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Research Intelligence Fusion

Transform research planning from chaos to clarity with this advanced AI framework. Get structured literature review guidance, methodological frameworks, analysis planning, and publication strategies. Perfect for graduate students, researchers, and faculty. Includes dynamic questioning, validation checkpoints, and expert consultation guidance. Saves 80% of planning time while ensuring academic rigor.
Prompt Details
Model
(claude-4-sonnet)
Token size
3,190
Example input
[research_question]: How does social media use affect anxiety levels in college students, and what intervention strategies might be effective?
[timeline_resources]: "2-year thesis timeline, university IRB approval needed, $5,000 research budget, access to undergraduate participant pool
[expertise_level]: Novice - first major research project, psychology PhD student with statistics coursework but limited research experience
[planning_priorities]: Need help with literature organization and methodology design - feeling overwhelmed by scope and unsure about research design choices
Example output

Social Media & Anxiety Research Planning Framework

Research Project: "How does social media use affect anxiety levels in college students, and what intervention strategies might be effective?"

Phase 1: Literature Review Planning Framework (Months 1-6)

1.1 Search Strategy Organization

Primary Search Terms:

  • Core concepts: "social media use," "anxiety," "college students," "university students"
  • Platform-specific: "Instagram," "TikTok," "Facebook," "Twitter," "Snapchat"
  • Measurement terms: "anxiety levels," "social anxiety," "generalized anxiety," "mental health"
  • Intervention terms: "digital wellness," "social media interventions," "mindfulness apps," "usage reduction"

Database Strategy:

  • Week 1-2: PsycINFO (primary psychology database)
  • Week 3-4: MEDLINE (health/medical perspectives)
  • Week 5-6: Academic Search Complete (interdisciplinary)
  • Week 7-8: Google Scholar (grey literature and recent preprints)

Literature Organization Structure:

  1. Theoretical Foundations (15-20 papers)

    • Social comparison theory
    • Fear of missing out (FOMO) research
    • Digital wellness frameworks
  2. Empirical Studies (30-40 papers)

    • Correlational studies (social media use → anxiety)
    • Longitudinal studies (temporal relationships)
    • Cross-cultural studies (generalizability)
  3. Intervention Research (20-25 papers)

    • Usage reduction interventions
    • Mindfulness-based approaches
    • Cognitive-behavioral digital interventions
  4. Measurement Literature (10-15 papers)

    • Social media usage assessment tools
    • Anxiety measurement in college populations
    • Digital behavior tracking methods

1.2 Gap Identification Framework

Key Research Gaps to Investigate:

  • Mechanism gaps: How does social media use specifically trigger anxiety?
  • Population gaps: Limited research on diverse college populations
  • Intervention gaps: Few randomized controlled trials of interventions
  • Measurement gaps: Objective vs. self-reported usage measures

Phase 2: Methodological Planning Framework (Months 4-8)

2.1 Research Design Considerations

Recommended Approach: Mixed-Methods Sequential Design

  • Phase 1: Cross-sectional survey (quantitative foundation)
  • Phase 2: Brief intervention study (pilot RCT)
  • Phase 3: Qualitative interviews (intervention refinement)

Design Rationale:

  • Builds understanding progressively
  • Manageable scope for novice researcher
  • Provides both breadth and depth
  • Allows for methodology learning curve

2.2 Participant Planning

Target Population: Undergraduate students (18-22 years old)
Sample Size Planning:

  • Survey phase: 200-300 participants (power analysis required)
  • Intervention phase: 60-80 participants (pilot study appropriate)
  • Interview phase: 15-20 participants (saturation-focused)

Recruitment Strategy:

  • University participant pool (primary)
  • Campus partnerships (residence halls, counseling center)
  • Social media recruitment (secondary, IRB-approved)

2.3 Measurement Planning

Primary Measures:

  • Social Media Use: Social Media Use Questionnaire (SMUQ) + objective tracking (if feasible)
  • Anxiety: Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) + Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI)
  • Intervention Measure: Digital Wellness Scale (custom or adapted)

Secondary Measures:

  • Demographics questionnaire
  • Social comparison tendency scale
  • Fear of missing out scale
  • Sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index)

Phase 3: IRB and Ethical Planning (Months 6-9)

3.1 IRB Preparation Timeline

Month 6:

  • Complete university IRB training modules
  • Draft initial IRB application
  • Prepare consent forms and recruitment materials

Month 7:

  • Faculty supervisor review and feedback
  • Refine methodology based on IRB requirements
  • Prepare data management and security protocols

Month 8:

  • Submit IRB application
  • Respond to IRB questions/revisions
  • Finalize materials and protocols

3.2 Key Ethical Considerations

  • Privacy Protection: Social media data collection protocols
  • Mental Health Screening: Anxiety assessment safeguards
  • Intervention Ethics: Ensuring interventions don't cause harm
  • Data Security: Secure storage and transmission protocols

Phase 4: Implementation Timeline (Months 9-18)

4.1 Data Collection Schedule

Months 9-12: Survey Phase

  • Recruit participants (ongoing)
  • Administer online surveys
  • Initial data analysis and cleaning

Months 13-15: Intervention Phase

  • Recruit intervention participants
  • Implement pilot intervention
  • Collect pre/post measures

Months 16-18: Qualitative Phase

  • Conduct interviews
  • Transcription and initial analysis
  • Integration with quantitative findings

4.2 Analysis Planning

Statistical Consultation Required:

