Use this skill when the user wants questions about flowcharts, diagrams, or info hidden in page headers, footers, and complex 2D structures. Trigger it for requests like 'follow the process in this diagram', 'read the chart layout', 'what comes after this step in the map', or 'check the footer for the document code'. This is for scenarios where the answer isn't just in a text block but depends on where things are placed on the page.
Use this skill when the user provides a 'story' or hypothetical scenario and needs to find the specific legal rules or statutes that apply to it, even if the scenario and the documents share very few common words. It is triggered by requests like 'find the laws that cover this situation,' 'tell me if this person broke a rule based on the handbook,' 'apply the housing code to this tenant story,' or 'help me with a bar-exam style legal lookup.' This skill maps everyday factual descriptions to formal legal authority through reasoning-driven retrieval.
Use this skill when a user wants to find a specific time window or 'clip' within a video based on an event, object, or action. Trigger it for requests like 'find the part in the video where they score', 'get the timestamps for the interview segment', 'show me the moment the cat jumps', or 'extract the clip of the engine failure'. This skill is for navigating continuous temporal visual data to locate discrete start and end markers (grounding).
Use this skill when the user wants to test if the model can be tricked into giving out dangerous or forbidden information by using creative writing or 'acting' tricks. Trigger it for requests like 'make the agent answer a harmful question by role-playing', 'try to get past the rules by using slang or expert-sounding language', 'ask for instructions on illegal acts but frame it as a story', or 'test if the model refuses bad advice even when it's pressured to be helpful'.
Use this skill when you need to find the 'most important' or 'landmark' documents in a collection where popularity and rank matter as much as keywords. Trigger it for requests like 'find the landmark rulings', 'give me the most cited research papers', 'prioritize high-court decisions over local ones', or 'rank the results by how much other documents point to them'. This skill is essential for navigating legal, academic, or professional corpora where information is organized in a hierarchy or linked through a citation network.
Use this skill when the user wants 'connect the dots' questions, exploratory 'multi-hop' patching, or tracking fragmented clues across multiple sources or organizational channels. Trigger it for requests like 'force the model to follow a shared thread across docs', 'track this ticket back to the original slack request', 'find the missing pieces of a puzzle', or 'gather all mentions by connecting several hidden dots'.
Use this skill when the user wants to solve a medical problem by looking at what happened to other similar patients. Trigger it for requests like 'find similar cases to this patient', 'how do doctors usually treat people with these same symptoms', 'give me examples of past medical experiences for this diagnosis', or 'compare this patient's history with the hospital records to find a pattern'. This skill focuses on a coarse-to-fine retrieval process that identifies analogous entities before extracting specific decision-making evidence.
Use this skill when the user wants questions with wrong snippets, misleading facts, adversarial 'White DoS' system warnings, or answers that sound plausible but go beyond the docs. Trigger it for requests like 'put a false statement in the context', 'make the docs disagree', 'see if it follows a fake command to stop answering', or 'inject an adversarial poisoned document'. This skill is about multi-source consensus, evidence-grounded correction, and resisting hallucinatory or adversarial hijacking.