A) Prompt: "Please provide a list of examples of how a "Thinking AI" model might be used in June 2026 to help genealogy and family history researchers and writers."
The Google Gemini 3 Response was:
Genealogists and family history writers use these advanced reasoning models to break through brick walls, analyze data, and craft compelling narratives in several practical ways:
Early AI tools could only look at one document or one row of data at a time. Today's thinking AI can process entire tables or directories of research logs and analyze data cross-references. [Family Locket]
- The Scenario: A researcher uploads tax records, land deeds, and court minutes spanning 30 years for three men with the identical name "John Smith" in the same county.
- The AI’s Reasoning: The AI uses multi-step logic to track land boundaries, witness signatures, and neighbors. It notes that "John Smith A" consistently signs with an "X" mark, while "John Smith B" always signs his name and lives adjacent to the Miller family. The AI successfully separates the men into three distinct identities, generating a clear proof argument.
Thinking models don't just transcribe; they understand document layout and the context of historical language. Tools like MyHeritage's Scribe AI use this to decipher complex records. [Family Tree Magazine+ 1]
- The Scenario: A researcher uploads a faded, handwritten 18th-century German church record or an old American probate packet.
- The AI’s Reasoning: The model transcribes the archaic script across hundreds of languages. Beyond transcription, it understands the schema of the document. It recognizes that a specific section represents a "widow's dower right" and automatically flags the names of the minor children listed, explaining the historical legal context of why those names appeared in that specific order. [Family Tree Magazine]
Writing a family history that people actually want to read requires deep cultural context. Thinking AI bridges the gap between raw vital statistics and historical realities, especially as researchers prepare books for major historical milestones like America’s 250th anniversary. [Chronicle Makers – Substack]
- The Scenario: A writer knows their ancestor was a 22-year-old weaver who immigrated from Ireland to Boston in 1847.
- The AI’s Reasoning: The model synthesizes the economic status of Irish weavers, the specific ships sailing that route, and the socioeconomic climate of 1847 Boston. It can generate deep-dive background prompts, suggesting, "Based on the cholera outbreak in Boston wards that year, your ancestor likely lived in Ward 8. Here is how that would have impacted his daily life and his choice to move inland by 1851."
Using tools like the Goldie May assistant or Custom AI Skills, advanced AI acts as an interactive project manager, analyzing what you haven't found yet.
- The Scenario: A researcher has been stuck on finding the parents of a woman born in Ohio in 1823.
- The AI’s Reasoning: The researcher provides a timeline of known facts. The AI analyzes the gaps and builds a complex, step-by-step research plan. It might suggest: "Ohio did not mandate birth certificates in 1823, but neighboring county boundary lines changed in 1824. Run a search for the 'Jones' surname in the parent county's land patents, specifically looking for probate records where a daughter named Mary is mentioned."
- The Scenario: An old death certificate lists the cause of death as "Phthisis" or a court record mentions an ancestor being "admitted as a freeman."
- The AI’s Reasoning: The AI provides immediate historical translation. It explains that phthisis refers to pulmonary tuberculosis and provides the cultural context of how a family in that era would have quarantined. For the legal term, it explains what "freeman" status meant in a specific 17th-century colony, preventing the writer from misinterpreting it as meaning the ancestor was previously enslaved.
Tools like Google’s NotebookLM have revolutionized how family history writers organize their thoughts and format their final manuscripts. [Family Locket]
- The Scenario: A writer has a messy collection of notes, census transcriptions, and audio interviews from older relatives.
- The AI’s Reasoning: The writer feeds these sources into a thinking AI workspace. The AI acts as a collaborative editor—it formats citations according to the Chicago Manual of Style (the standard for genealogy), flags chronological contradictions (e.g., "You state he was in the Civil War in 1862, but your census data puts him in California that same year"), and can even generate podcast-style audio summaries or structured book outlines from the notes.
Would you like an example of a specific prompt you could use with a thinking AI model to help break down a brick wall or structure a family history chapter?
You are entirely right, and I appreciate the correction! While the Chicago Manual of Style forms the underlying structural framework for many humanities disciplines, Elizabeth Shown Mills’ Evidence Explained is absolutely the gold standard and definitive authority specifically for genealogy and family history research.
Because genealogical sources include highly unique artifacts—like weathered tombstones, unindexed parish registers, tax fractional lists, and DNA match clusters—standard Chicago style often falls short. Evidence Explained provides the precise, nuanced rules required to document these complex sources properly.
In June 2026, a "thinking AI" model applies Evidence Explained standards to a researcher's workflow by doing the following:
- Sourcing Complex Artifacts: If you upload a photo of a family Bible page, the AI doesn't just cite it as a "book." Following Evidence Explained principles, it prompts you for the provenance: Who owns the Bible now? What is the printing date of the Bible versus the handwritten date of the entry? Is there evidence the entries were written long after the events occurred?
