When building your reference library, you can either drag and drop files you already have on your computer or, as mentioned previously, you can add papers directly to your library using the enhanced PDF reader feature.
Planning to use obsidian for a) Note-taking, mostly from Research article read and annotated on my reference management system & RSS reader.
B) Analysing and making notes and generating ideas: Connecting notes using linking and generating ideas
C) Using notes and as original reference to write research papers, articles, and thesis.
I recently published an article detailing some AppleScripts that I use for Zotero , and I thought it would be useful to show additional scripts that I used for ReadCube Papers. ReadCube Papers is a bibliographic software package for Mac and Windows users. It has excellent support for looking up metadata for papers and finding related papers similar to others in your library. The annotation tools are also ideal, as you can make notes and highlights in PDF documents and see a complete list in a sidebar; clicking any item in the sidebar takes you directly to the corresponding annotation in the PDF.
Removal of duplicates after import of a subsequent collection of references/papers (with a subset of references/papers being present in both groups) will remove the references/papers again from the second group. Thus references in groups get screwed up when removing duplicates.
In papers, I would add a keyword (or in note or other field that will be imported intact) for each group that I want the record to appear in, and once imported into endnote set up a smart group based on that keyword.
As researchers, we get through dozens or even hundreds of papers per year. Science has never been bigger - the total global scientific output doubles every nine years - and keeping track of everything can feel impossible at the best of times. This is where citation managers come in!
Keeping an electronic list of papers lets you search, categorise and tag your entire library of papers. Most citation managers let you output reference lists to Word or LaTeX, saving you countless hours of trying to insert references into your own publications. All of the options below integrate with the cloud, so you can access your research library from anywhere - and they all allow you to extend this collaboratively, so that your group/co-authors can share reference lists.
If you want a lightweight & free reference manager, write your papers with LaTeX, and only need your library on one computer, then Jabref could be a great choice for you! You could install it right now and quickly get some reference management in your life. Jabref is also the only other tool that has a Linux app.
conference abstracts). Checking by page number is also helpful. A second check where references are organised by DOI is useful, although not all records will have a DOI (and in some cases the DOI might be the same for different references, e.g. You can then look through to check for duplicate titles - although be aware that sometimes different publications can have the same title. Sort your references by the Title field by clicking on the column header.It can also be useful to set your output style to Annotated so that the reference preview includes the abstract. A more in-depth overview of the features and benefits of the Sciwheel platform for writing papers.Make sure to organise your centre pane where your references are displayed so that you can see all the useful fields clearly to help you judge whether a reference is a true duplicate.
Watch Designed for ReadCube Papers, Enterprise, and Anywhere Access customers, the new ReadCube Papers browser extension enhances the workflows in your research lifecycle: from searching and navigating to the full-text, to staying organized, reading and annotating, sharing and collaborating with colleagues, and finally citing papers and generating a bibliography in a manuscript.Now available for Chrome, Firefox and Edge.
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