gec-figures-and-tables

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Use when designing the figures, tables, framework diagrams, and maps for a Global Environmental Change (GEC) manuscript, plus the required Highlights. GEC reaches an interdisciplinary, policy-relevant audience, so exhibits must be self-contained and legible across disciplines. Improves exhibits; it does not fabricate data.

brycewang-stanford By brycewang-stanford schedule Updated 6/10/2026

name: gec-figures-and-tables description: Use when designing the figures, tables, framework diagrams, and maps for a Global Environmental Change (GEC) manuscript, plus the required Highlights. GEC reaches an interdisciplinary, policy-relevant audience, so exhibits must be self-contained and legible across disciplines. Improves exhibits; it does not fabricate data.

Figures & Tables (gec-figures-and-tables)

GEC exhibits are read by people from many disciplines and by policy-oriented readers. An exhibit must stand on its own, communicate the human-dimensions point quickly, and survive print and grayscale. This skill also covers the journal's Highlights requirement.

When to trigger

  • Designing main and supplementary figures, tables, framework diagrams, or maps
  • A reviewer found an exhibit "hard to read," "overloaded," or "disconnected from the argument"
  • Writing the Highlights (3-5 bullets) at submission
  • Deciding what belongs in the main text vs. supplementary material

Principles for GEC exhibits

  1. Self-contained. Title, axes, units, sample, and source are legible without the text. A reader from another field should grasp the point from the exhibit and caption alone.
  2. Show the human/policy point. Foreground the social driver, consequence, distribution, or governance outcome — not just a biophysical trend.
  3. Framework diagrams earn their place. A clear conceptual / systems diagram often carries the contribution; keep it uncluttered and consistent with the text's terms.
  4. Maps and scale. When mapping spatial variation, state the unit and scale; use classed, colorblind-safe schemes; avoid implying precision the data lack.
  5. Accessible. Colorblind-safe palettes, legible in grayscale, vector output (PDF/EPS) for print; no information conveyed by color alone.

Highlights (Elsevier requirement)

  • 3-5 bullet points, each <=85 characters including spaces, submitted as a separate editable file with "highlights" in the file name.
  • Capture the novel results and contribution in plain language — they are a shop window for an interdisciplinary, policy audience.

Tables

  • Report effect sizes and intervals, not stars alone; label units and samples.
  • Keep main-text tables focused; move full specifications and diagnostics to supplementary material.
  • Ensure every table/figure number matches the analysis workflow (the archive must reproduce them).

Anti-patterns

  • A chart that needs three paragraphs of text to interpret
  • Color-only encoding; rainbow scales; unreadable in grayscale
  • A framework diagram that contradicts the terms used in the text
  • Maps with no scale/unit, or implying spurious precision
  • Highlights that restate the title instead of the contribution

Exhibit-review patterns at GEC and the fix

GEC exhibits face a reader who may not share your discipline, so the editor and referees test whether the human-dimensions point survives translation. These are the recurring objections.

What a referee flags Underlying problem The GEC fix
"I cannot read this exhibit without the text" Not self-contained Put sample, unit, scale, and the social variable in the caption; make the point legible standalone
"The figure shows a biophysical trend, not the human story" Foregrounds the wrong half Plot the social driver, distribution, or governance outcome; relegate the raw biophysical series if needed
"The map implies precision the data lack" Continuous shading on coarse units Class the scheme, state the spatial unit, and use a colorblind-safe palette
"Highlights just restate the title" Shop-window wasted Each bullet carries a distinct novel result in plain language
"The framework diagram contradicts the text" Terms drifted Make every box and arrow use the manuscript's defined concepts

Worked micro-example (illustrative — coastal vulnerability map)

A coastal-adaptation paper proposes a single choropleth of "vulnerability" across districts.

  • Weak exhibit: a smooth rainbow gradient over district outlines, no unit stated, vulnerability undefined in the legend, readable only in colour.
  • GEC-strong exhibit: five classed quantiles on a colorblind-safe sequential ramp, the legend naming the index components (exposure, sensitivity, adaptive capacity), the district as the stated unit, and a caption noting that the top quantile holds 28% of population but 11% of adaptation spending (illustrative). A paired small-multiple shows the same pattern in grayscale.
  • Payoff: the inequity — the human-dimensions point — is visible from the exhibit and caption alone, and survives print.

Calibration anchors (hedged)

  • Self-containment bar: a non-specialist editor should grasp the contribution from the exhibit plus caption; if they cannot, it is not yet a GEC exhibit.
  • Accessibility bar: colorblind-safe, grayscale-legible, vector output is the expectation, not a courtesy.
  • Re-check figure-format rules on the journal's live author guidelines before filing, as Elsevier updates them.

Output format

【Exhibit】figure / table / framework diagram / map
【Point】the one human-dimensions takeaway it must convey
【Self-contained】readable from caption alone? [Y/N]
【Accessible】colorblind-safe + grayscale-legible + vector? [Y/N]
【Highlights】3-5 bullets, <=85 chars each, drafted? [Y/N]
【Next】gec-writing-style

Supplementary resources

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill gec-figures-and-tables
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