Reading
- A nice Science article with strategies for keeping up with the literature.
- And here is another nice Nature one.
The buzz
- If your field has a strong Twitter(/X) scene, and they are disciplined enough to avoid distracting personal posts, this can be an excellent way to find topical literature in your field.
- Here’s an article for how to get started on twitter as a scientist.
- Other options also exist, such as BlueSky, Mastodon, and LinkedIn.
- Can be important to follow the right people, and to mute the right people.
Direct from the journal’s mouth: RSS feeds
- Journals have RSS feeds that push new articles into an RSS reader.
- This is a good/essential way to stay on top of new articles as they are published in a place that doesn’t fill up your inbox.
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You can also create your own custom RSS feeds (e.g., in Scopus) to track authors you’re interested in, or sets of keywords most relevant to your research.
- Feedly is a good free choice to manage your RSS feeds. You can access the results either online, or via a native app.
- On Mac/iOS, Reeder is a really nice one
- Other options also exist.
Reference managers
- Zotero is the best reference manager available and is free. Essential add-ons:
- Better BibTex (for workign with LaTeX, including automatically updating a corresponding .bib file for your full library), and
- ZotFile (for synchronizing attachments via cloud storage, and working with tablets).
- Paperpile seems good, especially for those working with Google Docs.
- Mendeley is pretty poor.
- Readcube Papers is clunky and buggy and charges a regular fee.