The Vault
How to use the Vault
A quick guide to searching, saving, and contributing to the Clinical Wiki.
What is the Therapy Aligned™ Clinical Wiki?
A cross-disciplinary reference map of therapy theories, modalities, and frameworks — drawn from psychology, philosophy, sociology, economics, and beyond — indexed by the populations and problems-for-work each one speaks to. Every article includes sample treatment goals, SMART objectives, and therapeutic framing you can adapt for progress notes. It's a place for clinicians to explore ideas — not a substitute for training, supervision, or primary literature.
What is “The Vault”?
The Vault is the interactive map at the center of the page. Each node is a concept — a theory, modality, population, or problem — and the links between them show how they relate: shared lineage, discipline clusters, and which approaches apply to which populations and problems. Explore it visually, or just search if you already know what you're after.
How do I search the wiki?
Type any theory, modality, population, or problem into the search bar — for example “ACT,” “adolescents,” or “moral injury.” Autocomplete suggests matches as you type and is forgiving of spelling (type “acceptence” and it still finds Acceptance & Commitment Therapy). Results are ranked by what other clinicians have found most useful.
What do the colors and clusters in The Vault mean?
Nodes are grouped by discipline and type, so related approaches sit near each other. Use the Theory-only view to see just modalities and their lineage, or filter by a Population or Problem to light up only the approaches that apply to that clinical context — for instance, everything mapped to “veterans” or to “complicated grief.”
Can I save articles to read later?
Yes. Tap the bookmark on any article to add it to your Library — the icon in the top-right corner of every page. Your Library can hold several named notebooks, so you can group saves by topic, population, or case. Saved articles stay on your device (and sync across devices if you sign in), and you can open your Library anytime to revisit or export them.
How do I use my Library and notebooks?
Open your Library from the bookmark button in the top-right corner of any page. Inside, your saves live in notebooks: you start with one called “Saved,” and can add your own — “Adolescents,” “Grief work,” a case name — with New notebook. Bookmarking an article drops it into Saved; from inside a notebook you can move or copy an article into another notebook, rename or delete notebooks, and Export a single notebook to Markdown for NotebookLM. Sign in with Google to sync your whole Library across devices and to Publish a notebook. You can also browse the Public Library and save notebooks other clinicians have shared straight into your own.
Can the wiki read articles aloud?
Yes. Tap the speaker icon next to an article's title to hear the whole entry, or next to any section heading to hear just that part. A small player lets you pause, stop, and skip back or forward.
How do I get articles into NotebookLM or my own notes?
Open your Library, pick a notebook, and choose Export to NotebookLM (.md). It downloads that notebook's saved articles as a clean Markdown file you can upload into NotebookLM or any notes app. (We strip internal links on export, so you get the text — not a scrape of the whole wiki.)
What is the Public Library — and can I share a notebook?
The Public Library is a shared shelf of clinician-curated notebooks — themed reading lists assembled from the wiki. Browse what others have published, save any to your own Library, or publish your own: open your Library, organize a notebook, and choose Publish. You sign in with Google so each notebook is tied to a verified account, then decide whether to share anonymously or with credit. Publishing is immediate, and you can unpublish anytime. Listings are user-curated and credentials are self-reported — not reviewed or endorsed by Therapy Aligned.
How accurate is the content — can I rely on it clinically?
Every article is AI-generated to help you explore ideas quickly, and is clearly labeled as such. Treat it as a starting point: verify against primary sources, your training, and supervision before any clinical use — sentences carry a source marker or an “LLM” tag so you can see what's citation-grounded versus model-generated. It's our hope that the clinical community will help improve accuracy and add knowledge through revisions. So much of therapy lives in our experiential knowledge as clinicians, and we want this wiki to be a place where that knowledge can start living and growing — you can suggest a revision on any article.
How do I suggest a new topic or a correction?
Use the Suggest a new article form on this page, or Suggest a revision at the bottom of any article. Add a source — a citation, a CEU, or de-identified clinical experience — and we'll draft it, email you a preview, and publish once you approve.
Who is behind the Clinical Wiki?
It's built by Therapy Aligned, a New Jersey virtual behavioral-health group practice, and Therapy Aligned Solutions, its clinical-technology team. Within Therapy Aligned, the Clinical Wiki was created by Andrew H. Kim, LCSW, LCADC — a doctoral candidate (ABD) with extensive experience conducting research and building dissemination products, with and without machine learning and AI at various points in the methodology. The wiki is a free educational resource for clinician learning only — not clinical advice.
Contribute
Spotted something missing from the wiki? Suggest a new article topic or revision — we'll draft it, email you a preview, and publish once you approve.
Suggest a new article
Propose a theory, modality, or concept you think should be covered.
Suggest a revision
Spotted an error, outdated citation, or want to expand an existing article? Every article has its own Suggest a revision form at the bottom — here's how it works:
- 1Find the article using the search bar above.
- 2Open it and scroll to the "Suggest a revision" section at the bottom.
- 3Submit your proposed change with a source (a citation, CEU, or de-identified practice experience).
- 4Our clinical AI drafts the integration and emails you to approve — it publishes only once you say yes.