AI Tools for Researchers — Search & Literature Review

Workspace with laptop and floating tool panels labeled Read, Chat, Notes, Draft, Edit, Cite.

Research can feel slow.
Good tools make it faster.
Here are useful AI tools to help you search, think, and review papers.
Short notes. Links included. Use what fits your work.


Quick note

This list has search tools, chat helpers, and literature-review aids.
I keep it simple. Try one tool at a time.


Search Engines (fast paper discovery)

  1. SciLynkhttps://scilynk.com
    Fast search for papers and datasets.
  2. Scinapsehttps://scinapse.io
    Paper search with citation views.
  3. Perplexityhttps://perplexity.ai
    AI search that answers in plain text.
  4. Semantic Scholarhttps://www.semanticscholar.org/
    Research search with smart filters.

Brainstorming Research Questions

  1. Claudehttps://www.claude.ai/
    Ask big questions and get clear replies.
  2. ChatGPThttps://chat.openai.com/
    Use prompts to shape research ideas.

Literature Review Tools

  1. Irishttps://iris.ai/
    Map papers and find key topics.
  2. Elicithttps://elicit.org
    Auto-summarises papers and finds gaps.
  3. Incitefulhttps://inciteful.xyz
    Discover how papers cite each other.
  4. The Literaturehttps://the-literature.com
    Explore topic maps and clusters.
  5. Research Rabbithttps://researchrabbit.ai
    Visual maps of related papers.
  6. Connected Papershttps://connectedpapers.com
    Graph view for paper connections.
  7. R Discoveryhttps://discovery.researcher.life
    Researcher-focused discovery tools.
  8. Evidence Hunthttps://evidencehunt.com
    Find evidence and key studies fast.
  9. System Prohttps://pro.system.com
    (Tool for large-scale literature workflows.)
  10. Consensushttps://consensus.app
    Quick evidence answers from papers.
  11. Keenioushttps://keenious.com
    Suggests readings for your draft.
  12. Scitehttps://scite.ai
    See how papers are supported or disputed.

How to use these tools (simple workflow)

  • Step 1: Search broad with Perplexity or Semantic Scholar.
  • Step 2: Read summaries from Elicit or Iris.
  • Step 3: Map related works with Research Rabbit or Connected Papers.
  • Step 4: Ask deep questions with Claude or ChatGPT.
  • Step 5: Check evidence strength with Scite or Consensus.

Do small loops. Repeat as you refine the question.


Quick tips and safety

  • Tools help, but they can be wrong. Check the papers.
  • Save the best papers in a folder or reference manager.
  • Note ideas in a note app. Keep sources.
  • Don’t rely on a single tool. Use two or three for each step.


Final words

Start small. Try one tool from each group.
Mix them into your daily workflow.
They will save time and help you think clearer.

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