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ManagiDiTH Library Guide: AI tools for studies and research

Artificial intelligence in academic information retrieval

Although applications of generative AI, such as ChatGPT, are not, at least for the moment, suitable for academic information retrieval, there are several different applications that use AI specifically for article retrieval. This page presents some of them.

These tools offer a different approach to article search than Laurea Finna's article search or Google Scholar. They also provide tools for brainstorming, formulating research questions, creating search terms, creating article summaries and more.

 

AI-powered article search tools

  • There is be a paid version (Keenious Plus) and a free version available.
  • Laurea students and staff can now access the paid Keenious Plus. (Trial period ends 30.4.2025.) Read more about how to use Keenious and how to create an account to Keenious Plus.
  • In the free version, the number of search results is limited to 10 articles; in languages other than English, only one search per day is possible; the length of the search text is limited to 1000 words.
  • In the paid version Keenious Plus, the number of search results is limited to 1000 articles; cross-language searches can be performed up to 10 per day; there is no limit on the length of the search text; reference data can be exported in bulk to reference management systems.
  • Keenious searches for articles on the same topic based on the text entered. The feed can be short (a few words) or long (a whole article). In addition to the article search, Keenious generates a subject list which it interprets as related to the text entered. Based on this information, the searcher can refine his search in the direction he wants.
  • It is possible to download a Keenious plug-in for word processors (MS Word and Google Docs), which allows you to search for sources related to the text or part of the text you are writing.
  • Introduction Video
  • Registration is required. Registration gives access to free Elicit Basic service.
  • Elicit finds academic articles indexed in Semantic Scholar. It searches among more than 125 millions articles.
  • Use natural language sentence(s) as the search input. An abstract from another articles works fine too.
  • Search results can be filtered e.g. by the number of citations, type of the article (systematic reviews, meta.analyzes etc.) or by the quality of the publication  (SCImago ranking).
  • Elicit can also be used for extracting data from selected articles    
  • Instructions on how to get started and tips & best practices
  • Video instructions
  • Free to use. No need to register but doing so gives you more tools.
  • Use clear search words as search input. Searching with natural language sentences is not supported.
  • Finds academic articles from more than 200 million records
  • Search results can be filtered by relevance, citation count or by 'most influential papers'
  • Also offers article recommendations based on the articles selected by the user.
  • Suitable for users who are interested in filtering and sorting search results and saving articles for new article recommendations
  • Video instructions

Visualising AI-powered article search tools

  • Free and paid versions are available with differences in the number of articles and maps.
  • Creates a bibliographic map with data from a single publication or, alternatively, from multiple publications using BibTeX/RIS files.     
  • Litmaps shows the relationships between scientific articles in a dynamic network graph format. It makes suggestions for articles based on the relationships between articles, which helps you to find articles outside keywords.    
  • Requires you to create a login.
  • You can start using the tool by adding one good article to the collection. The tool generates recommendations based on your collection using titles, abstracts and other metadata of the articles.   
  • Research Rabbit visualises the networks formed between publications. You can move forward on the map, creating new publication networks including authors and sources. The tool helps to find new connections between a certain phenomena being studied and the researchers.

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