Research a topic — with answers you can check
Start a research notebook: add the articles and papers you are digging into, then ask where your sources agree and disagree — every point cited.
When you are digging into a question, the raw material piles up faster than your ability to hold it together: papers, articles, saved pages, half-finished notes. This template starts a research notebook whose whole job is pulling those threads into one grounded picture.
You add the sources you are actually reading. The suggested first question asks where your sources agree and where they disagree — and every point in the answer cites the passage behind it, so a claim is never more than one click from its evidence.
What you will actually do
Start from the template
Journal Genie creates a real notebook named "Research notes" — no blank-page setup.
Add your material
Add the articles, papers, or pages you are researching. Paste text, upload a document, or add a link — your sources stay private to your account.
Ask the suggested first question
The notebook opens with a suggested question — "What are the main findings across my sources, and where do they disagree? Cite each point." — tuned to this workflow.
Check the citations
Every claim in the answer cites the exact passage it came from, so you can verify it against your own material.
What this template does not do
- A template sets up the notebook — it does not add content. The answers come from the sources you bring.
- Answers are grounded in your material and cited; when your sources do not cover a question, Journal Genie says so instead of guessing.
One question away from a cited answer
Start from this template, add your material, and ask. Private by default, never trained on, exportable in one click.