  • Power analysis for sample size determination
  • Regression analysis for predictive relationships
  • Repeated measures ANOVA for intervention effects
  • Qualitative analysis software training (NVivo/Atlas.ti)

Phase 5: Budget Planning ($5,000 allocation)

5.1 Budget Breakdown

  • Participant Compensation: $2,500 (50%)

    • Survey participants: $10 each × 200 = $2,000
    • Interview participants: $25 each × 20 = $500
  • Software/Tools: $1,000 (20%)

    • Statistical software (SPSS/R)
    • Qualitative analysis software
    • Survey platform (Qualtrics)
  • Materials/Supplies: $500 (10%)

    • Printing, materials, office supplies
  • Conference Presentation: $1,000 (20%)

    • Conference registration and travel

Budget Contingency: Keep 10% buffer for unexpected costs

Phase 6: Validation and Quality Assurance

6.1 Expert Consultation Timeline

Month 3: Statistics consultation for survey design
Month 6: IRB consultation for ethical review
Month 9: Methodology consultation for intervention design
Month 12: Analysis consultation for data interpretation
Month 15: Writing consultation for thesis preparation

6.2 Quality Checkpoints

  • Monthly Progress Reviews: With faculty supervisor
  • Quarterly Methodology Reviews: With dissertation committee
  • Peer Review Process: Psychology department research meetings
  • External Validation: Conference presentations and feedback

Phase 7: Dissemination Planning (Months 18-24)

7.1 Thesis Writing Timeline

Months 18-20: Data analysis and interpretation
Months 20-22: Thesis writing and revision
Months 22-24: Defense preparation and final revisions

7.2 Publication Strategy

Target Journals (in order of preference):

  1. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking (mid-tier, good fit)
  2. Journal of American College Health (college-focused)
  3. Computers in Human Behavior (broader scope)

Conference Presentations:

  • Regional psychology conference (Year 1)
  • National conference (American Psychological Association - Year 2)

Risk Management and Contingency Planning

7.3 Potential Challenges and Solutions

Challenge: Low recruitment rates
Solution: Expand recruitment methods, increase compensation, extend timeline

Challenge: IRB delays or complications
Solution: Early submission, simple initial design, faculty guidance

Challenge: Intervention implementation difficulties
Solution: Pilot testing, technology backup plans, simplified protocols

Challenge: Analysis complexity beyond current skills
Solution: Statistical consultation, coursework, collaborative analysis

Confidence Assessment by Phase

High Confidence (90%+):

  • Literature review planning and organization
  • Basic survey methodology and data collection
  • IRB application process with faculty support

Medium Confidence (70-89%):

  • Intervention design and implementation
  • Advanced statistical analysis
  • Qualitative data analysis and integration

Lower Confidence (50-69%):

  • Objective social media usage measurement
  • Complex mixed-methods integration
  • Publication and dissemination strategy

Expert Consultation Required (<50%):

  • Power analysis and sample size calculation
  • Advanced statistical modeling
  • Intervention development and validation
  • Journal selection and submission process

Immediate Next Steps (First 4 Weeks)

Week 1-2: Foundation Building

  • Meet with faculty supervisor to confirm framework
  • Complete IRB training requirements
  • Set up reference management system (Zotero/Mendeley)
  • Begin systematic literature search

Week 3-4: Planning Refinement

  • Schedule statistics consultation for power analysis
  • Draft initial IRB application outline
  • Create literature review organization system
  • Identify potential measurement instruments

This framework provides a structured approach to managing your research project complexity while building your skills progressively. Each phase includes specific validation checkpoints and expert consultation opportunities to ensure you're on track and developing appropriate research competencies.
I understand you're feeling overwhelmed with your first major research project - this is completely normal and shows good self-awareness about the complexity of what you're undertaking. Let me help you break this down into manageable components and create a structured framework that will guide you through each phase systematically.Based on your research question and novice expertise level, I've created a comprehensive planning framework that breaks down your 2-year thesis project into manageable phases. This addresses both of your main concerns - literature organization and methodology design - while providing a realistic timeline that accounts for your learning curve as a first-time researcher.

Key Points for Managing the Overwhelm:

  1. Start Small, Build Systematically: The framework begins with focused literature searching (just 4 databases, specific search terms) rather than trying to read everything at once.

  2. Built-in Learning Opportunities: Each phase includes expert consultation points where you'll develop new skills with appropriate support.

  3. Realistic Scope: The mixed-methods approach progresses from simpler cross-sectional work to more complex intervention research, allowing you to build confidence.

  4. Clear Validation Points: Monthly supervisor meetings and quarterly committee reviews ensure you stay on track and catch issues early.

Immediate Questions to Help You Get Started:

  1. Literature Focus: Would you like to begin with the theoretical foundations (social comparison theory, FOMO) or jump into the empirical studies? Starting with theory often provides better context for understanding the research landscape.

  2. Methodology Preference: Are you more interested in understanding the relationship between social media and anxiety, or are you equally excited about testing interventions? This will help prioritize your methodology learning.

  3. Institutional Support: Have you identified your faculty supervisor and committee members yet? Their expertise areas will influence which aspects of this framework to emphasize.

The framework shows high confidence for the foundational work you'll do in Year 1, with appropriate expert consultation built in for more complex analyses. This realistic assessment should help reduce anxiety about the project scope while ensuring you develop solid research skills.

What aspect of this framework would you like to dive deeper into first? I'd recommend starting with the literature organization system, as it will provide the foundation for all your subsequent decisions.

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https://promptbase.com/prompt/research-intelligence-fusion-2

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