Phenotype Tracking

Phenotype Tracking

Log seizures, behaviors, meds, and triggers — then see patterns emerge in the Correlation Network.

Phenotype Tracking

LIVE

Log entry

A daily form for seizure count, severity, types, medications taken, behaviors, and suspected triggers. Designed to be fast enough to fill in under a minute.

Timeline and summary

Seizure chart with moving averages. Export a DOCX for clinicians. Trends computed automatically.

Correlation Network (demo headliner)

A force-directed graph with your child in the center and factors orbiting. Edges encode two things: color shows direction (red worsens, green helps), thickness shows strength (weak, moderate, strong, very strong). The vocabulary is locked across every surface that references correlation strength.

Hypothesis-generating, not diagnostic. The Correlation Network turns logged observations into a testable hypothesis surface. It is explicitly not a clinical assessment. Use it to ask better questions of your care team — don't act on correlations alone.

What-If sandbox

Tweak a factor (sleep, a specific medication, an illness marker) and see a predicted seizure-count change. The projection is linear from the observed Pearson correlation; it is not a clinical predictor.

PK Trough Chart and N-of-1 Split View

Two stretch features for researcher-literate caregivers: a single-compartment pharmacokinetic chart for common anti-seizure meds, and a before/after comparison around a specific intervention.

Where it lives

Menu → Patient Tools → Phenotype Tracker. Also Today Board → Seizures card.

Why it exists

What is driving the bad weeks? is one of the most common questions in rare-disease family life and one of the hardest to answer from memory. The correlation network turns logged observations into a testable hypothesis surface — so you can ask your care team a better question.

Updated on: 
Apr 14, 2026