Understand psychoactive substances, receptors, mechanisms of action and interaction signals as an interactive network.
The atlas turns structured Synapedia data into a readable map. It connects substance profiles with receptor systems, biological targets, mechanism patterns, interaction signals and nearby profiles.
It is built for orientation and scientific education: you can inspect neighborhoods, compare related profiles and move from a graph node into the underlying substance, receptor or interaction page.
Synapedia keeps the graph deliberately cautious. Class-based signals are labeled as such, weak similarity links stay visually low-emphasis, and the atlas does not provide use, dosage or sourcing instructions.
Solid lines represent concrete relationships such as target links, mechanism links or curated interaction signals.
Dashed lines indicate that a relationship comes from class or mechanism logic and should be read cautiously.
Lower-emphasis similarity edges show related neighborhoods, not identical risk profiles.
A focused node highlights its direct neighborhood so receptors, mechanisms and relevant warnings remain readable.
Rings and badges mark risk context for an edge or signal. They do not replace medical assessment.
These links open specific focus or mode states inside the atlas. They are useful interaction shortcuts; the indexable canonical page remains /en/graph.