Dedicated mind map library
Mind maps live as their own resource category, so students can revise visually without mixing them up with notes, MCQs, or question papers.
AlphaLearn mind maps turn large medical chapters into connected visual overviews. Browse by year and subject, open a topic map instantly, and keep visual revision tied to search, progress, and study-time tracking.
The mind map feature is a real resource category in AlphaLearn. It is not a static gallery. Topic cards route into a viewer, search can open matching resources, and study progress can appear where tracker data is available.
Mind maps live as their own resource category, so students can revise visually without mixing them up with notes, MCQs, or question papers.
Students can move through the library by MBBS year and subject, matching the way medical colleges structure revision.
Each topic can open the mind map viewer with file and title parameters, making every map shareable and easy to revisit.
Resource rendering supports Mermaid-style initialization for structured visual content where a topic needs a flowchart view.
Universal search can route matching academic items into the correct viewer, reducing the time spent digging through folders.
When tracker data is available, resource cards can show progress summaries. Resource study time can also count toward daily study time.
The page should sell the workflow, not just the asset type. AlphaLearn helps students choose a subject, scan topic cards, open the viewer, and return to the wider revision system.
Start with first year, second year, third year, or final year resources depending on the current exam block.
Open anatomy, pathology, pharmacology, medicine, surgery, pediatrics, OBG, ENT, ophthalmology, orthopedics, and more.
Tap a topic card to launch the mind map viewer using a direct file and title URL.
Use search, progress summaries, and study-time tracking to connect visual revision back to the rest of AlphaLearn.
Etiology, pathophysiology, signs, investigations, management.
Inspection, palpation, percussion, auscultation, common findings.
Microcytic, normocytic, macrocytic, causes, labs, treatment clues.
Use mind maps when a topic feels too scattered: scan the big picture, follow the branches, then jump back into notes, questions, or your study plan.