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Knowledge graph

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Everything a project picks up from its sources — risks, issues, decisions, actions, meetings, and more — is connected, not just listed. The Knowledge group in the sidebar gives you three ways to read those connections: the Feed, the Graph, and Themes & topics.

The Feed is a single chronological stream of every artefact classified across the project, regardless of which register it landed in. It’s where you scan “what’s come in.”

You can narrow the stream with the filter chips at the top:

  • Area — a PMI area such as risk or integration. One area can cover more than one kind (the risk area includes both risks and issues). Pick one at a time.
  • Type — a single artefact kind (risk, issue, decision, action, and so on).
  • Tags — the tags applied to artefacts. You can pick several at once; a row shows if it carries any of them. You can also click a tag on a row to filter by it.

Each row links straight to that artefact’s detail page. Use the Show archived toggle to include archived items (they appear muted, with an Archived badge).

A topic groups related artefacts (for example FRP unit bath investigation); a theme groups related topics (for example Bathroom renovation). Both emerge from the content automatically — they aren’t tagged by hand. As each communication is classified, the project’s existing themes and topics are reused where they fit, and a new one is created only when something is genuinely novel.

Themes & topics lists each theme with its topics underneath; within a theme, topics are ordered by how many artefacts each holds. Open a topic to see its artefacts grouped by kind, along with its intent, the main people or organisations it touches, and a short description.

The Graph answers “what does this project know about itself?” — it shows the theme → topic → artefact structure as connected nodes rather than lists. The /knowledge page offers three views:

  • Tree — themes expand to their topics, and topics expand to their attached artefacts. Topics also show an Also touches line: soft links to other topics the same content relates to.
  • Graph — the same structure drawn as a node-link map. Click a theme or topic to drill in and re-centre on it; the view is bookmarkable.
  • Full — the whole project graph, including stakeholders, organisations, source emails, and attachments. Toggle node groups on and off, filter by number of links, and search for a node. Non-live nodes (merged-away duplicates, superseded items) are hidden until you switch Archived on. The full graph needs the graph store to be available; if it isn’t, the Tree and Graph views still work.

The sidebar’s Graph link opens the Full view directly.

To follow an artefact back to the exact source excerpts it came from, open its detail page and read its evidence chain.