Thanks so much for sharing. I am a third-year PhD candidate myself, and I know all too well what a struggle managing all those papers can be. This is my workflow: (1) a. capture relevant papers using PubMed notifications for specific keywords in papers relevant to my topic b. research rabbit to find connect papers c. google scholar if I am looking for something in particular. All useful papers will end up in Endnote using the Endnote capture feature (2) Read: the most important/crucial papers will be read, highlighted and annotated using my tablet and a pen. These annotated PDFs will then be exported into Logseq, using the endnote reference code as a title. This is of great help for later referencing. Using group tags, I categorize the papers by research topic. All other papers will be exported directly into Logseq and read/annotated there. (3) Tag: then I go over my highlights, and directly tag the important highlights that I want to find back later (such as research ideas) and link to other papers in my logseq database using backlinks. Also, I make a summary of each paper. The great thing about Logseq is the great pdf support; for example the highlights you take on a pdf in Logseq can be traced back to the exact place in the pdf document. This is a lifesaver and saves so much time, and the one thing I was missing in most other applications. (4) Write my own paper. Based on the paper I want to write, I'll go into my Logseq database and look at the summaries, use the tags to find the relevant sections of the papers, and collect the data I need for my own story. Still trying to automate the endnote to logseq part, but I am finally happy with this system. Tried many other things, such as excel sheets or Onenote/Endnote, but my current setup works best. Love what you do, and keep up the good work!
Thank you for a great video. The only thing I would add is that you should take advantage of your academic librarians and the databases that they provide for you in your program. Rarely will the librarian be an expert in your personal dissertation topic but we are experts in searching the literature and we love to help. I often liken our role as being part of the pit crew for the dissertation writer (driver). We can be a valuable part of your team.
This is the most comprehensive and cohesive discussion for various toolset available (and how to use them in conjunction) for researchers/students. Beauty is all but one is freely available!! Thank you for this walk through.
Charlotte, thank you for making this video! I can't tell you how many times I've gone back to this video in the past few weeks, as I've been writing my master's thesis!
Scopus seems great, thanks for the insight, Charlotte! But the humanities are not its strong suit (especially in my field, philosophy and classical studies). So if anyone knows about alternative platforms other than jstor or muse, I'd be interested to hear!
I finished my undergrad last year and I'm currently just starting to write a paper for a lab I volunteer in... I'm so far behind everyone else in preparing for careers/grad school, and now on top of it, idek how to research anymore (and my old system consisted of just keeping 100+ tabs open till the paper was finished...). I just keep spending hours reading papers only to get nowhere on the actual project and forget basically everything i read by the next day... its been a hopeless 4 month cycle of trying to just START on the research... I feel like such a failure and have no one to look to for guidance (no family that understands post secondary anything at all or even cares to be involved in my education or life really, and no friends or connections from my undergrad other than my thesis supervisor). Just hearing how you generally approach research has given me so much guidance I'm literally tearing up writing this. I know I seem stupid and dramatic, but taking 4 months to just START researching is absolutely crushing for someone who never missed a deadline. I'm so disappointed in myself idk whats happened to me, but your video was the first thing to give me hope that i can finally pull my slow, slacking a** back together. Thank you so much for making this video
That sounds super hard indeed, I also had periods that I felt super low, because of an experiment not working or dips in motivation. I hope you can find someone in your uni that you can reach out too, as these feelings are super normal and the support of others around me really helped 🌸
Yes!!! Thank you so much for this video, it will help students so so much! I am at the end of my PhD now and I tried so many different ways of organizing the literature and my notes in them. I am finally happy with my system and the funny thing is that I am using the exact system you describe here 😄 I actually tell my students about it as well because I think it is so important to organize your literature but it is overwhelming. On a note, when I updated Zotero, it also got a lot easier to just copy and paste everything to Notion so that I have the highlighted parts and my notes in a literature database on Notion. I also just discovered how to have my codes in there as well, which is another advantage of Notion. Sometimes I have nightmares about ... what happens if Notion suddenly crashes and never works again 😵💫😁 Greetings from Germany!
I am in the process of finding a research topic for my PhD. Thank you for this guided video. I used to use these platforms individually, and I think your workflow is great!!!
I love seeing how people organize systems for their work so that I can add useful tips to my own workflow - thank you for sharing! Also btw, I'm in medical school, but I'm planning on matching into psychiatry and I think computational psychiatry is such a COOL AND AMAZING FIELD!!!
