Thank you, Mat, for creating this informative video. When I use Scispace or similar websites, they indeed save a lot of time. However, I feel that what they provide is not comprehensive enough for PhD-level research or a dissertation. Sometimes, I ask more questions to obtain additional details, but at the end of the day, I still feel like I'm missing some important parts if I don't read the entire paper. This leads to missing some concepts, so I find myself going back to read the paper again, which is really time-consuming. Do you have any tips or recommendations for addressing this issue? My research area is international space law, which is a relatively new subject and does not already have too many resources available.
I'm sorry for getting back to you late! I had a couple of very hectic days! I totally understand your concern and in the end of the day, there is nothing better than just reading the paper yourself because deciding what is important can be very subjective. When I was doing my PhD, the only way to speed up the process was to ONLY analyze the figures that were relevant or ONLY read few relevant sections based on the subheadings. I never read whole papers because it was just too time consuming to do. However, I'll check out other AIs and see if there is anything else you could do. I'll get back to you once i have something. BTW, international space law sounds very cool!
Thank you so much for your patience and understanding! I completely relate to the challenges of managing busy days. I appreciate your openness to exploring other AI options. I'll also be sending you an email if I come across something intriguing. And thanks, for your compliment on my research topic. It's always wonderful to hear that others find international space law interesting.@@DrMatJ
Hi @maryamk2398 Why don't you try openread, explainpaper, and powerdrill AIs for your research articles. As Scispace gives you a quick overview of lots of papers at once, these 3 can delve much deeper into individual papers of interest. Openread's free version is quite limited (you can't ask lots of questions), by explainpaper will let you ask as many questions as you want, and powedrill will let you have 200 questions a month. They are all great and work well papers within my field. Let me know if they work for you! Thanks, Mat
Thank you, Mat, for the excellent AI suggestions! Your insights are always spot-on, and I truly appreciate your support. I can't wait to try them and see how they elevate my work. I'll keep you posted on how it goes! Regards, Maryam@@DrMatJ
For SciSpace Discounts
https:/bit.ly/MatJurga-SciSpace
use these codes: matj20 for 20% OFF monthly, and matj40 for 40% OFF annually.
Thank you, Mat, for creating this informative video. When I use Scispace or similar websites, they indeed save a lot of time. However, I feel that what they provide is not comprehensive enough for PhD-level research or a dissertation. Sometimes, I ask more questions to obtain additional details, but at the end of the day, I still feel like I'm missing some important parts if I don't read the entire paper. This leads to missing some concepts, so I find myself going back to read the paper again, which is really time-consuming. Do you have any tips or recommendations for addressing this issue? My research area is international space law, which is a relatively new subject and does not already have too many resources available.
I'm sorry for getting back to you late! I had a couple of very hectic days! I totally understand your concern and in the end of the day, there is nothing better than just reading the paper yourself because deciding what is important can be very subjective. When I was doing my PhD, the only way to speed up the process was to ONLY analyze the figures that were relevant or ONLY read few relevant sections based on the subheadings. I never read whole papers because it was just too time consuming to do. However, I'll check out other AIs and see if there is anything else you could do. I'll get back to you once i have something. BTW, international space law sounds very cool!
Thank you so much for your patience and understanding! I completely relate to the challenges of managing busy days. I appreciate your openness to exploring other AI options. I'll also be sending you an email if I come across something intriguing. And thanks, for your compliment on my research topic. It's always wonderful to hear that others find international space law interesting.@@DrMatJ
Hi @maryamk2398 Why don't you try openread, explainpaper, and powerdrill AIs for your research articles. As Scispace gives you a quick overview of lots of papers at once, these 3 can delve much deeper into individual papers of interest. Openread's free version is quite limited (you can't ask lots of questions), by explainpaper will let you ask as many questions as you want, and powedrill will let you have 200 questions a month. They are all great and work well papers within my field. Let me know if they work for you! Thanks, Mat
Thank you, Mat, for the excellent AI suggestions! Your insights are always spot-on, and I truly appreciate your support. I can't wait to try them and see how they elevate my work. I'll keep you posted on how it goes! Regards, Maryam@@DrMatJ
If you haven't had a chance to check them out, I covered them here :)
ua-cam.com/video/u2Sx2Rjkgeg/v-deo.html
Great resource! Thanks :)
Super useful, thank you!
Świetna jakość obrazu!
Dzięki!