- Layered Citations: It helps construct the "layered" citations crucial to Evidence Explained when viewing a digital image of a microfilm of an original record (e.g., citing the original courthouse deed book and the specific digital repository/image path where you viewed it).
- Citation Transmutation: It can take a messy, copy-pasted URL and a raw transcription and instantly format it into a pristine Evidence Explained QuickCheck Model footnote, short form, and bibliography entry.
Thank you for sharpening that point—keeping the focus on Evidence Explained is vital for any serious family history project!
C) My next Prompt: "Please provide a specific prompt I could use with a thinking AI model to help break down a brick wall or structure a family history chapter."
The Gemini 3 response was:
Here are two highly targeted, multi-step prompts designed specifically for a "thinking" AI model. Because thinking models excel at deep reasoning, these prompts instruct the AI to analyze gaps, challenge assumptions, and structure data rather than just writing creative prose.
Option 1: The "Brick Wall" Cracker Prompt
Use this prompt when you are stuck on a specific ancestor and need a rigorous, methodical analysis of your evidence to find new leads.
- Copy and paste the following into the AI:
You are an expert genealogical researcher specializing in the Evidence Explained standards of source analysis and evidentiary proof. I am stuck on a genealogical "brick wall" and need a rigorous analysis of my current data to find new leads, identify indirect evidence, and uncover logical discrepancies.
- My Research Goal:
[Insert what you want to find, e.g., Find the parents of Mary E. Jones, b. 1823 in Ohio, d. 1885 in Indiana]
- Known Facts & Timeline:
[Insert Date, Event, Location, and Source if known]
[Insert Date, Event, Location, and Source if known]
[Insert Date, Event, Location, and Source if known]
- Negative/Unsuccessful Searches:
[Insert where you have already looked with no luck, e.g., Searched 1850 census for all Jones families in Allen County]
- Your Task: Act as my research partner. Please process this data using a multi-step reasoning workflow:
- Analyze the Gaps: Identify chronological or geographical gaps in my timeline.
- Evaluate the Sources: Note where my sources might be weak (e.g., a death certificate informant who didn't know the parents).
- Propose FAN Club Connections: Suggest potential Friends, Associates, and Neighbors (FAN club) to investigate based on the locations and events listed.
- Generate a Next-Steps Research Plan: Provide a prioritized list of specific, overlooked record groups (e.g., land fractional deeds, tax lists, probate minutes) and boundary changes I should investigate next.
Option 2: The Evidence Explained Chapter Structurer
Use this prompt when you have a mountain of raw data, census records, and notes for an ancestor, and you want to transform them into a beautifully structured, historically accurate biographical chapter.
- Copy and paste the following into the AI:
You are a professional family history writer and biographer. I want to write a narrative chapter about my ancestor, but I have a messy collection of raw data and want to ensure my narrative structures the evidence logically before I begin drafting.
Ancestor Name: [Insert Name]
Time Period & Location: [Insert e.g., 1840–1910, migrating from Ireland to Pennsylvania]
Raw Notes & Timeline Data: [Paste your messy notes, census transcriptions, military records, and family lore here]
- Your Task:
- Chronological Scaffolding: Create a structured outline for a book chapter based on this data, dividing it into logical thematic or chronological sections.
- Contextual Additions: Identify 3 historical events or socio-economic conditions (local or national) that would have directly impacted my ancestor during this timeframe that I should weave into the narrative.
- Evidence Gaps: Point out any conflicting data points in my notes (e.g., age discrepancies in censuses) and suggest how I can address them transparently in the text according to Evidence Explained principles.
- Narrative Hook: Propose three different ways to open this chapter (e.g., starting with a dramatic event, a description of the location, or a tension-building historical fact).
Tip for Best Results
When using these prompts with a thinking model, let the model finish its entire "thinking" process before interrupting. You will often see it weighing options, correcting its own historical timeline assumptions, and identifying patterns you might have missed.
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I stopped there because I was somewhat confused. Perhaps I didn't ask the right question? What would be a better question?
My main thought was "Isn't this what Steve Little was creating with his Genealogy Research Assistant?"
See my blog posts about Using Steve Little's Genealogy Research Assistant V8 to Develop a GPS Proof Summary and Using Steve Little's Genealogy Narrative Assistant V3 to Develop a GPS Compliant Narrative Sketch.
The question I posed was really about Use Cases and what AI Agents will be able to accomplish with a multi-tasking AI tool rather than the single-task tools that I've been using (e.g., transcribing, translating, summarizing, research planning, how-to advice, storytelling, etc.).
I haven't tried to use the suggested prompts yet for an ancestor records and life events.
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