Great video, thank you. Will definitely try out some of the programs, especially because I'm already working with Zotero (for the integration with R). I'm already in my last year of the Phd and still looking for something that works consistently. Main problems for me are a seamless integration of Zotero with handwritten notes taken on an android device and for me the folder system has never worked because a lot of core work actually applies to many different projects and I would never find it again. Folders by topic are also counterintuitive because most papers combine at least two topics. If anyone has a different approach for organisation, I'd be grateful to hear. :)
I had an immediate sympathy for you, your way of explaining things, I don't know if it's you, or my lack of scientific guidance. lol...thanks (from Brazil)
Thank you for your nice video :) I would really appreciate it if you could share how you synthesize exactly. Do you write down by hand in a notebook or do you use Notion as well? I believe that Notion might be the optimal approach, but somehow it feels more satisfying to write down things with pen & paper... However, it gets messy quite fast :(
Great timing as I have just started my PhD study and my first article will be a systematic review. I'm already using Zotero, but I have to take a look at the other tools you mention. Thank you!
Excellent video. Your workflow is very similar to mine. However, I transfer annotations to word and divide them into different headings and move them into respective themes to make sense. Would love to know how you synthesize everything and add your voice in a future video
When I first started graduate school I tried to be systematic about tracking the literature. Then I found it was more efficient just to read. All I do is group the PDFs on a specific topic in a folder. I also no longer take notes as I read. I have not noticed any difference in the amount of effort it takes to write a paper are a grant,
If you’re working on a literature review, Immersive Translate can help. This web plugin provides quick and accurate translations for your research documents.
wow, I’m very surprised. The notebook at the beginning of the video is the same as mine. My friend given me the notebook as a gift last night, to encourage me work hard on my PhD studies in 2024.
Thank you for sharing it! I know Notero works well, and Readwise links all notes from Zotero to Notion and Obsidian. But unfortunately, there is no free version of Readwise.
Any Phd program will not make smarter. It will mainly help to get deeper in a subject that you're really interested in; this is my humble opinion. By the way, this video is really great!, I was wondering how do you get time to read all those papers without sacrificing your social life🤔
I think there is no crossway for moving and taking the highlights from Zotero to Notion easily and also come up with great ideas and questions maybe you can use some type of AI based tools to get some insights but I personally think nothing takes place of doing this phase on your own as a scientist for God's sake 😜😀
OK big question do you use SciHub? I don't have a way to import from Zotero to Notion but there is a plugin for Obsidian that lets you do that very quickly. Always happy to talk Obsidian 😆
THANK YOU!!!! I dropped out from a PhD program and have an interview for another one scheduled for next week. I built a second brain on Notion and it was perfect when building my personal statement. I had been reading about the whole process of research and it was great to have an overall understanding of the process but I had this big question looming over my head that was "How to make the lit review process operational?" and you were right on the spot!! Again, thank you very much!! About connecting Zotero with Notion, I recommend this video ua-cam.com/video/8IC8-mPbjCo/v-deo.html The only downside is that you have to refresh the link every time you insert a paper in the Zotero folder. But other than that I think it is pretty straight forward.
I use Notero, a tool that link zotero to notion for an authomatic link. It creates a database with categories and links the notes
I use notero too, but also use Linter to format the metadata ie date into iso format for sorting
Thanks so much for sharing. I am a third-year PhD candidate myself, and I know all too well what a struggle managing all those papers can be. This is my workflow: (1) a. capture relevant papers using PubMed notifications for specific keywords in papers relevant to my topic b. research rabbit to find connect papers c. google scholar if I am looking for something in particular. All useful papers will end up in Endnote using the Endnote capture feature (2) Read: the most important/crucial papers will be read, highlighted and annotated using my tablet and a pen. These annotated PDFs will then be exported into Logseq, using the endnote reference code as a title. This is of great help for later referencing. Using group tags, I categorize the papers by research topic. All other papers will be exported directly into Logseq and read/annotated there. (3) Tag: then I go over my highlights, and directly tag the important highlights that I want to find back later (such as research ideas) and link to other papers in my logseq database using backlinks. Also, I make a summary of each paper. The great thing about Logseq is the great pdf support; for example the highlights you take on a pdf in Logseq can be traced back to the exact place in the pdf document. This is a lifesaver and saves so much time, and the one thing I was missing in most other applications. (4) Write my own paper. Based on the paper I want to write, I'll go into my Logseq database and look at the summaries, use the tags to find the relevant sections of the papers, and collect the data I need for my own story. Still trying to automate the endnote to logseq part, but I am finally happy with this system. Tried many other things, such as excel sheets or Onenote/Endnote, but my current setup works best. Love what you do, and keep up the good work!
