Research Rabbit Is An Incredible Tool That Fast-Tracks Your Research

Mushtaq Bilal, Phd


twitter thread from Mushtaq Bilal, Phd




Research Rabbit is an incredible tool that FAST-TRACKS your research. Best part: it’s FREE.

But most academics don’t know about it.

Here’s how to get started 👇

Research Rabbit 101: A step-by-step guide with visuals 🧵

Go to researchrabbit.ai and sign up with your email. Research Rabbit is an incredible tool that FAST-TRACKS your research
Once you’ve signed up, this is how Research Rabbit’s interface will look like. ai and sign up with your email
Click on “New Collection” in the top left corner.

Or click on “+Collection.” Once you've signed up, this is how Research Rabbit's interface will look like

Choose a name for your collection.

I’m using “World Literature” for illustrative purposes. Click on "New Collection" in the top left corner

As soon as you create a new collection, Research Rabbit will open it up and give you the option to add papers.

Click on “Add Papers.” Choose a name for your collection

Research Rabbit will open a screen-wide search bar for you.

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. As soon as you create a new collection, Research Rabbit will open it up and give you the option to add papers

For the purposes of this tutorial, I’m using the title of a paper, “World Literature, Indian Views: 1920s-1940s.” Research Rabbit will open a screen-wide search bar for you
After you click “Search,” it will open up a list of relevant sources.

You can start adding papers to your collection one by one. For the purposes of this tutorial, I'm using the title of a paper, "World Literature, Indian Views: 1920s-1940s

Research Rabbit will show you a green box towards the bottom of your screen to tell you it has added the paper to the collection.

Close the window once you are done adding paper(s). After you click "Search," it will open up a list of relevant sources

Research Rabbit will show you the paper you just added. It will give you an option to write a comment about the paper.

Up to this point you may find Research Rabbit not too different from a usual search engine.

But the REAL MAGIC starts from here on. Research Rabbit will show you a green box towards the bottom of your screen to tell you it has added the paper to the collection

As soon as you add a paper, Research Rabbit will retrieve its abstract.

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. Research Rabbit will show you the paper you just added

Research Rabbit will give you a list of similar works.

It will also an INTERACTIVE VISUALIZATION OF the SCHOLARLY NETWROK this particular paper/author is a part of. As soon as you add a paper, Research Rabbit will retrieve its abstract

Click on a blue circle and it will open that source and retrieve its PDF.

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. Research Rabbit will give you a list of similar works

You can also use this feature to see if two or more authors are part of the same network.

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. Click on a blue circle and it will open that source and retrieve its PDF

You can also use this feature to see what network YOU are a part of.

For example, by adding one of my own papers, I can see I am in the same network as Orsini and Damrosch.

This is useful because I want to be a part of this network. You can also use this feature to see if two or more authors are part of the same network

Research Rabbit has many cool features like importing/exporting collections from/to Zotero.

That I will write about in another thread.

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