Probe Field Manual

Field Manual for AI Scene Analysis

A practical library for photographing scenes, reading Probe outputs, understanding confidence, and using case-ready workflow in everyday situations.

Overview

Probe works best when the capture method and the review method are both clear. These pages explain how to document a scene, how to read evidence layers, where confidence should slow you down, and how to use the web platform as a visual evidence report workspace rather than a one-off scan.

Use this manual as a workflow, not a glossary

The Field Manual is organized around the actual path of a visual evidence report: capture the scene, upload it to the web platform, review the narrative, compare each finding against the overlay, and decide what needs follow-up. The goal is practical literacy. A better photo set usually produces clearer deductions, and a better review habit usually catches uncertainty before it becomes overconfidence.

Probe is built for web-first case review, with the mobile app as a companion when you need quick capture in the field. That means these guides focus on repeatable documentation, readable case history, and outputs that can be revisited later from a larger screen.

Recommended reading order

Start with reconstructionLearn how a scene becomes observations, deductions, confidence signals, overlays, and timeline cues.
Improve your captureUse the photography guide before uploading important scenes so the report has enough context to work with.
Review with disciplineUse the confidence and overlay guides together. One tells you strength; the other shows where the visual support appears.
Know the boundariesRead the AI-versus-manual and privacy pages before relying on Probe for sensitive, high-stakes, or shared records.

What Probe reports are for

A Probe report is a structured aid for understanding what is visible in a photo. It can help you document property condition, delivery damage, workplace scenes, minor incidents, maintenance issues, or any situation where a visual record is easier to review when it is organized. It does not prove legal outcomes, identify people, determine intent, or replace a qualified expert when the stakes require one.

Guide Library
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Open the Case File

Every scene tells a story.

Run evidence analyses on the web platform, then generate visual evidence reports from completed analyses. 3 free monthly analysis credits, with case history, deductions, overlays, and timeline output.