It's Del.icio.us For Academics
Most free bookmarking sites cater to tech geeks, political junkies, and folks who enjoy offbeat news and video clips. While both practical and entertaining for their users, the Diggs and Furls of the world have left a
How does CiteULike organize research?
Similar to social bookmarking sites, CiteULike offers a free signup and lets users install a bookmarklet so that, as they’re perusing the web for relevant articles, they can save them with one click. Users can then tag entries and search their personal library as it grows. But because CiteULike is focused on scholarly articles, books, and other research-related resources, it has some special features, including the ability to export to BibTeX and EndNote (two reference management tools frequently used in academia) and the ability to browse through articles by journal title. If the articles you save are from a supported site (e.g., JSTOR, the Public Library of Science, Anthrosource, Nature), then the citation details are automatically picked up when the page is saved using the bookmarklet. If you bookmark an article from a non-supported site, you just have to save the information manually (as you would anyway).
To what extent is CiteULike “social”?
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Lynne B
04/08/2009
This is a great resource for those of us in research. Many thanks for the article!
Kristy Martz Burmeister
02/17/2009
This could come in really handy as I complete my degree. :)
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