheses)
   - **IMPORTANT:** Use `\newpage` before each hypothesis box to prevent content overflow
   - Each box should be ≤0.6 pages maximum
3. **Testable Predictions** - Key predictions in amber boxes (0.5-1 page)
4. **Critical Comparisons** - Priority comparison boxes (0.5-1 page)

Keep main text highly concise - only the most essential information. All details go to appendices.

**Page Break Strategy:**
- Always use `\newpage` before hypothesis boxes to ensure they start on fresh pages
- This prevents content from overflowing off page boundaries
- LaTeX boxes (tcolorbox) do not automatically break across pages

**Appendices (Comprehensive, Detailed):**
- **Appendix A:** Comprehensive literature review with extensive citations
- **Appendix B:** Detailed experimental designs with full protocols
- **Appendix C:** Quality assessment tables and detailed evaluations
- **Appendix D:** Supplementary evidence and analogous systems

**Colored Box Usage:**

Use the custom box environments from `hypothesis_generation.sty`:

- `hypothesisbox1` through `hypothesisbox5` - For each competing hypothesis (blue, green, purple, teal, orange)
- `predictionbox` - For testable predictions (amber)
- `comparisonbox` - For critical comparisons (steel gray)
- `evidencebox` - For supporting evidence highlights (light blue)
- `summarybox` - For executive summary (blue)

**Each hypothesis box should contain (keep concise for 4-page limit):**
- **Mechanistic Explanation:** 1-2 brief paragraphs (6-10 sentences max) explaining HOW and WHY
- **Key Supporting Evidence:** 2-3 bullet points with citations (most important evidence only)
- **Core Assumptions:** 1-2 critical assumptions

All detailed explanations, additional evidence, and comprehensive discussions belong in the appendices.

**Critical Overflow Prevention:**
- Insert `\newpage` before each hypothesis box to start it on a fresh page
- Keep each complete hypothesis box to ≤0.6 pages (approximately 15-20 lines of content)
- If content exceeds this, move additional details to Appendix A
- Never let boxes overflow off page boundaries - this creates unreadable PDFs

**Citation Requirements:**

Aim for extensive citation to support all claims:
- **Main text:** 10-15 key citations for most important evidence only (keep concise for 4-page limit)
- **Appendix A:** 40-70+ comprehensive citations covering all relevant literature
- **Total target:** 50+ references in bibliography

Main text citations should be selective - cite only the most critical papers. All comprehensive citation and detailed literature discussion belongs in the appendices. Use `\citep{author2023}` for parenthetical citations.

**LaTeX Compilation:**

The template requires XeLaTeX or LuaLaTeX for proper rendering:

```bash
xelatex hypothesis_report.tex
bibtex hypothesis_report
xelatex hypothesis_report.tex
xelatex hypothesis_report.tex
```

**Required packages:** The `hypothesis_generation.sty` style package must be in the same directory or LaTeX path. It requires: tcolorbox, xcolor, fontspec, fancyhdr, titlesec, enumitem, booktabs, natbib.

**Page Overflow Prevention:**

To prevent content from overflowing on pages, follow these critical guidelines:

1. **Monitor Box Content Length:** Each hypothesis box should fit comfortably on a single page. If content exceeds ~0.7 pages, it will likely overflow.

2. **Use Strategic Page Breaks:** Insert `\newpage` before boxes that contain substantial content:
   ```latex
   \newpage
   \begin{hypothesisbox1}[Hypothesis 1: Title]
   % Long content here
   \end{hypothesisbox1}
   ```

3. **Keep Main Text Boxes Concise:** For the 4-page main text limit:
   - Each hypothesis box: Maximum 0.5-0.6 pages
   - Mechanistic explanation: 1-2 brief paragraphs only (6-10 sentences max)
   - Key evidence: 2-3 bullet points only
   - Core assumptions: 1-2 items only
   - If content is longer, move details to appendices

4. **Break Long Content:** If a hypothesis requires extensive explanation, split across main text and appendix:
   - Main text box: Brief mechanistic overview + 2-3 key evidence points
   - Appendix A: Detailed mechanism explanation, comprehensive evidence, extended discussion

5. **Test Page Boundaries:** Before each new box, consider if remaining page space is sufficient. If less than 0.6 pages remain, use `\newpage` to start the box on a fresh page.

