Your library is a web of connections — papers you've cited, documents that lean on the same sources, threads running between them. This release lets you actually see and move through that web.
The research graph
Open Graph in the top navigation for a live, force-directed map of your research. Sources and documents are nodes; a line is drawn wherever a document cites a source.
- Click any node for a side panel with the full details — citation, abstract, metadata, tags, and reading status — without leaving the map.
- Read in place — open a source's reader right inside the graph view instead of being bounced to another page.
- Find your way around — search to jump to a node, and the map fits itself to the screen on load, then settles in with a gentle cascade so you can watch the structure appear.
- Follow the threads — each node lists its neighbors, so you can walk from a paper to the documents that use it and on to the sources they share.
"Cited in" — reverse citations
Every source in your library now shows where you've used it. Open a source and you'll see "Cited in N documents," with links straight to each one. It's the citation graph read backwards: not just what a document cites, but which of your drafts depend on a given paper — handy when you're deciding whether a source still earns its place.
Continue reading
The dashboard now greets you with a Continue reading list: the sources you're partway through, plus the ones you've prioritized. One click resumes the reader where you left off. Reading is part of the work, so it now has a home on the way in.
Duplicate a document
Need a second draft from the same starting point, or a template you reuse? Duplicate a document from the dashboard to get an independent copy — content, structure, and settings intact.