Educational box plot anatomy infographic with a large horizontal box-and-whisker chart, comparison columns, labeled quartiles, whiskers, and high-end outliers. Styled like editorial data journalism on off-white paper, it supports hands on data visualization interactive storytelling from spreadsheets to code with crisp annotations and a red-green palette.
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Re-render this exact infographic with every label, heading and caption translated. We re-use all the original attributes (topic, style, palette, …) and only swap the language. Currently in English.
Data visualization infographic titled "Box Plot Anatomy" using COMPARISON COLUMNS as the dominant visual element, designed to explain box plot anatomy and highlight inequality. Center the layout on a large didactic statistical graphic: one oversized horizontal box-and-whisker diagram paired with aligned comparison columns underneath showing distribution spread and quartile proportions. Show clearly labeled parts in English: "Minimum", "Q1", "Median", "Q3", "Maximum", "IQR", "Lower whisker", "Upper whisker", and "Outliers". Add a numeric horizontal axis with sharp tick marks and labels in English from 0 to 100 at 10-unit intervals, no truncated axis, full honest scale. Use plausible illustrative values for an unequal distribution: Minimum 4, Q1 18, Median 34, Q3 67, Maximum 96, with several high-end outliers at 98 and 100. Visually emphasize inequality by making the right half of the box wider than the left half and spacing the upper whisker longer than the lower whisker, plus a cluster of high outliers. Include 4 key insight callouts with hand-drawn leader lines, each containing a headline number, a short interpretation in English, and a small icon: 1) "49" with text "IQR shows the middle 50% spans a wide range" and a small bracket icon; 2) "33" with text "Upper half is more spread out than lower half" and a small split-arrow icon; 3) "2" with text "High outliers signal extreme values" and a small alert-dot icon; 4) "34" with text "Median sits below the box center, suggesting higher-end dispersion" and a small center-line icon. Add small supportive comparison columns labeled "Lower quarter", "Middle 50%", and "Upper quarter" with heights or widths representing relative spread, reinforcing the inequality story. Include a tiny legend in English: "Red = higher spread / extremes" and "Green = central range / baseline". Ensure all labels, annotations, axis titles, legend text, and captions are crisp and readable. Add a small SOURCE / DATA-NOTE strip at the bottom in English: "Data note: Illustrative example for teaching box plot anatomy. Numbers are illustrative, not sourced observational data." Keep it clearly separated and modest. Visual style: hand-annotated sketchnote, marker-pen notes, editorial data journalism illustration, FT / Bloomberg-grade chart aesthetics, vector-clean infographic layout. Use a high-contrast red and green palette on an off-white paper background, with black ink outlines, subtle sketch arrows, margin notes, and energetic explanatory marks. Mood: educational, analytical, visually punchy, interactive-storytelling feel for learners moving from spreadsheets to code. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no fake authoritative sources cited, no watermarks Numbers labeled "illustrative" unless the user supplied specific sourced data. No fake authoritative sources cited (do not invent "Source: Reuters 2025" — use "Illustrative example" instead). No misleading axis truncation or scale manipulation.
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