Why mind maps work — early and late
Early in your revision, when you're meeting a specialty for the first time, a wall of text in a textbook gives you no scaffolding. A mind map gives you the scaffolding: 'acute chest pain' branches into three differentials, each with its own tier-one investigation, each with its own first-line management. Once you can see the shape of the specialty, the facts have somewhere to attach.
Late in your revision, the same map serves a different purpose. The facts are already in your head — what separates a pass from a fail is whether they're organised into retrievable patterns. The map makes the patterns visible, so you can see the gaps, the missing branches, and the look-alike pairs before exam day.
Not a PNG — an interactive canvas
Our mind maps are interactive — pan and zoom freely, search nodes by keyword, and click any node to open its detail panel:
- Node detail with key facts and common-confusion pairs
- A pop-up of the linked MCQs — attempt them without leaving the canvas
- A one-click deep link to the expert note for that condition
- A direct NICE search link so you can verify the guideline
How to use them in your revision
Mind maps slot into two stages of your revision plan:
- 1When you start a new specialty, open the map first — get the shape, the major branches, and the look-alike pairs in your head before any reading.
- 2Click into nodes you don't recognise, read the summary, and do the linked MCQs to confirm retention before moving on.
- 3In the final 2-3 weeks, return to the same map for an explain-out-loud rehearsal: try to describe each branch before clicking.
- 4Bookmark any node you still find shaky. Your bookmark list becomes your exam-eve pack.
Rehearsal, not re-reading
The value of a mind map is in what you say before you click. If you click every node and read the summary, you're doing re-reading — the lowest-retention revision activity. Say it first, then click to check.
Frequently asked questions
Which specialties have mind maps?+
The library is growing steadily. All major specialties on the MLA Content Map are covered; see the in-app list for the current catalogue.
Can I edit or make my own mind maps?+
Not yet. The published maps are curated by our editorial team to a consistent standard. Custom maps are on our roadmap.
Are the maps searchable?+
Yes — there's a search bar that highlights matching nodes across the canvas. You can also jump to a specific node via URL.