Finding information on a particular topic in behavioral and social sciences can seem deceptively easy. On the one hand, we are provided with resources for easy access to information, the university pays for access to most journals, a large library books catalog, and immediately available electronic book collections, among others. On the other hand, one can be easily lost in that amount of literature, encountering conceptual heterogeneity, contradictory results, and a myriad of perspectives that lack consensus, making it challenging to study and understand certain phenomena. The amount of new information is growing at a never seen speed and we need tools and methods to effectively synthesize the scientific knowledge we produce. In this blog, I start with a reflection on traditional ways of knowledge summaries, followed by “unpopular” but effective examples of different ways of knowledge synthesis, and finish by presenting my research where I plan to develop a database containing all empirical evidence of daily stress and mental health research.