Event Explorer
Event Explorer is the primary investigation page for a single NataPulse event.
It uses a three-column structure:
- Timeline: chronological and cross-source developments.
- Investigation: the normalized event, metadata, implications, cluster, and reports.
- Sources: numbered evidence cards linked to the underlying source.
Investigation content
Section titled “Investigation content”Depending on the event type, the page can show:
- title, body, source, entity, and timestamps;
- importance and confidence;
- cluster and related events;
- cross-source timeline;
- generated impact or implications;
- related reports;
- source references;
- domain-specific structured fields.
AI impact analysis
Section titled “AI impact analysis”An authorized user can request an impact analysis for supported events. This produces a research aid explaining possible implications based on the available evidence.
Impact analysis is not a fact added to the source record. It is an interpretation and should be read with its evidence and limitations.
Report and Deep Research actions
Section titled “Report and Deep Research actions”Users with the required permission can create an event report or launch Deep Research. The event identifier becomes the research scope, allowing the report to connect back to the source investigation.
Quantitative events
Section titled “Quantitative events”Events with source type market_quant can display a dedicated Quant Signal section containing:
- asset and timeframe;
- signal type;
- hedged bias and strength;
- expected volatility;
- anomaly and confidence;
- input data quality;
- generation time;
- source-data references;
- the fixed probabilistic disclaimer.
This section appears only for quantitative events.
Static evidence view
Section titled “Static evidence view”Event Explorer does not require the event itself to change in real time. New related evidence can appear elsewhere in the product or after a refresh, while the selected event remains an auditable historical record.
Investigation discipline
Section titled “Investigation discipline”Do not stop at the event title. Check the original timestamp, source identity, cluster members, independent corroboration, and whether later evidence changes the interpretation.