Editorial-style psychology infographic showing 10 common cognitive distortions in CBT as a clean dark-mode poster grid with icons, captions, and a non-diagnostic educational note. Designed with restrained academic typography, charcoal tones, and muted blue-teal accents, it fits psychology, carl jung mbti, and educational brand content.
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.
Psychology infographic titled "Cognitive Distortions in CBT". COGNITIVE BIASES poster grid. Academic textbook style, dark mode palette, editorial psychology magazine illustration. Render a clean structured poster grid of numbered cards, each card with a short English caption and an evocative icon, explaining common cognitive distortions in CBT as educational concepts, not diagnostic labels. Include 10 cards: 1 All-or-Nothing Thinking — seeing situations in extremes, icon split black/white circle; 2 Catastrophizing — expecting the worst outcome, icon falling meteor; 3 Overgeneralization — drawing broad conclusions from one event, icon spreading ripple; 4 Mental Filter — focusing only on negatives, icon funnel; 5 Disqualifying the Positive — dismissing strengths or good outcomes, icon crossed-out star; 6 Mind Reading — assuming others think negatively, icon eye with thought cloud; 7 Fortune Telling — predicting failure without evidence, icon crystal ball; 8 Emotional Reasoning — treating feelings as facts, icon heart merged with exclamation mark; 9 Should Statements — rigid rules and self-pressure, icon checklist with warning sign; 10 Personalization — taking excessive responsibility for events, icon single figure under spotlight. Add subtle textbook elements such as section dividers, small legend area, neat hierarchy, restrained academic typography, soft glow accents, charcoal background, muted blue and teal highlights, high contrast readability. Include a small non-diagnostic educational note in English stating these are common thinking patterns discussed in CBT and are not medical diagnoses. Visually hint at analytical psychology interest through abstract scholarly motifs only, with no on-image reference to search intent. 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 diagnostic medical claims, no watermarks No diagnostic medical claims, no labeling viewers, no stigmatization. Frame personality systems as informal / educational, never as diagnostic tools.
Tell us why this image is inappropriate. A description is required — generic submissions are dismissed. Confirmed reports are resolved within 24 hours.