Templates
Abstracts, Literature Reviews, Methods, Grant Summaries
Choose a structured template to match common journal sections
Free tool for researchers
Generate structured abstracts, literature-review syntheses, reproducible Methods sections, and export-ready reference snippets. Choose a template, paste source abstracts or DOIs, set citation style and word limits — the writer returns citation-anchored text and BibTeX/LaTeX snippets you can drop into your manuscript.
Templates
Abstracts, Literature Reviews, Methods, Grant Summaries
Choose a structured template to match common journal sections
Export formats
BibTeX, LaTeX snippets, CSV screening exports
Copy‑ready outputs compatible with reference managers and manuscript tools
Workflows
Citation-aware synthesis, screening, reproducibility checklists
Prebuilt prompt clusters for common research tasks
Researcher-focused features
Designed for graduate students, faculty, research assistants, librarians, and grant writers — the writer reduces time spent synthesizing literature while preserving traceability. It prompts for citation style, required word count, and exclusions to produce outputs aligned with journal conventions and reproducible-research practices.
Practical prompts you can paste and use
Choose one of the explicit prompts below, paste your inputs (abstracts, DOIs, experiment notes), and set the output constraints (style, length, exclusions). Each template includes guidance for required fields and recommended post-checks.
Group pasted abstracts by theme, highlight gaps, and return a short reading list.
Turn a manuscript draft into a concise structured abstract.
Generate reproducible Methods formatted for journal submission.
Convert citation lists to exportable formats and in-text examples.
Fast inclusion/exclusion tagging and exportable screening records.
Preserve traceability
Outputs include visible source anchors (title, first author, DOI when provided) and formatted reference snippets suitable for copying into Zotero/Mendeley/EndNote or into a BibTeX file. Use the citation-style selector to switch between APA, Chicago, and IEEE examples; exported BibTeX entries follow standard field conventions for easy import.
From note-taking to manuscript
Use the writer to standardize notes, generate reproducible Methods, and create shareable prompt templates for collaborators. Exported outputs are designed to slot into common academic pipelines — lab notebooks, manuscript drafts, grant applications, and systematic-review registries.
What to paste and why it matters
To maximize accuracy, paste the highest-quality metadata you have: abstracts with DOIs, full author lists, arXiv IDs, PubMed IDs, or repository links. The writer is tuned to understand common academic metadata patterns (CrossRef/DOI, arXiv abstracts, PubMed/Medline metadata, ORCID identifiers) and will flag missing or ambiguous DOIs for manual verification.
A free access tier is available for quick synthesis and export tasks. Heavy or extended usage, team features, or advanced integrations may require an account or a paid plan — see /pricing for plan details. The free tier is intended for individual researcher workflows such as drafting abstracts, short literature syntheses, and citation exports.
When you provide DOIs, PMIDs, or arXiv IDs alongside abstracts or citation metadata, the writer includes source anchors (title, first author, DOI) in the output and formats reference snippets accordingly. If metadata is missing or ambiguous, the tool flags those items so you can verify or add the correct identifier before export.
Yes. The writer provides copy-ready BibTeX entries and LaTeX-formatted tables/snippets for Methods and supplementary materials. These are formatted to be compatible with common reference managers and LaTeX workflows; however, always validate final formatting against your target journal’s submission guidelines.
Treat outputs as drafting assistance: cross-check key claims against the original papers, confirm numerical values against source tables/figures, and verify DOIs and author names. We recommend keeping an audit trail — keep the original pasted abstracts/DOIs and include anchor notes the writer generates when preparing final drafts.
Yes — there are templates to tag titles/abstracts with inclusion/exclusion decisions and to generate a CSV export containing decision, rationale, and DOI columns for protocol documentation. Use the reproducible prompt templates to make screening rules explicit for team-based reviews.
Select the citation-style field before running a prompt. Templates will format reference lists and in-text citation examples according to common styles (APA, Chicago, IEEE). For specific journal templates, use the custom-output field to request style constraints (section labels, max word counts) and verify final formatting against the journal’s author instructions.
Always disclose AI assistance where required by journal or institutional policy, verify and attribute original sources using the included anchors, avoid copying long passages verbatim from sources without quotation and attribution, and run standard plagiarism checks on any text prepared for submission. Use the writer to paraphrase and synthesize while keeping source citations intact.
Yes. The writer includes grant-summary templates that convert a research plan into a concise significance/approach/outcomes abstract and bulletized broader impacts. Use the grant-summary prompt to produce a 150–200 word overview and a short list of impact bullets suitable for proposal decks or cover letters.