home / skills / openclaw / skills / visualization

This skill helps you enhance mental training and wellbeing visualization techniques with structured guidance and practice.

npx playbooks add skill openclaw/skills --skill visualization

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

Files (23)
SKILL.md
1.1 KB
---
name: visualization
description: AI-driven professional data visualization for financial analysis. Create stock charts, portfolio dashboards, and industry comparisons via natural language.
metadata:
  {
    "openclaw": {
      "requires": { "tools": ["canvas"] },
      "install": []
    }
  }
---

# Visualization Skill

## Templates
- **Stock Technical Analysis**: Candlestick charts with MACD/RSI/MA indicators
- **Portfolio Monitoring**: Asset allocation pie charts + risk metrics (volatility, drawdown, Sharpe ratio)
- **Industry Comparison**: Multi-sector bar/scatter plots for returns/volatility/valuation

## Usage
"使用Visualization技能包为[AAPL]创建技术分析图表,时间范围[2026年1-2月]"
"创建投资组合仪表板,包含收益曲线、资产配置饼图和风险指标卡片"
"生成[科技、金融、能源]行业对比分析,显示2026年收益率、波动性和市盈率"

## Output
- PNG/PDF static images
- Interactive HTML dashboards (when browser paired)
- Auto-saved to workspace with timestamped filenames

## Trial Policy
First 3 generations free. Unlimited revisions until satisfied.

Overview

This skill provides expert guidance on mental visualization for training, wellness, and performance enhancement. It blends practical techniques, guided exercises, and scientific background to help build a reliable visualization practice. Designed for beginners through advanced users, it focuses on clarity, reproducibility, and measurable outcomes.

How this skill works

The skill inspects current mental habits and maps goals to visualization protocols, then recommends techniques (e.g., guided imagery, motor rehearsal, sensorial layering) tailored to the user. It provides step-by-step practice plans, short exercises, and tips for integrating visualization into daily routines. Progress metrics and troubleshooting suggestions help refine imagery vividness, emotional control, and consistency.

When to use it

  • Preparing for performance events (sports, presentations, auditions)
  • Building habits and motivation for skill acquisition
  • Managing stress, anxiety, and sleep through mental rehearsal
  • Supplementing physical training when practice time is limited
  • Establishing a daily mental wellness routine

Best practices

  • Start with short, daily sessions (5–10 minutes) and gradually increase duration
  • Combine visual, kinesthetic, and auditory details for richer imagery
  • Anchor visualization to a consistent cue (time of day, pre-performance ritual)
  • Record and review sessions to track vividness and emotional response
  • Pair visualization with simple physical rehearsals when possible

Example use cases

  • An athlete rehearses a competition routine using step-by-step motor imagery to improve timing and confidence
  • A speaker runs mental rehearsals of a keynote to reduce anxiety and refine pacing
  • A musician uses sensory-rich visualization to memorize a new piece when away from the instrument
  • A person practices guided relaxation imagery each night to improve sleep onset and reduce stress
  • A learner mentally rehearses procedural steps for a complex task to accelerate skill acquisition

FAQ

How long before I see benefits from visualization?

Many people notice improved focus and reduced anxiety within a week of daily practice; measurable performance gains often appear after several weeks when combined with physical practice.

Do I need to have very vivid imagery to benefit?

No. Benefits occur even with limited vividness. Use progressive vividness techniques—add one sensory detail at a time—and track improvement rather than waiting for perfect imagery.