How Public Studies Work in Studieasy

How publication, language filtering, subject hubs, ranking, and discovery quality work for public studies in Studieasy.

Updated: 2026-05-03

Quick answer

Public studies are indexed by language and broad subject, then ranked by engagement and recency signals. Discovery aims to surface relevant, active study sets while reducing low-quality or mismatched-language results.

TL;DR

  • Public visibility is language-aware by default.
  • Studies are grouped into broad subject hubs for navigation.
  • Trending, popular, and newest each prioritize different user intents.

Visibility and language rules

Only ready public studies are discoverable. Language normalization and filters ensure users mostly see studies aligned with their selected language and browsing context.

Subject hubs and intent navigation

Each study maps to a broad subject hub. This enables both exploratory browsing and direct intent search when users need focused material quickly.

Ranking signals and freshness

Trending and popular ranking blend signals such as opens, challenge starts, completions, unique visitors, and time decay so useful current sets rise faster.

How creators benefit

Publishing high-quality sets can increase visibility, peer usage, and contribution credibility, while also giving you extra practice from community feedback loops.

FAQ

Why do some studies not appear in my language?

If a study language does not match your selected language context, it is filtered to keep discovery relevant.

How is trending different from newest?

Newest is primarily date-based. Trending blends recency with engagement quality.

Should I publish every study set?

Publish the sets with clean structure and strong coverage so other students can rely on them and discover them more easily.

Next step

Put this workflow into practice with your own materials.

Explore public studies