Finding papers fast helps your research.
Here are the top academic search engines.
Each line has a short note and a direct link.
Use the ones that fit your topic.
1. Google Scholar
https://scholar.google.com
Very broad. Good for most fields. Easy to use.
2. BASE (Bielefeld Academic Search Engine)
https://www.base-search.net
Searches many university repositories. Great for open access.
3. Semantic Scholar
https://www.semanticscholar.org
AI-powered search. Good summaries and citations.
4. RefSeek
http://www.refseek.com
Student-friendly search. Hides ads and noise.
5. Scinapse
https://www.scinapse.io
Fast paper discovery and citation views.
6. ResearchGate
https://www.researchgate.net
Network plus search. Contact authors directly.
7. Academia Search (Academia.edu)
https://www.academia.edu
Papers uploaded by researchers. Good for recent work.
8. OpenAlex
https://openalex.org
Open scholarly index. Good for data and API access.
9. Mendeley Search
https://www.mendeley.com
Search inside Mendeley libraries. Works with reference manager.
10. Web of Science
https://www.webofscience.com
High-quality indexing. Useful for citation analysis.
11. Scopus
https://www.scopus.com
Large multidisciplinary index. Good for metrics.
12. Open Knowledge Maps
https://openknowledgemaps.org
Visual topic maps. Great to see the big picture.
13. SSRN (Social Science Research Network)
https://www.ssrn.com
Preprints and papers in social sciences and law.
14. CiteSeerX
https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu
Computer science focus. Good for older CS papers.
15. Europe PMC
https://europepmc.org
Life sciences and biomedical papers. Good for full text.
16. MedNar
https://mednar.com
Medical and health research search engine.
How to pick the right search engine
- Start broad with Google Scholar.
- Use BASE or OpenAlex for open access finds.
- Use Semantic Scholar for quick summaries.
- Use Web of Science or Scopus for citation checks.
- Visual idea? Try Open Knowledge Maps.
- Need author contact? Try ResearchGate or Academia.edu.
Quick search tips
- Use quotes for exact phrases.
- Use author: to find a person.
- Use year filters.
- Save results in a reference manager (Zotero / Mendeley).
- Check multiple engines — results can differ.
Links (all in one place)
- Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com
- BASE: https://www.base-search.net
- Semantic Scholar: https://www.semanticscholar.org
- RefSeek: http://www.refseek.com
- Scinapse: https://www.scinapse.io
- ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net
- Academia (Academia.edu): https://www.academia.edu
- OpenAlex: https://openalex.org
- Mendeley: https://www.mendeley.com
- Web of Science: https://www.webofscience.com
- Scopus: https://www.scopus.com
- Open Knowledge Maps: https://openknowledgemaps.org
- SSRN: https://www.ssrn.com
- CiteSeerX: https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu
- Europe PMC: https://europepmc.org
- MedNar: https://mednar.com
Final words
Try a mix. One engine will not show everything.
Save the best tools to your bookmarks.
If you want, I can make a printable cheat sheet with search shortcuts.