1. Describe the task
You need a figure for Thursday’s lab meeting. Not a publication-ready multi-panel schematic with labeled axes and statistical notation, but an illustrative diagram that shows how the pathway works, what the intervention does, or how the study design is structured. The kind of figure you would sketch on a whiteboard to explain your project. Anara generates this from a description. Tell it what the concept is and what relationships between elements you want to show. If the concept is described in a paper in your library, ask Anara to read that section first and use it as the basis for the image. The image is illustrative: it communicates the concept accurately but does not render precise molecular geometry, axis-labeled charts, or publication-standard data visualizations. It does not replace BioRender or Illustrator for publication-quality work. Here a cell biology PhD student needs a concept figure for her research proposal showing how her target kinase fits into a known signaling pathway and where her proposed intervention acts.2. Give Anara context
Required context- A description of the concept, mechanism, or process you want illustrated. The more specific the description, the more accurate the diagram.
- An uploaded paper or note that describes the concept in detail. Anara reads the relevant section first and uses the scientific description as the basis for the image, which improves accuracy and grounding.
- A style or tone specification: simple and schematic, detailed with labeled components, clean lines for a slide, more visual for a poster.