This is awesome
Thanks a lot for sharing
Have u graduated 🎉?
Thanku ❤
Thank you for a great video. The only thing I would add is that you should take advantage of your academic librarians and the databases that they provide for you in your program. Rarely will the librarian be an expert in your personal dissertation topic but we are experts in searching the literature and we love to help. I often liken our role as being part of the pit crew for the dissertation writer (driver). We can be a valuable part of your team.
I have my Zotero automatically synced to Notion. I have the instructions of how to if you'd like me to share them.
Please do
Sure
Hi There, I am interested in knowing the details. I will be grateful if you can share.
Regards raj
Can you please share the details? Thank you!
Bruh
This is the most comprehensive and cohesive discussion for various toolset available (and how to use them in conjunction) for researchers/students.
Beauty is all but one is freely available!!
Thank you for this walk through.
Charlotte, thank you for making this video! I can't tell you how many times I've gone back to this video in the past few weeks, as I've been writing my master's thesis!
Good luck writing!
Scopus seems great, thanks for the insight, Charlotte! But the humanities are not its strong suit (especially in my field, philosophy and classical studies). So if anyone knows about alternative platforms other than jstor or muse, I'd be interested to hear!
A video on synthesizing the notes would be amazing!!
Agree
Yes please!
I finished my undergrad last year and I'm currently just starting to write a paper for a lab I volunteer in... I'm so far behind everyone else in preparing for careers/grad school, and now on top of it, idek how to research anymore (and my old system consisted of just keeping 100+ tabs open till the paper was finished...). I just keep spending hours reading papers only to get nowhere on the actual project and forget basically everything i read by the next day... its been a hopeless 4 month cycle of trying to just START on the research... I feel like such a failure and have no one to look to for guidance (no family that understands post secondary anything at all or even cares to be involved in my education or life really, and no friends or connections from my undergrad other than my thesis supervisor). Just hearing how you generally approach research has given me so much guidance I'm literally tearing up writing this. I know I seem stupid and dramatic, but taking 4 months to just START researching is absolutely crushing for someone who never missed a deadline. I'm so disappointed in myself idk whats happened to me, but your video was the first thing to give me hope that i can finally pull my slow, slacking a** back together. Thank you so much for making this video
That sounds super hard indeed, I also had periods that I felt super low, because of an experiment not working or dips in motivation. I hope you can find someone in your uni that you can reach out too, as these feelings are super normal and the support of others around me really helped 🌸
Thank you for your video! It's not only informative but also comfortable to watch ~
Yes!!! Thank you so much for this video, it will help students so so much! I am at the end of my PhD now and I tried so many different ways of organizing the literature and my notes in them. I am finally happy with my system and the funny thing is that I am using the exact system you describe here 😄 I actually tell my students about it as well because I think it is so important to organize your literature but it is overwhelming. On a note, when I updated Zotero, it also got a lot easier to just copy and paste everything to Notion so that I have the highlighted parts and my notes in a literature database on Notion. I also just discovered how to have my codes in there as well, which is another advantage of Notion. Sometimes I have nightmares about ... what happens if Notion suddenly crashes and never works again 😵💫😁 Greetings from Germany!
Can you back up all this work from Notion?
I am in the process of finding a research topic for my PhD. Thank you for this guided video. I used to use these platforms individually, and I think your workflow is great!!!
You're very welcome!
I love seeing how people organize systems for their work so that I can add useful tips to my own workflow - thank you for sharing! Also btw, I'm in medical school, but I'm planning on matching into psychiatry and I think computational psychiatry is such a COOL AND AMAZING FIELD!!!
Great video, thank you. Will definitely try out some of the programs, especially because I'm already working with Zotero (for the integration with R). I'm already in my last year of the Phd and still looking for something that works consistently. Main problems for me are a seamless integration of Zotero with handwritten notes taken on an android device and for me the folder system has never worked because a lot of core work actually applies to many different projects and I would never find it again. Folders by topic are also counterintuitive because most papers combine at least two topics. If anyone has a different approach for organisation, I'd be grateful to hear. :)
this is so so so helpful to me. I love your content so much. I really need this!
