From perspectives-on-psychological-science-skills
Designs APA-style review/synthesis exhibits for Perspectives on Psychological Science: conceptual framework figures, who-found-what summary tables, and meta-science prevalence/replication figures.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/perspectives-on-psychological-science-skills:ppsych-tables-figuresThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- The synthesis is done and a cross-area reader needs to *see* the field at a glance
PoPS exhibits summarize or conceptualize across the literature; they do not present the author's own experiment. The workhorses:
| Exhibit | Purpose | Design notes |
|---|---|---|
| Conceptual / framework figure | render the organizing spine — taxonomy tree, theory diagram, the reframe | usually the piece's signature exhibit; restate-able from memory by a non-specialist |
| Who-found-what summary table | one row per study/area: construct, design, sample, finding (direction + magnitude), credibility note | rows ordered by framework cells, not chronology; only comparable constructs share a column |
| Practice-prevalence / meta-science exhibit | bar/trend of how common a practice is; replication-outcome landscape; power distribution | only when the underlying coding is systematic and reproducible |
| Forest / meta-analytic plot | pooled effect with uncertainty | only when estimates are commensurable and you are doing a real meta-analysis |
Because the readership is cross-area, the framework figure carries disproportionate weight: it is what a psychologist from another area remembers and reuses. Invest in one diagram that renders the spine cleanly — a taxonomy tree, a theory flow, or the reframe — so a reader who recalls nothing else can reconstruct the argument. Design for legibility in the published format and confirm current figure specs and color policy on the author pages (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准).
A reform argument lands when the reader sees the prevalence:
ppsych-literature-synthesis — a prevalence figure with an undisclosed sampling frame is the very opacity reform opposes. Note the sampling frame and coding rules in the caption, and deposit the data/code (see ppsych-transparency-and-reproducibility).When a figure from a reviewed paper is central, prefer a re-drawn synthesis figure (your own panel placing several studies on common axes) over copying one paper's exhibit — it serves the argument and avoids consensus-by-accident. If you reproduce an original figure, attribute it and secure any permission SAGE requires (检索于 2026-06;以官网为准).
【Exhibit set】<list: conceptual figure / summary tables / prevalence / forest>
【Conceptual figure】renders the spine; restate-able from memory? Y/N
【Summary table】rows by framework cell; comparable constructs only; effect sizes + credibility? Y/N
【Meta-science exhibit】sampling frame disclosed; coding reproducible? Y/N · N/A
【Forest plot】pools only commensurable estimates (or omitted)? Y/N · N/A
【Sourcing】every cell traces to the evidence matrix? Y/N
【APA/specs/permissions】captions APA; specs + permissions confirmed on SAGE pages? Y/N · 待核实
【Next step】→ ppsych-writing-style (weave exhibits into the synthesis prose)
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin perspectives-on-psychological-science-skillsDesigns summary tables and conceptual figures for Annual Review of Psychology reviews, including who-found-what tables and framework diagrams that organize the literature.
Builds PRISMA flow diagrams, forest plots, funnel/bias plots, moderator bubble plots, and APA 7th-edition summary tables for Psychological Bulletin meta-analysis manuscripts.
Builds summary who-found-what tables, conceptual framework figures, and meta-evidence exhibits for Annual Review of Sociology review papers.