But most academics don’t know about it.
Here’s how to get started 👇
Research Rabbit 101: A step-by-step guide with visuals 🧵

Enter the title (or keywords) of a paper/book related to your project.
You can also use identifiers like DOI and PMID to look up sources.

Up to this point you may find Research Rabbit not too different from a usual search engine.
It will also show you if a PDF of the paper is freely available. It can’t retrieve a PDF if it’s behind a paywall.
It will also give you an option to see “Similar Works.” Click on that.
It will also an INTERACTIVE VISUALIZATION OF the SCHOLARLY NETWROK this particular paper/author is a part of.
You can keep doing this and Research Rabbit will keep on finding newer and newer scholarly networks for you.
You can also look up these networks using references an author used or a paper’s citations.
For example, here it shows Orsini and Damrosch are in the same network along with a bunch of other scholars whose works could be relevant to my project.
For example, by adding one of my own papers, I can see I am in the same network as Orsini and Damrosch.
That I will write about in another thread.
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