Writing the literature review of your research forms a big chunk of the work. It can often be stressful and overwhelming to search, understand, organize and finally cite the literature you use. For this week’s #MondayMood, we look at some helpful tools to make this work easier!
Discovering Papers: @Inciteful_xyz is an academic article network finder with a fast, user-friendly interface. The tool provides a range of features, such as finding similar and essential papers in the field, recent papers by the top 100 authors, etc.
Understanding Content: @scispace_ new Copilot feature is here to your rescue! (a little self-promotion). This AI-powered tool breaks down complicated text and assist you in understanding complex equations 👇
It can even answer any doubts or questions you may have! Try it for one of your papers: typeset.io
Organizing Literature: @mendeley_com is a free reference management tool that can help you to capture the bibliographic information of the articles you read, keep their copies in PDFs, and highlight and comment on the most relevant information 👇
It is also easy to integrate with browsers for data capture and MS Word for adding references into your text while writing the literature review.
Citation: @bibme is an online bibliography generator that makes the tedious task of citation more convenient. It can automatically cite up to 22 different source types and supports more than 7,000 citation styles.
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🚨 Now, get simple explanations and answers from AI for any paper as you're reading it.
Introducing SciSpace Copilot! 🚀
➡️ Break down complicated text, formulas, and tables. ➡️ Get more context and plug knowledge with instant Q&As. #AcademicTwitter
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🧐What is Copilot?
Think of it as your own personal AI assistant.🤖
Want to comprehend a passage quickly? Just highlight it.⬇️
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Need to understand a mathematical equation? Snip it.⬇️
⚡️ The map led Tharp to realize that the ocean floor could help prove the scientific theory of continental drift and the idea that the continents are moving.
⚡️ In the late 1940s, Tharp began working as a research assistant at the @Lamont_Doherty at Columbia University, NY. This is where she met her fellow geologist Bruce Heezen, with whom she would work for the next 30 years.