Turn any anatomy diagram into a quiz
Upload a labeled anatomy diagram and StudyPDF hides the labels so you can name each structure from memory. Bones, muscles, the heart, the brain, a histology slide. It is a blank anatomy diagram built from your own slides, and it exports to Anki.
- Hides the labels on any anatomy diagram
- Name every bone, muscle, and structure
- Bones, muscles, heart, brain, histology
- Built from your own slides and atlas pages
- Exports to Anki and to PDF
A blank anatomy diagram, built from your slides
Anatomy is named structures on a picture, so the fairest way to test yourself is a blank diagram you fill in. You either know where the structure sits and what it is called or you do not. The slow part is making one. Blanking out the labels by hand, or finding an unlabeled version of the exact figure your professor used, rarely matches your course. StudyPDF makes the quiz from your own diagram, so the picture and the labels are the ones you will be tested on.
See it in action
Watch how StudyPDF turns your files into study material you can quiz yourself on.

How to make an anatomy labeling quiz
Three steps from a labeled diagram to a quiz you can take.
Upload your anatomy diagram
Add a lecture slide, an atlas page, a histology slide, or a whole PDF.
It hides the labels
StudyPDF finds the labels and covers each one, turning the diagram into a blank one to fill in.
Name each structure
Reveal one label at a time and name the bone, muscle, or part from memory, then check.
Export to Anki or PDF
Send the cards to Anki for spaced review, or print a blank-diagram worksheet.
For every system: skeletal, muscular, cardiovascular, neuro, histology
The bones of the hand, the muscles of the leg, the chambers of the heart, the lobes of the brain, the layers of a vessel wall under the microscope. Every system in anatomy comes down to naming the parts of a picture, and a blank-diagram quiz is the direct way to drill it. Because StudyPDF reads your file, it works whether the diagram is a lecture slide, an atlas page, or a photo of your textbook. You do not have to find a clean unlabeled version first.
Why a blank diagram beats rereading the atlas
Looking at a labeled atlas figure again feels like studying, but it mostly builds recognition. You know the answer once you see it, which is not the same as recalling it in a practical exam. A blank diagram forces recall. You have to produce the name yourself, and that is what makes it stick. Spread the quiz over a few days and each successful recall strengthens the memory, which is why anatomy students pair it with Anki.
What you get
Quizzes from the exact diagrams your course uses, not a generic worksheet.
- Quizzes built from your own anatomy diagrams
- Cover one label or all of them at once
- Bones, muscles, organs, neuro, and histology
- Native Anki image occlusion export
- Printable blank-diagram worksheet
- Flashcards and quizzes from the same upload
Start with one diagram
Upload a single labeled figure and take the quiz in a couple of minutes. The same upload also gives you flashcards, a quiz, and a study guide, so one diagram can turn into a full study session.
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Questions, answered.
It is an anatomy diagram with the labels removed that asks you to name each structure. You see the figure with the names hidden, fill them in from memory, then check. It tests whether you really know the anatomy, not just whether you recognize it.
Upload a labeled anatomy diagram to StudyPDF and it hides the labels for you, turning it into a blank diagram you fill in. You reveal one label at a time and name each structure, then export the cards to Anki or print a worksheet.
Yes. StudyPDF reads slides, atlas pages, scanned figures, histology slides, and whole PDFs, so you build the quiz from the exact diagram your course uses instead of hunting for a blank version online.
Any labeled anatomy figure: skeletal, muscular, cardiovascular, respiratory, nervous, and histology slides. If the thing you need to learn is a picture with named structures, it fits.
Yes. The cards export to Anki's native image occlusion note type, so they sync to your phone and schedule themselves for spaced review. You can also print a PDF worksheet for offline practice.
It is free to start, and the free tier covers most of a term. You only upgrade if you need a bigger weekly pool of credits for heavy exam-season use.