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Work with the three-panel workspace

In this guide, you will open a source, ask a cited question, and save a note, all in one session without switching context. The goal is to learn how the three panels work together.

What you need

  • An Atlas project with at least one processed source.
  • About fifteen minutes.

How the panels work

PanelWhat it showsWhat you do there
Left panelProject navigation: sources, notes, chats, mapsOpen items, add sources, switch projects
Middle panelThe active item: a source, note, or mapRead, write, or explore
Right panelChatAsk questions, verify answers

The three panels are three views of the same project. They update together.

1. Open the project from the left panel

Select the project you want to work in. Open its source list and confirm you have at least one processed source.

If the project is empty, add a source first. Read Add your first source if you are not sure how.

2. Open a source in the middle panel

Select a source from the left panel. It opens in the middle panel.

Skim the key sections: title, abstract or introduction, headings, conclusion. You are getting oriented, not reading everything. The middle panel should answer one question: what am I working with right now?

3. Ask a question in chat

Type a question in the right panel about the source you have open. Keep it specific.

Examples:

  • What is the main argument of this source?
  • What evidence supports that argument?
  • What limitations does this source identify?

Read the answer and check whether important claims include citation badges. If the source is processed correctly, you should see at least one citation linking back to it.

4. Verify a citation

Select a citation badge in the chat answer. The middle panel scrolls to the exact passage Atlas used.

Read the passage in context, not just the highlighted sentence. Confirm the source supports the claim. Verification is what separates a finding from an unverified suggestion.

5. Save the finding in a note

Create or open a note in the middle panel. Write the finding in your own words and mention the source using @.

Type @ in the note editor and select the source from the picker. This creates a direct link from the note to the source in the project graph.

This is the core workspace loop: find material on the left, inspect it in the middle, ask and verify on the right, save the result back into the project.

Check your result

After this session you should have:

  • One source open and verified in the middle panel.
  • One citation you confirmed against the original passage.
  • One note that mentions the source it draws from.

Next steps