We've been working on something we're really excited about: a direct connection between your Paperpile library and the AI assistants you already use. ✨️
You can now send PDFs to ChatGPT, NotebookLM, or Claude.
✨ As a PhD student, it's important to regularly celebrate your achievements, big and small. ✨
Cultivating a habit of reflecting on your milestones will help you stay motivated during difficult moments on your PhD journey.
Every step you make is progress.
A good literature review does not just summarize sources.
It analyzes the state of the field on a given topic and creates a scholarly foundation for you to make your own intervention.✨
Questions to ask yourself as you analyze the literature:
PhD student tip: Establish a routine to categorize the papers you read. ⏰
Maintaining a regular reference management schedule will help you gain an overview of your research by understanding its key topics and help you make new connections between references in your library. ✨
Don't worry if you don't know your thesis trajectory in the first year. Explore different directions for your research by reading a lot. Reflect on what you've learned by journaling. By taking time to soak up information, things will become clearer as you proceed in your program.
Have a folder of PDFs on your desktop, and need to rename all PDFs with a first author-year-title pattern?
Import the folder into Paperpile and all PDFs are automatically renamed with this pattern. #paperpileTips
Today — after an intense period of planning, development, and beta testing — we are happy to announce Paperpile for iOS and Android 🎉
Finally a place for your research papers on your iPad, iPhone, and Android devices!
Read more on our blog: pprpl.co/38MiEWh
Google Scholar helps you easily find full text versions of articles, export bibliographic data (BibTeX, RIS) for use with reference management software, and explore other works that have cited the listed reference.🔎
5 tips for making the most of Google Scholar: