Projects — Shared Research Thesis
Organize your sessions, watchlists, and notes by topic. Charlie remembers the context of your project from one conversation to the next—your preferences and the key facts you provide remain available in every session.
Emerit Science Team
A project in Charlie is a folder that brings together everything related to a single research topic: your conversations, your active monitoring, your notes, and the references you’ve attached to it.
Most importantly: Charlie keeps a project history. When you tell it, “I’m working on the p53 pathway in triple-negative breast cancer” or “I prefer answers in the form of a comparison table,” it remembers. The next time you log in to this project, the context is already there.
1. Create a project
- 1 From the sidebar, click New Project. Give it a short, descriptive name (e.g., “TNBC Chemoresistance”).
- 2 Start a conversation directly from the project page: the session will automatically be linked to the project and will use its memory.
- 3 You can also drag and drop existing sessions into a project from the sidebar to rearrange them.
2. What does Charlie recall?
During your conversations, Charlie identifies the key elements of your project: research topics, format preferences, definitions, and key findings. It saves these to the project memory, which is separate from each individual conversation.
The next time you open the project, this settings file will load automatically when you open the first document. You won't need to re-enter your work details or display preferences in Charlie.
3. Three levels of memory
Session
The context of the current conversation. Disappears when you start a new session.
Project
Key facts, topics, and preferences specific to the project. These persist from one session to the next within this project.
User
Your general preferences (language, level of detail, scientific profile). These settings apply to all projects.
4. View and manage memory
From the project page, open "Manage Memory" to see everything Charlie has saved—and make changes if anything seems inaccurate or outdated. The modal window lists the facts by section: Topics of Interest, Preferences, Key Discoveries, Definitions.
You can edit or delete any item. Charlie will use this updated version starting with the next project session: full transparency regarding what influences its responses.
Tip
At the start of the project, clearly state your topic and preferences (“I prefer comparative tables,” “always cite the most recent reference”). Charlie will save this information and apply these rules throughout the project.
Create your first project
Organize your conversations, monitoring, and notes around each research area.
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