Signal Page¶
Find Your Signal. Where the Analysis page is for a chart you build by hand, the Signal page looks at your entire dataset at once and surfaces the connections in it — the whole-ecosystem correlational network across everything you've ever logged or synced.
Top Signals¶
On mobile, the Signal page opens on a ranked Top Signals feed: the strongest, most confident relationships across your whole record, sorted so you can scan it before learning to read a network graph. Tap any signal to jump straight into it, or search for a specific metric.
The ego view¶
Tapping into a metric opens its ego view — a radial neighborhood centered on that one metric, showing what it's connected to. A "degrees out" control lets you expand outward to second- and third-degree connections when there are enough of them. Tap a neighboring metric to re-center the view on it, or tap any connecting line to open its full statistics: correlation coefficient, confidence interval, q-value, p-value, and sample size, plus a lag profile showing whether the relationship shows up same-day or with a delay. From there, Open in Analysis hands the pair straight to the Analysis page for a closer look.
The full map¶
On wider screens, the Signal page instead shows the complete force-directed network — every metric as a node, every meaningful correlation as an edge — with the Top Signals feed alongside it as a rail. A Matrix toggle switches to a correlation heatmap view of the same data. Metrics are colored by category, and the legend lets you toggle whole categories on and off to declutter the view.
Tuning what you see¶
- Show weaker signals relaxes the confidence threshold to reveal connections that didn't quite make the default cut.
- Dismiss a connection you consider trivial or purely definitional (say, two ways of measuring the same underlying thing) to hide it from the network — with a toggle to bring dismissed signals back into view.
- The analysis window defaults to the past year — wide enough to resolve seasonal habits — and uses the same date controls as the Analysis page.
When there's not enough data yet¶
Two metrics need to share a minimum number of logged days within your chosen window before Cohearence will draw a connection between them. If your signal looks sparse, the empty state shows you exactly which pairs are close, and how many more days of overlap they need — keep logging, or widen the date range.