Certain AI tools are a blessing in disguise
By Rimps
@Rimps85 (2131)
India
January 27, 2025 11:17am CST
As a PhD scholar one has to deal with lots of previously published journals & reports from around the world, and to gather them under one roof and find out the links would have been tremendous labourious process had there been no AI tools...
I came across one such app, that will draw a complete network diagram of the referred journals & will suggest future scope of work
2 people like this
3 responses
@DaddyEvil (139750)
• United States
27 Jan
Will the app/tools also tell you if the AI is making up journals and reports before you use them as a reference or do you still have to check everything before using it?
1 person likes this
@DaddyEvil (139750)
• United States
28 Jan
@Rimps85 By "unwanted stuff", do you mean it can tell the difference between fake reports posted by idiots online or do you mean you'll still need to check everything by hand?
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@Rimps85 (2131)
• India
28 Jan
@DaddyEvil not that way - whenever you search for academic reports/journals, they are either indexed by authentic publishers (like WOS, Scopus etc) or are available from open-sources, generally open-source materials are junk and are avoided. Out of the authentic publication, not all are helpful to my topic/area of research, so to get rid of them and save my time not studying them and leaving mid-way (realising its not my area of interest), use of these Apps are a great help.
Also, it provides a bubble chart in terms of which is the most cited paper/journal and inter-related papers derived from them subsequently.
1 person likes this
@luisadannointed (6890)
• Philippines
27 Jan
Wow that was cool and I think very helpful.
1 person likes this