Thank you for sharing! Appreciate the clean explanation of your workflow. It was really helpful.
Glad it was helpful!
I had an immediate sympathy for you, your way of explaining things, I don't know if it's you, or my lack of scientific guidance. lol...thanks (from Brazil)
Thank you for your nice video :) I would really appreciate it if you could share how you synthesize exactly. Do you write down by hand in a notebook or do you use Notion as well? I believe that Notion might be the optimal approach, but somehow it feels more satisfying to write down things with pen & paper... However, it gets messy quite fast :(
Second to this! Would be nice to see.
Great timing as I have just started my PhD study and my first article will be a systematic review. I'm already using Zotero, but I have to take a look at the other tools you mention. Thank you!
Excellent video. Your workflow is very similar to mine. However, I transfer annotations to word and divide them into different headings and move them into respective themes to make sense. Would love to know how you synthesize everything and add your voice in a future video
Thank you for your sharing, it is useful for my further study, could you please share more about synthesis? It will really help me! Thank you !
When I first started graduate school I tried to be systematic about tracking the literature. Then I found it was more efficient just to read. All I do is group the PDFs on a specific topic in a folder. I also no longer take notes as I read. I have not noticed any difference in the amount of effort it takes to write a paper are a grant,
If you’re working on a literature review, Immersive Translate can help. This web plugin provides quick and accurate translations for your research documents.
Saying Hi from Switzerland! I'm a big Fan of yours 😊
Thanks so much, very helpful.
Thanks for the tips❤
wow, I’m very surprised. The notebook at the beginning of the video is the same as mine. My friend given me the notebook as a gift last night, to encourage me work hard on my PhD studies in 2024.
Nice glimpse of fancy Staedtler pen.
Nice and very informative, thanks a lot.
This video is just amazing, thank you so much for this, :)
You're so welcome!
@@CharlotteFraza this answer made my day, I really admire you :) keep doing good work ;)
Thanks for the information....but I am unable to find document search in Scopus only author search is available. How can I get a document search?
You can link Zotero and Notion with the Notero Add-on
Thank you for sharing it! I know Notero works well, and Readwise links all notes from Zotero to Notion and Obsidian. But unfortunately, there is no free version of Readwise.
Hello there! How do you get your notes from Zotero into Readwise? That would be very helpful as I am a Readwise and Notion user! Thanks!
I use notero plugin: I have a list of all the articles in zotero (or the selected maps) in a database in notion
Hi, you havent mentioned which word processing software you are using? Any suggestion folks?
Thank you!!
i love your videos, thanks
Thank's a lot for tips! I'm from Brazil and I work in cooperation with NUBS - UK (Newcastle)
What kind of planner do you use?
how do you mark pdf file as red (in zetero) to show that you have read them?
Any Phd program will not make smarter. It will mainly help to get deeper in a subject that you're really interested in; this is my humble opinion. By the way, this video is really great!, I was wondering how do you get time to read all those papers without sacrificing your social life🤔
thanks a lot
I'd like to see how you create your review. Thank you.
Sure thing!
ma sister Frazaaaa what's that Book you opened in ending of this Video !
I know by experience how to get extensive knowledge and understanding in mathematics for research in algebraic geometry.
I think there is no crossway for moving and taking the highlights from Zotero to Notion easily and also come up with great ideas and questions maybe you can use some type of AI based tools to get some insights but I personally think nothing takes place of doing this phase on your own as a scientist for God's sake 😜😀
the bgm is a little bit too load
OK big question do you use SciHub?
I don't have a way to import from Zotero to Notion but there is a plugin for Obsidian that lets you do that very quickly.
Always happy to talk Obsidian 😆
THANK YOU!!!!
I dropped out from a PhD program and have an interview for another one scheduled for next week. I built a second brain on Notion and it was perfect when building my personal statement. I had been reading about the whole process of research and it was great to have an overall understanding of the process but I had this big question looming over my head that was "How to make the lit review process operational?" and you were right on the spot!! Again, thank you very much!!
About connecting Zotero with Notion, I recommend this video ua-cam.com/video/8IC8-mPbjCo/v-deo.html The only downside is that you have to refresh the link every time you insert a paper in the Zotero folder. But other than that I think it is pretty straight forward.