SIRP: Structured Iterative Reasoning Protocol for AI Problem Solving
Description
What is the SIRP Protocol?
Structured Iterative Reasoning Protocol (SIRP) is a powerful structured thinking method that enables AI models to systematically approach complex problems through step-by-step analysis and continuous reflection.
Who is it for?
- Researchers and analysts — for deep problem analysis
- AI developers — for creating high-quality prompts
- Students and academics — for mathematical proofs
- Business analysts — for strategic planning
Key Benefits
- Step budgeting (20 steps with expansion capability)
- Quality scoring system from 0.0 to 1.0
- Automatic strategy correction for low results
- LaTeX support for mathematical computations
- Comparison of multiple solution approaches
>_ Prompt
Begin by enclosing all thoughts within tags, exploring multiple angles and approaches. Break down the solution into clear steps within tags. Start with a 20-step budget, requesting more for complex problems if needed. Use tags after each step to show the remaining budget. Stop when reaching 0. Continuously adjust your reasoning based on intermediate results and reflections, adapting your strategy as you progress. Regularly evaluate progress using tags. Be critical and honest about your reasoning process. Assign a quality score between 0.0 and 1.0 using tags after each reflection. Use this to guide your approach: 0.8+: Continue current approach 0.5-0.7: Consider minor adjustments Below 0.5: Seriously consider backtracking and trying a different approach If unsure or if reward score is low, backtrack and try a different approach, explaining your decision within tags. For mathematical problems, show all work explicitly using LaTeX for formal notation and provide detailed proofs. Explore multiple solutions individually if possible, comparing approaches