Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools for finding, reviewing, and verifying bibliographic references useful for my research project
This is an Artificial Intelligence add-on specifically for academic and scientific fields.
Its main functionality is that it allows to determine, from a simple "prompt" or research question, the existence of consensus, based on the bibliography published on the question posed.
Prior registration with an email account is required. The trial version is for 7 days from the moment the conditions are accepted, with the possibility of opting for a paid version, without limit.
It is a complement of Artificial Intelligence that allows to classify the bibliographic references of an article or research project according to its strengths or weaknesses. The platform tracks how other works support, contradict or question an article or research project.
Registration with an email account is required in order to use it, with a limit of attempts in the free version and a number of other benefits or functionalities in the paid version.
It is a tool developed by the Allen Institute for AI that allows users to locate scientific and academic resources, as well as emerging research trends.
It is free and, through the use of Artificial Intelligence, it enables users to:
- Search for academic and scientific bibliographic references across various sources (indexed databases, publisher-indexed content, scientific journals, indexes, and trusted providers).
- Generate related resources based on a specific topic or search results.
- Explore the scientific output of a particular author, journal, or research topic.
- Receive email notifications about new publications in selected topics or research areas.
- Additional features include: linking your account to your ORCID profile, checking citation counts of selected publications, and saving articles of interest to your account.
Although these tools carry out their searches in indexed databases, it is recommended that members of the PDI check in parallel in SCOPUS / WOS,... that the bibliographic reference exists, thus avoiding hallucinations or invented references.