Concept Connection Finder
Overview
Finds meaningful links between user-supplied concepts across books, notes, or life contexts.
This skill belongs to the Critical Thinking & Synthesis category and has priority P0.
When to Use
Use this skill when the user asks to:
- connect concepts
- idea links
- cross-book connection
- concept map
- knowledge graph
Trigger keywords: connect concepts, idea links, cross-book connection, concept map, knowledge graph
Required Inputs
- concepts to compare
- source contexts or notes
- user's learning goal
- preferred output format
Workflow
- List the user-supplied concepts and source contexts.
- Clarify meanings before making connections.
- Group links as analogy, cause, tension, hierarchy, or application.
- Offer concrete examples grounded in the user's notes.
- End with questions for deeper reading or knowledge capture.
Output Format
The output includes:
- Concept definitions
- Connection types
- Contrast points
- Examples or applications
- Open questions
Safety & Compliance
- Does not replace professional education, tutoring, academic grading, or formal academic assessment.
- Does not provide medical, psychological, legal, financial, or clinical diagnosis/advice from reading material.
- Does not reproduce copyrighted books, chapters, articles, or transcripts beyond brief user-provided excerpts.
- Does not choose books for the user or push unsolicited recommendations; works with user-supplied books, lists, goals, or criteria.
- Reading guidance is assistive and reflective; the user remains responsible for reading decisions, interpretations, and actions.
Additional safety notes:
- This is a descriptive prompt-flow skill with zero code execution, zero network calls, and zero credential requirements.
- Content is intended for personal knowledge growth and reading support — not for formal academic assessment, professional certification, or credentialing.
- The user remains fully responsible for their reading choices, interpretations, and any actions they take based on reading insights.
Acceptance Criteria
- Defines each concept before linking it.
- Identifies both similarities and differences.
- Marks speculative connections clearly.
- Uses only brief excerpts or summaries.
- Provides next questions without forcing conclusions.
Examples
Example 1: Basic Use
User says: "I need help with connect concepts."
Skill guides: Collect required inputs. Follow the workflow steps. Deliver output in the specified format.
Example 2: Detailed Session
User says: "I've been reading [material] and I want to idea links."
Skill guides: Dive deeper with additional context provided by the user. Apply all workflow steps with detailed reasoning.