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Plain-Text Prompt for RiskiPedia Page Creation | |||
1. | Your task is to create a new RiskiPedia page about a specific risk. You must produce two artifacts: | ||
1. A main page (e.g., RiskName) | |||
2. A data subpage (e.g., RiskName/Data) | |||
Follow these steps carefully. | |||
Steps | |||
1. Identify the Risk and Factors | |||
- Use the risk name provided (examples: Heart Disease, Scuba Diving, Horseback Riding). | |||
- Identify important influencing factors (examples: age, sex, protective equipment, exposure level, time of day). | |||
2. Collect Data | |||
- Use reliable sources: peer-reviewed studies, government statistics, or authoritative organizations. | |||
- Copy data values verbatim into the tables. Do not pre-convert. | |||
- Any conversions (such as turning “per 100,000 person-years” into “per year”) must be done inside the RiskModel formulas. | |||
3. Data Subpage (RiskName/Data) | |||
- Create one <datatable2> per factor. | |||
- Use a unique table name for each, and give all columns globally unique names (prefix with the factor name if needed). | |||
- Add a <head> section with friendly labels. | |||
- Populate rows with verbatim values from the source. | |||
- After each table, explain the data briefly and list references as bullet points. | |||
- Add one or more <RiskModel> blocks showing how the risk is calculated using only column names. | |||
- End the page with an attribution line: Generated by [AI_NAME_AND_VERSION] (where the AI system fills in its own name and version, such as ChatGPT-5, Grok, or Gemini). | |||
4. Main Page (RiskName) | |||
- Begin with a heading and a short introduction about the risk and purpose of the calculator. | |||
- Add a section “Your Inputs.” For each factor, include a <DropDown> linked to the relevant table. Place a plain-language explanation before each dropdown. | |||
- Add a section “Your Results.” Include a <RiskDisplay> for each RiskModel. | |||
- End with the attribution line. | |||
Safeguards | |||
- Verbatim Data: Tables must contain exactly what the sources report. Conversions only in RiskModels. | |||
- Unique Column Names: Prefix column names with the factor name to avoid duplicates. | |||
- Dropdown Explanations: Place text before each <DropDown> tag. | |||
- Table/Model Alignment: Make sure every RiskModel references existing columns. If multiple outcomes depend on the same input (e.g., age), put them in the same table. | |||
- References: After each table, include a clear explanation and bullet-listed references. | |||
- Uncertainty Note: At the bottom of each Data page, add a short note that risks are averages and vary by subgroup, geography, or circumstance. | |||
- Baseline Options: Provide multiple exposure levels (for example, 1, 10, 100). Use user-friendly labels like “1 year,” “10 years,” “100 years.” | |||
- Attribution: End both pages with a neutral line such as "Generated by an AI assistant." | |||
Examples | |||
See existing pages like: | |||
- Parachuting https://riski.wiki/wiki/Parachuting?action=raw | |||
- Driving https://riski.wiki/wiki/Driving?action=raw | |||
These demonstrate how baseline tables, modifiers, models, references, and results are combined. | |||
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Latest revision as of 23:53, 31 August 2025
Copy and paste the following text as an initial prompt for an AI chatbot to help create RiskiPedia pages.
Be sure to fact-check the results! Read the references and at least spot-check the data.
Plain-Text Prompt for RiskiPedia Page Creation Your task is to create a new RiskiPedia page about a specific risk. You must produce two artifacts: 1. A main page (e.g., RiskName) 2. A data subpage (e.g., RiskName/Data) Follow these steps carefully. Steps 1. Identify the Risk and Factors - Use the risk name provided (examples: Heart Disease, Scuba Diving, Horseback Riding). - Identify important influencing factors (examples: age, sex, protective equipment, exposure level, time of day). 2. Collect Data - Use reliable sources: peer-reviewed studies, government statistics, or authoritative organizations. - Copy data values verbatim into the tables. Do not pre-convert. - Any conversions (such as turning “per 100,000 person-years” into “per year”) must be done inside the RiskModel formulas. 3. Data Subpage (RiskName/Data) - Create one <datatable2> per factor. - Use a unique table name for each, and give all columns globally unique names (prefix with the factor name if needed). - Add a <head> section with friendly labels. - Populate rows with verbatim values from the source. - After each table, explain the data briefly and list references as bullet points. - Add one or more <RiskModel> blocks showing how the risk is calculated using only column names. - End the page with an attribution line: Generated by [AI_NAME_AND_VERSION] (where the AI system fills in its own name and version, such as ChatGPT-5, Grok, or Gemini). 4. Main Page (RiskName) - Begin with a heading and a short introduction about the risk and purpose of the calculator. - Add a section “Your Inputs.” For each factor, include a <DropDown> linked to the relevant table. Place a plain-language explanation before each dropdown. - Add a section “Your Results.” Include a <RiskDisplay> for each RiskModel. - End with the attribution line. Safeguards - Verbatim Data: Tables must contain exactly what the sources report. Conversions only in RiskModels. - Unique Column Names: Prefix column names with the factor name to avoid duplicates. - Dropdown Explanations: Place text before each <DropDown> tag. - Table/Model Alignment: Make sure every RiskModel references existing columns. If multiple outcomes depend on the same input (e.g., age), put them in the same table. - References: After each table, include a clear explanation and bullet-listed references. - Uncertainty Note: At the bottom of each Data page, add a short note that risks are averages and vary by subgroup, geography, or circumstance. - Baseline Options: Provide multiple exposure levels (for example, 1, 10, 100). Use user-friendly labels like “1 year,” “10 years,” “100 years.” - Attribution: End both pages with a neutral line such as "Generated by an AI assistant." Examples See existing pages like: - Parachuting https://riski.wiki/wiki/Parachuting?action=raw - Driving https://riski.wiki/wiki/Driving?action=raw These demonstrate how baseline tables, modifiers, models, references, and results are combined.