Mushtaq Bilal, PhD Profile picture
Jul 3 15 tweets 7 min read Read on X
Google Scholar and PubMed show you research papers. But they don't show how papers are connected.

Here's how to supercharge your literature review with "visual search," which shows connections between papers:

(And how to export papers to Zotero, Mendeley, and EndNote.)
A screenshot of search results in Google Scholar.
A graph of related papers created by Research Rabbit.
1. Go to Google Scholar or PubMed and look up papers relevant to your project.

Read through the results and pick a paper that you find interesting.

Open the paper and copy its title or DOI.
2. Go to researchrabbit(dot)ai and sign up for a free account.

Once you've logged in, click on the "New Collection" button in the top-left corner and create a collection.

Research Rabbit will show you a big green button that says "Add Papers."
3. Click on "Add Papers" and Research Rabbit will open a search bar for you.

Paste the title or the DOI of the paper you had copied earlier.

Then click on "Add Directly" and your paper will be added to the collection.

In the column next to the collection, you will see the option "Similar Work." Click on it and Research Rabbit will create a graph of related papers.

Click on a paper in the graph and Research Rabbit will give you its abstract.

If you find a paper interesting, click on "Add to" next to the abstract and the paper will be added to your collection.

Find relevant papers by clicking on "Similar Work" multiple times and add them to your collection.
4. Research Rabbit also shows you optioons of "Earlier Work" and "Later Work" under "Similar Work."

You can also use these options to find related papers.
5. Exporting papers to Zotero:

Click on "Connect to Zotero" in the top-left corner.

Zotero will tell you that Research Rabbit wants to access your account. Click on "Accept Defaults" and your Zotero account will be connected.
6. After your Zotero account is connected, click on "Sync to Zoteor" at the bottom of the collection.

Research Rabbit will ask you to choose a title for your Zotero collection.

Choose the same title as you have in Research Rabbit to avoid any confusion.

Click on "OK" and your collection will be exported to Zotero.

Select all the papers in your Zotero collection and right-click. Then choose "Find Available PDFs" and Zotero will retrieve open access PDFs for you.

Now you can read the papers and take notes on them.
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7. You can also import your Zotero collection in Research Rabbit.

Click on "Import Zotero Collection" in the top-left corner. Research Rabbit will give you a list of your Zotero collections.

Choose a collection and click on "Start Sync."

Research Rabbit will ask you to name your collection. Choose the same name as you have in Zotero.

Research Rabbit will then ask you to choose the papers you want to sync.

Select the relevant papers and then click on "Similar Work" next to the collection.

Research Rabbit will show you how papers in your collection are related.
8. Exporting papers to Mendeley:

To export papers to Mendeley, click on "BibTeX" in the column next to your collection.

This will download a BibTeX file to your computer. A yellow arrow points to the "BibTeX" button in Research Rabbit.
9. Open your Mendeley and create a new collection.

Then click on "Add new" in the top-left corner and select "Import library" and then "BibTeX."

Navigate to the BibTeX file you just downloaded and add it.

All the papers from your Research Rabbit collection will be added to your Mendeley.

For better organization, select all the paper you imported and click on "Organize" at the bottom of your screen.

Click on "Add to Collection" and select the collection you just created.
10. Exporting papers to EndNote

To export papers to EndNote, click on "RIS" in the column next to your collection. This will download an RIS file to your computer. A yellow arrow points to the "RIS" button in Research Rabbit.
11. Open your EndNote and right-click on "My Groups" and select "Create Group."

Choose a name for your group.

Then click on "File," select "Import," and then "File" again.

Next, click on "Choose" and navigate to the RIS file you just downloaded.

Add the file and all your papers from Research Rabbit collection will be imported to your EndNote.

For better organization, select all the papers you imported and right-click.

Select "Add References to" and choose the group you just created.
Found this tutorial helpful?

1. Scroll to the top and repost the first tweet to share it with your friends.

2. Follow me for more tutorials on how to supercharge your academic writing with AI.
Want to learn about which AI apps to use for academic purposes?

Here's a list of 50 apps I made.

Click the link:

And you will get the list in your email, for FREE! mushtaqbilalphd.ck.page/50ai
A list of 50 AI apps for academic writing by Mushtaq Bilal, PhD

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More from @MushtaqBilalPhD

Jul 4
How to make $100,000 online as an academic

A step-by-step tutorial:
Step 1: Developing the Right Mindset
If you want to make money online, the first and the most important thing is to develop the right mindset.

If you don’t have the right mindset, nothing will work, and you will feel frustrated.
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Jun 27
Ten commandments for using AI (for academic purposes):

1. Outsource your labor to AI, not your thinking or agency.
2. Use AI as your research assistant not your supervisor.

If you're using it as your supervisor, ask yourself why.
3. Use AI to create structure not content.

AI-genereated content is predictable and bland. We don't want that.

AI-generated structure is predictable. We do want that.
Read 11 tweets
Jun 25
ChatGPT is dead.

Claude just launched a powerful new feature: Projects.

It lets you build your own customized chatbots.

You can upload multiple documents as its knowledge base and add your own specific instructions.

Here's how to create a Project in Claude:A red rectangle highlights the announcement of Projects on Claude's homepage.
1. Open Claude and click on "Claude" in the top-left corner.

Select "Projects" and click on "Create Project" in the top-right corner.

Brief Claude about the project. Then click on "Create Project."

I told Claude I needed a mock peer reviewer to critique my manuscript.
2. Claude will create your Project.

Now you can add Project Knowledge.

Click on "Add Content" in the top-right corner and upload relevant documents.

If you upload multiple documents, it may take a while.
Read 6 tweets
Jun 23
Millions of academics use MS Word.

But few tap in to its full potential.

Here are 6 features that will make your writing process efficient:
1. Voice Notes

Open a blank document in Word and click on the "Dictate" button in the top-right corner.

Now start speaking and Word will transcribe whatever you say.

This is a great way to take notes and think through your ideas while reading.
2. Read Aloud

Click on the "Review" tab and select "Read Aloud."

Word will start reading your document aloud to you.

You can listen to your drafts and see if your writing sound smooth or clunky.
Read 9 tweets
Jun 22
Claude 3.5 is set to revolutionize teaching and learning.

But most academic are not paying attention to it.

Here's how Claude can create interactive visualizations and educational games for you — in minutes:

(No prompting expertise needed)
1. Open Claude 3.5 and ask it to create an interactive visualization of a concept you want to explain.

I asked it to create an interactive visualization of gravitational lensing. It turned out great.

If you don't get the desire result the first time, tweak your prompt a bit.
2. I asked Claude if it knew the idea of "bullshit jobs." It said it did.

Then I asked it create an interactive visualization to explain this idea.

It created a Bullshit Job Quiz that I can use to show what kind of jobs are considered bullshit.
Read 9 tweets
Jun 16
Jenni is the best AI-powered app designed for academic writing.

It's your writing, reading, and research assistant all rolled into one.

Here's how to use Jenni to supercharge your academic writing:

1. Go to jenni(dot)ai and sign up for a free account.
2. Jenni will open a text editor for you.

Type in the title of your project and Jenni will give you a sentence to get started.

Don't use the sentence as is. Use it as an inspiration to come up with your own sentence.
3. You can also use the option "Start with a prompt."

Click on it and write a prompt to get started.

Again, Jenni will suggest a sentence to help you get started.
Read 9 tweets

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