6. **Appendix Page Management:** In appendices, use `\newpage` between major sections to avoid overflow in detailed content areas.

**Quick Reference:** See `assets/FORMATTING_GUIDE.md` for detailed examples of all box types, color schemes, and common formatting patterns.

## Quality Standards

Ensure all generated hypotheses meet these standards:

- **Evidence-based:** Grounded in existing literature with citations
- **Testable:** Include specific, measurable predictions
- **Mechanistic:** Explain how/why, not just what
- **Comprehensive:** Consider alternative explanations
- **Rigorous:** Include experimental designs to test predictions

## Resources

### references/

- `hypothesis_quality_criteria.md` - Framework for evaluating hypothesis quality (testability, falsifiability, parsimony, explanatory power, scope, consistency)
- `experimental_design_patterns.md` - Common experimental approaches across domains (RCTs, observational studies, lab experiments, computational models)
- `literature_search_strategies.md` - Effective search techniques for PubMed and general scientific sources

### assets/

- `hypothesis_generation.sty` - LaTeX style package providing colored boxes, professional formatting, and custom environments for hypothesis reports
- `hypothesis_report_template.tex` - Complete LaTeX template with main text structure and comprehensive appendix sections
- `FORMATTING_GUIDE.md` - Quick reference guide with examples of all box types, color schemes, citation practices, and troubleshooting tips

Overview

This skill generates evidence-based, testable scientific hypotheses from observations or preliminary data. It produces competing mechanistic explanations, prioritized predictions, and concrete experimental designs across scientific domains. Every hypothesis report must include AI-generated schematic figures to clarify frameworks, mechanisms, and experimental flow.

How this skill works

The skill guides a structured workflow: clarify the phenomenon, perform a literature synthesis, and generate 3–5 competing mechanistic hypotheses. Each hypothesis is evaluated for testability, falsifiability, parsimony, and explanatory power. For every viable hypothesis the skill proposes specific experiments, measurable predictions, and decision criteria to discriminate alternatives. Reports include at least one AI-generated schematic (preferably 2–3) created via the scientific-schematics tool to visualize mechanisms and experimental designs.

When to use it

  • Turning observations or pilot data into testable mechanistic hypotheses
  • Designing experiments or studies to discriminate competing explanations
  • Preparing concise hypothesis-driven research briefs or grant figures
  • Conducting literature-based hypothesis generation across domains
  • Planning mechanistic follow-up studies or prediction-driven validation

Best practices

  • Start with a focused phenomenon statement that sets scope and constraints
  • Perform a targeted literature search to ground hypotheses in current evidence
  • Generate 3–5 distinct, mechanistic hypotheses that make different predictions
  • Always include at least one schematic (ideally 2–3) to show mechanisms, experimental flow, or decision trees
  • Keep main text concise; move extended details, protocols, and full citations to appendices

Example use cases

  • Translate an unexpected experimental result into competing mechanistic hypotheses with planned follow-up assays
  • Create a 4-page hypothesis brief for a grant that includes concise boxes, key citations, and schematic figures
  • Design observational and experimental tests to distinguish ecological or population-level causal pathways
  • Generate quantitative predictions and power/sample-size guidance for a proposed clinical or lab experiment
  • Synthesize literature to propose novel mechanisms and prioritize experiments for validation

FAQ

Must every report include figures?

Yes. Each hypothesis report must include at least one AI-generated schematic; 2–3 figures are recommended for clarity.

How many competing hypotheses should I generate?

Aim for 3–5 distinct hypotheses that are mechanistic and make differentiable predictions.

What belongs in the main text versus appendices?

Main text should be concise (executive summary, hypothesis boxes, key predictions, critical comparisons). Detailed protocols, full literature reviews, and extensive citations go in appendices.