Saving and Organizing Articles
How to build your personal research library and keep it organized.
Saving an article
When you find something interesting in Discover, click the heart icon on the article card. It's saved to your Library. You can also add a personal note when you save (like "good for TikTok" or "follow up on methods section").
Finding your saved articles
Open the Lab in the top navigation and switch to the Library tab. This is your personal collection of saved articles. Only you can see it.
Tracking your progress
Each article in your Library has a status that you can update as you work on it:
| Status | What it means |
|---|---|
| Saved | You bookmarked it but haven't started working with it yet. |
| Researching | You're reading it and pulling out the main points. |
| Scripting | You're writing a post or script based on it. |
| Produced | You've turned it into content and published it. |
This lets you see at a glance where each article is in your content pipeline: how many are waiting, how many you're actively working on, and how many you've finished.
Source Pages
Source Pages are themed collections that live on the Source Pages tab in the Lab. For example, you might create one called "Climate Week Posts" and drag in all the articles you want to reference that week. Each page gets a public URL you can share so your audience can see the research behind your post.
Article details
Each saved article shows metadata like the authors, what journal it was published in, the DOI (a permanent link to the paper), and when it was published. This is helpful when you need to cite your sources.