Icosa is not therapy, and it does not replace it. It is a structural map of your psychological landscape — trap patterns, coherence trends, and a longitudinal record that helps you understand yourself between sessions and prepare for the ones that matter most.
Structural areas in your personality geometry that show risk patterns requiring attention. Traps are not diagnoses — they are geometric findings that describe where your system may be under strain.
Stability reservoirs in your personality structure — the centers and configurations that anchor you when other areas are under stress. Understanding your basins helps you know what to protect and what to lean on.
How your overall integration score changes across assessments — rising toward greater coherence, holding steady, or declining. The trajectory is often more informative than any single data point.
How your formation and gateway status shift over time. Which centers are opening. Which patterns are loosening. What the structure of your experience looks like from the outside.
Every assessment becomes a longitudinal data point. Formation evolution, coherence trend, gateway activation changes, and trap pattern updates accumulate into a trajectory you can actually see — not just sense.
Explore →Geometric risk patterns are detected from your profile structure. Traps are clearly labeled as structural findings, not diagnostic conclusions — and they come with structural context for what they mean.
Explore →In Standard and Comprehensive assessments, behavioral patterns are detected from how you answer — response timing, trajectory, sequential patterns — not just what you answer. These signals provide additional context for interpreting your structural profile.
Explore →Personalized, structurally derived growth paths. When your profile shows areas under strain, the centering plan identifies the specific leverage points most likely to produce movement toward integration.
Explore →Share your full profile with a therapist or clinician through Icosa's secure clinician-client system. Your clinician accesses your profile with your permission — bringing structural self-knowledge into your therapeutic sessions.
Explore →Important: Icosa is not a diagnostic tool. It is not a substitute for professional mental health care. If you are in crisis, contact a mental health professional or crisis service immediately. In the United States, you can reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline by calling or texting 988.
Therapy works in the space of language, relationship, and meaning. It is irreplaceable. What it does not always have is a structural picture of the client’s personality geometry — a map showing which dimensions are under strain, which are stable, where the risk patterns are, and how all of it has been changing over the past six months.
Icosa provides that map. Not as a replacement for therapy, but as a complement to it. A twenty-center grid that shows your four Capacities — Open (receptivity), Focus (directed attention), Bond (attachment and connection), Move (action and expression) — across five Domains: Physical, Emotional, Mental, Relational, and Spiritual. From that structure, the system computes trap patterns, basin stability, coherence, gateway status, and a personalized centering plan — all from your specific profile geometry.
Structural self-knowledge is different from insight. Insight is understanding something about yourself. Structural self-knowledge is being able to see where you are in a map — and where the exits are from the patterns that have been keeping you stuck.
Traps are geometric risk patterns detected from your profile. They are not diagnoses. They do not imply pathology. They describe structural configurations where your personality system may be under sustained strain — patterns where a particular combination of activation and suppression creates a self-reinforcing loop that is hard to break from the inside.
Understanding a trap structurally changes how you relate to it. Instead of “I always do this and I can not stop,” you can see “this is a geometric pattern that has specific leverage points.” That is not minimization — it is precision. And precision opens different possibilities than shame or confusion.
Basins are the complementary finding: stability reservoirs in your personality structure. The centers and configurations that hold you when other areas are under stress. Knowing your basins matters especially in difficult periods — they are what to protect and what to lean on when the terrain gets difficult.
One of the hardest things about mental health work is the gap between sessions. Things happen, states shift, and by the time you are sitting with your therapist again, the most important moment of the week may be hard to reconstruct accurately.
Timeline tracking gives you a structural record of that terrain. Every Icosa assessment you take becomes a timestamped data point — formation, coherence score, gateway status, trap patterns. Smart Retake delivers 10–15 targeted questions between full assessments to capture movement without starting over. Over time, you accumulate a trajectory that reflects where you were, where you are, and how you have changed.
That record is yours. You can review it before sessions to identify what has shifted. You can share it with your therapist through the secure clinician-client system — bringing structural self-knowledge into the room rather than trying to reconstruct it from memory.
Icosa’s clinician-client system allows you to share your full profile — timeline, trap patterns, centering plan, and all — with a therapist or clinician who uses the platform. Sharing is always opt-in and controlled by you. Your clinician can see your profile with your permission; you can revoke that access at any time.
For therapists who integrate Icosa into their practice, the shared profile becomes context for richer sessions. For you, it means your structural self-knowledge travels with you into the therapeutic relationship rather than staying on your phone.
Icosa Atlas is a personality assessment tool. It is not a mental health treatment and does not replace professional care. Use it as one source of self-knowledge among many — and when professional support is what you need, please reach for it.